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- TidBITS#124/18-May-92
- =====================
-
- And now, for something completely sticky, read about the
- forthcoming GUM. Then we move into slimy with some more legal
- and virus news. Symantec's upgrade policies for Norton Utilities
- are all wet, but Dantz will clean up after itself with a free
- upgrade to DiskFit Pro. Of course, Apple has some solid new
- products, as does CE with QuickMessenger for developers, and
- finally, stop needlessly harassing the FCC about that old modem
- surcharge proposal.
-
- 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/18-May-92
- NUM Upgrade Costs Updated
- More Utilities, By GUM
- DiskFit News
- CE Ships QuickMessenger
- Warnings and Upgrades
- New Products from Apple
- FCC Flap
- Reviews/18-May-92
-
- [Archived as /info-mac/digest/tb/tidbits-124.etx; 29K]
-
-
- MailBITS/18-May-92
- ------------------
- Mark H. Anbinder writes to tell us the latest in the court case
- concerning Mark Pilgrim and David Blumenthal, authors of the MBDF
- virus discovered this spring. "I just found out today that Pilgrim
- and Blumenthal were arraigned in Tompkins County court last
- Friday. They each entered Not Guilty pleas, and the matter is
- being held for forty-five days by Judge Betty Friedlander to allow
- the defense counsels to file any motions. Nothing is likely to
- happen until that time... but assuming things go forward as they
- are, it seems likely that there will be a trial."
-
- In other, stranger legal news, Judge Vaughn Walker agreed to
- reconsider his April decision throwing out a number of the issues
- in Apple's suit against Microsoft and HP. Apparently this doesn't
- mean that he will necessarily change his mind, but he certainly
- couldn't change his mind without reconsidering. Hmm. More news
- when it's news. Perhaps even stranger yet was the announcement
- that Quorum, makers of Mac emulation software, is suing Apple in a
- pre-emptive legal strike. It seems that Quorum wants the court to
- rule that Quorum's software does not infringe on Apple's
- copyrights or patents, and that some of those patents may in fact
- be invalid. I hope Quorum has a lot of legal firepower or it won't
- even be a fair fight. Tune in next week when Apple lawyers declare
- that Apple actually own rights to the concept of the personal
- computer and sues IBM over the original PC - the entire case has
- already been picked up by several major cable TV networks as a
- spectator sport. :-)
-
-
- AutoDoubler Support from Fifth
- Robert Hess passes on this note. "FileDirector 3.1 from Fifth
- Generation Systems includes a brand new version of DiskTools
- which, among other enhancements, includes additional support for
- DiskDoubler and AutoDoubler from Salient Software. DiskTools has a
- new checkbox in the Preferences dialog called Show Indicator on
- Compressed Files. If this checkbox is turned on, DiskTools will:
-
- 1. Stamp the "DD" on the icon for compressed files in the main
- DiskTools File/Folder list and in the File/Folder Info dialog.
-
- 2. Show the actual disk space occupied by compressed AutoDoubler
- or DiskDoubler files in the main DiskTools File/Folder list NOT
- their uncompressed sizes (like you see when you Get Info in the
- Finder).
-
- These two are useful for determining from within DiskTools which
- files are compressed (and by how much) and which are not,
- information that can be extremely useful to know at times.
-
- 3. Copy compressed DiskDoubler files in their compressed state.
-
- Why is this pretty cool? Because those of you who use AutoDoubler
- & AppleTalk Remote Access can use DiskTools to perform faster
- copies by using DiskTools instead of the Finder. Then again, the
- "hacked" Finder that increases throughput/cache-size, or 7th
- Heaven, will still do better." [It's nice to see some third
- parties supporting each other in their products directly because
- it makes customized Mac environments more seamless. -Adam]
-
- Information from:
- Robert Hess -- ENDPOINT@applelink.apple.com
-
-
- NUM Upgrade Costs Updated
- -------------------------
- Sendhil Revuluri recently pointed out that we published an
- incomplete set of upgrade prices for Norton Utilities for
- Macintosh (NUM) 2.0. Symantec is offering a lower price to
- registered users of Norton Utilities 1.1 (as opposed to users of
- SUM II or NUM 1.0), so if you purchased that package, you can
- upgrade for only $20. I've read reports of Symantec denying the
- existence of this offer, so I confirmed this information with a
- Symantec customer service representative.
