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- TidBITS#131/29-Jun-92
- =====================
-
- Wondering about expanding a PowerBook's hard drive space? Want
- to do some visual programming? Interested in hearing some great
- music from your Mac? Curious about how you can go to jail by
- using your color scanner and DeskJet C? Still wondering
- whether you should buy Word 5.0 or Nisus 3.06? Answers to
- these questions, and maybe even a few more, inside. There
- is, however, no little plastic toy. Sorry.
-
- 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/29-Jun-92
- Expanding a PowerBook
- Prograph Extensions
- SoundTracker
- Use a Scanner, Go to Jail
- Nisus/Word Comparison
- Reviews/29-Jun-92
-
- [Archived as /info-mac/digest/tb/tidbits-131.etx; 29K]
-
-
- MailBITS/29-Jun-92
- ------------------
- This issue has reached you extremely early because we're going to
- be enjoying ourselves on vacation back in New York State. Luckily,
- we've had a lot of excellent submissions from around the world, so
- I didn't have to kill myself to put this issue out. You can thank
- Murph Sewall, Mark H. Anbinder, Ken Linger, and Matt Neuburg for
- this issue.
-
- Please feel free to send me mail this week if you wish, but since
- I will not be dialing in to check it, I won't see it until the 5th
- of July when we return. Incidentally, that means that we probably
- won't send out the 06-Jul-92 issue quite on time. It also means
- that submissions for that issue will be especially welcome. :-)
-
-
- Expanding a PowerBook
- ---------------------
- by Murph Sewall -- SEWALL@UCONNVM.BITNET
-
- Ah, the choices one must make. I find it so hard to pick up the
- PowerBook and leave home without stuffing it with every
- conceivable application I just might have a use for, even ones I
- haven't used for months. So, I love AutoDoubler's (or one of the
- other transparent compressor's) ability to cram more stuff on the
- drive.
-
- Unfortunately, the PowerBook only has 4 MB of RAM. Funny how 4 MB
- of RAM no longer seems like enough. It can be difficult to use
- Apple's DiskCopy, which needs 1792K of RAM, to duplicate a 1.44 MB
- disk, for example. The problem is that AutoDoubler uses 363K of
- System heap (you can reduce this by shrinking AutoDoubler's cache)
- and the DiskDoubler INIT wants another 163K. ATM 2.0.3 wants 111K
- plus whatever the font cache size, typically 128K, is set to, an
- argument for using TrueType instead on a PowerBook.
-
- The terrible choices become: (a) expand the awfully expensive
- PowerBook RAM, (b) dump enough stuff to backup so that compression
- isn't necessary, or (c) buy a bigger hard drive, which is also
- expensive, but not as expensive as RAM. Using virtual memory isn't
- practical because it requires at least 5 MB of free space on the
- hard disk and it runs the hard drive all the time, draining the
- battery so fast that the PowerBook requires household current.
-
- My solution was to order a Quantum GO 80 hard drive from APS for
- $439 and pay $40 for my local "authorized Apple technician" to
- install it. That turns out to be about $100 less expensive than
- our campus store probably will offer the Apple upgrade for (they
- haven't received a price sheet yet, but they usually charge about
- 80% of list). Although expected by the end of the month, the GO
- 120 isn't shipping yet and at $699, it costs more per MB than the
- GO 80. Because my PowerBook is my "backup" Mac, I figured I could
- live with 80 MB. After all, I'd been squeezing stuff into the 40
- MB drive, which equalled an uncompressed 50.5 MB.
-
- The GO 80 (82K capacity actually, and APS PowerTools makes 80.8K
- actually usable) was installed yesterday. The extra space is
- wonderful, but wow is it NOISY (compared to the Connor which
- simply "whirred" some - colleagues say even the Connor is noisier
- than the drives that ship with many DOS laptops). The only drive
- test I've run is Speedometer's; it claims the GO 80 is 60% faster
- than the Connor (the price one pays for sounding like a coffee
- grinder?). Sure enough, expanding all the files and not using
- AutoDoubler and DiskDoubler have given me 526K more RAM to run
- applications. Adding a few things I didn't have room for on the 40
- MB drive has left me at 59K on the drive. After one day, I'm happy
- but I keep finding neat new programs I'd like to have at my
- fingertips. I may yet regret not having gone for the GO 120 ;-). I
- still have the Connor as a backup in case the machine shop sound
- of the GO 80 turns out to be a symptom of trouble. I've thought
- about looking for one of the cases that could make the Connor an
- external drive, but I don't really expect I'd use it much that
- way. If anything interesting (unusual) happens with the GO 80,
- I'll report it here.
