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- TidBITS#128/15-Jun-92
- =====================
-
- This is an issue of the small and the large. First come short
- notes about Super Boomerang, pop-up menus, and three of the most
- popular word processors, Word, Nisus, and WriteNow. Then comes
- the meat of the issue with a preview article on FileMaker Pro
- 2.0 for the Mac and Windows, some in-depth analysis of Apple's
- Newton announcements, and a look at works programs by Matthew
- Wall that leads into a special issue on ClarisWorks later this
- week.
-
- 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 information send email to info@tidbits.com or ace@tidbits.com
- CIS: 72511,306 -- AppleLink: ace@tidbits.com@internet#
- AOL: Adam Engst -- Delphi: Adam_Engst -- BIX: TidBITS
- TidBITS -- 9301 Avondale Rd. NE Q1096 -- Redmond, WA 98052 USA
- -----------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Topics:
- MailBITS/15-Jun-92
- Menu Usage
- Word Processing Notes
- FileMaker Pro 2.0
- Apple Newtons II
- The Works Concept
- Reviews/15-Jun-92
-
- [Archived as /info-mac/digest/tb/tidbits-128.etx; 29K]
-
-
- MailBITS/15-Jun-92
- ------------------
- Early apologies if you see this a little late - we've been married
- exactly one year now and the champagne might get in the way of
- uploading this issue everywhere. Time flies when you're having
- fun.
-
-
- QuicKeys ElectroOops
- I completely forgot to mention in TidBITS#127 what CE Software
- included in the QuicKeys upgrade, and I can't expect everyone to
- remember TidBITS#123, which talked about what would be in the
- upgrade. My apologies! It's too late for the upgrade now, but
- still, sorry about that.
-
-
- Super Boomerang Tip
- Alberto Ricci writes, "Wow - here is an incredibly useful feature
- that Hiroaki Yamamoto put in Super Boomerang. If you are using any
- application, and you have the Open or Save standard file dialog in
- front, and you've got Super Boomerang installed, clicking on a
- window that belongs to the Finder (one of the windows in the
- background - just click a part of it if it's partially covered by
- other windows) will bring you to that level of the hierarchy in
- the standard file dialog. Click, click, click, and you'll be
- jumping from one place to another of your mounted volumes."
-
- Information from:
- Alberto Ricci -- FRICCI@polito.it
-
-
- New Apple Campaign
- We've heard from the estimable Pythaeus that Apple has begun a
- completely new advertising campaign that may address some of the
- complaints Mac users have had with Apple's advertising. The new
- campaign will go head-to-head with Windows, much like Sculley's
- presentation at Macworld SF when he had an assistant try to make a
- PC-clone into a multimedia machine. Some ads might run a bit like
- this...
-
- All I really wanted to do was simplify my job. So I bought
- Windows. I added extra RAM. I replaced my video card and
- monitor. I installed a mouse. I bought a half-dozen new
- programs, configured the system, set the DIP switches on the
- printer, and as I sit here watching my spreadsheet crawl on
- my PC, I'm thinking to myself "THIS IS MAKING IT EASIER?"
-
-
- Menu Usage
- ----------
- by Fred Condo -- CONDOF@CGSVAX.CLAREMONT.EDU
-
- In Howard Hansen's EXCELlent review of Excel 4 in TidBITS#127, he
- makes the following comment about the pop-up menus feature:
-
- >When you hold down the command and option keys and click the
- >mouse, Excel brings up a pop-up shortcut menu right next to
- >your mouse pointer. Select a range of cells, command-option
- >click, and Excel allows you to instantly cut, copy, paste,
- >clear, delete, or insert, as well as change number, alignment,
- >font, border, or patterns formatting. This saves the trouble
- >of mousing all the way up to the menu bar, finding the right
- >option and choosing it. (I find our ever-increasing computer
- >laziness quite wonderful!)
-
- Unfortunately, pop-up menus are inherently more difficult and
- slower to use than are pull-down menus. This is due to Fitts's
- (1954) Law, which governs hand and arm movements. The application
- of Fitts's Law is discussed by former Apple interface guru Bruce
- Tognazzini (1990, May) and by Walker, et al. (in press). Fitts's
- Law essentially states that more precise manual motions must
- proceed more slowly than coarse movements.