-
- If you own SUM II or NUM 1.0, the upgrade cost is $39 plus $8 for
- shipping and handing. If you own NUM 1.1, the cost is $20, (plus
- $8, I presume, for shipping and handling). On the form I received
- in the mail, Symantec also offered a competitive upgrade of $59
- for MacTools Deluxe owners, but the customer service person at
- Symantec denied that there were any competitive upgrades. Go
- figure. I also presume (based on the information TidBITS used to
- publish its original article) that if you purchased SUM II or NUM
- 1.1 after 20-Jan-92 (and can prove it), that you only pay the $8
- shipping charge.
-
- But wait, there's more. The guy at Symantec confirmed that users
- who paid the $39 fee when they were entitled to the $20 price can
- get a $19 refund from Symantec. All I can think is that someone at
- Symantec completely forgot about users of NUM 1.1 having already
- paid for one upgrade since there was no mention of the $20 upgrade
- in any of the user or press information I've received from
- Symantec. Call Symantec for details on the refund, and if they
- balk, tell them that one of their reps told a member of the press
- about it. It would be nice in the future if Symantec could make
- upgrading less confusing by figuring out upgrade policies in
- advance.
-
- Symantec -- 800/343-4714 -- 408/252-3570 (outside U.S.)
-
- Information from:
- Sendhil Revuluri -- s-revuluri@uchicago.edu
- Symantec propaganda
-
-
- More Utilities, By GUM
- ----------------------
- "What does the world need," you may ask if you're one of those who
- is always asking essentially rhetorical questions. If you're Guy
- Kawasaki and After Hours Software, the answer is another
- collection of useful utilities, seemingly along the lines of the
- popular Now Utilities from Now Software. The collection will be
- assembled by and named after the ever-present Guy, so along with
- the strangely-acronymed Symantec Utilities for Macintosh (SUM) and
- Norton Utilities for Macintosh (NUM), we'll have the tongue-in-
- cheek Guy's Utilities for Macintosh, or GUM.
-
- I can't tell you a lot about GUM, since I don't know very much
- myself. I do know that it's in the final stages of assembly, but
- Guy and After Hours Software are still looking for truly snazzy
- utilities that could not survive in the commercial market alone.
- Guy claims that he's looking for utilities that do things like
- improve the Finder, menuing, System 7, and the use of the
- PowerBooks. Feel free to send your utilities to Guy at any of the
- addresses below, but keep in mind that I've already suggested
- Sticky Menus, Bubble Help, and DiskDoubleMint, along with a little
- utility that keeps the monitor from moving when you chew.
-
- I'm also agitating strongly for some Bazooka Joe comics in each
- package, or at least a few baseball cards. I certainly hope that
- Guy has the gumption to consider my requests seriously. Of course,
- there's no telling when GUM will be out, but if it doesn't get
- stuck under the table, it is likely to be more well-received in
- higher education than its physical manifestation. Nonetheless, I'm
- looking forward to GUM, especially if it doesn't try to overlap
- with the other utilities packages already on the market. If so,
- I'd probably have to eschew GUM in favor of Now Utilities, which
- has had more time to mature into a killer collection and comes out
- of one's hair more easily.
-
- Tooth decay notwithstanding, these sort of collections are
- becoming more popular. Atticus Software just announced that it is
- putting together a less sugary package called Super 7 Utilities,
- which includes seven utilities primarily based on previous
- freeware or shareware programs. You may recognize some of the
- names, including Speed Beep Pro, Helium Pro, Desktop Extras, Trash
- Alias, and Mighty Menus. Also included are Printer Picker and
- Super Comments, neither of which I recognize from the freeware or
- shareware world. Super 7 Utilities will supposedly be available in
- July for about $100 list. In addition, users of the shareware
- BeHierarchic, which gives you a hierarchical Apple menu, may have
- noticed that version 2.0 is supposedly now part of the Kiwi
- PowerWindows package from Kiwi Software. So if you've got an
- illegal copy of BeHierarchic 2.0, spit it out or swallow it.
-
- Atticus Software -- 203/324-1142
- Kiwi Software -- 805/685-4031
-
- Information from:
- Guy Kawasaki -- Kawasaki2@applelink.apple.com -- MacWay on AOL
- 76703.3031@compuserve.com
-
-
- DiskFit News
- ------------
- Dantz Development's popular backup program, DiskFit Pro, has been
- in the net conversations recently, though mostly on CompuServe. It
- appears that DiskFit Pro has a few bugs and confusing changes from
- previous versions, and those bugs have convinced Dantz to send a
- free upgrade to 1.1 to all registered users when 1.1 is done (soon
- is all I can say about the timing).