-
- Has anyone else installed a GO 80? Did I mention that mine is loud
- enough to hear across the room? Is yours?
-
-
- Pixel Anxiety
- -------------
- We've been hearing more griping about the number of pixels that
- are either dead or void on the PowerBook 170 active matrix
- screens. Dead pixels don't make anybody happy, but given the low
- manufacturing yields, they seem to be an unfortunate reality.
- Prices would certainly be higher if Apple guaranteed that all
- screens had no defects.
-
- We'd like to see Apple sell machines having a few defective pixels
- at a slightly lower price. That would allow them to continue using
- the slightly defective screens and would enable more people to buy
- into active matrix who would otherwise be unable to afford it.
- Heck, at the right price I'd like a factory-second 170.
-
- Of course, the best factory seconds are in Vermont, where you can
- buy factory seconds of Ben & Jerry's ice cream that has failed the
- stringent controls so that the chocolate chips are too big, for
- instance. Horrors!
-
-
- Prograph Extensions
- -------------------
- by Mark H. Anbinder -- TidBITS Contributing Editor
-
- TGS Systems, Ltd, the publisher of the Prograph visual, object-
- oriented programming environment, recently announced that they
- have extended the capabilities of the environment through a family
- of six extensions. Prograph is an innovative development
- environment that allows programmers to work in a visual manner.
- Unlike prototyping utilities such as MacApp or AppMaker, which
- allow a programmer to create a visual interface that can then have
- program code added, Prograph actually generates final
- applications.
-
- The extensions, which work with Prograph 2.5, are the first
- offerings in a series of extension products in two categories,
- Connectivity Tools and Object Tools. The C Interface and Pascal
- Interface allow the use of C and Pascal libraries from within the
- Prograph environment. The Comm Toolbox is a Prograph API
- (application programming interface) for Apple's Communications
- Toolbox (CTB). SQL Interface/DAL and ORACLE Interface enable
- creation of networked SQL (pronounced "sequel" and stands for
- Structured Query Language - don't you love all these acronyms?)
- client applications in Prograph. The Visual Effects Manager adds
- presentation-style color transitions and ramps, as well as three-
- dimensional color text, to Prograph applications.
-
- While most of these libraries appear intended to allow Prograph
- developers to take advantage of a fuller range of Macintosh system
- software technology, the real advance for seasoned programmers
- appears to be the availability of the C Interface and Pascal
- Interface. These allow the use of THINK C (versions 4 or 5) and
- MPW C libraries, or THINK Pascal (version 4) or MPW Pascal
- libraries. These libraries of pre-prepared routines can be used
- unmodified within the Prograph interpreter and with compiled
- Prograph applications. As a result, developers using Prograph will
- be able to make use of Macintosh toolbox and manager routines,
- such as QuickTime, that are included in libraries provided by
- other vendors whose products the developers have purchased.
-
- Each of the extensions will be individually priced, and are now
- available directly from TGS Systems.
-
- TGS Systems -- 902/455-4446 -- FAX 902/455-2246
-
- Information from:
- TGS propaganda -- tgs.systems@applelink.apple.com
-
-
- SoundTracker
- ------------
- by Ken Linger -- linger@drystone.attmail.com
-
- Something new has begun to sweep the Macintosh free-software
- scene. Sure, we all enjoy the freeware and shareware programs
- available from numerous electronic repositories, but they are
- usually modifications to already existing programs, free or
- otherwise, with only a few changes to differentiate them. Every
- once in a while, however, something comes around that really
- impresses people - a program that you can use to shock non-Mac
- users, such as parents, friends, or co-workers, prompting them to
- ask, "How does it do that?" This time, that program is Sound
- Tracker.
-
- Sound Tracker came out several months ago as a freeware beta
- program uploaded to several Internet sites, and then to online
- services like America Online. Now, Sound Tracker has been released
- as a $30 shareware program in its "final" form, complete with
- source code.
-
- Sound Tracker is a bare bones music player. You can't record songs
- in it. You can't sample songs with it. You can't edit and re-save
- songs. All you can do with program is modify the volume, tone, and
- tempo. Despite this apparent lack of power, Sound Tracker can
- produce some amazing results.
