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- TidBITS#132/06-Jul-92
- =====================
-
- Malevolence continues with a new virus, T4, and a Trojan Horse
- whose author's head now carries a price. Luckily, all is not
- lost, with CE and Microsoft releasing good things, updates to
- Alarming Events and QuicKeys from CE and a free patch for that
- nasty styles bug from Microsoft. Rounding out this issue, we
- have the eagerly-awaited second part of Howard Hansen's Excel
- review, which will conclude next 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/06-Jul-92
- Disinfectant 2.9 Released
- Trojan Horse Reward
- CE Ships AE & QK2 Updates
- Word 5.0a Patch
- A New Direction for IE
- Excel 4.0 for the Mac II
- Reviews/06-Jul-92
-
- [Archived as /info-mac/digest/tb/tidbits-132.etx; 29K]
-
-
- MailBITS/06-Jul-92
- ------------------
- We're back from vacation, which we enjoyed on the whole, but we
- could have done without the unplanned seven hour bus ride from New
- York City to Ithaca on a transit-style bus that could barely do 45
- miles per hour on the freeway. Isn't traveling fun? For those of
- you making the pilgrimage to Boston in August, good luck with your
- flights, and I hope to see you there.
-
-
- Disinfectant 2.9 Released
- -------------------------
- by Mark H. Anbinder -- TidBITS Contributing Editor
-
- John Norstad of Northwestern University this weekend released
- version 2.9 of his free anti-virus utility, Disinfectant. Version
- 2.9 detects the T4 virus, two strains of which were discovered in
- several locations around the world late last month.
-
- The T4 virus can interfere with the booting process, either
- causing crashes during startup or preventing system extensions
- from loading properly. It masquerades as Disinfectant when
- attempting to infect files, in an apparent attempt to get around
- the "suspicious activity monitor" type of anti-virus utility. If
- you see a warning that "Disinfectant" is attempting to modify a
- file, and you are not using Disinfectant, it is a good indication
- that the T4 virus may be attacking your system.
-
- Unfortunately, applications that have been infected with the T4
- virus can not be repaired, so it is necessary to delete and
- replace any infected applications. Previously, Disinfectant had
- been able to repair virtually any infection. Some anti-virus
- authors prefer to recommend that users always replace, rather than
- repair, any infected files, but Norstad feels that it's more
- realistic to offer users the option of repairing files rather than
- expecting them to religiously replace applications. In this case,
- though, the option is not available.
-
- The virus was embedded in two versions, 2.0 and 2.1, of the game
- GoMoku, which was distributed widely via online services, Internet
- FTP archives, and the comp.binaries.mac Usenet group. Users who
- have these versions of GoMoku should discard them and use
- Disinfectant 2.9, or another anti-virus utility released since the
- beginning of July, to scan all of their disks. The games were
- apparently distributed under a false name; the person whose name
- appears in the program's about box was completely uninvolved with
- the virus, and that name should not be used when referring to the
- virus.
-
- Norstad took the opportunity in his release announcement to
- mention that three Cornell University students have been indicted
- on an assortment of felony and misdemeanor counts, including
- first-degree computer tampering, in connection with the release of
- the MBDF virus this spring. They are presently awaiting trial.
- Norstad hopes that this news will remind potential virus writers
- that computer viruses are taken seriously, and that writing them
- and releasing them is a crime that can, should, and will be
- punished under the law.
-
-
- Trojan Horse Reward
- -------------------
- by Neil Shapiro
-
- REWARD OFFERED FOR INFORMATION LEADING TO ARREST AND CONVICTION OF
- TROJAN HORSE AUTHOR
-
- The MAUG Staff on CompuServe discovered an upload called
- CHINAT.CPT which, when we routinely examined the file, revealed
- itself to be a Trojan Horse program. The program, "Chinatalk,"
- purports to be a female voice for Macintalk. But when run it will
- overwrite the directory of any hard disk it finds online, which is
- the same as choosing Erase Disk... from the Finder.
-
- The file was never made public here, on ZiffNet/Mac or on any
- CompuServe Forum.
-
- All sysops of private BBS services should be on the lookout for
- this file.
-
- If anyone has information on the perpetrator of this Trojan Horse
- program please contact me - Neil Shapiro - via either email or
- phone at 516/735-6924.