-
- The first complaints about DiskFit Pro stemmed from Dantz's
- decision to change the Only Applications and Only Documents
- selections so that items in the System Folder were not included.
- This comes up primarily for people who upgraded from the previous
- version but did not create a new SmartSet, because they will
- expect their documents and applications in the System Folder to be
- backed up. The design implementation is not so much in question as
- Dantz's failure to clearly document the change as a change. The
- manual and the program say that Only Documents will exclude
- documents in the System Folder. They do not, however, say that
- applications in the System Folder will be excluded if Only
- Applications is checked. Larry Zulch of Dantz has acknowledged the
- problem on CIS, and said that they were looking into providing the
- same functionality in a manner that would allow the user to more
- precisely select what will and will not be backed up.
-
- More serious from the bug standpoint is a pesky varmint that will
- on occasion make the Exact Duplicates function, which preserves a
- volume's special identification data to retain privilege
- information, work like Less Copying, which only copies files if
- the file size has changed. The workaround is to avoid using Exact
- Duplicates, which would entail fixing some privileges in the event
- of a restore, but would not lose any data. Needless to say, this
- is a bug that could result in some data not being backed up. Dantz
- takes their responsibility as a provider of what is in essence
- security software seriously, and this bug compromises DiskFit Pro
- 1.0's efficacy. Hence the free upgrade that will arrive at your
- door soon if you're registered. We're pleased to see this sort of
- public response because it instills confidence in a company, and
- if a company making backup software needs anything, it's consumer
- confidence. No one's perfect, but the best we can all do when we
- make mistakes is try and fix them quickly and accurately.
-
- Information from:
- Larry Zulch, Dantz Development -- 72477.1322@compuserve.com
- Bill Weylock -- 76012.3026@compuserve.com
-
-
- CE Ships QuickMessenger
- -----------------------
- by Mark H. Anbinder -- TidBITS Contributing Editor
-
- Fulfilling an old promise to allow integration between QuickMail
- and non-mail applications, CE Software recently announced
- QuickMessenger, an API (or application programming interface) that
- will allow developers to enable their applications to send
- QuickMail messages.
-
- QuickMessenger includes eleven routines that may be called by any
- application to perform such operations as sending messages or
- files, searching for user addresses via the NameServer, looking up
- the contents of QuickMail address books or groups, and obtaining
- lists of MailCenters and zones. According to QuickMessenger
- engineer Van Kichline, the API "is designed to be a simple but
- very robust step toward providing complete QuickMail access to
- third party applications." QuickMessenger does not yet allow
- applications to receive messages, but the Inside QuickMail API,
- which allows developers to create gateways, bridges, or other
- utilities that run within QuickMail itself, does allow third-party
- software to receive and process messages.
-
- One third-party product that will take advantage of QuickMessenger
- is QM Log Translator, from MDG Computer Services. This is a
- customized 4th Dimension database that summarizes the mail
- activity logs typically sent to the QuickMail custodian. The
- database can generate reports and can send notices to users who
- are taking up more than their share of space on the server's hard
- disk.
-
- Another utility that QuickMessenger will enhance is DiskTwin, an
- expansion card (in NuBus and PDS configurations) from Golden
- Triangle Computers, Inc., that allows a Macintosh to write all
- data to two hard disks simultaneously. With this product,
- QuickMessenger will allow a network manager or system
- administrator to receive instant notification in the event of a
- disk failure.
-
- The QuickMessenger software developer kit, including
- documentation, source code examples, and the QuickMessenger Tool
- Kit, is available from CE for $125. The Inside QuickMail API is
- still available for $100. Purchasers of either package must sign a
- trade-secret agreement with CE Software because of the nature of
- the information that is included in the documentation.
-
- CE Software, Inc. - 515/224-1995
- MDG Computer Services -- 708/818-9991
- Golden Triangle Computers, Inc. -- 619/279-2100
-
- Information from:
- Sue Nail -- CE Software
-
-
- Warnings and Upgrades
- ---------------------
- by Mark H. Anbinder -- TidBITS Contributing Editor
-
- LC II Ethernet Card
- Users who have an old Macintosh LC Ethernet Card and need to use
- it with a Mac LC II (if, for example, they have upgraded their LCs
- to LC IIs) will need to upgrade the card to a Macintosh LC II
- Ethernet Card. This requires a simple, and free, ROM swap. This
- can be arranged through any Apple authorized service center, who
- will be able to order the ROM upgrade for you. Users who are still
- using the card in an LC do not need to upgrade the card, but since
- the free upgrade will only be available until 30-Jun-93, it might
- be a good idea to take care of it just in case.