-
- Until recently, programs that included music would either plunk
- out tones on the Mac speaker or include a small sample. Plunking
- out tones wastes little disk space since a song is composed of
- compact instructions telling the speaker when to turn on and when
- to shut up and what tone and volume you want. These sort of songs
- sound as unimpressive as you would expect. Sampled songs sound
- great, but for a good sample, a couple of seconds will run you
- over 100K and an entire song, if you even had the space, just
- isn't feasible.
-
- Sound Tracker gives you the best of both worlds by combining
- sampling and programming. The end result is sampled music sound
- without the heavy disk or memory space requirements sampled sound
- files generally need. For instance, most of what a Sound Tracker
- file might contain are some keyboard samples, a bass, guitar, and
- several drums. The remainder of the file is code telling Sound
- Tracker when to play the bass, at which pitch and volume and so
- on, and before you know it, you've got a song. It's basically the
- computer's equivalent of sheet music, though you never see any of
- this going on behind the scenes. You just load the song and
- listen.
-
- Although Sound Tracker doesn't come with a sample file, songs can
- be downloaded from most of your favorite locations. Be sure to
- grab at least one when you take Sound Tracker. Quality varies of
- course, so you might have to snag a couple before you find the
- perfect one to impress your friends.
-
- Sound Tracker gives you four tracks to which you can vary the
- volume, so you can turn down the bass, remove the melody, or
- whatever you want. There is also a master volume. The tone and
- tempo controls are also interesting because you can speed up a
- song without it sounding like the Chipmunks. Sound Tracker plays
- all the instruments in a shorter amount of time, giving you a
- fast-paced song without the high pitches. Likewise, you can raise
- or lower the pitches without losing any beats-per-minute.
-
- The program also comes with a spectrum display and oscilloscope.
- I'd stay away from these. It seems like they update only a few
- times per second so it seems that Sound Tracker is always catching
- up. You really don't need these features to enjoy Sound Tracker,
- so it's no great loss.
-
- Sound Tracker has a good interface, as well as a few neat features
- that take advantage of System 7. The controls look a bit like a CD
- player's controls, and you can load songs by dropping them on
- Sound Tracker's icon or by simply using Open. What's more, you can
- queue up a list of songs by dropping a group on Sound Tracker's
- icon and it will play through that list, optionally repeating at
- the end. You also have a fast forward button (no rewind) and a
- pause. If you change songs in the middle of a song, instead of an
- abrupt change, the previous song fades out first. You can now also
- shuffle the songs to play them in a random order.
-
- Sound Tracker can play asynchronously in the background. Once you
- start playing a song, try going back to the Finder and launch an
- application. Start a download, type a letter, whatever. The song
- plays on uninterrupted. You can also load your next song while one
- is already playing. This backgrounding ability isn't perfect,
- though. Sound Tracker has three different sampling rates for
- playback. While the lowest setting doesn't sound absolutely great,
- you will have more control of your Mac which Sound Tracker is
- playing in the background. The better the playback, the slower
- your Mac will respond to keyclicks and incoming data (while on-
- line with a song playing in the background with the best sampling
- rate, the text comes in spurts at times). You decide what level of
- response you can live with.
-
- The latest version of Sound Tracker also lets you save your
- settings and test how much your Mac is being slowed down by a song
- in the background. This may help you decide which sampling rate is
- the best for playing something behind Excel.
-
-
- Songs
- What about the songs? Sound Tracker has been available for the PC
- and Amiga for some time now, so there are many songs in those
- formats. Any song for these computers will usually have the
- extension .MOD. However, they will take some converting to get
- them into the proper format for Mac Sound Tracker. In all
- likelihood, you'll have to find a Mac decompressor for either
- format and you will have to use ResEdit, DiskTop, or a similar
- utility to change each file's creator and type to STrk.
-
- [StuffIt Deluxe has translators for the common PC compression
- formats, and my limited experience with the Amiga leads me to
- believe that there will be tools for defunking Amiga compressed
- files under Unix, for those of you with access to Unix boxes. As
- far as changing the file creators and types, there are freeware or
- shareware programs that will make this a simple process for
- multiple files. -Adam]
-
- Fortunately, you shouldn't have to mess with such conversions.
- Many songs have already been converted and are being uploaded to
- the Internet and online services. America Online, for example, has
- about 100 songs already, with more coming all the time. This
- should keep you occupied for some time. Songs vary in size from
- 25K to 200K. The lengths, though, can be as short as few seconds
- of a drum solo to (as far as I've seen) over 5 minutes. An average
- download at 2400 baud will take perhaps 10 minutes.