-
- The reason for this is that you can mouse off the top edge of a
- pop-up menu, but you cannot mouse off the top of the menu bar.
- This "impermeability," as Walker, et al. call it, makes the menu
- bar essentially an infinitely tall target. The user can therefore
- program a very coarse, quick movement for the mouse hand to access
- the menu bar.
-
- One heuristic that might improve pop-up menus is to cause the most
- recently used command to be the one that comes up under the mouse
- pointer. However, unless Excel 4's menu structure is so complex
- that it requires a great deal of cogitation to recall the
- locations of the common commands that pop up, the drawbacks of
- pop-up menus will very likely overwhelm the benefits. Moreover, by
- the time a user of Mac Excel 4 remembers to and does press the
- command and option keys, she or he could likely have moused up to
- the menu bar and chosen the appropriate command.
-
- Now, it is altogether possible that the pop-up menus in Excel 4 do
- make it quicker and easier to use, but it is not for the reason
- Mr. Hansen proposes.
-
-
- References:
- Fitts, P. M. (1954). The information capacity of the human motor
- system in controlling amplitude of movement. Journal of
- Experimental Psychology, 47, 381-391.
-
- Tognazzini, B. (1990, May). Pull down menus win hands down.
- Appledirect, pp. 25-27.
-
- Walker, N., Smelcer, J. B., & Nilsen, E. (in press). Optimizing
- speed and accuracy of menu selection. International Journal of
- Man-Machine Studies.
-
-
- Word Processing Notes
- ---------------------
- Much has happened recently in the word processing world, so much
- in fact, that it's starting to become hard to track. For those of
- you who haven't been watching as closely as we have (we're word
- processor junkies, and word processing is probably the most common
- task for which people use computers), here's the news, labeled for
- your convenience by weasels (apologies to Dave Barry).
-
-
- New PIMs for Word
- Very good news: Word 5.0's modularity has started to pay off, and
- Microsoft has made new Grammar and Spelling plug-in modules (PIMs
- - and you thought PIM stood for personal information manager). The
- grammar checker had a nasty habit of crashing when running under
- System 7 on a 68000-based Mac, and the Spelling PIM slowed to an
- incredible crawl if you added more than a few hundred words to a
- custom dictionary. Both of those bugs are now fixed, and the
- Spelling PIM has been generally improved. You can get the new PIMs
- by calling Microsoft tech support at the number below and being
- nice. Or, if you wait a few weeks, Microsoft may make the PIMs
- available on the online services.
-
- Microsoft Tech Support -- 206/635-7200
- Microsoft Customer Service -- 800/426-9400
-
- Information from:
- Laurel Lammers, Microsoft Corporation
-
-
- WordBASIC cancelled
- Bad news: All is not completely happy in Microsoft-land, and
- Microsoft recently announced that they will not ship the WordBASIC
- plug-in module for Word 5.0. Period. MacWEEK quoted Microsoft Word
- product manager Leslie Koch as saying that WordBASIC will have to
- wait until the introduction of Word 6.0 in mid-1993. This means
- that all of you who had hoped to automate tasks within Word 5.0
- will have to rely on QuicKeys or nothing at all. The Word 6.0
- release will reportedly share most of its code with the Windows
- version of Word, much as Excel on the Mac and Windows share 80% of
- the core code. This means that the Mac version will be completely
- rewritten, which will hopefully take care of some of the lingering
- problems with figure, footnote, and table numbering discussed on
- the nets recently.
-
- Information from:
- Michael A. McGuire -- mcguire@utkvx.utk.edu
-
- Related articles:
- MacWEEK -- 08-Jun-92, Vol. 6, #22, pg. 4
-
-
- WriteNow 3.0 ships
- Good news: T/Maker has shipped version 3.0 of their small, fast
- word processor, WriteNow. We haven't had much time to seriously
- evaluate it yet, but a review is on its way. In short, WriteNow
- 3.0 is small (287K program size, and although it prefers 490K of
- RAM, it can use as little as 325K), fast, and has a really snazzy
- implementation of styles, including both character and paragraph
- styles, a domain previously inhabited only by Nisus among
- Macintosh word processors.
