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- TidBITS#130/22-Jun-92
- =====================
-
- Hot news arrives in the form of the PowerBook 145 and Salient's
- acquisition. Mike O'Connor contributes some little-known tips
- for working with QuickTime movie players, and for you network
- junkies we have a detailed look at the Internet, the first in a
- series of articles on network connections. Finally, for those
- of you using PowerBooks, check out our review of Nisus
- Software's smaller word processor, Nisus Compact.
-
- 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/22-Jun-92
- QuickTime Tips
- Salient Acquired!
- Gateways 1: Internet
- PowerBook 145
- Nisus Compact
- Reviews/22-Jun-92
-
- [Archived as /info-mac/digest/tb/tidbits-130.etx; 29K]
-
-
- MailBITS/22-Jun-92
- ------------------
- Nigel Stanger writes about Apple's choice of the name Newton:
- "It's quite obvious when you think about it. What was Apple
- Computer's first logo? Newton sitting under the apple tree. The
- original company slogan also mentioned Newton. Unfortunately I
- can't remember it, and I left the book [West of Eden] at home. It
- was profound, anyway. Whether this is actually the reason they
- chose "Newton" is anyone's guess, but I wouldn't be surprised if
- factored into the decision."
-
- Information from:
- Nigel Stanger -- stanger@otago.ac.nz
-
-
- QuickTime Tips
- --------------
- Mike O'Connor, author of Navigator and programmer extraordinaire,
- passes along some QuickTime tips of interest.
-
- Here is a user interface command I'll bet _nobody_ knows. In any
- QuickTime movie window that uses the standard movie controller you
- can hold down the Control key and click in one of the single step
- buttons at the right end of the controller. A tiny slider bar
- appears which you can then drag to play the movie at variable
- speed forward or backward!
-
- Here is some other control stuff that works in standard QuickTime
- movie windows.
-
- Double-click on image = play
- Single-click on image = pause
- Shift-double-click on image = play backward
- Left, Right arrows = single step
- Up, Down arrows = volume
- Space, Return = toggle play/pause
- Option-click on speaker icon = toggle sound mute
- Shift-drag the play bar = select section of movie
-
- Finally, a good, little-known way to select a section of a movie
- is to first position yourself at the start of the selection. Hold
- down the Shift key, and type Space or Return. The movie starts
- playing, selecting the played portion as it goes. When you release
- the Shift key, it stops playing and the played portion is
- selected.
-
- Wild, wacky stuff! -Mike
-
- Information from:
- Mike O'Connor -- 76004.1447@compuserve.com
-
-
- Salient Acquired!
- -----------------
- Talk about frustration. I was watching America Online's FlashMail
- download my mail earlier this week, and I'd received a couple of
- files that were going to take 20 minutes to download. But, just
- under the file transfer dialog box, I could see a mailfile from
- Salient with the tantalizing title "Salient Acquired!!!" Tonya and
- I spent the next 20 minutes speculating on the who and why of the
- deal, and we were still surprised when we finally read the letter.
-
- It turns out that Salient wanted to expand their services overseas
- (hurrah!) and didn't have the capital or the organization to do
- that. I also wouldn't be surprised if they were vaguely looking at
- other platforms for their patented compression technology, but
- that's just a supposition. In any case, and this seems to have
- happened fairly quickly, Fifth Generation Systems expressed an
- interest in purchasing Salient, and last weekend, the deal was
- done. Neither company has commented on the price, but I suspect
- that Salient was worth a good deal.
-
- Salient will probably retain its name, and will stay at its
- offices in California rather than move to Louisiana. Primarily
- though, they will have the financial backing of Fifth Generation,
- which will allow them to expand beyond what they can do now.
- Interestingly, Fifth Generation doesn't have a high profile in the
- Macintosh market despite publishing Suitcase, SuperLaserSpool,
- FastBack+, and various other utilities. Adding the popular
- AutoDoubler and DiskDoubler to their line will help enhance Fifth
- Generation's image in the eyes of Mac users, something which won't
- hurt now that Fifth Generation is gearing up to compete directly
- with Symantec's Norton Utilities and Central Point's MacTools with
- the new Public Utilities package that we mentioned briefly in
- TidBITS#123.