-
- Many of the songs I've seen tend to be pop/alternative. There are
- a couple of oldies floating around, as well as some Top 40, but
- the majority aren't. [I've recently seem some classical music come
- through on the nets as well. -Adam] Some songs even have the
- lyrics included on one of the four tracks! When you plug your Mac
- into the stereo (Sound Tracker provides for this by using two
- tracks per channel) you can really perform some impressive things!
-
- Be aware that some "cheaply" made songs may not sound all that
- good. You can put anything on a track. Some songs may have all the
- percussion on track one, guitars on track two, etc., and the track
- assignments may vary from song to song. This isn't Sound Tracker's
- fault but is merely a design decision left to the people
- programming in the songs. Maybe in a Mac recording version, a
- standard will be set.
-
-
- In the future...
- What about the future of Sound Tracker and the Mac? For one thing,
- the Amiga can record songs with various programs. The Mac should
- be able to, especially the newer Macs with the more sophisticated
- sound input circuitry, but so far can't. All the songs you hear
- played through Sound Tracker were most likely created on an Amiga.
- It should be just a matter of time before there is another program
- like Sound Tracker which provides better options and recording and
- MIDI ability.
-
- Why stop at being an application? Because of the non-choppy
- background ability, how about having a startup theme? We have
- pictures, sounds, movies playing at startup, why not have your Mac
- hammer out a song while the startup is going on? Throw this in
- with a song shuffling ability and your Mac may never shut up!
-
- I love Sound Tracker and I'm hoping that it will be an inspiration
- to other software authors to make more programs like it. While it
- is an impressive program today, I suspect that someone can better
- it with a program that doesn't slow down the Mac as much, has a
- useful spectrum analyzer and oscilloscope, and more features we
- haven't even thought of yet. Still, Sound Tracker is very popular
- among those who have access to computer services, and songs are
- being traded almost like baseball cards.
-
- Sorry Classic and older Mac owners - Sound Tracker requires a Mac
- with a 68020 or higher. It works under System 7, but I'm not sure
- about System 6. If it does work with System 6, you certainly won't
- have the drag & drop feature.
-
- On the Internet, check out the Info-Mac archives at sumex-
- aim.stanford.edu via FTP. Songs are located in the info-
- mac/sounds/st directory. On America Online, search the Mac files
- with the keyword MOD or Sound Tracker and you'll get a sense of
- what's available.
-
- So if you don't already have Sound Tracker, what are you waiting
- for? It's worth the $30 and sounds great! Maestro?
-
-
- Use a Scanner, Go to Jail
- -------------------------
- by Mark H. Anbinder -- TidBITS Contributing Editor
-
- Hewlett-Packard included a bulletin in a recent mailing to dealers
- warning them that, when demonstrating the capabilities of HP
- scanners, they must avoid scanning money and other "sensitive
- documents." Anyone who does scan such documents risks
- "Constructive Seizure" of their computer equipment, up to $25,000
- in fines, or up to fifteen years imprisonment.
-
- Apparently HP has learned of an incident where U.S. Treasury
- agents seized an HP ScanJet IIc scanner, HP DeskJet 500C printer,
- and an HP Vectra personal computer. The dealer and HP sales
- representative involved spent a considerable amount of time
- retrieving the equipment.
-
- HP provides this list of guidelines from the U.S. government.
-
-
- Unacceptable scanning:
-
- * Money
- * Federal Reserve notes
- * U.S. postage stamps
- * Foreign postage stamps
- * Revenue stamps
- * Other negotiable valuated articles (for example, checks, bonds,
- and securities)
- * Identification documents (for example, driver's license and
- governmental identification documents
-
-
- Acceptable scanning:
-
- * Photographs of people, places, or things
- * Pictures from magazines, newsletters, and calendars
- * Other similar non-sensitive documents
-
- We wish to add that, if you do scan photographs (or even text)
- from copyrighted publications, it's important to secure permission
- before using that material in any way.
-
- Perhaps the government is concerned that computer input and output
- devices are becoming powerful enough that counterfeiting is (or
- will soon be) a real concern. We've seen the latest output
- technology, though, and we're skeptical that counterfeiting with
- multi-million-dollar technology would be cost-effective! Of
- course, until output quality catches up with the government's
- concerns, we'll be unable to avoid the image of a crook lugging
- along a 24-bit color 1152 x 870 monitor, trying to convince
- someone that the scanned image on it is legal tender!