-
- T/Maker -- 415/962-0195
-
-
- Paragon Concepts changes name
- Marketing news: As far as we can tell, this has nothing to do with
- their products, but Paragon Concepts, makers of Nisus, Nisus
- Compact, QUED/M, and several other products, recently changed its
- name to match its flagship product, much as SSI renamed itself to
- WordPerfect Corporation some years ago. From now on, Paragon will
- be known as Nisus Software. Making a clean sweep, the company has
- moved to 107 S. Cedros Avenue, Solana Beach, CA 92075.
-
- Nisus Software -- 619/481-1477
-
-
- Nisus XS slips
- Bad news: Jim Bates of Nisus Software Tech Support reported on
- CompuServe that Nisus XS, the module to provide System 7-savvy
- features to Nisus, has been postponed again. Jim says that Nisus
- Software anticipates releasing Nisus XS at the end of the year.
- Orders are no longer being taken for XS, but if Nisus Software is
- standing behind loyal customers who have already ordered the
- update. If you ordered Nisus XS before 09-Jun-92, you will receive
- the update for free when it does ship, and your credit card will
- not be charged. If you have already paid for Nisus XS or had your
- credit card charged because the Nisus XS purchase was combined
- with another product, your money will be refunded and you will
- receive XS for free when it ships.
-
- I must say that I am extremely disappointed to hear that the
- release date has slipped again, but I hope that Nisus Software
- uses the extra time to come up with a truly amazing product. As
- powerful as it is, Nisus has perhaps even more potential than
- power, and for those of you who still wonder how it compares to
- Word, keep an eye out for a _short_ comparison from Matt Neuburg,
- author of our definitive Nisus review in TidBITS#116-#118.
-
- Information from:
- Jim Bates, Nisus Software -- 75300.1243@compuserve.come
-
-
- FileMaker Pro 2.0
- -----------------
- Claris has given notice that it intends to pull no punches in the
- Windows market. At PC Expo in a few weeks, Claris will show a
- pre-release version of FileMaker Pro 2.0 for Windows, along with
- its almost identical twin for the Mac. The marketing elves have
- been working long and hard on this release, and the press
- materials are extensive and useful, hopefully foreshadowing the
- program itself. Claris's emphasis on the Windows version of
- FileMaker Pro 2.0 is especially interesting given Apple's
- forthcoming ad campaign against Windows - perhaps this shows that
- Claris is not completely under Apple's control.
-
- But enough of the marketing nonsense - you want to read about the
- programs. Perhaps the most interesting thing is that the two
- versions of FileMaker Pro are almost identical, sharing 85% of the
- core code,. If you've used FileMaker Pro on a Mac, you'll be able
- to use it under Windows, and you'll even be able to transfer files
- directly, without any sort of conversion. From the promotional
- pictures that Claris distributed, the two versions can create
- databases which even look almost identical save for the Windows-
- specific interface elements like the ugly underlining of the Alt
- key character and the short filename in the title bar. One of
- FileMaker Pro 2.0's main selling points on the Windows side is the
- interface since Claris is known for producing well thought-out
- interfaces that bring the power of the programs to the surface.
-
- Other useful features that may not be common in Windows databases
- include ScriptMaker, which allows you to create scripts by
- selecting items from menus and clicking on buttons, extensive
- graphic tools for designing layouts, sophisticated text handling
- that makes FileMaker Pro into an excellent platform for database
- publishing, and instant updating of multi-user databases, even
- over mixed platform networks. There's also automatic record
- locking and release for ensuring data integrity, and FileMaker Pro
- 2.0 still has its multi-user file server technology, so you don't
- have to have a file server to take advantage of the network
- capabilities.
-
- This isn't to imply that the versions are entirely equal. The
- Windows version uses Dynamic Link Libraries to support Novell
- NetWare and PhoneNet Talk networks, and it supports TrueType,
- Bitstream Facelift, and Adobe Type Manager fonts. Windows-based
- help is included, and for those of you with extra PC sound
- hardware, you can even add sound to your databases. QuickTime is
- still limited to the Mac version, although that will change when
- Apple ships QuickTime for Windows. The Mac version also supports
- Apple Events in scripting, so FileMaker Pro 2.0 can talk to other
- Apple Event-aware programs like HyperCard, Resolve, QuicKeys, and
- Frontier. Claris included other System 7 features, so much so that
- Claris claims it is "System 7 omniscient," including support for
- the Data Access Manager, Balloon Help, and TrueType, along with
- the Apple Event support mentioned above. Finally, you will be able
- to reorder layouts, reserialize records, and use wildcards in
- searches, and for those of you who do database publishing,
- FileMaker Pro 2.0 has more complete style control for text.