-
- On behalf of MAUG, I am personally posting a $500.00 reward for
- information which leads to the arrest and conviction of this
- criminal. (Should more than one person supply identical
- information the reward will be to the first giving the
- information; or if two or more people give information which is
- both non-identical and necessary to catching the criminal the
- reward will be equally split between the parties.) Let's catch
- this pond scum and let's do it quickly!
-
- Again: the file was NEVER made public here, on ZiffNet/Mac, or on
- any other CompuServe Forum. Thanks, -- Neil Shapiro (Chief Sysop,
- MAUG)
-
- Information from:
- Neil Shapiro -- 76703.401@compuserve.com
-
-
- CE Ships AE & QK2 Updates
- -------------------------
- by Mark H. Anbinder -- TidBITS Contributing Editor
-
- CE Software is now shipping new versions of Alarming Events, a
- personal scheduling software, and QuicKeys, a macro making
- program. In addition CE has reduced the suggested retail price of
- Alarming Events to $99.95.
-
-
- Alarming Events 1.1
- Alarming Events 1.1 is primarily a compatibility upgrade, making
- it 32-bit clean and Quadra '040 cache compatible, but it does have
- some welcome new features. Most useful among these are the new
- "Find" and "Find Again" commands, which allow users to find an
- event or appointment using specific words or phrases. Although
- previous versions were good about reminding you when an
- appointment, event, or other activity was imminent, finding a
- specific future entry required searching manually. This Find
- feature would also be a welcome addition to CE's flagship product,
- QuickMail. In addition, Alarming Events now has a more colorful
- interface, a revamped notification system, and an Apple Installer
- script. Registered users of Alarming Events 1.0 can upgrade for
- $20, and users who purchased the product after 01-Jun-92 can
- upgrade free. Users should contact CE at one of the phone numbers
- below, and should be prepared to provide their serial numbers.
-
-
- QuicKeys 2.1.2
- According to CE's recent propaganda, "No one in the world makes
- desktop automation so easy," and with the new release of QuicKeys,
- they may be right. QuicKeys 2.1.2 incorporates the Instant
- QuicKeys, SoftKeys, and QK Icons features described in
- TidBITS#123, and seven new logic extensions that allow branching
- based on various conditions. Instant QuicKeys is an "intelligent"
- automated setup program that helps new users past the hurdles of
- customizing their QuicKeys macros. The SoftKeys extension provides
- on-screen palettes of favorite QuicKeys, and QK Icons creates
- double-clickable mini-applications that execute QuicKeys shortcuts
- from the desktop. System 7 users will even be able to use drag &
- drop to access with the QK Icons, for example by dragging multiple
- documents to a printer QuicKey icon in order to print those
- documents to the specified printer. This capability is one which
- Apple promised would be part of a new Print Manager in System 7,
- but which has yet to arrive.
-
- An updater utility for users of QuicKeys 2.1 can be downloaded
- from popular online services soon, but this does not include
- Instant QuicKeys, SoftKeys, QK Icons, or the new logic extensions.
- Registered QuicKeys users should contact CE for upgrade
- instructions.
-
- You may not be able to find that updater online right away, since
- CE has discovered a problem with 2.1.2 that may cause your
- Universal Keyset to be corrupted under System 6. CE has identified
- the problem and will make new updaters available soon. From what
- Tom Hillson of CE Tech Support has told us, the problem may be
- related to installing without turning off anti-virus software, but
- if you have any questions, contact Tom at <cesoftware@aol.com> or
- CE Tech Support at 515/224-1953. You'll probably notice if you've
- already run into this problem because the Universal Keyset being
- corrupted can cause the Mac to crash before loading the Finder.
-
- CE is offering a special sidegrade option to owners of the
- competing Tempo macro utility from Affinity Microsystems, which
- recently shipped a System 7-compatible version of Tempo after
- almost a year. US and Canadian Tempo owners may upgrade to
- QuicKeys 2.1.2 for only $49, through 30-Sep-92. This offer is
- available only by mail, fax, or e-mail, _not_ by telephone, and
- users must provide their serial number, manual cover page (mailed
- or faxed), or the original program disk from their Tempo package,
- along with full name, address, telephone number, and method of
- payment. Orders may be faxed to the number below; emailed to
- CESOFTWARE on AppleLink, America Online, or MCI Mail,
- <cesoftware@aol.com> on the Internet, 76136,2137 on CompuServe, or
- via QuickMail to 515/224-1721; or mailed to:
-
- CE Software, Inc.