-
- [This article is being published simultaneously in TidBITS and
- Clicks!, the newsletter of the Ithaca Macintosh Users' Group.]
-
-
- Nisus/Word Comparison
- ---------------------
- by Matt Neuburg -- clas005@csc.canterbury.ac.nz
-
- Here's one more drop in the never-ending flow of One Person's
- Opinions comparing Nisus 3.06 and Word 5.0. Your mileage may vary,
- and this is certainly not the last word - pun intended, as I
- suspect that Word 6.0 (mid-1993 is the current fantasy prediction)
- will change things considerably, especially if it includes a macro
- language and automatic numbering of figures, cross-referencing,
- and so forth.
-
- These comments adopt roughly the order and categories of
- my review of Nisus, published by TidBITS and living on
- sumex-aim.stanford.edu as /info-mac/digest/tb/tidbits-nisus.etx;
- see it for more detail if desired. Here I simply list categories
- and declare my personal winner in each.
-
-
- Typing
- Word; there is much less delay in screen updating and use of the
- Delete key, and it uses fairly standard key-input coding, whereas
- Nisus uses its own system and doesn't work with input-modifying
- extensions like SmartKeys.
-
-
- Text Selection
- Nisus. Any program with non-contiguous multiple selection beats
- everything else cold, and Nisus's selection methods generally are
- wonderfully easy and intuitive.
-
-
- Moving Around the Document
- Word, where you can customize the keyboard commands and can jump
- back instantly to a previous location. However, Nisus gets points
- for letting you name and jump to locations in the document, and
- for its clever way of letting you know what page you're on during
- the middle of a thumb- scroll.
-
-
- Windows
- Nisus. You can easily stack or tile multiple windows (though
- tiling is flawed), and you get more ways to move between windows;
- you can also do things to a window without bringing it to the
- front.
-
-
- Menus
- Neck-and-neck. Word's menus are more customizable; you can
- completely rearrange them, and set nearly any key-code you like
- (in Nisus, every key-code must involve the command key). However,
- Nisus's use of multiple keystrokes in the key-codes is ingenious,
- and so is its use of menus which change as modifier-keys are held
- down.
-
-
- Editing
- Nisus, by a mile. Unlimited multiple Undo rules! And every time I
- use Word I find myself hunting for the Append Copy and Swap Paste
- commands, and the multiple clipboards; but they're only in Nisus.
-
-
- Footnotes, Creating and Modifying
- Word, by a mile. In Nisus you can't see the main text when
- creating or modifying the text of a footnote, which is stupid.
-
-
- Footnotes, Numbering
- Nisus, which gives you lots of numbering formats (in brackets, in
- parentheses, raised, not raised) or you can make your own, and
- they can differ in text and footnote. In Word you get no choice.
-
-
- Footnotes, Appearance
- Word, which knows the difference between a normal separator and a
- continuation separator, and lets you modify either one completely.
-
-
- Find/Replace
- Nisus, of course; this is one of its major features. Sorry, Word,
- your new Find/Replace is cute, but since your only wild-card is a
- single character, it's not very useful even in a simple-minded
- search.
-
-
- Macros and Programming Language
- Well, right now Word is completely out of it; but even when it
- brings its macro/programming language on line, it's going to have
- its work cut out for it if it wants to be in the same class with
- Nisus. This is Nisus's other major feature.
-
-
- Styles
- Hmm, this is a toughie. I guess that although I have some lengthy
- complaints about the details, Nisus wins for letting you do really
- powerful, useful things like instantly cause all identically
- formatted (but un-styled) paragraphs to be brought under a single
- style, and for allowing you to apply multiple styles to a single
- piece of text but keep them separate (so that you can alter or
- remove just one of them later). Nisus also has character styles,
- unlike Word, which is limited to paragraph styles. But Word lets
- you designate styles as Based On other styles, and includes the
- Keep With Next Paragraph designation; it also has a more orderly,
- predictable way of importing styles. In addition, Word styles
- import into page layout programs well.
-
-
- Tables and Side-by-side Paragraphs
- Word has 'em, and they're great, too. Nisus hasn't a thing.
-
-
- Columnar Layout
- Word. In Nisus a document can only have one columnar layout (one
- column, or two, or whatever) without screwing around with Placed
- Pages; in Word you just insert a section break, press a button on
- the Ribbon, and voila, you've switched to a new columnization.
-
-
- Cross-referencing
- Nisus. Nisus lets you mark locations in the text and refer to them
- by page number elsewhere in the document. Word has nothing here.
