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- TidBITS#123/11-May-92
- =====================
-
- So much news, so little time. MBDF authors indicted, Microsoft
- apologizes, ACE crumbles, disk utilities appear from the
- woodwork, QuicKeys extended, strange behavior from Apple Canada,
- and a French product that will let a 140 or 170 act like a hard
- disk. Where will it all end? In a review of Peachpit's "The
- Little Mac Word Book," that's where. PS: What happens when you
- hit Cmd-S in Disk First Aid? There will be a quiz.
-
- 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 email to info@tidbits.halcyon.com or
- ace@tidbits.halcyon.com -- CIS: 72511,306 -- AOL: Adam Engst
- TidBITS -- 9301 Avondale Rd. NE Q1096 -- Redmond, WA 98052 USA
- --------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Topics:
- MailBITS/11-May-92
- Virus Authors Indicted
- An Official Microsoft Apology
- Canadian PowerBooks
- ACE in the hole?
- Even More Utilities
- A PowerBook Umbilical Cord
- QuicKeys Line Enhanced by CE
- Little Mac Word Book
- Reviews/11-May-92
-
- [Archived as /info-mac/digest/tb/tidbits-123.etx; 29K]
-
-
- MailBITS/11-May-92
- ------------------
- Alberto Ricci writes, "Pressing command-S while (or right before
- you click Start) Disk First Aid is scanning a disk brings up a
- progress window that explains what it's doing. It's there from the
- old days, when Disk First Aid was another program, which was then
- acquired by Apple. The first program had a menu choice; Disk First
- Aid now doesn't show it, but it's still there. And, as you may
- guess looking at the "hidden" window, the program was Scavenger."
- [It's interesting finding out what Disk First Aid is doing after
- all these years of wondering if it did anything at all. -Adam]
-
- Information from:
- Alberto Ricci -- FRICCI@polito.it
-
-
- Virus Authors Indicted
- ----------------------
- In the good news department, a Tompkins County grand jury indicted
- the two Cornell sophomores arrested in March on suspicion of
- releasing the MBDF virus. David Blumenthal, 20, and Mark Pilgrim,
- 19, were both indicted for first degree computer tampering, a
- class E felony that carries with it a maximum sentence of one to
- four years in state prison. Arraignment and trial have not yet
- been scheduled.
-
- As I understand it, and I'm not exactly one of the great legal
- minds of the Western Hemisphere, the fact that Blumenthal and
- Pilgrim were indicted means that the prosecution decided that they
- had enough evidence for a trial and the grand jury concurred. Even
- if Blumenthal and Pilgrim are found guilty (or plead guilty right
- off), it's unlikely that they will receive a prison sentence.
- Stiff probation, a hefty fine, and lots of community service are
- far more plausible sentences.
-
- I don't see much point in throwing these two in jail - the prison
- system is already overburdened. They worked long and hard to cause
- people trouble; now they should work even longer and harder to
- help others, whether they want to or not. There's not much else to
- say about the case right now, but we'll keep you posted.
-
- Information from:
- Mark H. Anbinder -- TidBITS Contributing Editor
-
-
- An Official Microsoft Apology
- -----------------------------
- Laurel Lammers of Microsoft Word Marketing writes in regard to our
- article "CompuBigotry" in TidBITS#122:
-
- To Gann Matsuda and all others concerned about the Microsoft Word
- Speller:
-
- Microsoft values diversity in its workforce and its customer base.
- We license the dictionaries from another company and we do
- extensive testing of them. This is an unfortunate coincidence in
- the suggestion algorithm and does not represent any intention on
- the part of Microsoft or the outside vendor to offend anyone. We
- apologize for any offense taken.
-
-
- Canadian PowerBooks
- -------------------
- We've just heard from Pythaeus that Apple Canada is not yet
- selling the PowerBook 170 configuration with 4 MB of RAM and an 80
- MB drive (with or without the internal fax/data modem), which is
- the highest end PowerBook available from Apple. Apparently Apple
- Canada will announce the modem-less version of the 170 4/80 at the
- end of this month, so any of our Canadian readers who are
- considering purchasing a PowerBook 170 may wish to hold off for
- until that model becomes available. Interestingly, the PowerBook
- 140 4/80 is available in Canada now - wonder what the difference
- is? In any event, keep that little fact in mind if you've decided
- that you just have to have a 170 in the near future.