-
- Without having seen a pre-release copy of the program, it
- certainly sounds like Claris has a winner with the dual-platform
- FileMaker Pro 2.0. We'll only know in the fall when it ships ($399
- list, $89 upgrades for existing owners). Interestingly, the press
- information also implies that Claris wants to release another
- Windows product soon, and high on the list is MacDraw Pro,
- although my sources have said that ClarisWorks might be even more
- likely.
-
- Claris -- 408/727-8227 -- 800/544-8554
-
- Information from:
- Claris propaganda
-
-
- Apple Newtons II
- ----------------
- Last week I talked briefly about what the Newton technology
- entails, setting myself up for this week's analysis. If you
- haven't seen last week's issue, I recommend you take a look.
-
- Underneath all of Apple's hurrah over Newton being a Personal
- Digital Assistant (PDA), I see Apple attempting a paradigm shift.
- This paradigm shift may not be in the way people use computers but
- in the way people think about computers. It may not equal being
- clunked on the head by an errant fruit, but it's still important.
- And, to quote Foghorn Leghorn, that famous cartoon chicken, "Clunk
- enough people on the head and we'll have a nation of lunkheads."
- Hmmm...
-
- Newton fits into Apple's class of Personal Digital Assistants, but
- most, if not all, of the technologies in Newton make up most, if
- not all, of what you would need for a full operating system.
- Apple's marketing folks may not want this to get out, but a Newton
- device is a computer that can do computer-like tasks given
- appropriate software. The question is, then, why has Apple
- sidestepped the terminology?
-
- The term "computer" comes loaded with linguistic baggage linking
- it with numbers. After all, the first computers were machines that
- merely did basic math quickly. Computers have changed, and despite
- the ubiquitous spreadsheet, the vast majority of the time you use
- a computer you do not directly work with numbers. When you move
- the mouse, type on the keyboard, or look at a graphical display on
- the screen, you are not directly manipulating numbers, and in
- fact, one of the reasons for the Mac's popularity is that it
- removes even more of the explicit numerology from using the
- computer. You can drop into EDLIN under DOS and play with
- hexadecimal, but a Mac in its default mode will try its hardest to
- avoid spewing indecipherable numbers at you.
-
- Despite this move away from numbers, the Mac is a computer, and no
- one pretends otherwise. Here's the trick. Apple wants all the
- people who have avoided a computer in the past to buy a Newton
- device, because the Newton is _not_ a computer. It's a Personal
- Digital Assistant, and the fact that it doesn't do everything
- (which is often expected of computers) is fine - you wouldn't
- expect a human assistant to do everything for you either, although
- that person might help out a great deal in keeping track of your
- addresses, your schedule, and so on.
-
- I've heard that one way to visualize how Apple intends the PDAs to
- complement today's computers is via a time-based graph. Along the
- Y-axis is the ability to perform a task well, while the X-axis is
- a time line for a project from start to finish. Computers,
- including the Mac, generally start out low at the beginning of a
- project and become more useful as the task progresses. It's not
- your imagination - it is hard to get started with brainstorming
- and conceptualization on a computer. That's where the PDAs come
- in. They start off high at the beginning of the project, and move
- down since their capabilities after the initial conceptualization
- are limited. Presumably, when the lines on the graph cross, it
- would be a good time to move work from the PDA to a computer,
- where it will be easier to solve the now-established problems. The
- power of Newton devices will certainly increase as time goes on,
- but with the addition of Newton technology in our Macs, the
- utility of computers at the beginning of projects will also
- increase.
-
- Of course, this graph applies primarily to the so-called "early
- adopters" who will buy something at almost any price because they
- know they need it, and that set of people largely overlaps with
- the set of current Mac owners. Hence the additional emphasis on
- wireless communications and all that, which is in reality just
- magic that many people won't care about, assuming, again, that the
- primary audience will be non-computer users who will get started
- on Newton and then may even decide to try a computer.
