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- TidBITS#144/28-Sep-92
- =====================
-
- It seems that PowerBooks are all the rage these days, and we have
- news on the upcoming PowerBook Duos, along with a report on how
- Apple handles the PowerBook 100 Rework program and an article
- about GCC's new WriteMove II portable printer. In other news,
- Apple prices drop even further, sumex holds a bake sale (not
- really), and you should stay on the lookout for a new 13" color
- monitor from Apple that tastes great and is less filling.
-
- 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. Caveat lector. 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/28-Sep-92
- Navigator Buglet
- Prices, Prices, Prices
- Sumex Fund Drive
- PowerBook 100 Rework Experience
- Lighter Color on the Horizon
- The WriteMove, Baby
- Duo Date Approaching
- Reviews/28-Sep-92
-
- [Archived as /info-mac/digest/tb/tidbits-144.etx; 29K]
-
-
- MailBITS/28-Sep-92
- ------------------
- Bill Leue writes, "Your article on the StyleWriter backlog problem
- mentions the HP DeskWriter as a suitable substitute. You should
- also note that HP has recently extended the warranty on the
- DeskWriter to three years, making it even more attractive. The
- latest HP drivers seem to completely eliminate problems with
- System 7.0, TrueType, etc., and offer print spooling to boot."
- [Alternately, read on for news about a new printer from GCC. -
- Adam]
-
- Information from:
- Bill Leue -- leue@crd.ge.com
-
-
- Apple Support
- A friend writes in response to Tonya's query about how Apple would
- restrict toll-free support to people who buy through the new Apple
- Catalog: "I used to work on the System 7 upgrade answer line so I
- may be able to answer your question. Users who purchase items
- mail-order will have to provide their serial number, which will be
- their ticket into the support line. If you don't have the magic
- number, you will be referred to the usual avenues of support,
- dealers, user groups, and so on."
-
-
- About those mailing lists...
- In response to our comment of last week about Apple never having
- used the mailing list they keep from returned registration cards,
- Edward Reid writes:
-
- They use it now - to make money by selling it to third-party
- vendors. When I sent in the registration for my IIci, I listed my
- P.O. Box as 378-CI. I also checked the box on the card requesting
- no outside use. (I believe that box was on the IIci card. Some of
- the registration cards had it and some didn't. The ones that
- didn't, I wrote a note to the same effect.) A few months later I
- got advertising mail from some unrelated vendor (I no longer
- remember who - I think it was only one). Because of the variation
- in the P.O. Box,** **I knew the address came from Apple. I called
- Apple and complained. They said, "If you checked the box we
- wouldn't do that." I said, "Caught you red-handed." They must have
- fixed it; I haven't received any more mail sent to that P.O. Box.
-
- Information from:
- Edward Reid -- ed@titipu.resun.com
-
-
- Navigator Buglet
- ----------------
- We incorrectly reported a problem in replying to Internet email
- from CompuServe in TidBITS#142. The problem is that Internet mail
- coming in has the initial ">" character stripped from the address.
- That in itself is not necessarily a problem, as it turns out,
- since CompuServe has changed the way the gateway works so you no
- longer need that character. Sort of. CompuServe Information
- Manager 2.0.1 responded to a test mailfile correctly, however,
- Navigator 3.1.1 failed in the same test. The simple workaround for
- Navigator is inserting the ">" character in front of the word
- INTERNET in the sender's address in the message window. Then you
- can click Reply and Navigator will use your edited address instead
- of the incorrect one.
-
- The fact that CIM worked correctly but Navigator didn't implies,
- and this was confirmed by Dave Elliott of CompuServe, that the
- problem lies in the protocols that CompuServe uses to communicate
- with Navigator in the Mail area. Thus, there's no telling who has
- to fix what, but for the time being Navigator users have to fix
- outgoing replies to Internet mail.
-
- Information from:
- Dave Elliott -- 70006.461@compuserve.com
-
-
- Prices, Prices, Prices
- ----------------------
- I'm not going to publish a chart of Macintosh prices this week,
- but I might do one next week when the retail channel gets a look
- at the new suggested retail prices that Apple USA just announced.
- Apple dropped the suggested retail prices by 11% to 36%, with most
- of the cuts coming on machines from the IIci on down. The Quadra
- prices only changed by between 11% and 22%. Do note that these
- cuts are only effective in the US.