-
- Information from:
- Pythaeus -- pythaeus@tidbits.halcyon.com
-
-
- ACE in the hole?
- ----------------
- Compaq Computer recently dropped out of the Advanced Computing
- Environment Consortium (ACE), claiming essentially that it could
- make do just fine with Intel's P5, or 80586 chip, in its high-end
- PC servers and workstations. Compaq claimed that Intel was ahead
- of schedule on the 586 and that it would come in competitively-
- priced with the MIPS RISC chips that were to form the basis of
- ACE-compliant machines. Compaq's move may significantly limit
- ACE's chances in the competition against Sun's Solaris operating
- system, Taligent's Pink, and NeXT's NeXTSTEP. I'm sure Hewlett-
- Packard has something in the works as well, but I haven't heard
- any details recently. This may all sound like boring business-
- speak, but this action is actually important and rather
- intertwingled.
-
- Compaq helped found the ACE consortium a little over a year ago
- along with DEC, Microsoft, MIPS, and The Santa Cruz Operation
- (SCO). Apart from Microsoft, the group was generally a bunch of
- runner-ups for one reason or another, and they viewed ACE as a way
- to advance the level of computing in a standard way that would
- leave IBM, Sun, and Apple out of the deal. Lots of other companies
- without the initiative, talent, money, or clout to compete with
- the biggies joined ACE in hopes that it would raise their fortunes
- as well. Membership now includes nearly 200 companies worldwide.
-
- As with anything designed by committee, there were some questions
- about the choices of operating systems and hardware that would
- constitute an ACE-compliant machine. Last I checked, there were at
- least two operating systems, Windows NT and SCO Unix, and two
- hardware platforms, the MIPS R4000 and the Intel x86. That
- situation might have changed, but what has definitely changed is
- the make-up of some of the more prominent members. Several months
- ago, Silicon Graphics, an early member and manufacturer of high-
- end Unix-based graphics workstations, bought MIPS, the company
- that was to provide the R4000 RISC chip to the rest of the
- consortium. Sounds a little fishy to me, as it must have to the
- other ACE members...
-
- The Silicon Graphics/MIPS deal may have been a little fishy, but
- then in late February, DEC introduced the 21064, the first in a
- series of fast 64-bit microprocessors in the same league as the
- MIPS R4000. It was silly to think that DEC had just dissolved all
- of its research and would depend on the MIPS chip just because it
- was a member of ACE, and in fact, DEC seems pretty proud of the
- 21064 and its Alpha open computing architecture. DEC claims that
- it has even licensed the 21064 to Cray and other supercomputer
- companies for use in massively parallel machines (for those of you
- who don't know what parallel computing is, just think lots of
- little processors, relatively speaking, all working together very
- fast). If that wasn't enough anti-ACE news from DEC, the company
- announced recently that it would be working with Microsoft to set
- up DEC's Alpha architecture and Microsoft's Windows NT as the
- chief RISC-based computing system. So it seems that DEC has little
- use for the rest of the ACE consortium, and Microsoft, seeing an
- opportunity (perhaps Bill Gates's greatest strength) has jumped on
- the Alpha bandwagon.
-
- So it's not looking good for ACE. The final blow to report is that
- apparently SCO has withdrawn from the ACE executive board,
- although it is still remaining a member of the group. SCO also
- stopped working on a version of its implementation of Unix for the
- MIPS R4000. I almost wonder if all the major players in the ACE
- group realized that design by committee is a politically sensitive
- but otherwise inefficient method of working. It's also possible
- that there were some serious corporate egos running into each
- other at the meetings - I don't know because I wasn't there, but
- to judge from some of what I've read about the industry in Robert
- X. Cringely's excellent "Accidental Empires" and numerous other
- places, corporate ego is a significant factor in much of this
- posturing.
-
- Overall, I'm still unimpressed with the concept of ACE and will
- not be sorry if it disappears officially. There was too much
- effort involved with trying to please everyone and not enough
- realization that people don't really give a hoot what processor
- their computer has or what operating system it runs so long as it
- does what they want.