- 1801 Industrial Circle
- P.O. Box 65580
- West Des Moines, IA 50265
- 800/523-7638
- 515/224-1995
- 515/224-4534 fax
-
- Information from:
- Sue Nail, CE Software
- Tom Hillson, CE Tech Support -- cesoftware@aol.com
- CE propaganda
-
-
- Word 5.0a Patch
- ---------------
- Microsoft has fixed the font/styles bug that caused styles to
- revert to the Normal font when files were transferred between
- machines (see TidBITS#126). In an unusual move, Microsoft has
- created a patch program, which it is distributing it for free on
- all the online services. Of course, you can get Microsoft to mail
- you a disk with the patch for Word 5.0a on it, but frankly, if you
- have access to one of the online services, downloading is easier.
- The patch fixes the bug and updates the version number of Word
- from 5.0 to 5.0a.
-
- On the Internet, you can snag the patch from several places.
- Perhaps the easiest is sumex-aim.stanford.edu where the 27K file
- is stored as:
-
- info-mac/app/msword-50a-updater.hqx
-
- Of course, you can also get the file through a sumex mirror site -
- check out the Gateways 1 article in TidBITS#130 for more
- information on them. You can call a Microsoft BBS at speeds up to
- 9600 bps for the file as well.
-
- Microsoft Mac Word Technical Support -- 206/635-7200
- Microsoft BBS -- 206/936-6735
-
-
- A New Direction for IE
- ----------------------
- by Mark H. Anbinder -- TidBITS Contributing Editor
-
- Information Electronics, the Hammondsport, NY developer best known
- until now for its QuickMail add-on products, announced last week
- that they will no longer offer their QuickMail gateways and
- enhancements. According to chairman Tom Clodfelter, "We no longer
- feel that QuickMail is the best solution for a corporate
- communication system." Instead, the company will now offer gateway
- and enhancement products for FirstClass, a graphical-interface
- bulletin board system (BBS) from SoftArc, Inc. that allows both
- network-based and dialup modem communications.
-
- In a newsletter sent to IE customers, the company explained that
- QuickMail, the electronic mail product from CE Software, Inc.,
- presents too many limitations. On 04-Jul-92, Information
- Electronics removed QMConcierge, QMSight, UMCP\QM, and SMTP\QM
- from the market. The two year old product line offered features
- not available elsewhere, such as message forwarding and
- distribution lists with QMConcierge, and connectivity to
- FreeSoft's Second Sight BBS software with QMSight. The UMCP\QM and
- SMTP\QM products, offering Unix and Internet connectivity via UUCP
- and SMTP had competition in the market.
-
- The flagship of IE's new product line will be PostalUnion,
- offering FirstClass system administrators a combination of UUCP
- and SMTP connectivity, complete with full electronic mail and
- Usenet news service. The retail price for an unlimited-user-
- license package will be $1995, and until 31-Aug-92, IE is offering
- an exchange price to SMTP\QM and UMCP\QM customers of only $200,
- if the customers are also taking advantage of IE's QuickMail-for-
- FirstClass trade-in offer. (For information, contact Information
- Electronics as shown below.) In addition, IE will offer a $495
- gateway to link FirstClass to Microsoft Mail via network or modem.
-
- Asked about Information Electronics' departure, Sue Nail, a media
- representative at CE Software, said, "We're sorry to lose them as
- developers. Tom's a good programmer." CE informed many of its
- large-site customers last month that the Information Electronics
- products would no longer be available, and presented special
- offers for IE customers from vendors offering similar products.
- While CE would prefer to avoid the appearance of stepping on
- another company's toes, they explained that they wanted QuickMail
- customers to hear about alternatives that would allow them to stay
- with QuickMail if they wish, saying, "We want to take care of our
- customers in any way that we can."
-
- Information Electronics now offers support for its products, both
- its new FirstClass add-ons and the previous QuickMail
- enhancements, via its new FirstClass bulletin board. The graphical
- BBS, which can be reached by modem at 607/868-3393, shows off the
- features of both the FirstClass software and the PostalUnion
- gateway, offering local and Internet discussions, Usenet
- newsgroups, product updates, and IE's online support forum.