-
- Information from:
- Terry Morse, Salient -- 76174.2440@compuserve.com
-
-
- Gateways 1: Internet
- --------------------
- The time has come. You've probably noticed that I usually write
- out addresses in the so-called Internet format. For example, when
- I give a CompuServe address, I replace the usual comma with a
- period and append "@compuserve.com" to the end. Look above at
- Terry Morse's CompuServe address for an example.
-
- I settled on that method some time ago for a good reason. TidBITS
- is very popular on the commercial services, but they are nowhere
- near as large as the worldwide Internet. Our Internet mailing list
- holds around 2500 people, and an estimated 42,000 people read the
- Usenet group comp.sys.mac.digest, where all the issues are
- distributed as well. Thus, it makes sense to bias the address
- styles to the majority of readers. In addition, I figured that
- CompuServe readers would realize how to reverse-engineer the
- address format.
-
- The networks are all becoming more interconnected, a move that I
- highly applaud. The latest addition to the Internet gateways came
- from America Online, which announced its gateway several weeks
- ago. GEnie has long promised to add an Internet gateway, and I
- even heard rumors about the paranoid censors at Prodigy thinking
- about adding some sort of connection to the rest of the world. If
- only they'd link to reality in the process.
-
- In this series of articles I'm going to take you to many of the
- services that carry TidBITS and talk about how these services
- connect to each other. These articles are not meant to be the
- ultimate in gateway information because this information changes
- frequently, and quite frankly, I'm sure that there's a ton of
- stuff I haven't seen yet. I also believe strongly in
- experimentation, so I haven't provided moron-proof instructions
- here. Consider it an exercise in network navigation. One thing I
- should note right off. AppleLink and CompuServe both charge for
- mail sent to and from the Internet, something worth checking into
- before using those gateways heavily. I'll say more about the
- charges in later articles.
-
-
- Internet mailing list
- As I said above, the best places to find TidBITS on the Internet
- are via our mailing list and the Usenet newsgroup
- comp.sys.mac.digest. To subscribe to our mailing list, send email
- to:
-
- LISTSERV@RICEVM1.RICE.EDU
-
- with this line in the body of the mailfile:
-
- SUBSCRIBE TIDBITS your full name
-
- You will be automatically added to the group if the LISTSERV can
- return mail to you. Keep the acknowledgment letter you receive
- confirming subscription because it tells you how to leave the list
- if you're going away for the summer. All you have to do is send
- the command SIGNOFF TIDBITS to the same LISTSERV address. Signing
- off and then subscribing again is a good way to switch addresses
- if you start using another machine.
-
-
- Usenet
- I can't tell you specifically how to find the Usenet group
- comp.sys.mac.digest because every machine is set up differently
- and there's no telling if yours even carries the Usenet groups. If
- you want to check, try typing "rn comp.sys.mac.digest" at the
- command line (most of these sort of machines have command lines).
- For help, type the letter h,, or, before you get into the program,
- type "man rn" for more general help. The best resource is a friend
- who knows - please don't ask me for any more help with your
- specific setup since I won't be able to help.
-
-
- FTP Sites
- TidBITS is stored on many FTP (File Transfer Protocol) sites
- around the world. I've compiled a short list from searching with
- Archie, which I'll talk more about in a minute. In each case, you
- can reach the site in question by typing "FTP <hostname>", where
- <hostname> is the name of the machine or its associated IP
- (Internet Protocol) number. Many people use "FTP sumex-
- aim.stanford.edu" but you should pick the site closest to you to
- cut down on network traffic. Check in the online help or with your
- local gurus for instructions on how to further use FTP.
-
- Host akiu.gw.tohoku.ac.jp (130.34.8.9) [Good for Japan]
- Location: /pub/mac/doc/tidbits
-
- Host wuarchive.wustl.edu (128.252.135.4) [A big site]
- Location: /mirrors/info-mac/digest/tb
-
- Host uhunix2.uhcc.hawaii.edu (128.171.44.7)
- Location: /mirrors/info-mac/digest/tb
-
- Host sumex-aim.stanford.edu (36.44.0.6) [The main site]
- Location: /info-mac/digest/tb
-
- Host sics.se (192.16.123.90) [Good for people in Europe]
- Location: /pub/info-mac/digest/tb
-
- Host plaza.aarnet.edu.au (139.130.4.6) [Good from Australia]
- Location: /micros/mac/info-mac/digest/tb
-
-
- Mailservers
- Those of you on the other side of the gateways were just
- frustrated by the above paragraphs because you can't read Usenet
- and you can't FTP files. However, there are some sites that will
- deliver files to you via email as well. This is not foolproof
- because almost every gateway has a limit on file size.