-
- Information from:
- DECNEWS -- 02-Mar-92
-
- Related articles:
- Communications Week -- 04-May-92, #401, pg. 8
-
-
- Even More Utilities
- -------------------
- Just as many of us received our long-awaited upgrades to Norton
- 2.0, Central Point Software upped the ante with a version 2.0 of
- its MacTools utility package, adding a number of new and cool
- features as well as a completely new virus-checking module. In
- addition, Fifth Generation Systems just announced Public
- Utilities, and Microcom updated 911 Utilities. Details are scarce
- on Public Utilities, but it appears that it offers the standard
- functionality and some of the same automatic checking abilities
- promised in MacTools 2.0. Reports on CompuServe indicate that
- there might be some problems remaining in the Complete Undelete
- file tracking extension of Microcom's 911 Utilities.
-
- As far as I can tell, and based on reports from the nets, Norton
- Utilities 2.0 has few completely new features. Most of what's new
- in Norton 2.0 came from SUM II and was cleaned up or rewritten
- (for example, Norton Partition and Norton Backup). Directory
- Assistance II looks like a solid and useful SFDialog utility,
- although without Super Boomerang's ability to search for text in
- files and to create a hierarchical Open menu, and without
- ShortCut's integration with StuffIt archives. If you don't use
- either of those, Directory Assistance will be useful. People on
- the nets are still leery of SpeedDisk, Norton's optimizer,
- although no one has reported problems with the current version as
- they did with version 1.1. One final note, the DiskLight extension
- which provides an on-screen indication when your disks are reading
- and writing is still flaky - on my system the hard disk would
- randomly access for about a minute for no known reason. This
- problem went away when I shut DiskLight off. On a more serious
- note, it appears that Norton's FileSaver extension is incompatible
- with MultiFinder 6.1b9, which comes with MPW under System 6. You
- _may_ be able to work around the conflict by installing and
- configuring under Finder only, then switching back to MultiFinder.
- Just don't try accessing the FileSaver Control Panel under
- MultiFinder after that.
-
- But enough about Norton, I wanted to say more about MacTools 2.0.
- From the information Central Point sent me, it looks as though
- they've thought a bit more about a complete solution. They added
- an anti-virus program that combines scanning, cleaning, and
- prevention, and set it up so that it can be updated with new virus
- signature files automatically on a network. With viruses though,
- prevention and quick reactions are key, and Central Point has
- added a checksumming feature to its Anti-Virus Control Panel. If
- new viruses appear, help and new files will be available in a
- multitude of ways. For those who just want to check, Central Point
- has a 24-hour virus hotline at 503/690-2660 with the latest
- information on viruses.
-
- Central Point also enhanced its Backup program. Backup can now
- create Finder-readable backups as well as compressed backups and
- supports more backup devices, including DAT drives. To make sure
- your backups are clean, Backup has integrated virus scanning
- capabilities. Some high-end features reminiscent of Retrospect now
- appear in Backup as well, so you can schedule automatic unattended
- backups and even include multiple sources and destinations. You
- can also backup drives to a network server, and in addition to the
- virus signature file updating over a network, the entire package
- can be configured and installed over a network, easing the
- administrator's load.
-
- Perhaps the most interesting new feature in MacTools 2.0 is its
- ability to run unattended, checking constantly or at regular
- intervals for any sign of damage that might require repair. The
- DiskFix program can then perform the maintenance automatically,
- presumably alerting the user later that something has been done.
- Central Point claims that DiskFix can fix over 100 disk problems.
- I wonder how it compares to Norton's Disk Doctor in this respect -
- I've always found Disk Doctor to be somewhat more effective in
- actually fixing the disk. Another utility, FileFix, can now repair
- damaged Microsoft Word and Excel files, something which will no
- doubt be extremely popular if it works as Central Point claims,
- recovering undamaged data rather than losing the entire file.
-
- Single-user upgrades for MacTools will cost $49 and the suggested
- list price will be $149. MacTools runs on a Mac Plus or higher
- with System 6.0.5 or higher, including System 7. Those of you with
- 1 MB machines may wish to check with Central Point before buying
- since it appears that MacTools requires 2 MB of RAM, even under
- System 6.0.5.
-
- No matter which of these utilities you choose, I recommend that
- you get and use one of them. Even excellent backup habits (which
- we all have, right?) aren't always enough to save us from a lot of
- rebuilding work.
