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- TidBITS#145/05-Oct-92
- =====================
-
- The Duo debate continues and we present the first 7.1 tip for
- early birds. Printer mavens will like HP's new dual cartridge
- color DeskWriter, NEC has a new driver for the CDR-74 that
- solves some problematic conflicts, we figure out just how
- Performa users will re-install system software since they don't
- get bundled system disks, and finally, a review of a rare book
- on tech support.
-
- 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/05-Oct-92
- Duo Doubters
- CDR-74 Problem
- Now Utilities 4.0 Bugs Out
- System 7.1 Tip O' The Week
- Performa Systems
- Double DeskWriters
- Help! The Art of Computer Technical Support
- Reviews/05-Oct-92
-
- [Archived as /info-mac/digest/tb/tidbits-145.etx; 29K]
-
-
- MailBITS/05-Oct-92
- ------------------
- I said last week that I might do Macintosh price chart this week
- after the suggested retail price drop had a chance to sink in.
- Well, either it hasn't had a chance, or it won't sink in, since
- street prices didn't change from the chart in TidBITS#143. Stay
- tuned.
-
-
- LISTSERV 101
- I like helping people with subscription problems to the TIDBITS
- LISTSERV, but it isn't a good use of my time since you can easily
- do everything yourself. Here are the instructions for subscribing
- to and leaving the list. If you switch accounts, signoff from your
- old account and subscribe from your new one. There is no command
- to change an address.
-
- To subscribe, send email to the address below:
-
- LISTSERV@RICEVM1.RICE.EDU
-
- with this line in the body of the mailfile:
-
- SUBSCRIBE TIDBITS your full name
-
- To remove yourself from our mailing list, send email to the same
- address with this line in the body of the mailfile:
-
- SIGNOFF TIDBITS
-
-
- 8*24 GC Refund Program Extended
- Mark H. Anbinder writes, "According to this week's dealer
- bulletin, the 8/24 GC Video Card Refund Program is being extended
- through 30-Oct-92." [For more information on this, check out
- TidBITS#143. -Adam]
-
- Information from:
- Mark H. Anbinder, Contributing Editor
-
-
- WriteMoving Ribbon
- Mark H. Anbinder writes:
-
- One nifty feature of the new GCC printer is its "ribbon saving"
- feature. GCC's dealer material describes it like this:
-
- "In order to print more quickly, the WriteMove II's ribbon
- cartridge continues to spool even as it passes over white spaces
- in your document. GCC has engineered a means by which you can
- choose to spool ribbon over white spaces, and therefore maximize
- the speed of the printer, or choose to stop ribbon spooling and
- conserve the ribbon. If speed is important, choose High Speed
- Printing. If it is less important, you can conserve ribbon by
- adjusting the speed downwards.
-
- "Note that you should always use High Speed Printing when using
- the Multi Strike Ribbon."
-
- I applaud GCC for leaving the choice of whether to optimize
- printing time or consumables usage in the user's hands. They have
- revealed a failing of most devices that use ribbons, and have
- taken it upon themselves to resolve the problem.
-
- Information from:
- Mark H. Anbinder, Contributing Editor
-
-
- Duo Doubters
- ------------
- Perhaps I was a tad over-enthusiastic about the PowerBook Duos
- last week. Two readers pointed out problems that I had
- conveniently ignored in my article. "Conveniently ignoring" (often
- known as "poetic license") isn't commonly acknowledged by
- journalistic circles. For example, read most anything about the
- Macintosh that appears in a PC or consumer oriented publication.
- Heck, even the New York Times writes the word incorrectly as
- "MacIntosh."
-
-
- About that floppy drive...
- Ralph Lombreglia writes:
-
- I share your enthusiasm - in theory - for a PowerBook Duo and a
- Duo Dock, as the machine that would do what most of us want
- (though not really me, alas, because I leave my SE/30 on all the
- time for faxing and voice mail). Truly, any real PowerBook,
- combined with a real Mac at home, will create enormous file-
- version headaches for most users (although I hear there's a
- utility out for this; still, two full-fledged computers with all
- your stuff loaded is a pain) [There are several utilities for
- synchronizing files between machines -Adam]. This almost makes
- the PowerBook 100, with minimal software loaded, and functioning
- as a notebook, the best PowerBook for people with a real Mac at
- home.