- CompuServe's limit is about 50K; MCI Mail goes up to about 70K;
- AppleLink is a strict 30K, which includes the headers; and America
- Online will truncate incoming files (destroying them if they are
- programs) at 27K. Incidentally, you can only request programs that
- have been encoded in the Binhex 4.0 format (look for a .hqx
- filename extension) because it changes binary files to text files.
- StuffIt Deluxe Lite and Compact Pro both include deBinhexing
- functions. Despite these quirks, mailservers (of which our
- fileserver is one) can be very useful. If you send email to
- <fileserver@tidbits.com> with the single word "locations" (no
- quotes) in the Subject: line, you'll receive a file listing known
- locations of TidBITS, which will also tell you about a few
- mailservers. For simplicity's sake, I will only mention the one
- run at Rice University at the moment. To find out what files are
- available and to request a file, send email to:
-
- LISTSERV@RICEVM1.RICE.EDU
-
- with lines like this in the body of the mailfile.
-
- $MAC DIR
- $MAC GET tidbits-130.etx
-
- Do be aware of the file size limits on the gateways because it's
- simply rude to overwhelm them and these services will only exist
- as long as they aren't abused. In addition, sites like the
- LISTSERV at Rice often have internal limits of how much you can
- request per day. Rice sets that limit at 256K of files, although
- it will still deliver a single file per day if it is over that
- size.
-
-
- Network Guide
- I strongly recommend that everyone interested in gateways request
- a very specific file from a different LISTSERV. This is the best
- list of all the available gateways and how to address mail from
- one to another. Anyone who uses the Internet heavily should read
- this file. At about 23K, it should fit through all gateways. To
- get the Network Guide, send email to:
-
- LISTSERV@UNMVM.BITNET
-
- with this line in the body of the mailfile
-
- GET NETWORK GUIDE
-
-
- Archie
- Archie is a truly cool program that makes searching the world's
- FTP sites for a specific file far easier than doing so by hand.
- Archie has a database of a large number of FTP sites and can
- search that database on a keyword, returning the name of the file
- and its location. Those of you on the Internet can telnet to an
- Archie machine and search interactively, and those not directly on
- the Internet can send email searches to Archie machines and
- receive the results back via email. I'll warn you though, doing an
- Archie search on "tidbits" will create a file larger than most
- gateways can handle because it finds every instance of the word at
- every machine in the database. I'm only going to give one Archie
- machine address here because of space reasons, but there are at
- least nine all told. The entire list is in the Special Internet
- Services list, which I'll talk about in a bit.
-
- If you're on the Internet, you can "telnet archie.rutgers.edu" and
- login in as "archie", at which point you'll get basic directions
- and pointers to other Archie machines. A simple search would
- entail typing "prog <keyword>" and remember, you want to be quite
- explicit or you'll find too much. To get more information about
- using Archie via email send email to <archie@archie.rutgers.edu>
- with the single word "help" (no quotes) in the Subject: line.
-
-
- Special Internet Services
- Scott Yanoff took up the task of compiling a list of neat Internet
- services some time ago, and it has grown into a 14K file offering
- brief connection information on services ranging from the useful
- to the esoteric. Some of them include machines on which you can
- play real-time chess and Go with other people and machines
- containing information on the weather, flying conditions,
- geographical statistics, recipes, and NASA. You can find the list
- posted regularly on the Usenet group alt.bbs.internet (and
- probably others, but that's the one I read) and you can get on
- Scott's mailing list by sending a polite request to:
-
- yanoff@csd4.csd.uwm.edu
-
- Well, I think that's enough for now. The information I've provided
- here could keep anyone on the Internet busy for the rest of their
- lives since so much of this stuff points to other things. Those of
- you who work with the Internet only through mail gateways will
- find plenty of interesting stuff too.