-
- Central Point Software -- 800/445-1684
- Fifth Generation Systems -- 800/873-4384 -- 504/291-7221
- Symantec -- 800/-441-7234 -- 408/253-9600
-
- Information from:
- Central Point propaganda
- Wayne Pollock -- pollock@screamer.csee.usf.edu
-
- Related articles:
- MacWEEK -- 04-May-92, Vol. 6, #18, pg. 4
-
-
- A PowerBook Umbilical Cord
- --------------------------
- by Jean-Philippe Nicaise -- nicky@etca.fr
-
- When Apple unveiled the PowerBook line six months ago, it appeared
- that they had made an odd and inconsistent mistake. The PowerBook
- 100 (which was designed by Sony, remember) has the ability to act
- as an external hard drive for a desktop Mac, but the otherwise
- more capable 140 and 170 lack this useful feature. It's too bad,
- because transferring files to and from a PowerBook moves much
- faster via SCSI than AppleTalk or floppy. Rumor had it that Apple
- simply ran out of time and decided not to implement this feature
- in the 140 and 170, but for the tons of people who already own
- one, hope is not lost. A new product called PowerDisk from a
- French company, Additional Design, can do this and more with a
- PowerBook 140 or 170.
-
- The PowerDisk package includes a PowerBook to SCSI disk cable, a
- jumper to change your PowerBook's internal hard disk SCSI ID, a
- disk with the software to disable the PowerBook CPU, and two
- manuals: one for your Macintosh dealer and one for the
- installation and use of the software.
-
- The modification of the internal hard disk SCSI ID must be done by
- an Approved Apple Dealer who will open the PowerBook and simply
- place a jumper. Additional Design provides a label to stick on the
- rear panel indicating the new SCSI ID. The installation manual is
- so clear that you could do it yourself if you had the correct
- screwdrivers (and don't mind voiding your warranty and possibly
- damaging your PowerBook). In France Apple has endorsed this
- procedure (so it will not void your warranty) as long as it is
- done by an Approved Apple Dealer. Since PowerDisk is only
- distributed in France for the time being (sorry folks), it's
- possible that Apple may set up different policies in other
- countries.
-
- The software installer simply adds a driver to your System file
- (.POWERDISK) and copies the PowerDisk application to your Apple
- Menu Items folder. If your Macintosh isn't a PowerBook or your
- PowerBook hasn't had the SCSI ID modified, the installer will warn
- you and won't do anything.
-
- To prepare the connection, you simply run the PowerDisk
- application which makes sure you want to proceed. If you agree,
- the PowerBook will be shut down and PowerDisk will be set to
- activate when the desktop Mac looks for external SCSI devices.
- Then you just switch off your desktop Macintosh and your
- PowerBook, connect the SCSI cables, and make sure that all SCSI
- terminators are off.
-
- Now, you act as though your PowerBook was an external hard disk:
- switch it on and then switch on the Macintosh. Your PowerBook's
- screen will simply show the SCSI ID of your hard disk, the
- accumulator level indicator and the PowerDisk icon. Those
- indicators move around on the screen as though they were part of a
- screen saver module. If you strike a key, click, or move your
- trackball, a message will tell you PowerDisk is running and what
- to do to bring your PowerBook back to life (switch off your Mac,
- switch off your PowerBook, disconnect the cables, switch on your
- PowerBook).
-
- It's easy, simple, and really efficient. PowerDisk's price in
- France is 690 French francs (about US$115) which is fair since the
- package includes the cable, a 290 French francs (about US$48)
- value on Apple's price list. PowerDisk is currently sold only in
- France, but Additional Design is looking for distributors in the
- US and other countries. The product's availability will depend on
- how soon they find distributors - interested parties should
- contact Additional Design for more information.
-
- Additional Design:
- Voice : +33 (1) 69 07 30 28
- Fax : +33 (1) 69 07 86 74
-
- Information from:
- Franck Lefebvre, Additional Design
- ADD.DESIGN@applelink.apple.com
-
-
- QuicKeys Line Enhanced by CE
- ----------------------------
- by Mark H. Anbinder -- TidBITS Contributing Editor
-
- CE Software has been in the press quite a bit lately, and
- deservedly so. The latest piece of news out of West Des Moines,
- Iowa, is that CE has announced two new pieces in the QuicKeys
- product line, one of which will ship later this month.
-
- QuicKeys is CE's macro product for the Macintosh, allowing users
- to customize and largely automate their work environment by
- assigning frequently-used or "menial" operations to one-or-two-
- keystroke commands. Version 2.1.2, scheduled to ship on 20-May-92,
- is 32-bit clean, System 7 savvy, and supports Apple Events of all
- kinds. This latest version also offers improved compatibility with
- Microsoft Word 5.0 and other minor changes.