- Although the BBS is intended for IE's customers, the company
- welcomes people who are interested in experiencing FirstClass to
- give it a try. Users should call with a modem supporting 1200-2400
- bps or V.32 9600 bps, and press Return at both the userid and
- password prompts to create a new user account. They will then be
- able to download the Macintosh application that provides the
- graphical front end or proceed to use the BBS's VT100 terminal
- interface. Users may also take FirstClass and PostalUnion for a
- test drive at SoftArc's booth (#122) at the Mactivity conference
- in Santa Clara next week.
-
- SoftArc plans to offer a Windows front end application in the near
- future, in addition to other enhancements that we will describe in
- depth in an upcoming issue of TidBITS.
-
- Information Electronics -- 607/868-3331
- SoftArc, Inc. -- 416/299-4723 -- 416/609-2250 BBS
-
- Information from:
- Information Electronics -- info@ie.com
-
-
- Excel 4.0 for the Mac II
- ------------------------
- by Howard Hansen
-
- In this second installment of my review of Excel 4.0, I promised
- to tell you about some of the less glitzy features of the new
- version. I don't mean to say that you should stop reading lest you
- get bored. We'll see plenty of cool stuff here as well.
-
- [Howard didn't intend the review to go to three parts, but we ran
- out of space in this issue. I've tried to retain the sections
- dealing with the functional parts of Excel this issue, and next
- time we'll look at user interface and output features. -Adam]
-
-
- Errata
- In the first part of this review, I complained that I wanted a way
- to turn Autofill's brains off - so that it would mindlessly
- duplicate values into adjacent cells. I got my wish much sooner
- than I anticipated. Holding down the option key as you drag does
- the trick. Thanks to Ray at Microsoft for noticing my mistake.
-
- I also gave an incorrect example for using Autofill to do a linear
- regression on a series of numbers. Doing an autofill after
- selecting 2, 4, 8 returns 10.67, 12.67, etc. I meant to say that
- doing an autofill on 2, 4 would return 6, 8, 10, etc., not 8, 16,
- 32, etc., since Excel does linear, not geometric autofills.
-
-
- Macro Changes
- The macro language has many nice changes, of which I find the
- changes to the debugging environment to be the most useful. Excel
- has always let you step through the macro one instruction at a
- time so you can watch what happens. Two new buttons show up in the
- Single Step dialog: Pause and Step over. Pause has saved me an
- immeasurable amount of grief. I often step through a macro and,
- just before coming to the crucial step, realize that I needed to
- make a little change. Before, I had to halt the macro, make the
- change, then start the macro up again. Now, I just hit the Pause
- button, make the fix, then hit the resume tool, which sits on the
- "Macro Paused" toolbar that Excel brings up immediately after you
- hit pause. The Step Over button allows you to let Excel run
- through a subroutine you've programmed correctly without having to
- look at each step in the process. After Excel hits the RETURN in
- the subroutine, it resumes single-step mode.
-
-
- Direct copy and paste
- The COPY and CUT macro functions now have arguments. No, they
- don't fight - they allow you to specify the source and destination
- ranges. In one step, you can tell Excel where to copy from and
- where to paste to. Not only will this save tedious coding for
- activating and selecting, it also runs tons faster. If you have
- macros that work with the clipboard, rewrite them using this.
-
-
- Global Macro Sheet
- Finally, we have a macro sheet that opens every time Excel opens.
- When you record a macro, Excel will ask you where to store the
- commands - in a macro sheet you specify, or in the Global Macro
- sheet. Before Excel 4.0, I didn't have a convenient place to put
- those little utility macros which make my life easier. I've also
- created a custom toolbar that includes tools to run most of my
- macros.
-
-
- Other Macro Additions
- Excel now has AUTO_ACTIVATE and AUTO_DEACTIVATE macro functions
- that specify which macro to run when the user activates or
- deactivates a given document. The ON.DOUBLECLICK function lets you
- change what double-clicking in a document means. These tools can
- help you create Excel spreadsheets that only a sophisticated user
- could distinguish from a stand-alone application.
-
-
- Crosstab Wizard
- Next in what will, no doubt, turn into a long line of wizards in
- Excel and other Microsoft products, we find the Crosstab Wizard.