-
- We have no way of knowing how much these price cuts will affect
- real world prices since Apple lowered prices to dealers several
- weeks ago and the lowest discount prices in our chart of last week
- might reflect those cuts. It's possible that dealers unable to
- match the volume of the larger metropolitan dealers will now be
- able to reduce their prices significantly, but pricing remains up
- to the individual dealer. Still, it's hard to complain about price
- cuts of any sort, especially after the news that Apple will not
- distribute System 7.1 for free.
-
- The price cuts will decrease the initial sticker shock for
- shoppers, especially those frequenting superstores before
- Christmas. In a twist that may not surprise some, IBM just
- informed department stores that it won't deliver the lowest-priced
- machines that it announced a few weeks ago (various PC-clone
- configurations, not in the slightest bit interesting in and of
- themselves). So instead of the promised $1,100 machines, IBM will
- send these unhappy dealers machines starting at $1,700, although
- the more expensive computers supposedly have "more advanced
- technology." Compaq's ProLinea line has reportedly been in short
- supply since its June introduction, and with these two major
- players bungling the consumer market as they have done so often in
- the past (bringing up the PCjr in this context is a hallowed
- tradition), Apple's lower prices might bring a significant number
- of new users into the fold. With a perfectly useful (if not
- technologically-whizzy) Classic II 4/40 listing for $1,079 and a
- color-capable LC II 4/40 listing at $1,239 (gee, I just described
- the Performa 200 and 400 - what a surprise), and a ramped up
- production line, Apple stands an excellent chance of stealing the
- show this Christmas.
-
- More support for the move against DOS-based clones comes from a
- new deal Apple will unveil on October 19th. Called "The Easy Way,"
- the deal will allow a purchaser of any Mac other than a Performa
- to purchase a bundle of software for a suggested retail of $399.
- Apple designed the bundle to highlight the Mac's superiority over
- and compatibility with DOS machines, and it will include Lotus
- 1-2-3 for Macintosh, WordPerfect/Mac, Universal SoftPC, and
- AccessPC. That gives you the Mac versions of the two best-selling
- packages in the DOS world, the ability to run most DOS
- applications slowly, and the ability to easily use DOS disks.
- Considering that those products cost over $850 mail order, go for
- that $399 price if you want the software. You can only get this
- deal if you purchase a Mac through a dealer or VAR (value-added
- reseller) and it expires on 03-Jan-93.
-
- Information from:
- Apple propaganda
- Pythaeus
-
-
- Sumex Fund Drive
- ----------------
- It's one step above a bake sale, but a grass-roots movement is
- underway among Internet users to raise money toward a few
- gigabytes of disk space for the popular FTP site at sumex-
- aim.stanford.edu. The site has been overwhelmed with submissions
- and Bill Lipa, the administrator, has had to implement a policy of
- deleting less commonly used files. Unfortunately, those files
- always show up in a net question or answer shortly thereafter, and
- someone has to resubmit them. Part of the problem no doubt stems
- from the number of cool, but huge, QuickTime movies that have
- appeared in the last few months.
-
- The solution is simple. Buy more disk space. It's not that simple,
- however, when you realize that the archive is entirely run by
- volunteers, primarily Bill, and that sumex is unrelated to
- Stanford University other than the fact that Stanford owns the
- computer itself. The archive has no money and no status as a legal
- entity. From that quandary sprang the idea of a fund drive. If
- several hundred people (which isn't many, considering how many
- people use sumex daily) send in $10, Bill could buy a larger drive
- to add to the relatively small one currently online.
-
- If you use sumex (or one of the mirror sites that depends on sumex
- for its files) and wish to contribute $10 or so (I'm sure Bill
- wouldn't turn down a few million if you have that lying around,
- and then we'd have a full-time moderator for life.), you can send
- a check made out to "William Lipa" to:
-
- William Lipa
- P.O. Box 7313
- Menlo Park, CA 94026-7313 U.S.A.
-
- A number of issues about logistics and using the money
- appropriately came up on Info-Mac Digest, which Bill also
- moderates, but the only real option is to send checks to Bill. As
- Bill said at some point, if you don't trust him, you're unlikely
- to contribute in the first place. He will maintain a file on sumex
- listing check numbers and amounts so people can keep track of what
- comes in and the total available. If you include your email or
- snail mail address with your check and ask, Bill will send you a
- note acknowledging receipt of the check.