-
-
- Unplug that Quadra!
- A recent Apple technical memo noted that, because of a +5 volt
- trickle charge that the Quadra 900 provides to one pin on each
- NuBus card, it is important to unplug the Quadra 900 before
- installing or removing any NuBus card. (The manual states this
- fact when describing the card installation procedure, but Apple
- has received reports that some users have missed this warning.)
- The trickle charge is provided so that a NuBus card can be
- designed to allow for remote booting.
-
-
- Personal LaserWriter LS Driver 7.2
- Apple has released a new version, 7.2, of the Personal LaserWriter
- LS driver. The new driver allows the printer to print closer to
- the edge of the page on legal-sized pages. The previous driver
- imposed one-inch margins on legal-sized pages, to provide for
- backward compatibility with the Personal LaserWriter SC, but in
- response to numerous customer complaints, the company produced a
- new version that allows the printer to come within a quarter inch
- of each side. The new driver will be available from dealers, user
- groups, and licensed online services.
-
-
- Don't Plug that PowerBook!
- Kim Cary writes to say that a user plugged their StyleWriter power
- connector into a PowerBook 140, zapping the charging circuit and
- requiring a $650 repair to let the unit work on battery power
- again. Kim guessed that the StyleWriter power connector has a
- reverse polarity from the PowerBook's own power connector. So if
- you have a PowerBook and a StyleWriter around, be careful when you
- plug it in.
-
- Information from:
- Kim Cary -- kcary@pepvax.pepperdine.edu
-
-
- New Products from Apple
- -----------------------
- by Mark H. Anbinder -- TidBITS Contributing Editor
-
- Once again Apple has shown they mean business with their plans to
- offer a steady stream of new products. Just today, the company
- introduced its new series of commercial system enhancement
- software, and replaced the Quadra 900, only seven months old, with
- the new Quadra 950.
-
- A few months ago, Apple revealed its plan to offer certain kinds
- of system software, such as enhancements that only some users will
- need, as separate commercial products. The first two offerings in
- this series are Macintosh PC Exchange and the QuickTime Starter
- Kit, each of which, like the $99 System 7 Personal Upgrade Kit,
- comes with a few months of free telephone tech support via Apple's
- 800 support line.
-
- Macintosh PC Exchange is a $79 package that, like Insignia's
- AccessPC and Dayna's DOS Mounter, allows users to mount DOS-
- formatted diskettes on the desktop of Macs equipped with Apple's
- SuperDrive or compatible high-density floppy drives. In addition,
- the utility will automatically launch appropriate applications
- from a user-configurable list when the user double-clicks on a DOS
- file in the Finder. For example, double-clicking on a Lotus 1-2-3
- DOS file will automatically open either Excel or Lotus 1-2-3 for
- Mac, whichever you specify. The utility also allows users to
- format diskettes for use in DOS machines later on.
-
- The new QuickTime Starter Kit, selling for $169, allows users with
- 68020, '030, or '040 Macs to take full advantage of Apple's video,
- sound, and animation system software. In addition to the extension
- itself, this starter kit includes several utilities (MoviePlayer,
- Movie Recorder, Movie Converter, and Picture Compressor), and a
- CD-ROM containing a wealth of video clips, animation, and still
- images.
-
- Last, but certainly not least, of Apple's new offerings, the
- Quadra 950 replaces the 900. The 950 has a faster processor (a 33
- MHz 68040 instead of the 900's 25 MHz CPU), and provides faster
- video, Ethernet, and I/O bus performance as well, thanks to faster
- VRAM SIMMs and a new, faster 25 MHz I/O bus. The new Quadra joins
- the Macintosh lineup at the same price as the 900, so power-hungry
- Mac users can now get more bang for the buck.
-
- For a short time, Apple will even offer a very low price for
- Quadra 900 owners who want to upgrade. The $1,499 price lasts
- until 27-Dec-92, after which the upgrade price will be $3,000.
- This upgrade should actually be available in June or July.