- This remarkable electronic helper makes creating cross tabulated
- reports from your database information remarkably easy.
-
- A crosstab report consists of a grid of numbers with row and
- column labels. If you had a database of sales transactions which
- had information on the product sold, total sale, as well as the
- sex and age of the purchaser, you could create a crosstab report
- where the column labels would indicate the sex of the purchaser,
- the row labels would indicate the age of the purchaser (either as
- separate numbers or in ranges you specify), and the cells would
- hold the dollar value of the sales for each category (or
- alternatively, you could have the crosstab count the number of
- sales in each category). This can be hard to visualize, but
- crosstabs are really useful.
-
- Like the Chart Wizard I discussed in TidBITS#127, the Crosstab
- Wizard takes you screen-by-screen through the process, asking you
- what field to use for the row labels, column labels, and for the
- actual cell values. You can choose to sum, count, average, or even
- take the standard deviation of the reported values.
-
- When Excel creates a crosstab report, it creates a new worksheet
- to hold the information. This report does not have a "hot links"
- to the database, so you need to recalculate an existing crosstab
- when the underlying data change. Once you've created a crosstab
- report, Excel allows you to double-click on any cell in the table,
- at which point Excel creates another new worksheet and
- automatically extracts all records from the database which meet
- the criteria you specify - a killer feature!
-
- None of this comes quickly. Unless you have the fastest of Macs or
- the smallest of databases, you will spend some time drumming your
- fingers before you get results. I haven't had any problems with
- the shipping version of the Crosstab Wizard (yet), but it bombed
- prodigiously and spectacularly while in beta, so I still feel a
- little wary about it - I always save my data before jumping in.
- Although the Crosstab Wizard works nicely, I still want the kind
- of live, multi-dimensional crosstab reporting and browsing
- available with Improv, MUSE, and other products.
-
-
- Data Analysis
- With Excel 4.0, Microsoft has added a number of powerful data
- analysis arrows to its quiver. For the business user who uses
- Excel for classic spreadsheet "what-if" analyses, 4.0 provides an
- excellent way to manage the different results generated from a
- model. With the new Scenario Manager, you can have Excel run a
- model you have through a number of different "what-if" scenarios
- with Excel plugging different values for different inputs and
- returning the end results. You can name each of the scenarios, and
- have Excel create a summary worksheet which gives you all of the
- inputs and the results produced by the model. Using Excel's new
- Print Report add-in, you can also have Excel print each different
- scenario automatically.
-
- For those of a more technical bent, the "Analysis ToolPak" add-in
- consists of a series of what I like to call "mini-wizards." These
- ask you everything you need to tell it to perform a statistical,
- financial, or engineering analysis - you can perform Anova, t-,
- and, z-tests, and even create one-step histograms.
-
-
- Workbooks
- If you link worksheets together, you probably know the remarkable
- stress that comes from the "Update references to unopened
- documents?" dialog box. Excel 4.0 allows you to "bind" as many
- documents as you wish together into one file, called a workbook.
- Under Excel 3.0, my company's financial management system
- consisted of four separate worksheets (receipts, billings,
- assumptions, and a summary worksheet). With Excel 4.0, I've bound
- them all together into a workbook. Now I don't have to make sure I
- open them in the right order. Plus, I only have to double-click on
- one icon, and I only copy one file.
-
- You can also have "unbound" worksheets in your Workbooks. They
- will open just like bound worksheets, but you can change them
- outside of Excel. For instance, you may have a server which has
- today's currency exchange rates in a Lotus 1-2-3 format. If you
- store it as an unbound worksheet in a workbook, the latest version
- opens when you open the workbook.
-
- You can also use Workbooks to simulate 3-D worksheets (in fact, if
- you open a Lotus 3-D file in Excel, it becomes a Workbook). In
- practice, though, I find that Excel's Data Consolidate feature
- provides a more flexible solution for summarizing data than 3-D
- worksheets.
-
-
- Add-ins
- Many of the new features I've described here don't reside in the
- core of Excel code. They live on special macro sheets called
- Add-ins. Rather than put everything into the product, Microsoft
- chose to make Excel more modular and add major functionality this
- way. I applaud the decision to keep the core code of the product
- simple, and allow the user to add only what she needs. This
- technique saves RAM to make your "real" work faster.