-
- Of course, one way around all of this would be for a company to
- donate a large SCSI hard drive in return for mention as the
- drive's donor. I believe sumex runs on a Sun workstation of some
- sort, so if you know of a company interested in gaining some net
- exposure, drop Bill a note and ask him about the specifics.
- There's no such thing as too much disk space, especially for a
- public archive that serves thousands of people.
-
- And as Bill said, he'll donate $20,000 worth of his time, so in
- comparison to all that work what's a measly $10 or so if you're a
- heavy user? My check is in the mail.
-
- Information from:
- Bill Lipa -- info-mac-request@sumex-aim.stanford.edu
-
-
- PowerBook 100 Rework Experience
- -------------------------------
- by Don Norman -- dnorman@ucsd.edu
-
- On September 19th, I signed on to AppleLink and discovered that my
- PowerBook 100 was being recalled [to prevent the problem that
- could melt a small hole in the case - see TidBITS#143]. That
- didn't sound good. I immediately called the 800 number, five
- minutes after closing time. "No problem," the person said, "we are
- here to help."
-
- The next day, September 20th, Airborne Express delivered a big box
- to my doorstep, with complete and easy to follow instructions. I
- packed the PowerBook and the next morning called Airborne to come
- and pick it up, which they did the same day, September 21st.
-
- On September 23rd, Airborne Express delivered the PowerBook back
- to me. Unfortunately, I couldn't get it to run off of the battery,
- just off of wall current. How did the battery get discharged? I
- left it charging overnight. The next morning (September 24th) it
- still wouldn't work off battery, and it wouldn't work off my spare
- battery. I called the Apple trouble line. John, who answered the
- phone, couldn't help, so he turned me over to Ben. Ben said, "you
- know that switch at the back of the PowerBook that disconnects the
- battery? Check its setting". "Oh," I said, flipped the switch and
- guess what, the dead battery came back to life.
-
- Conclusion: A very smooth and well run operation. Nothing on the
- disk was lost. But I did lose all the Control Panel parameters -
- date, time, AppleLink setting - even the city setting in the Map.
- (Bad design, if you ask me: on battery-operated portables, this
- stuff ought to be saved on the hard disk, not in a power-sensitive
- location.)
-
- [The trio of lithium batteries inside the PowerBook 100's "back
- door" provide current to store this kind of information, and even
- the computer's whole memory image briefly, when the main battery
- is dead or has been removed so another can be inserted. Under most
- circumstances, you'll never have ALL battery and AC power removed
- at once. This will only happen when the machine is being serviced,
- and all power MUST be removed so as to avoid damaging the
- PowerBook's components. Having to reset a few things such as time,
- location, and mouse tracking is, IMHO, a small price to pay in
- return for not frying the logic board. - Mark]
-
- Disclaimer: Between the time I sent in the PowerBook and the time
- it came back, I accepted a job at Apple as an Apple Fellow to
- start 01-Jan-93 (where, among other things, I hope to improve
- designs such as the volatile Control Panel). My experience with
- the PowerBook modification was superb, but if it had been bad, I
- would have told you.
-
-
- Lighter Color on the Horizon
- ----------------------------
- Along with the new monitors Apple introduced with the Performas,
- look for a new 13" color monitor to replace the aging Apple 13"
- color monitor on October 19th. The new monitor will cost $200 less
- than the old one, weigh much less, and include a tilt & swivel
- base and front-mounted controls. Picture quality should remain
- high with a newer Sony Trinitron.
-
- The only question is whether or not the new monitor will cause
- more interference problems in double-monitor setups without the
- heavy, metal shielding used by the older 13" color monitor. As it
- is, I can't put my SE/30 closer than about four inches from my
- Apple 13" color monitor or the color monitor flickers badly. I'll
- be curious to see if Apple discontinues the much-maligned 12"
- color monitor or merely lowers its price.