-
-
- PowerBook 145
- -------------
- The latest solid rumor, oxymoronically enough, concerns the next
- round of PowerBooks to emerge from Cupertino. From the sounds of
- it, Apple will be upping the ante in the middle of the line with a
- PowerBook 145 that will essentially be a 170 without the active
- matrix screen or the FPU. The main change from the 140 is a 25 MHz
- 68030, although we would prefer it with the floating point unit
- (FPU) to bring it to full IIci/170 speed.
-
- Apple will also drop the price to below what 140 currently goes
- for - rumor has it as much as 30% less. As with all of Apple's
- price drops, this may not affect the street price. However it also
- may mean that you'll be able to pick up a 140 at a fire sale price
- this fall when the 145 ships, and we have no reason to believe
- that it will be delayed since there's little new functionality
- promised.
-
- Information from:
- Pythaeus
-
-
- Nisus Compact
- -------------
- Small, modular programs are among us. Not many, but a few, and
- it's a trend I hope to see more of in the future. Why pay for and
- store the program code needed to do something you don't want or
- need. This is one of the main design philosophies behind Nisus
- Software's new low-end word processor, Nisus Compact, which costs
- about $95 discounted. Nisus Compact has three main draws. First,
- it includes a number of useful features for PowerBook users.
- Second, it introduces a neat categorizing utility called File
- Clerk that actually may succeed where the Hierarchical Filing
- System fails, and third, Nisus Compact is a good example of a
- program that sacrifices frills, not power, in the quest for a
- small, fast, word processor. I'd also like to congratulate Nisus
- Software for naming Nisus Compact using real English words and
- avoiding the ad-speak "Lite" or "Kompact."
-
-
- What's gone
- I'm not just beating a dead pet peeve above. "Compact" really does
- describe Nisus Compact, because it looks at first glance like
- nothing so much as Nisus with about half of the menu choices
- missing. Gone are the colors and the more esoteric styles like
- boxed text. Gone are the macros, entirely, as are the indexing and
- table of contents tools. Cross referencing, glossaries, graphics,
- placed pages... Nisus Software removed it all. Considering what I
- do, which is write a lot of straight text without pretensions of
- desktop publishing, I only miss a few things in Nisus Compact.
- High among those are macros, the Get Info... feature (which I use
- constantly to check how much space I've got when creating a
- TidBITS issue), and the more sophisticated items in Nisus's
- Preferences like Auto Indent and the ability to tell it not to
- open an Untitled document at startup. Luckily, Nisus's Intelligent
- Paste, which puts spaces in around pasted words correctly 98% of
- the time (unlike any other Macintosh program that I use), has been
- built into Nisus Compact as the default.
-
-
- What's still there
- But why am I talking about what's _not_ in Nisus Compact? I've
- already cheated significantly in this review, but with good
- reason. Above I told you what Nisus Software took out of Nisus to
- create Nisus Compact; in this section I'll tell you the major
- items that are still present; and in the next section I'll talk
- more about what is new to Nisus Compact. As a result, you may wish
- to find issues #116 through #118 of TidBITS, which is our
- definitive review of Nisus, perhaps the most complete one ever
- done (Nisus has a lot of features worth writing about). After
- you're more familiar with Nisus's standard features, you'll
- understand better what's cool about Nisus Compact.
-
- Nisus Software left a shell of Nisus's GREP-based pattern-matching
- searching abilities. By that I mean that you are limited to about
- what you can do in Microsoft Word 5.0. Well, it's not that bad,
- since you can find the GREP patterns matching Any Character, Any
- Word, Any Text, Any Digit, and you have the OR function and, most
- importantly, the Found replacement value (so you can search for
- any set of three characters, a dash, and four numbers, and replace
- each set with precisely what you found, but in bold, for
- instance). Unfortunately, some of the more powerful parts of
- Nisus's PowerSearch aren't present. I see no reason why they took
- out PowerSearch as it stood in Nisus - if you're going to include
- pattern matching at all, why cripple it?