-
- So I share your Duo excitement. But I have one basic problem with
- the design which you blithely skip over as though it doesn't
- matter to you for some reason: there's no floppy in the Duo, so
- when you're out with it, working like mad, how do you back up your
- files? Personally, there's no way that I'm pouring the best
- gestures of my brain into a computer for hours on end, and having
- the results on only one storage device. Buying an external floppy
- is not the answer because that's a royal pain, and not what one
- should have to do after spending three grand for a small light
- notebook.
-
- [I agree with Ralph about the PowerBook 100 being the best for
- those of us who have fully-loaded Macs that run at all times. Of
- course, I'm putting my mouth where my money is, since we recently
- acquired a cute PowerBook 100 and popped in a 6 MB memory upgrade.
- It's a treat of a writing machine, especially when running from
- RAM disk, in part because there's less available to distract me
- than on my 20 MB SE/30 with 15 applications open.
-
- My answer to Ralph's valid point about the lack of the internal
- floppy is that many people won't need it. True, you can't backup
- your work as easily, but we never bother with the external floppy
- for our 100. Filesharing or emailing files to yourself (assuming
- you have an internal modem) serve as quick backup mechanisms that
- don't waste space or weight on a floppy drive. Remember, you can
- easily have two volumes on a PowerBook by creating a RAM disk, and
- if the Duos work like the PowerBook 100, that RAM disk should be
- safe, although certainly not as safe as a separate floppy disk.
- It's a trade-off, and one I'm willing to live with. -Adam]
-
-
- Oh yeah, and the screen...
- Hisham A. Abboud writes:
-
- One comment on the "Duo Date" article in TidBITS#144. The lack of
- active matrix display was not mentioned at all. I think the active
- matrix display played a major, major role in the success of the
- PowerBook 170, and I am disappointed none of the Duos has it.
- Currently, I am looking into the PowerBook 180. If I didn't need
- the active matrix display, I would save the money and go with a
- PowerBook 160 or a Duo, but an active matrix display is a must
- have, as far as my needs are concerned.
-
- [Frankly, Hisham, you're right. I can waffle around and make an
- argument based on the fact that the active matrix screens cost
- more and might draw more power, but as Rich Wolfson says in his
- excellent book "The PowerBook Companion" when comparing the
- PowerBook 140 and 170, "The screen is the deciding factor, and
- you'll have to evaluate your screen needs and preferences before
- you can make your choice." If you need or want an active matrix
- screen, the fact that other people don't mind the passive matrix
- screens makes no difference. You want active matrix and will pay
- for it, and you won't buy a Duo until the next generation of them
- includes an active matrix screen. -Adam]
-
- Information from:
- Ralph Lombreglia -- ralph@world.std.com
- Hisham A. Abboud -- abboud@cedrus.cedrus.com
-
-
- CDR-74 Problem
- --------------
- On October 19th, that oh-so-magical date, Apple will announce a
- new machine, the IIvx, that includes an internal double-speed
- CD-ROM drive, reportedly from Sony. An external CD-ROM drive based
- on the same mechanism can't lag far behind, so you might wait
- before jumping to purchase a CD-ROM drive, or you could be tempted
- to jump up and down on it. (Of course, reports claim those
- external drives will be in short supply until January, but that's
- beside the point.)
-
- NEC has the only double-speed drives available on the market, the
- CDR-73M and the CDR-74. Their double-speed technology allows the
- drive to spin twice as fast when reading data as opposed to when
- it reads audio information, which must (by decree of the standards
- committee on high) come off the disc at 150 KB per second. So, a
- double-speed drive can read data at 300 KB per second, providing
- significantly better response with QuickTime movies and the like
- as long as the head doesn't have to fly from sector to sector
- seeking widely separated information. If that happens, the double-
- speed technology makes no difference since double-speed drives
- suffer the same access time limitations (about 300 millisecond
- access time) as normal single-speed drives. Nonetheless, the
- increased throughput when reading sequential data sounds good and
- probably works well. Most of the time, anyway.