-
- The additions to the family are Instant QuicKeys and QuicKeys
- Runtime. The former is a new installation and modification
- application that leads users through a process that automatically
- sets up dozens of useful QuicKeys without having to use the
- regular QuicKeys editor. With Instant QuicKeys, which will ship in
- the box with QuicKeys 2, CE says they no longer have just a "power
- user's" product, but a product that will cater to all levels of
- Mac user.
-
- Instant QuicKeys will also allow users to set up on-screen
- palettes of "SoftKeys" containing up to ninety frequently-accessed
- macros, accessible through a single keystroke or by clicking on
- the screen. An additional application, QKIcons, will allow users
- to create icons that can invoke any QuicKey with a single click.
- The icons can be placed on the desktop or in any folder for easy
- location and use.
-
- This last feature is reminiscent of Tiles, CE's "intelligent
- desktop" product, which hasn't done as well in the marketplace as
- the company would have liked. One of the features of Tiles is that
- a QuicKey can be assigned to a tile, which resides within the
- program's windows or can be dragged out to float over the desktop.
- The program is an application launcher and desktop organizer, but
- users have complained of a confusing interface and excessive
- memory requirements, and many prefer to accomplish the same tasks
- with simpler, less-expensive utilities.
-
- QuicKeys Runtime, for which a shipping date and price are not yet
- set, is a runtime version of QuicKeys that will allow system
- managers, consultants, or value-added resellers (VARs) to create
- customized sets of QuicKey macros and install them for users who
- won't need to modify them or create their own. We hope that CE
- will elect to price the runtime package at an affordable level
- that will enable large workgroups to afford to share in QuicKeys's
- benefits without the extra expense. Since the product is obviously
- aimed at workgroups and larger installations, it would make sense
- for CE to offer quantity pricing, as they do with QuickMail, their
- flagship electronic mail product. Five, ten, fifty, and one
- hundred user packages would make sense.
-
- Current QuicKeys 2 users will be able to upgrade to version 2.1.2,
- including Instant QuicKeys, for $30, and users of versions prior
- to 2.0 will be able to upgrade for $49. Users who are interested
- in upgrading from 2.1 to 2.1.2 without getting Instant QuicKeys,
- SoftKeys, or QKIcons may download an updater utility from various
- online services, or may obtain an update disk from CE for $15.
- Users who purchased QuicKeys after 01-Apr-92 will be able to
- upgrade to 2.1.2 (with Instant QuicKeys) for free. International
- users should contact their local distributors, or call CE customer
- service at 515/224-1995.
-
- CE Software -- 800/523-7638 -- 515/224-1995
-
- Information from:
- CE propaganda
-
-
- Little Mac Word Book
- --------------------
- by Tonya Engst -- TidBITS Special Projects Coordinator
-
- Microsoft's Word has a ton of options buried in its menus, though
- it can take patience to make these options show their heads and
- perform their tricks. In fact, many people use Word for years
- without delving into its depths. Peachpit Press recently published
- "The Little Mac Word Book," a book that should help anyone harness
- Word's capabilities.
-
- With lively prose and a liberal sprinkling of screen dumps, author
- Helmut Kobler explains not only how to use Word's features but
- also which tasks are particularly suited to the different
- features. Don't think of this book as a heavy reference tome, but
- rather as light (or at least somewhat light) reading that you
- might do over a weekend. The Little Mac Word Book actually would
- make a good reference for most purposes, but it's not completely
- comprehensive. It should be especially good for newcomers to Word
- and for people who have used Word for a while but infrequently use
- some of its deeper features such as table of contents, tables, and
- placing graphics on a page. If you never use a certain Word
- feature because you can't figure out the arcane logic behind it,
- this book should help you out. In addition, Word works much better
- for people who are more aware of what it can do, so reading this
- book could enhance your overall Word experience.
-
- Kobler begins with a summary of what's new in Word 5.0, giving
- brief descriptions and page number references for where the book
- explains the features in detail. The book continues with a Project
- Guide, which matches common projects with features in Word will be
- most useful and with more page number references.
-
- Somewhat predictably, the next section has a basic introduction to
- word processing (let the computer do the wrapping; cut, copy, and
- paste; saving files, etc.). Interspersed through these expected
- explanations Kobler has sprinkled tidbits that many Word users
- will appreciate (Word's different views, how Word repagination
- works, selecting text using different techniques, and more). The
- section is to be commended for explaining about never using spaces
- in place of tabs right up front, and for a good description of
- using the SFDialog box, a place where many beginners get stuck.