-
- Apple's new software products will be included in the company's
- new software distribution plans. They have signed a contract with
- Ingram Micro, a large distributor of computer-related products, to
- make Apple's software products available to software resellers as
- well as Apple's existing dealer base. This should dramatically
- improve software availability from a wide variety of vendors and
- dealers. Macintosh PC Exchange and the QuickTime Starter Kit join
- the System 7 Personal and Group Upgrade Kits, AppleTalk Remote
- Access, and AppleShare 3.0 in this new program. Interestingly, the
- deal with Ingram Micro also means that some mail order vendors,
- including MacWarehouse, will now be able to sell Apple software
- products. In fact, MacWarehouse has wasted no time in advertising
- this fact in the latest MacWEEK.
-
- While some users might prefer that Apple include Macintosh PC
- Exchange in the system software itself, and provide it free of
- charge to end users, the commercial distribution is actually
- consistent with past policies. Such things as the AppleShare
- server software, which only some users will actually need, have
- always been sold as separate products. This allows Apple to
- recover the costs of developing such software without forcing
- Apple's entire user base to pay for it through increased system
- software prices. Apple has long considered changing its policy of
- offering free system software upgrades to users who don't require
- the manuals that come with the purchasable upgrade packages. We
- feel that given the choice between forcing all Macintosh users to
- pay for system software upgrades, and asking users who need
- specialized extensions to pay for those separately, Apple has done
- the right thing.
-
- In the meantime, the QuickTime software that was released a few
- months ago is still being distributed free of charge by user
- groups, dealers, and some online services, as well as by some
- software companies whose software takes advantage of QuickTime. In
- effect, the "run-time" software for viewing QuickTime movies is
- free, and users who want more power for themselves may purchase
- either the (admittedly limited) QuickTime Starter Kit or go for
- one of the commercial animation packages. This is similar to the
- current Claris approach with HyperCard. All users receive
- HyperCard free when they purchase a new Mac, but the Developer's
- Kit, which contains lots of sample stacks and HyperTalk code, as
- well as developer's utilities, is a commercial product.
-
- Information from:
- Apple propaganda
-
-
- FCC Flap
- --------
- Those of you on the nets may have noticed a flurry of postings
- about a proposed Federal Communications Commission (FCC) surcharge
- on modem users. Just to get this out in the open right away, this
- rumor is FALSE! Phew, now that we've cleared the air and everyone
- can stop being irate at the FCC, let's look at this in a little
- more detail.
-
- I can't say that this posting is specifically a hoax, because that
- implies willful maliciousness on the part of an individual. That
- very well may not be true. It is true that such a proposal came
- before the FCC a number of years (ten or so?) ago and was
- defeated, in part due to the outpouring of sentiment from modem
- users. The problem is that such information on the nets never
- disappears, it just gets hidden for a while. Eventually someone
- who is new to the nets finds the information, say the posting on
- the original case, and assumes that it's true, failing to check
- the dates involved and the current FCC docket. At that point, our
- well-meaning neophyte immediately forwards the seemingly urgent
- posting to everyone he or she knows, some of whom may know that
- this is a moot-point; others of whom will react with equal horror.
- This continues ad netfinitum until there are enough postings
- saying "Stop! It's a hoax!" that everyone cools down for a year or
- two. Then some well-meaning net neophyte finds an archived posting
- and...
-
- On the face of it, this problem only applies to people in the U.S.
- I don't know much about modem surcharges in other countries,
- although I gather they are not unheard of. Nonetheless, this
- incident does have several lessons for users of the global
- networks no matter where you may be located - after all, you never
- know which warning will apply to you and which won't.
-
- The FCC surcharge posting appeared first (to my eyes) on a local
- user group BBS, forwarded by a well-meaning someone with net
- access at Microsoft. The user group members were horrified, and
- several of them immediately whipped off letters of complaint to
- the FCC, and even posted form letters people could print out to
- send to the FCC. This happened within only a few days, and by the
- time I saw these messages and posted a note of caution, expressing
- my doubt that the proposal was real, a bunch of people had already
- complained to the FCC. Luckily, several people acted equally as
- quickly on my note, and after checking with FCC, posted
- retractions and asked others to refrain from bothering the FCC
- further. At first, I thought this reaction might be limited to the
- BBS world, but then I received several copies of the posting from
- friends who haven't been on the nets long enough to have seen it
- the first few times around.