-
- Alert and temporarily disgruntled reader Bill Leue wrote to tell
- us about a problem after he purchased a NEC CDR-74 at Macworld
- Expo in August. He purchased the drive from a major CD vendor,
- Educorp, and after the show called them to order the popular
- CD-ROM game from Reactor, Spaceship Warlock. When the order person
- heard he had a CDR-74, she informed him that Educorp's had
- discovered a conflict between the CDR-74 (and the CDR-73M) drive
- and some CD-ROM discs, including Spaceship Warlock. Bill then
- talked to a tech support person there who thought the problem lay
- in the driver software, and said that Educorp had reported the
- problem to NEC. Luckily, it turns out that NEC now has a new
- version of the driver software (2.25) that fixes this problem.
-
- Further investigation on Bill's part turned up additional
- incompatible CDs, including Virtual Valerie, also from Reactor,
- Warner New Media's A View from Earth, and Educorp's own Educorp
- Shareware CD. Some of the possible problems include blank dialog
- boxes with only an OK button, the bottom third of the display
- becoming corrupted with black bands, "Not enough memory to load
- saved game" messages, and flashing bomb boxes.
-
- Since this story ended happily, I'm running it mainly to warn
- owners of these NEC drives who may have strange problems. Bill
- noted that although Educorp's technical support people were prompt
- and friendly and sent him the new driver without being asked, he
- had trouble getting NEC to even answer the phone. That meshes with
- my experience with NEC and with things I've heard, so if you need
- a new driver, talk to your dealer first and NEC last. I hope
- version 2.25 of the driver software indeed solves all of the
- problem listed above.
-
- I cannot say if this problem will appear on Apple's new double-
- speed drives as well, although I hope Apple tests the drive with
- these discs. I recommend that you wait and let someone else act as
- a guinea pig unless you have to buy one of these drives
- immediately. Forewarned is forearmed, but you can always complain.
-
- Information from:
- Bill Leue - leue@crd.ge.com
-
-
- Now Utilities 4.0 Bugs Out
- --------------------------
- After much anticipation from users, Now Software recently shipped
- version 4.0 of the popular Now Utilities package. Aside from
- concerns regarding the exclusion of certain utilities from the
- package, the promised features left little wanting. Unfortunately,
- as clothes do not make the man, features alone do not make the
- program.
-
- Shortly after the package shipped, reports of odd conflicts and
- bugs appeared on CompuServe and America Online, though,
- interestingly enough, not as evidently on the Internet. Now's
- online technical support staff did an excellent job, answering
- every post that I saw, but it became apparent that a quick bug fix
- was necessary, and Now posted a public message stating that they
- intended to drop development on all other projects (including the
- maintenance release of the previous version of Now Utilities
- 3.0.3) to concentrate on fixing version 4.0.
-
- No one would gain from a list of bugs and conflicts here since the
- free updater should be available online soon, perhaps within the
- week. If you have installed version 4.0, I suggest you remove it
- from your computer if you have an unusual number of crashes, as I
- did on my SE/30. Going back to 3.0.2 or living without the
- utilities will cause less stress and frustration than having your
- Mac crash frequently and unexpectedly. I assure you that version
- 4.0.1 of the Now Utilities will fix numerous bugs and even a few
- design flaws (such as the one that forced everything to load after
- Now Toolbox, a requirement that caused problems for some low-level
- extensions like Connectix's Maxima). Many people (and our
- PowerBook 100) have had no trouble with Now Utilities 4.0, so if
- you haven't noticed any problems, don't worry about going back to
- the previous version.
-
- I need a ROM upgrade for my crystal ball, so I can't say precisely
- what went wrong. In an ideal world and aided by hindsight, perhaps
- Now should have waited longer before releasing and should have had
- a larger beta program, but real life circumstances may have
- prevented more delay or the addition of more beta sites. Perhaps
- the most important issue is the sheer complexity of ensuring
- compatibility and testing a set of extensions with most every
- other application and extension in the Macintosh world. The size
- of that task is mind-boggling, and it's no surprise that bugs and
- conflicts slipped through. A single application program will have
- far fewer potential interactions than a set of extensions that
- modify system behavior, and conflicts show up even with relatively
- simple applications.
-
- I'm sure that Now regrets the problems as much as you do if you've
- had them, and there's no use complaining over spilt software, to
- mangle another cliche. Once version 4.0 is as stable as version
- 3.0.2, I think most people will find the added features attractive
- and worth the upgrade price.