-
- This modularity also has a cost. When you choose the menu item for
- the first time, Excel opens up the add-in, then does whatever
- preparation the command requires, so after you let go of the mouse
- button, you wait... even on my Rocket-accelerated Mac II. I wish
- Microsoft could figure out a way to compile the add-in and create
- files like Word 5.0's command files.
-
- Add-ins also present the problem of possibly different
- configurations of Excel for different users. I can just see the
- help desk person saying, "Now just choose Crosstab from the Data
- menu.... What do you mean you don't have Crosstab on your Data
- menu?!?" If you chose a minimal installation, you will have a
- significantly different program than your neighbor who loaded all
- 11 MB.
-
-
- Charting Changes
- Excel bulked up with a few new chart types for this version. These
- include the Surface chart (in 2-D and 3-D versions) and the Radar
- chart (really - they use it a lot in Japan). You've all seen
- surface charts, but radar??? In a radar chart each data category
- gets its own axis. I have seen this type of chart created manually
- in psychological profiles, where the test measures your level of
- intuition, or extraversion, or whatever, then plots each on its
- own axis. The radar chart connects the points into a polygon so
- you can see how vastly your spouse's personality differs from your
- own!
-
- In Excel 3.0, the Format 3-D View dialog box took the prize as the
- coolest feature in the entire program. Unfortunately, you will
- need to use that wire frame wonder much less often with 4.0, since
- you can now manipulate the 3-D view directly. Select the 3-D chart
- area, wait a moment, then click on it again. You will see a set of
- eight handles which correspond to the corners of a cube (or
- rectangular prism). Drag any of the handles and the 3-D view
- changes automatically.
-
- Microsoft still needs to eliminate the distinction between
- worksheet and charting modes. I consider myself a power user (to
- steal a phrase, I actually consider myself a raging thunder-lizard
- of an Excel user). Even so, I get confused and forget that I have
- to double-click on a chart embedded on a worksheet so I can get at
- a certain menu item which exists only on the charting menus. Why
- not have the charting menu bar appear automatically when you have
- a chart selected, and have the worksheet menu appear when you
- click away. Heck, if Claris could figure that out for ClarisWorks,
- why not Microsoft for Excel?
-
-
- Nice Additions
-
- * When you select a cell or range of cells which you've defined a
- name for, the name automatically appears in the reference area (to
- the left of the formula bar).
-
- * Double-clicking on a cell which contains a formula causes Excel
- to select ALL cells which it uses to calculate the value.
-
- * The color tool on the formatting toolbar makes choosing colors
- for cells or objects much easier - each click applies the next
- color in Excel's 16-color palette. (Shift-clicking moves backwards
- through the colors.)
-
- * Nearly every dialog box in Excel now has a title bar, which
- means you can drag it around and easily jump to another
- application and a help button which summons context-sensitive
- help.
-
- * Functions, Number Formats, and Toolbar tools are grouped into
- categories in their dialog boxes.
-
- * If you type a function and the open parenthesis, then forget the
- arguments to that function, just hit Control-A and Excel
- automatically enters the argument names.
-
- * Worried about making a spelling error in your worksheet for the
- Annual Report? Never fear, Microsoft has added a spelling checker
- to Excel. It doesn't use the Word dictionary, but it can share
- user dictionaries with Word.
-
- * If your Mac has a microphone, you can record sound notes in
- Excel and attach them to cells. With the macro language, you can
- have Excel play any sound in any file on your Mac.
-
- [Stay tuned next week... -Adam]
-
- Microsoft Customer Service -- 800/426-9400
-
- Information from:
- Howard Hansen, The Oasis Group -- HHansen@aol.com
- 206/282-6255
-
-
- Reviews/06-Jul-92
- -----------------
-
- * MacWEEK
- Cachet 1.0 -- pg. 33
- Norton Utilities for Macintosh 2.0 -- pg. 33
- Mirus FilmPrinter turbo II -- pg. 36
- Micro Planner Manager & Micro Planner X-Pert -- pg. 36
-
- References:
- MacWEEK -- 29-Jun-92, Vol. 6, #25
-
-
- ..
-
- This text is wrapped as a setext. For more information send email
- with the single word "setext" (no quotes) in the Subject: line to
- <fileserver@tidbits.com>. A file will be returned promptly.
-
-
-
-