-
- Looking at that set of non-computer users, Apple's bean counters
- started drooling. There are millions of personal computers in use
- right now, but there are many times more people who have never
- touched one, and probably will avoid it as long as possible. I'm
- sure you all know people who have less than no interest in and may
- even be hostile toward computers. And then there are people who
- might like computers and may even be using them, but for whom the
- generalized power of the average computer just isn't quite right.
- This is why I've talked a lot about a Newton "device" - Apple
- intends to create many different types of Newtons for different
- specific ("vertical" in the jargon) markets. One example is a
- Newton for architects that would have a large screen that the
- architect could sketch on while talking to clients, the Newton
- cleaning up the sketch all along and saving it for further
- embellishment in a CAD program. Another example involves building
- Newton technology into student desktops so that the students can
- all communicate with one another and the teacher, who would have a
- desktop and a blackboard-sized display on the wall. No more dusty
- hands and spine-shivering chalk squeaks, but just think of the
- note-passing abilities! Actually, the realities of the school
- environment (little money and hard use) would seriously limit the
- efficacy of such a Newton, but it's still a neat idea.
-
- I think there are several other rationales behind not calling the
- Newton devices computers. Despite Apple's acknowledged better
- graphical interface and well-thought out hardware, the majority of
- computer users (PC-compatible users) see Apple and the Macintosh
- as small fry, and quite frankly, many of them are so biased that
- they refuse to even try a Mac because "I'm just not a mouse person
- and it's not a real machine." There's no way Apple could sell a
- little pen-based computer to those people - they can't get past
- their mental blocks about Apple's computers. But a cute little
- Newton device that talks to their PC as well as it talks to
- Macs... that's another story.
-
- Also, by positioning themselves outside of traditional computer
- market, Apple escapes the otherwise-inevitable comparisons with
- GO, IBM, Microsoft, Compaq, etc., and moves into an arena with
- Sharp, Casio, and Sony. I don't wish to imply that these companies
- are easy competition, but just think of Apple's two main
- advantages. First, although Newton is not a computer, Apple is a
- more obvious computer company, so despite the contradiction, that
- fact makes Apple appear stronger in comparison. Second, Sharp has
- licensed the Newton technology, and Sony and other selected
- companies will soon follow. These licensing deals, prominently
- mentioned, put Apple at the top of the heap before they've even
- introduced a product because it says that this Newton stuff is so
- cool that only Apple could have created it and everyone else has
- to license it from Apple. Of course, all this is moot for the time
- being, and we have to wait until the Newton devices show up in
- stores before making any final judgements. Nonetheless, I think
- Apple has done some intelligent positioning that just might pay
- off big.
-
- Information from:
- Pythaeus
- Jeremy Norberg -- tlk@u.washington.edu
-
-
- The Works Concept
- -----------------
- by Matthew Wall -- wall@cc.swarthmore.edu
-
- [This is an introduction to Matthew's full review of ClarisWorks,
- which will be a special issue immediately following this weekly
- issue. Keep an eye out for it! -Adam]
-
- The _works_ program - a single application combining several
- functions - has long been a strange and orphaned beast. The idea
- of a program which seamlessly (and at low-cost) integrates a
- variety of types of data is an appealing one. If perfectly
- executed, the works concept would be the perfect implementation of
- the basic Macintosh philosophy: the computer interface should be
- an easy-to-use and intuitive tool that builds on consistency to
- make the work process simpler.
-
- The basic concept is not unique to the Macintosh or even to
- microcomputers. The lack of easy integration of both data and
- tools - standards is another word - might be considered the
- fundamental problem of computing technology since its inception.
- Differing file formats and types of data have been a consistent
- bugaboo for end users, as have the frustrations of learning
- different tools and interfaces for performing the same tasks
- across different applications. One need only look at the otherwise
- inexplicable continuing popularity of DEC's All-in-One or any set
- of Microsoft products as evidence that any solution promising
- integration is preferable to none in some environments. In fact,
- one of the most popular programs in history was AppleWorks on the
- Apple II, which some estimate to have sold over four million
- copies since 1984.