-
- Information from:
- Now Software -- 71541.170@compuserve.com
-
-
- System 7.1 Tip O' The Week
- --------------------------
- To get you into the mood for System 7.1, Robert Hess passed on
- this tip from Leonard Rosenthol, chief technical wizard at Aladdin
- Systems. Apparently you can put FKEYs and other resources in
- System 7.1's special Fonts folder and the system will open them
- automatically. When the system opens a file and leaves it open, as
- it will do for font suitcases, the resources in that file become
- part of the standard operating system. So, if you put a file
- containing resources of any type, FKEYs, sounds, etc., and change
- the TYPE of the file to a font file's type, either FFIL or ffil,
- the system will open that file.
-
- When I asked about this, Leonard said "I tried to convince Apple
- to actually allow other file types to be opened by that piece of
- code, but they wouldn't do it (though it is REALLY easy to add)."
- I guess that would have been too easy and made too much sense,
- although then the folder would have needed a new name since it
- makes little sense to put FKEYs in a folder called Fonts.
-
- Information from:
- Robert Hess -- robert_hess@macweek.ziff.com
- Leonard Rosenthol -- leonardr@netcom.com
-
-
- Performa Systems
- ----------------
- It seems that the Performas, although they run a slightly modified
- version of System 7.0.1, will not ship with a full set of system
- disks. This is a problem for a third-party tech support person
- when she wants the user to test a problem by booting from a floppy
- disk or to correct a problem by re-installing the system.
- Obviously, some companies like Shiva and Wolfram Research won't
- worry about this since Performa users won't use routers or
- Mathematica, but lots of companies will have problems with this,
- not the least of them Symantec, Claris, and Intuit.
-
- I checked this with John Cook, Apple's consumer product manager,
- who luckily answered his email while in Germany helping with the
- roll-out of the Performa line. John confirmed that Apple will not
- ship system disks in the box with the Performa, but Apple Backup,
- a simple backup utility does come pre-installed on the hard disk
- and in the Launcher. Let's hope that users read the manual first,
- because it immediately instructs users to backup of their hard
- disks with the Apple Backup utility (if you advise anyone about
- buying a Performa, make sure they buy a box of blank disks at the
- same time!). Apple Backup provides two choices, according to John,
- just the operating system (I presume he means the System Folder)
- or everything on the disk.
-
- So that's where the user will get his set of system disks to use
- when a tech support person wants him to re-install the system. If
- the user overlooks making a backup, he can call Apple's toll-free
- customer assistance center for answers about the operating system
- and if necessary Apple will send a set of system software disks.
-
- This will no doubt slow down technical support for Performa users
- of third-party applications, but at least the user will eventually
- get full support.
-
- John said, "We've learned a lot from our consumer pilot and from
- our PowerBook support programs and feel this system works. Our
- data tells us that many users, especially first time buyers, don't
- understand install routines for the Mac OS or know what to do with
- the disks."
-
- John is right about users not knowing what to do with the
- installer, but I'd like to see Apple go even further yet. Consider
- this. If master disks had a few special non-printing characters at
- the start of the disk name, a simple extension could offer the
- choice of treating the disk as a normal one or running an install
- script (one allowing the user to place files wherever she wants
- rather than on the boot volume). Power users wanting to avoid the
- automatic installer could simply remove the initial special
- characters, and novice users would find it much less daunting. The
- installer extension could even automatically add items to the
- Launcher on the Performas. A clever person might be able to
- duplicate this functionality with Frontier Runtime and a
- sophisticated script.
-
- Information from:
- John Cook, Apple Consumer Product Manager
-
-
- Double DeskWriters
- ------------------
- I enjoy seeing Hewlett-Packard enhance its popular DeskWriter
- printers, and last year's introduction of the DeskWriter C color
- printer did not disappoint me. This year, HP managed to put two
- cartridges - one color and one true black - in the same printer so
- you can print in color and black in the same document without
- switching cartridges or putting up with brownish blacks that
- depleted the more-expensive color cartridge.
-
- The new printer, the HP DeskWriter 550C, will list for $1,099,
- should be available by 01-Nov-92, and will include a three-year
- warranty. Needless to say, with the new printer priced like that,
- HP dropped the list price of the DeskWriter C to $779. If HP
- wanted to make a killing, they could also offer a deal on the
- plain DeskWriter since Apple's comparable StyleWriter is
- reportedly in short supply right now.