-
- Information from:
- Pythaeus
-
-
- The WriteMove, Baby
- -------------------
- As the popularity of the Macintosh PowerBooks increases (Apple
- claims to have sold more than 300,000 PowerBooks in less than a
- year), more and more PowerBook-specific products arrive at the
- industry doorstep (if not ours :-)). Some seem to fade into
- obscurity, such as the SCSI-based Radius PowerView, whose lack of
- popularity may have helped slow the release of SuperMac's
- SuperView as well. Others seem destined to fare better, and from
- the initial sounds of it, GCC's new WriteMove II printer should
- find a nice niche for itself.
-
- GCC specifically designed the WriteMove II to complement the
- PowerBook line. The printer weighs in at a mere 2.5 pounds,
- measures 11.7" x 3.5" x 2.0" (which puts it at about half the size
- of a closed PowerBook), features 360 x 360 dpi resolution, and can
- run on battery power (it recharges when it's plugged in). In the
- past, portable printers have traded quality for portability, but
- it appears that the WriteMove has solved that problem with its 360
- x 360 dpi resolution and ATM and TrueType compatibility.
- Unfortunately, the WriteMove does not come completely without
- trade-offs.
-
- The print engine differs from the common low-end printers these
- days since it uses thermal fusion to imprint characters with a
- wax-based ink from the ribbon. GCC has two types of ribbons, a
- multi-strike cloth ribbon that you can flip five or more times and
- a single-strike ribbon for absolutely final copies. The single-
- strike ribbon costs significantly more per page, not surprisingly,
- but the multi-strike ribbon's quality will suffice for most common
- printing jobs, although the quality decreases as you use up the
- ribbon. Interestingly for those who do presentations on the road,
- the WriteMove II prints on normal transparencies.
-
- Needless to say, the WriteMove II uses QuickDraw, which means that
- you must use either ATM and PostScript fonts or TrueType to print
- at a full 360 dpi resolution. To help you along, GCC bundles ATM
- and Adobe Type 1 versions of Times, Courier, Helvetica, Helvetica
- Narrow, Symbol, and Palatino (six font families for a total of 21
- fonts). Of course, you have a bunch of those as TrueType fonts
- included with System 7, but it's still useful.
-
- The driver software offers most of the features commonly available
- such as background printing, but GCC has built in a couple of less
- common features as well. If you want to queue up a bunch of files
- to print later (say you're working on a plane and don't have the
- printer set up), you can use Print Later, and if you want to check
- your document before printing, GCC included a Preview mode. The
- driver has a Color/Grayscale mode like Apple's LaserWriter driver,
- and for those five people who still use bitmap fonts, the GCC
- driver does font smoothing.
-
- The WriteMove's major drawback (and the reason why you wouldn't
- use it as your main printer) is that you must feed each sheet to
- it personally. That's certainly not a problem for a new
- presentation transparency, or for printing out a quick memo, but
- it would pale as entertainment after the first 15 or 20 pages of a
- long document. In addition, the WriteMove II is no speed demon at
- about a half page per minute, but you can't expect blinding speed
- from something that weighs 2.5 pounds and can run on battery
- power. The batteries last for about 12 to 15 pages per charge, and
- you can recharge the batteries (it will take about six hours for a
- full charge, although the batteries charge whenever the printer is
- plugged in, even if it's printing) about 600 times before you need
- new ones. Like the PowerBooks, the WriteMove II has a power-
- conserving sleep mode that it enters after one minute of idle
- time. After three minutes it shuts itself off to save even more
- power.
-
- Aside from the paper handling and slow speed, the only other
- problem I see is that you have to get ribbons directly from GCC or
- a GCC dealer, which may make them hard to find when you're on the
- road and the ribbon wears out (as it no doubt will). GCC will
- deliver a ribbon overnight for $9, which is expensive, but in an
- emergency.... Otherwise, the WriteMove II sounds perfect for those
- people who live and die by their PowerBooks in hotel rooms.
-
- Particularly when combined with a 170 with an internal
- PowerPort/Gold modem (which sends and receives faxes), the
- WriteMove II offers some impressive features in a small and light
- package. If GCC could add an optional paper tray, they'd have a
- definite winner on their hands. As it stands now, the WriteMove II
- should be a popular printer for portable users, but purchasers
- might compare it to the Kodak Diconix 150 (the printer on which
- GCC based its now-discontinued WriteMove printer) in order to
- determine which feature set and trade-off set best meets their
- specific needs.