-
- You can define character styles and attach Named Rulers to them,
- giving you all the power of Nisus's styles, and all of the fancier
- keyboard shortcut tricks like command-up arrow work just fine. You
- can have as many Undo's as you could possibly want, limited only
- by memory and the number 32767, and you can even place and move
- graphics in the graphics layer, rather than as characters, if you
- hold down the Control key when selecting them. Everything in the
- file format (which is identical to Nisus's) is supposed to
- transfer back and forth without problems. In my tests, that was
- true, so even though Nisus Compact can't create colored text or
- certain special styles, it can display them and retain them in
- files. Even goodies like the Nisus Catalog are present, although
- Nisus Compact doesn't manage files as well as Nisus can.
-
-
- What's new
- Nisus Compact has two main features that do not exist in Nisus -
- the PowerBook utilities and the File Clerk. Nisus Compact can
- store itself in memory via a checkbox in the Preferences, a
- feature which presumably limits disk accesses on the PowerBook,
- extending battery life. There's an option for thicker cursors, and
- I gather that you also get a battery monitor in the Info bar at
- the top of the screen. Nisus Compact adds the current time to that
- Info bar too, so you don't even have to run SuperClock or Now's
- AlarmsClock. Finally, I hear that you get a Sleep item in the File
- menu when on a PowerBook.
-
- The File Clerk is completely new, and a bit harder to explain. It
- has two parts, the File Clerk Catalog (a list of files you've
- categorized) and the Categorize dialog, which lets you categorize
- files. If the File Clerk Catalog is open when you close a file, it
- will pop up the Categorize dialog, which has four columns of
- categories. You can also select a file in the normal Catalog (a
- list of files in the current folder) and click the Categorize
- button to pull up that dialog. Anyway, Nisus Software has defined
- the four columns as File Type, File Contents, Action, and Proper
- Names, and they've also provided a decent-sized list of
- suggestions, so File Type includes things like Letter, Notes, and
- Report, and Action includes things like To Send, Urgent, To
- Finish, Finished, and so on.
-
- You can add your own items to these four categories, and you can
- change the column names as well, if they aren't appropriate. I
- think most people will find them more or less on target. To
- categorize a file, you simply click on one or more items in one or
- more of the columns. Click to select, click again to deselect, no
- shift keys or anything else to fool with. For instance, if I was
- going to categorize a letter to my mother about visiting her, I
- would select Letter from the File Type column, Personal and Travel
- from the File Contents column, To Send from the Action column, and
- my mother's name from the Proper Names column. I'm quite impressed
- with the File Clerk because I've found it a quick and unobtrusive
- method of categorizing files without having to type in categories
- each time or select items from pop-up menus. From what I've heard,
- it blows Word's Summary feature out of the water.
-
- What good will categorizing do? Well, if you've got a ton of
- documents like I do, you probably have a decent method of
- organizing them. Even still, it can be hard to pick the right one
- at any given time. The File Clerk Catalog provides a list of all
- the files that have been categorized, and since that list is
- likely to be pretty long, you just click the Show Categories
- button, then click on the appropriate categories, and the File
- Clerk will narrow the selection for you. What I especially like is
- that as you narrow the selection, it removes unnecessary
- categories from the list, so the available category choices shrink
- as you go. When you finish the selection, you go back to the File
- Clerk Catalog window and only the matching files are listed.
- Double-click, and there's your file. There's also a pop-up menu
- for limiting the files to ones created within certain dates, and
- if the several choices aren't appropriate, you can type in your
- own specific date ranges. Overall, I think the File Clerk is an
- excellent way to avoid the tyranny of the Hierarchical Filing
- System, and I anxiously await its arrival in the full-fledged
- version of Nisus.
-
- One other new feature - despite the fact that the Find feature
- isn't as powerful as Nisus's, Nisus Software did add fuzzy find,
- so you can find words (more likely names) that you can't
- necessarily spell. For instance, "nekecerie" matched "necessary,"
- despite being abysmally spelled. I don't know how often I'd use
- this, but it's neat nonetheless.
-
-
- What should be there
- What I'd like to see more than anything else in Nisus Compact is
- the ability to transfer macros to it from Nisus. If Nisus Software
- really expects us to use Nisus Compact on our ubiquitous
- PowerBooks and the full-fledged version on our more powerful
- desktop Macs, then this single feature would allow us to keep a
- basic set of personal functions on both machines. Many of the
- features that Nisus Software has removed from Nisus aren't really
- necessary for working with text on a daily basis. If you use Nisus
- and have a bunch of macros built up, your macros are an integral
- part of your writing environment. I don't need a glossary or
- indexing, but I do need my personal macros that do Smart Quotes
- correctly, unlike all known Smart Quote features, and re-wrap
- return-delimited lines from online services. People could also
- create libraries of macros for the public, so if you wanted one
- little feature, you could just download that macro. Commands that
- weren't appropriate to Nisus Compact would have to be filtered
- out, of course, but I still think it would be a spiffy addition.