-
- The DeskWriter 550C includes the same fonts that Apple includes
- with the current LaserWriters. HP's driver uses Intellifont
- technology to achieve font scaling for the included fonts, and
- unless I'm mistaken TrueType should work with the DeskWriter 550C
- as well.
-
- The new printer offers better paper handling that deals with
- letter-, legal-, A4-, and executive-size pages, along with
- envelopes. For those of you who, like me, had never heard of
- "executive-size" paper, it's a tad smaller at 7.25" x 10.5". I
- suppose a comment about executive-size brains might be in order
- here. The standard paper tray automatically feeds any of these
- page sizes and holds up to 100 sheets of paper or 20 envelopes.
-
- The main reason to buy a DeskWriter 550C remains the improved
- document quality because you can print true black and color on the
- same page. The dual-cartridge implementation provides faster
- output for pages with both black and color on them, up to four
- times faster than the DeskWriter C according to HP. Straight text
- speed is about three pages per minute, and a full color page could
- take up to seven minutes. I presume that HP uses two print heads,
- one for each cartridge, or has come up with a shuttling system for
- the cartridges controlled by the driver. I wonder if the driver
- will let you print true black and a color on the same line?
-
- Finally, I don't know how HP does this, but the DeskWriter 550C
- offers a color matching system implemented in the driver. This
- allows you to more closely match colors on the screen to the
- colors that appear on the page, a noticeable problem in the past.
-
- For those of you working in mixed environments, HP will offer a
- DeskJet 550C at the same time and for the same price. The only
- difference is that you get drivers for DOS and Windows, and I
- assume the ports are different, probably serial and parallel for
- the DeskJet 550C and LocalTalk for the DeskWriter 550C. One way or
- another, it appears that HP has upped the ante in the inkjet
- market yet again.
-
- I've started to hear faint whispers of rumors of Apple coming out
- with a color (or at least upgraded) StyleWriter, but I can't
- imagine such a printer appearing until at least the spring or more
- likely summer. Of course, considering the decibel level of these
- rumors, you can never tell.
-
- Hewlett Packard -- 800/752-0900
-
- Information from:
- Hewlett-Packard propaganda
-
-
- Help! The Art of Computer Technical Support
- -------------------------------------------
- by Tonya Engst -- TidBITS Editor
-
- I've earned a living through supporting or selling computer
- software and hardware in one capacity or another for almost five
- years now, and I've always been bothered by the paucity of
- materials about the field. Some professions have large libraries
- devoted to them, but I've never run across a So-And-So Memorial
- Library of Technical Support. This may be because support folks
- are so overworked that we never have time to write about what we
- do. At any rate, I eagerly awaited the arrival of Peachpit Press's
- "Help! The Art of Computer Technical Support" and read it from
- cover to cover in short stints over a period of two days. One of
- the problem with being a tech support person is that you may end
- up with your productive time broken up into about fifty two-minute
- blocks over the course of a day, which does weird things to your
- personality after a while.
-
- Written by Ralph Wilson, "Help! The Art of Computer Technical
- Support" could have been yet another pop-business book about using
- cute psychological tricks on your customers (Don't sit across from
- them at a table; sit next to them or sideways from them to make
- you seem friendlier.) or it could have offered tired, simpering
- maxims such as "The customer is always right" and "Never make
- excuses." I learned these at a support seminar, but I promptly
- discounted them because I know darn well that the customer often
- doesn't have a clue. ("I don't need a PostScript printer; I only
- print from PageMaker.") As for not making excuses, just try
- working for an educational reseller of Macintoshes and not make
- excuses when Daddy calls from Long Island to find out why his
- daughter cannot purchase a computer until she actually registers
- for college. This book assumes that the reader has a brain and has
- mastered the basics of spitting out the chewing gum before
- answering the phone.
-
- "Help! The Art of Computer Technical Support" will help everyone
- involved in computer support from high-level managers to the most
- overworked techs in the cubicle trenches. It's for people involved
- with consulting firms and internal help desks, as well as software
- and hardware companies that support what they sell. Wilson offers
- ideas and examples about improving support on all levels, with
- plenty of real life examples and quotes from leaders in the
- support profession.
-
- For suit-types, the book discusses what personality traits make
- for a good support person, how to train support personnel, how to
- keep techs from burning out, and how to cost-justify your
- existence. For those managing phone support centers, it discusses
- various ways of charging (or not charging) customers for support.