-
- The rest of the book systematically explains how to do most of the
- things that you would ever wish to do in Word. The book struck me
- as being particularly strong in its explanations of how to use
- Outlining and Framing. Other strong points included indexing,
- table of contents, print merges, and footnoting. On the whole, and
- for most practical purposes, the book is outstanding.
- Unfortunately, though, the book also has a number of minor
- glitches. Some of these appear to be due to careless editing, and
- some are most certainly due to the inherent difficulties in
- writing a book about a program while the program is in beta. I
- don't know how commonly books such as this have errors, so I don't
- know exactly how damning a criticism this is.
-
- Two errors that particularly caught my attention were these.
- First, in the final release version of Word 5.0, the program can
- open and save files in WordPerfect for DOS versions 5.0 and 5.1.
- Perhaps due to the usual pre-release shuffle of features that do
- and do not miss the deadline, the book states that Word 5.0 will
- save and open files for Mac WordPerfect and WordPerfect for DOS
- versions 4.1-5.1. Don't look for these translators - they just
- aren't there, and WordPerfect users may have to convert to a more
- compatible format manually before transferring the files to Word
- 5.0. The second glaring error comes when the book incorrectly
- states that in one operation Word can do a find and replace in the
- main section of the document, as well as in the header, footer,
- and footnote sections. Unfortunately, this task is beyond Word
- 5.0's capabilities.
-
- Visually, the book has a fair amount going for it. The headers are
- in an easily readable grey-blue color, making it easy to skim for
- particular information. The text is nicely broken up by screen
- dumps illustrating directions in the text, and ample margins leave
- room for notes if you like to write in books. Also in the margins
- are related tips and tricks. The only problem that I noticed was
- that in my particular copy the leading ("line-spacing" in Word-
- speak) looks a bit strange after some of the sub-headings.
-
- In conclusion, the Little Mac Word Book certainly works as a
- credible reference for Word 5, but what makes it stand out is its
- friendly layout and spirited prose. An interested Word user could
- probably read straight through without falling asleep (something
- that certainly could not be said about Word 5.0's admittedly-
- improved manuals), and any Word user should be able to use it to
- quickly find out how Word can most effectively do what she wants
- it to do. True power users who require an in-depth reference to
- every possible word feature will find this book a little light,
- but most Word users should find it a useful addition to their
- computer libraries. The Little Mac Word Book retails for $15.95
- and should be available at good bookstores everywhere by now.
-
- Peachpit Press -- 800/283-9444 -- 510/548-4393
-
-
- Reviews/11-May-92
- -----------------
-
- * MacWEEK
- Ray Dream Designer 2.0.2 -- pg. 33
- ScanJet IIp -- pg. 33
- HandiWorks -- pg. 38
- Contact! -- pg. 38
- Aperture Professional 2.0.7 -- pg. 39
- AgentDA 2.1 -- pg. 39
- Brainstorm Accelerator for the Mac Plus -- pg. 40
- HyperDeX -- pg. 40
-
- * MacUser
- DeltaGraph Professional -- pg. 50
- Adobe Premiere -- pg. 52
- Minitab -- pg. 54
- OmniPage Professional -- pg. 55
- ShiftWorker -- pg. 57
- Swing Shift -- pg. 57
- Tiles -- pg. 70
- PacerForum -- pg. 72
- Cause -- pg. 74
- Ft. Knox -- pg. 81
- Publish It! Easy -- pg. 81
- Crash Barrier -- pg. 81
- Vellum 3D -- pg. 83
- Mutant Beach -- pg. 85
- Spreadsheets -- pg. BG32
- Excel 3.0
- Lotus 1-2-3/Mac 1.0
- Claris Resolve 1.0v3
- Integrated Packages -- pg. BG44
- ClarisWorks 1.0
- GreatWorks 2.0
- HandiWorks 1.0
- Relational Databases -- pg. BG60
- FoxBASE+/Mac
- Omnis Seven
- Double Helix
- 4th Dimension
- CPU Accelerators -- pg. 166
- (too many to list)
-
- References:
- MacWEEK -- 04-May-92, Vol. 6, #18
- MacUser -- Jun-92
-
-
- ..
-
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