-
- There are a number of risks here. First, it's trivial to spread a
- false warning around the globe in a matter of days so it's likely
- that this sort of thing will happen again. In this situation, the
- thing to do is to check the source as carefully as you can before
- basing any serious action on that warning. Second is the case of
- The Net That Cried Wolf. Distributing warnings via the nets is an
- extremely powerful and useful method of informing lots of people
- quickly, but we cannot abuse that power or else everyone will
- ignore net warnings because they're so common. Third, although
- this particular proposal is false, you may remember an editorial I
- wrote some time ago about how the Department of Justice wanted to
- require telephone companies to make it easy to tap phone systems.
- That incident proves that we cannot necessarily trust the
- government to leave us alone, happily telecommunicating away. This
- is an issue because if modem users periodically bombard the FCC
- with complaints about this non-existent surcharge proposal, the
- FCC is less likely to take us seriously as a group in the future
- when our combined clout might become necessary.
-
- So the moral of the story is not so much "Look before you leap,"
- but "Think before you post." We'll all be better off for it.
-
- Unlike the false posting that merely gives some general addresses
- to write to but no specific information about the fictitious
- proposal, the memo from the FCC we've seen does have specific
- information. If you wish to verify for yourself that this
- surcharge proposal is indeed a hoax, call the number below.
-
- Federal Communications Commission
- Common Carrier Bureau
- Enforcement Division
- Informal Complaints and Public Inquiries Branch Suite 6202
- Washington, D.C. 20554
- 202/632-7553
-
-
- Reviews/18-May-92
- -----------------
-
- * MacWEEK
- Accountant, Inc. 3.0 -- pg. 39
- PowerPlay for the Macintosh -- pg. 39
- Fontographer 3.5 -- pg. 42
- Print Central -- pg. 42
- WindoWatch -- pg. 44
-
- * Macworld
- Accelerators -- pg. 146
- (too many to list)
- Alternative Input Devices -- pg. 154
- (too many to list)
- Integrated Programs -- pg. 160
- BeagleWorks
- ClarisWorks
- Desk
- GreatWorks
- HandiWorks
- Microsoft Works
- Ethernet Hubs -- pg. 166
- (too many to list)
- 3-D Rendering Software -- pg. 176
- (too many to list)
- Macintosh 16" Color Display -- pg. 184
- Showplace 1.1 -- pg. 185
- GOfer 2.0 -- pg. 188
- ON Location 2.0.1 -- pg. 188
- MouseMan -- pg. 188
- TrackMan -- pg. 188
- A3 Mouse -- pg. 188
- Muse 1.0 -- pg. 190
- Educational Games -- pg. 192
- Number Munchers 1.1
- Super Munchers 1.0
- Word Munchers 1.0
- Wordscan 1.0 and Wordscan Plus 1.0 -- pg. 194
- Dycam Model 1 -- pg. 197
- Canon RC250 -- pg. 197
- ArchiCAD 4.02 -- pg. 199
- Bose RoomMate -- pg. 201
- MacSpeaker -- pg. 201
- Nobunaga's Ambition -- pg. 202
- Aldus FreeHand 3.1 -- pg. 202
- Prograph 2.5 -- pg. 204
- StudyWare for the SAT 3.7N -- pg. 204
- SICOS Cordless Rechargeable Mouse -- pg. 206
- SICOS Cordless Trackball -- pg. 206
- PageBrush Professional -- pg. 206
- Minitab 8.2 -- pg. 207
- Pro-Cite 2.0 -- pg. 207
- FolderBolt 1.02 -- pg. 208
- Patton Strikes Back: The Battle of the Bulge -- pg. 208
- Wordtris 1.0 -- pg. 210
- Expert Color Paint 1.0 -- pg. 210
- Animation Clips -- pg. 213
- Notify 1.0 -- pg. 213
- WordPerfect for the Macintosh 2.1 -- pg. 215
- PowerPort/V.32 -- pg. 215
- LightningScan Pro 256 -- pg. 224
- RateFinder 1.5 -- pg. 224
- ComStation 2 and ComStation 4 -- pg. 225
- Citadel with Shredder -- pg. 225
- The Complete Annotated Alice -- pg. 226
- NetWorks 1.0.1 -- pg. 226
- Creepy Castle -- pg. 227
- Aspects 1.01 -- pg. 227
-
- References:
- MacWEEK -- 11-May-92, Vol. 6, #19
- Macworld -- Jun-92
-
-
- ..
-
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