- You'll find out WordPerfect's rationale for providing toll free
- support, why Ashton-Tate provided some support for the cost of a
- phone call, and the argument for and against 900 numbers as the
- emerging phone support method. Help Desk managers may be
- interested in the discussion of the pros and cons of
- "outsourcing," or making someone outside the company do some of
- the work. One chapter analyzes and explains the main features of
- several commercial databases used to store technical information
- and track customer information.
-
- People who actually talk to customers and provide support will
- find useful suggestions for most aspects of their jobs, from
- assisting difficult customers to graciously accepting feedback.
- Wilson has done his homework here, with suggestions for dealing
- with all sorts of customer situations including skeptics, four-
- letter abuse, and "Novice Users and the Terminally Confused." He
- discusses important issues for any support person to be aware of,
- such as taking charge of the support situations and active
- listening to customers. A particularly valuable chapter is the one
- on developing trouble-shooting skills, which provides many ideas
- for becoming better at trouble-shooting, a skill which is rarely
- mentioned but plays a key role in providing support. Wilson
- discusses the difference between internal and external support and
- even looks at alternative methods of support such as fax and
- email. I had the most fun with the last chapter, though, which
- discussed how to behave as the recipient of technical support. Now
- if only my callers would read this chapter before calling me!
-
- Ralph helpfully included a bibliography of related materials,
- which I hope to look up in the future. After reading the book, I
- had some new ideas for working with users and a better
- understanding of the different aspects of providing support.
- Peachpit's books tend to be fun and informative, and "Help! The
- Art of Computer Technical Support" lived up to my expectations.
- Unlike some other Peachpit books that feature extreme brevity,
- this book is a solid 200-plus pages, and is worth the $19.95
- sticker price. If nothing else, your employer should buy it or you
- can write it off as a business expense. Highly recommended.
-
- Peachpit Press -- 800/283-9444 -- 510/548-4393
- 510/548-5991 (fax)
-
-
- Reviews/05-Oct-92
- -----------------
-
- * MacWEEK -- 28-Sep-92, Vol. 6, #34
- Serius Developer 3.0 -- pg. 53
- CPU -- pg. 53
- Acecat -- pg. 54
- Bar Code Readers -- pg. 56
- BC-91 Bar Code ID System
- LM-300 Bar Code Scanner
- DuraWand Bar Code System
- Texas Instruments microLaser XL Turbo -- pg. 58
-
- * Macworld -- Nov-92
- Macintosh Performas -- pg. 110
- Accounting Software -- pg. 116
- (too many to list)
- Optical Drives -- pg. 124
- (too many to list)
- Removable-Media Drives -- pg. 132
- (too many to list)
- Pixar Typestry 1.0 -- pg. 148
- Atlas Pro 1.0.6 -- pg. 149
- Morph 1.0 -- pg. 152
- DesignCAD Macintosh 3.0.1 -- pg. 159
- Aldus Intellidraw 1.0 -- pg. 160
- Trackballs -- pg. 162
- Mouse-Trak
- TurboMouse 4.0
- Motion Works Promotion 1.0 -- pg. 164
- Connections 2.1 -- pg. 166
- MasterFinder 1.2.1 -- pg. 166
- C. Itoh ProWriter Printer -- pg. 168
- DocuComp II 1.0 -- pg. 170
- Fontographer 3.5 -- pg. 170
- ACS300 Computer Speaker System -- pg. 172
- Sensible Grammar 2.1.3 -- pg. 172
- NightWatch II 2.0.1b -- pg. 174
- Retrieve It 1.0 -- pg. 174
- Smoothie 1.02 -- pg. 176
- SpeedyCD 1.2.2 -- pg. 176
- Entrypaq 1.0 -- pg. 178
- A/UX 3.0 -- pg. 178
- EdScheme 3.4 -- pg. 180
- Office Wiz 1.1 -- pg. 180
- SuperDuper 1.7 -- pg. 182
- StatView 4.0 -- pg. 182
- Easy Alarms 2.0.3 -- pg. 184
- Eco-Adventures in the Oceans 1.0 -- pg. 184
- Eco-Adventures in the Rainforest 1.0 -- pg. 184
- Red Baron -- pg. 185
- GeoQuery 3.02 -- pg. 185
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