-
- The works concept is entering its third era on the Macintosh. The
- first era was completely defined by Microsoft Works, the first,
- and until recently, the only integrated product. Considering the
- paucity of Mac products on the market at the time, Microsoft Works
- came as a great revelation. In the pre-MultiFinder days, people
- wishing to work on word processing and a spreadsheet at the same
- time could use Works. Works quickly grabbed a huge market share,
- to the point where even in 1992 Macworld lists Works as the number
- four bestselling Mac application (behind Word, Microsoft Office,
- and Excel) [according to Macworld Jan-92 p. 286. Interestingly
- enough, Works fell to sixth in May and eleventh in July.]. But in
- typical fashion, Microsoft sat on its big fat market share and on
- further Works development for five years. A set of tools once
- revolutionary now seem childishly simplistic. Only the inherent
- inertia and resistance to change among the typical computer user
- has kept Microsoft Works alive at all.
-
- MultiFinder ushered in the second era of works on the Mac. With
- the maturation of MultiFinder in System 6 and the coinciding drop
- in memory prices, buying more than one application and running
- them simultaneously became practical. Users had access to a wider
- variety of choices for individual "modules" under MultiFinder, and
- software publishers began to allow formatted exports and imports
- to file formats of their competitors. (In my opinion, APDA's push
- of XTND and easy file exchange is the single most important
- development for Mac applications in the era between MultiFinder
- and System 7.) Microsoft Works became far less attractive to
- people needing a full featured spreadsheet or word processor but
- having little or no need for one of the other modules.
-
- We're now in the midst of a works renaissance of sorts, with the
- release of three new works programs - ClarisWorks, BeagleWorks,
- and GreatWorks, and the announcement of the development of
- Microsoft Works II. I'm not sure how four companies suddenly
- decided that the time was ripe to develop new generations of works
- programs, but I suggest some possible reasons:
-
- 1. There's no real reason for a Works program, but software
- developers couldn't ignore Microsoft's continuing profits from
- Microsoft Works.
-
- 2. With the migration of major word processing, spreadsheet, and
- database programs to high-memory, large disk-space, and zippy-
- processor Macintoshes (cf. Word 5.0, Excel 4.0, FileMaker Pro, et
- al.) a new market has emerged for the still-lively installed base
- of low-end Macs.
-
- 3. The introduction of the already immensely popular PowerBook
- line has created a new need for a low-memory, small disk-space
- "notetaking" integrated application.
-
- 4. The idea of integrating data and tools under one application is
- basically a good one and is receiving new life on its own merit.
-
- The commercial motivations for developing the new works products
- are probably some combination of the above factors, and your
- reason for buying a works program likely corresponds closely to
- one of the following:
-
- 1. You've been using Microsoft Works and are dying for something
- better.
-
- 2. You need to keep up with how the high-end users use the Mac,
- but you're stuck with a low-end computer.
-
- 3. You have a PowerBook and need to run more application types
- than you have disk space or memory.
-
- 4. You like the idea of a single, low-cost, easy-to-use
- application and you don't need most of the fancy features of
- high-end programs.
-
-
- The Future of Integration
- The constraints of the works concept in its current incarnation -
- low cost, low memory requirements, and low disk space requirements
- - demand that the individual modules of a works program represent
- "low-end" applications. This shouldn't necessarily be so, but most
- developers seem to be relying on System 7's Publish & Subscribe
- and Apple Events technologies as the future of application
- integration. Indeed, the Communications Toolbox is an early model
- of the operating system providing a mix-and-match supporting
- framework for users supplying their own customized tools. The
- future of application software will probably be modular, much as
- the future of programming itself is object-oriented. In the
- meantime, the new generation of works program deserves some
- consideration if you find yourself in one of the situations
- described above.
-
-
- Reviews/15-Jun-92
- -----------------
-
- * MacWEEK
- Color Flatbed Scanners -- pg. 64
- DPI Art-Getter
- HP ScanJet IIc
- HSD Scan-X Color
- Microtek ScanMaker 600ZS
- Mirror 600 Color Scanner
- Mustek MFS-6000CS
- Sharp JX-320
- UMAX UC630
- UMAX UC1200
- XRS 6c OmniMedia
- FourMat Learning Processor 2.0 -- pg. 74
- ExpertWriter 1.0 -- pg. 74
- QuickLetter 2.0 -- pg. 74
-
- References:
- MacWEEK -- 08-Jun-92, Vol. 6, #22
-
-
- ..
-
- This text is wrapped as a setext. For more information send email
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