-
- The WriteMove II has a one year warranty and will retail for $599,
- but dealers set their own prices, so I'd expect it to run around
- $500 at first, perhaps dropping a bit after the novelty has worn
- off.
-
- GCC -- 800/422-7777
-
- Information from:
- Ken Hancock -- kenh@world.std.com
- GCC propaganda
-
-
- Duo Date Approaching
- --------------------
- A few weeks back in TidBITS#138 I wrote briefly about the upcoming
- Macintosh PowerBook Duo 210 and 230, mostly focussing on basic
- specs. More information has come in since then, both good and bad,
- but in terms of overall design, I think that Apple has a winner
- with the Duos. As I said previously, the Duos weigh about 4
- pounds, measure 8.5" X 11" X 1.4", support up to 24 MB of RAM, use
- 9", 4-bit grey-scale, backlit, supertwist LCD screens, include
- either 80 or 120 MB hard drives, and run with either a 25 MHz or
- 33 MHz 68030. They have only two ports, a serial port and an RJ-11
- phone port for the internal modem's phone line connection.
-
- Power management will supposedly improve, and the Duos will
- automatically dim the screen and/or go to sleep when closed. For
- those that despise the sliders that the 140, 145, and 170 use for
- controlling the screen, the Duos will have push button brightness
- and contrast controls. We reserve judgement until we've tried it,
- but the sliders are decidedly inferior to the PowerBook 100's
- dials. Finally, perhaps because Apple never took advantage of the
- motherboard/daughterboard design of the current PowerBooks
- (although we've heard rumors of some third parties working on
- interesting projects that involve that daughterboard), the Duos
- will have a single motherboard along with a light magnesium frame
- that provides stiffness and helps dissipate heat.
-
- The list prices will range between $2,500 and $3,000 for the base
- units. The fact that Apple stuffed that much power into a four
- pound package is interesting in and of itself, but even better are
- the two docks that Apple will sell separately, the Duo Dock for
- about $1,200 and the Duo MiniDock for about $600.
-
-
- Docks
- The Duo Dock looks like nothing so much as a IIsi with a really
- big floppy port along the entire front. It will be two-toned,
- PowerBook charcoal on the bottom and Macintosh platinum on top
- (since people will pretty much have to use it with a PowerBook
- inside and a monitor sitting on top). The oversized floppy port
- holds the PowerBook Duo itself, sucking it in as the Mac sucks in
- a floppy disk. Somewhere in that process, a door in the back of
- the Duo flips down to expose what is supposedly a 400-pin
- connector that will attach to the dock internally. The Duo Dock
- features two NuBus slots, a slot for a math coprocessor, a
- SuperDrive, room for another optional hard drive, and the full set
- of normal Macintosh ports, including internal video. As we
- reported before, you can lock the Duo into the dock with a key
- switch so you only have to secure the dock itself (if you needed
- to lock it down for security reasons). Removing the Duo requires
- pushing an eject button - there's no software-based SuperTrash
- that ejects the Duo when you drag the hard disk to the trash. The
- only drawback to the Duo Dock is the placement of the internal
- floppy drive. Apple ran out of space, so the drive sits low to the
- ground on the side, which means that papers and other junk on your
- desk will block it.
-
- The Duo MiniDock provides essentially the same ports used by the
- PowerBook 145 and 170 currently with a few additions, an RJ-11
- jack, sound in and out, SCSI (a totally unconfirmed rumor says
- that you may see more of that HDI-30 SCSI port in the future, even
- in desktop Macs), printer and modem serial ports, video out, ADB,
- floppy, and a power jack. It won't have the floppy drive, room for
- an additional hard drive, or NuBus slots of the Duo Dock, hence
- the lower price. I suspect that users who primarily use the Duo
- when traveling will prefer the MiniDock so they can have a full
- selection of ports (they can use the ports in the hotel room since
- the MiniDock will be light and portable, but probably not on the
- plane, since the MiniDock and Duo will be less portable than just
- the Duo). The floppy port on the MiniDock will only work with the
- PowerBook 100's HDI-20-based SuperDrive. Interestingly, the
- MiniDock reportedly provides Super VGA output so you can hook into
- one of those monitors should you need to.