-
-
- What should be fixed
- I heard that Nisus Software's main programming team took only
- three weeks to convert the core of Nisus into Nisus Compact.
- That's impressive, and they did an excellent job on the whole.
- Nonetheless, there are still some problems. Nisus Compact is as
- much of a CPU hog in the foreground as Nisus is, and some
- communications programs will work very slowly in the background.
- However, MicroPhone II 4.0's ZMODEM implementation never so much
- as hesitates, even with Nisus running full tilt in the foreground.
- Nisus Compact claims it prefers 900K of RAM, which is odd for a
- program designed for the anemic memory systems of many PowerBooks.
- Nisus Software said that you can set the memory size down to 500K,
- but that will limit your number of Undo's and the size of the file
- you can have open. 700K is probably a fine compromise. The
- programming haste also shows in a few places cosmetically. For
- instance, if you try to use a module that's not loaded, the
- resulting SFDialog that lets you find it has some icons at the
- bottom that are cut off a third of the way down. These are nits,
- and Nisus Software has probably fixed them already since I have a
- very early version.
-
-
- Modularity
- As it ships, Nisus Compact has no dictionary, no mail merge, and
- no ability to customize the keyboard shortcuts. You do get a
- balloon help module, but you have to purchase the dictionary and
- the mail merge/menu keys module separately from Nisus Software for
- $29.95 for one or $39.95 for two, and other cool modules are in
- the works. If you own Nisus already, Nisus Compact can use the
- same dictionaries, and you may not want the mail merge or menu
- keys module. I think Nisus Software chose wisely which modules to
- break out so Nisus users don't pay for something they already have
- and no one has to mess with mail merge or menu keys if they don't
- wish to spend the money. Interestingly, unlike Word 5.0, you can
- load modules after startup if you wish. Nisus Compact will simply
- ask you to locate them, although it doesn't store the locations
- for future use, which would be nice.
-
-
- In the end...
- I think Nisus Software is on the right track with a small, fast
- word processor that doesn't bristle with desktop publishing
- features. They are specifically aiming Nisus Compact at the
- PowerBook user, and there's no reason to assume that a PowerBook
- user will want less power, just fewer speed- and space-consuming
- frills. On the whole, Nisus Compact succeeds admirably - it is
- small, fast (even usable on a Classic), and capable of almost
- anything you could want to do on the road as far as document
- creation and manipulation goes.
-
- Aside from smoothing the rough edges, I think Nisus Software could
- go further in providing a powerful, yet quiet (free of bells and
- whistles) word processor. A Macro Player module would be great, of
- course, and I'd like to see the full PowerSearch (but not
- PowerSearch+ - no one carries a GREP manual on the road)
- implemented as well. By leaving out these important text-
- manipulation features, Nisus Software unfortunately reduced the
- power in the name of compacting the program. There's a difference
- between power and frippery - Nisus Compact has little or no
- frippery, and with just a touch more power in the areas I've
- mentioned, it would be an absolute killer of a word processor for
- home or the road, especially for those of us used to the full
- power of Nisus.
-
- Nisus Software
- 107 S. Cedros Avenue
- Solana Beach CA 92075
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- jon@weber.ucsd.edu
- 75300.1243@compuserve.com
- D0405@applelink.apple.com
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-
- Reviews/22-Jun-92
- -----------------
-
- * MacWEEK
- AutoCAD Release 11 -- pg. 41
- Atex Renaissance -- pg. 42
- CoStar AddressWriter -- pg. 44
- MicroMac Plus -- pg. 44
- Image Manager 1.0 -- pg. 46
- EHelp 2.0 -- pg. 47
- System 7 Pack 3.01 -- pg. 48
-
- References:
- MacWEEK -- 15-Jun-92, Vol. 6, #23
-
-
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