-
-
- Table-of-Contents and Indexing
- Word, which has far more levels and far more options and better
- handling generally. However, shame on _both_ programs for not
- letting you index material in footnotes!
-
-
- Spell-checking and Thesaurus: Both lousy in both programs.
-
-
- Hyphenation
- Word, which shows you what it's doing and asks for your approval;
- Nisus just hyphenates, right or wrong. But neither program lets
- you set parameters.
-
-
- Glossary: Now virtually identical.
-
-
- Mail Merge
- The Word 5.0 interface is undeniably easy and inviting. However,
- both programs have essentially the same actual capacities. And
- shame on _both_ for causing character formatting to be lost from
- the data document during the merge! [This would need to be
- optional, since people using one data file for several main
- documents might strongly object to having to use the same formats
- in different main documents. -Tonya]
-
-
- Drawing
- I don't think much of either program's built-in picture-making
- facilities, but Nisus better handles pictures created from within
- it. They run about even on handling pictures created by other
- programs; Word's linking and embedding technology may put it in
- the lead eventually. Nisus XS, the new Publish & Subscribe
- extension to Nisus, has unfortunately slipped to later in the
- year.
-
-
- Big Documents
- Word, because you can chain documents together. Word has always
- been excellent at dealing with the possibility that the user may
- not have much memory. In Nisus, you have to be able to load your
- whole document at once to open it at all.
-
-
- Manual
- Word. It has one of the best manuals, in fact, that I have ever
- read: I'm actually impressed. Nisus has one of the worst.
-
-
- Learning Curve
- I think Word is much easier to use powerfully. Microsoft has gone
- to great lengths to make this true; hence the new ribbon,
- draggable text, draggable frames, Print Merge Helper, and TOC and
- Indexing help. I wouldn't recommend Nisus to any novice Mac user.
- On the other hand Word hasn't as much depth to learn about; I
- would certainly recommend Nisus to any programming-savvy user, and
- there are many uses for which it is simply the only choice.
-
- I trust it is now obvious which one to buy... ;->
-
-
- Reviews/29-Jun-92
- -----------------
-
- * MacWEEK
- VideoShop -- pg. 61
- WriteNow 3.0 -- pg. 61
- PSI PowerModem -- pg. 64
- Cause 2.1.2 -- pg. 64
- AppleCD 150 -- pg. 70
- MediaTree 1.3 -- pg. 70
- PACo Producer 2.0 -- pg. 71
- ALSoft Power Utilities -- pg. 71
-
- * Macworld
- Small Hard Drives -- pg. 132
- (too many to list)
- Film Makers -- pg. 146
- (too many to list)
- Fractal Design Painter 1.2 -- pg. 154
- Alias Sketch 1.0.2 -- pg. 155
- Vicom Terminal Emulator -- pg. 156
- TelePort/FullFax -- pg. 158
- IBM LaserPrinter 10A -- pg. 158
- DataClub Classic 2.0 & DataClub Elite 2.0 -- pg. 164
- PowerPlay 1.0 -- pg. 166
- Just Grandma and Me -- pg. 166
- MacQuill 1.0 -- pg. 168
- ALSoft Power Utilities -- pg. 168
- HP ScanJet IIP -- pg. 170
- Nisus Compact 3.3 -- pg. 170
- LinksWare 1.4 -- pg. 171
- SupraFaxModem V.32bis -- pg. 171
- TouchBase 2.0 -- pg. 172
- Magic 1.0 -- pg. 172
- Spaceward Ho 2.0.1 -- pg. 173
- Sherlock Holmes, Consulting Detective -- pg. 173
- Nolo's Living Trust 1.0 -- pg. 174
- StoryLine 1.02 -- pg. 174
- Think Pascal 4.0 -- pg. 176
- Zeus 0.91 -- pg. 176
- Acecat for Macintosh -- pg. 177
- Network Supervisor 2.0.1 -- pg. 177
- Active Memory 2.0 -- pg. 178
- Picture It 1.0 -- pg. 178
- Job Cost/Time Billing 1.05 -- pg. 179
- Correct Grammar 3.0 -- pg. 179
-
- * BYTE
- 24-bit Color Scanners -- pg. 230
- (too many to list)
- Envisio 030 Notebook Adapter -- pg. 281
- The Incubator -- pg. 281
-
- References:
- MacWEEK -- 22-Jun-92, Vol. 6, #24
- Macworld -- Aug-92
- BYTE -- Jul-92
-
-
- ..
-
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