-
- Apple will also offer a sub-$150 adapter that provides only ADB
- and floppy ports for the Duos, which makes sense for people who
- don't want all the options in the MiniDock. This adapter is more
- important than it sounds. Since the Duos cannot do the PowerBook
- 100 SCSI-disk trick, the only way to get data into them (other
- than by slow modem) is via LocalTalk or floppy, and the only way
- to get a floppy attached without one of the more expensive docks
- is this $150 adapter.
-
- One detail that has gone unmentioned is the need for a keyboard
- and mouse. You'll obviously need one when docked to a Duo Dock,
- since it sucks the complete Duo inside. By the same token, you
- won't need them with the MiniDock or the adapter, since you'll
- have access to the Duo's monitor, and thus its keyboard and
- trackball.
-
-
- More docks
- MacWEEK reported this week that several third parties are working
- on additional docks, including two from E-Machines. The $500
- PowerLink Presentor will provide gobs of video output choices
- along with graphics acceleration, stereo output, serial ports, and
- ADB and floppy ports. The $700 PowerLink DeskNet, on the other
- hand, will add Ethernet support, stereo input, and a SCSI
- connector, along with hardware pan and zoom.
-
- I'm unsure how well third party docks will sell. E-Machines and
- others may face some resistance from people who feel that the dock
- is not merely an accessory, but an integral part of a Duo, and
- thus the best docks must come from Apple (I'm not saying that it's
- logical reasoning, but I'll bet it will happen). I could also see
- some suspicion of added incompatibilities until the third party
- docks had proven themselves and been reviewed in the magazines.
- Nonetheless, users should eventually welcome the additional
- flexibility as long as it doesn't come at too high of a cost.
-
-
- Modems
- Although Global Village has all but sewed up the market for
- PowerBook modems (OK, so that's probably a slight exaggeration and
- I haven't tested any of them), Apple will attempt to make up for
- the mediocre modem it shipped with earlier PowerBooks with the
- Apple Express Modem. Like the PowerPort/Gold, Apple's new modem
- will be what I call "v.everything" which means v.32bis and on down
- along with send and receive 9600 bps fax capabilities. Apple will
- sell bundles that include the modem, and no telling yet how Apple
- will set the pricing on those bundles.
-
-
- Opinionated drooling
- OK, I'll admit it. I think the Duos and their docks are the
- neatest things since automatic breadmakers (I was born after
- sliced bread was neat). I see a dream system consisting of a 24 MB
- Duo 230 with an internal v.everything modem and a Duo Dock that
- has an extra large hard drive and a math coprocessor along with a
- 16" color monitor and a few NuBus cards, perhaps a VideoSpigot or
- something like that. You get tremendous performance when docked
- with the additional hard drive and the coprocessor, and the 16"
- monitor and NuBus slots provide everything you need when at your
- desk. Away from the office, however, you still have an impressive
- machine that only has a smaller grey-scale monitor, less disk
- space, no floppy, and no coprocessor, not to mention the smaller
- keyboard and recessed trackball. That's still nothing to sneeze at
- for portable use, especially in a four pound package. The price
- will stay steep for a while, especially since the Duo will use a
- new, smaller memory card, but a Duo and Duo Dock combination will
- really replace the combination of a desktop Mac, a IIci say, and a
- PowerBook 170. I'll bet in that light the Duo does well. The only
- people who won't be able to take advantage of the Duo scheme are
- those like me who have their Macs doing stuff all the time via
- modem. If I went to Macworld and took my hypothetical Duo, I
- wouldn't get any email the entire week, which would be a problem.
- Now if only Apple could throw in some Newton technology, I might
- just have to turn the SE/30 into an email server...
-
- Information from:
- Pythaeus
-
- Related articles:
- MacWEEK -- 28-Sep-92, Vol. 6, #34, pg. 1
- MacWEEK -- 21-Sep-92, Vol. 6, #33, pg. 1
-
-
- Reviews/28-Sep-92
- -----------------
-
- * MacWEEK -- 21-Sep-92, Vol. 6, #33
- Equation Editors -- pg. 55
- Expressionist 3.0
- MathType 3.0
- Tektronix Phaser II PXe -- pg. 55
- WireTap 2.0 -- pg. 60
- Morph -- pg. 60
- PC Exchange -- pg. 62
-
-
- ..
-
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