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- TidBITS#148/19-Oct-92
- =====================
-
- Industry stories on hard drive prices and the PowerBook 100
- phenomenon anchor this issue, which starts off with some
- comments on our KeyFonts review, covers some new CD-ROMs of
- several major Internet archives, passes on the good news that
- AppleShare 3.0.1 will work with QuickMail Server 2.5.x, and
- finally, takes a look at the Internet gateway to America Online
- and the brand new TidBITS library there.
-
- 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/19-Oct-92
- Internet CD-ROMs
- QuickMail/AppleShare Problem Fixed
- Gateways III/America Online
- Driving a Hard Bargain
- The 100 Phenomenon
- Reviews/19-Oct-92
-
- [Archived as /info-mac/digest/tb/tidbits-148.etx; 29K]
-
-
- MailBITS/19-Oct-92
- ------------------
- Several people commented on Mark Nutter's review of the KeyFonts
- package, casting additional light on the package and the problems
- Mark noted. A few people expressed the opinion that giving 100
- fonts, especially lower quality ones, to someone with no design
- sense was akin to handing a loaded machine gun to a monkey with
- fleas. Although elitist, such an opinion is understandable when we
- see some of the abysmal results of desktop publishing. The worst
- instances of that are behind us (remember when every newsletter
- used San Francisco?) but it's worth keeping in mind that lots of
- fonts will not make a well-designed publication.
-
- Gene Steinberg, a consultant for FontBank, writes:
-
- Mark Nutter made a valiant effort in printing out 100 fonts in
- both Postscript and TrueType format to check the quality of this
- low-cost font package. However, there are a few fundamentals that
- serious Mac font users should know that might help explain some of
- Mr. Nutter's comments.
-
- First, installing both Postscript and TrueType versions of the
- same font can cause a font conflict, resulting in, as Mr. Nutter
- reports, missing characters and erratic letterspacing. You have to
- use either PostScript or TrueType.
-
- Second, the missing optional characters should not be blamed on
- the need to make these fonts compatible with the DOS/Windows
- environment. In their text faces, Adobe provides more or less the
- same character set for both platforms, with the addition of a
- handful of fraction keys that seem accessible only by PC
- keyboards. For display faces, based in part on traditional
- typesetting "film" fonts, the lack of some optional characters is
- a given. For text faces, it is a serious drawback.
-
- Information from:
- Gene Steinberg -- afagenes@aol.com
-
-
- Swanson Clarification
- Mark H. Anbinder writes, "As we reported in last week's issue of
- TidBITS, there was some confusion as to the details of Randall
- Swanson's sentence in connection with the MBDF virus case. His
- attorney contacted us after the issue was published, and he
- explained the situation. Swanson was not sentenced to serve forty-
- five weeks of community service; he was given a "conditional
- discharge." This means that no punitive sentence will be ordered
- provided that he obeys certain conditions for a period of one
- year. These conditions essentially amount to an order to "Stay out
- of trouble." However, Judge Friedlander did suggest that Swanson
- perform some community service on his own."
-
- Information from:
- Mark H. Anbinder, Contributing Editor
-
-
- Internet CD-ROMs
- ----------------
- by Don Rittner -- afldonr@aol.com
- (c) 1992 MUG News Service
-
- Having just returned from the CD-ROM Expo, I want to share a
- valuable find with you. Everyone knows there are thousands of
- files strewn around the Internet. Trying to find them all could
- take a lifetime, but Pacific HiTech, Inc., a new company begun by
- a couple of computer science students from the University of Utah,
- and Walnut Creek CD-ROM have produced some goodies that will help
- ease the search. They have taken entire collections of several
- Internet archives, pressed them onto inexpensive CD-ROMs, and are
- offering them for sale. Four CD-ROMs of immediate interest are
- summarized here.
-
-
- Info-Mac CD-ROM
- Although Walnut Creek markets this $39.95 disc, Pacific HiTech
- actually produced (and sells) it. Pacific HiTech downloaded the
- programs on this disc in August of 1992 from the Info-Mac archive
- on the Internet site <sumex-aim.stanford.edu>. The quarterly
- (Info-Mac is a moving target) disc contains 112 MB of software in
- HFS format, following the sumex directory structure. The disc
- includes thousands of freeware and shareware applications, desk
- accessories, games, virus-detection programs, and commercial
- demos. It is also packed with graphics, sounds, and HyperCard
- stacks, and everything is ready to run. No defunking here!
-
- For those seeking archives of electronic discussion groups and
- publications, you'll find TidBITS, Info-Mac Digest, and digests
- from comp.sys.mac.programmer for all of 1992 (so far) on the disc.
- Pacific HiTech initially intended to place the entire Info-Mac
- archive on the CD. However, they had to leave off some files due
- to copyright restrictions and the logistics of getting permission
- from all contributors. In the end, they managed to include roughly
- 75% of Info-Mac's files, although a number of files have turned
- over since then due to the size of the currently (and soon to be
- replaced) 200 MB hard drive on sumex.
-
-
- CICA Microsoft Windows CD-ROM
- This $24.95 CD-ROM contains the entire collection from Indiana
- University's Center for Innovative Computing Applications (CICA) -
- more than 140 MB of Windows goodies, including utilities, shells,
- games, and lots more. The entire disc is configured for OPUS,
- RBBS, and PCBOARD bulletin boards, similar to the Mac's BBS in a
- Box, so sysops can have a ready-made file library with little
- effort. Many demos of commercial programs, drivers for a large
- number of printers and monitors, icons and graphics, source code
- listings and programming tools for C, C++, ToolBook, Turbo Pascal
- and Visual Basic, round out the collection. This disc was made in
- July 1992.
-
-
- Garbo MS-DOS/Mac CD-ROM
- This $24.95 disc contains more than 250 MB of DOS software and 125
- MB of Mac software from the Garbo archive at the University of
- Vaasa, Finland. The majority of the many programs from Europe and
- America are in English.
-
- For DOS users, the disc includes lots of animation, archive
- utilities, BBS programs, business programs, science programs, and
- education software, with special areas for astronomy, linguistics,
- and educational games. Also included are programming tools,
- tutorials and tech docs, and anti-virus software. On the Mac side,
- there are lots of graphics, fonts, commercial demos, HyperCard
- stacks, and programming tools and documentation. This disc was
- made in May 1992.
-
-
- Simtel20 MS-DOS CD-ROM
- Over 9,000 files (640 MB) of DOS programs from the Simtel20
- archive are on this $24.95 disc. Many of the programs include
- source code and there is a great deal of technical documentation,
- utilities, and programming tools for APL, assembly, BASIC, C, and
- more. The disc includes several complete BBS programs and
- utilities, and like the Windows disc, it already has index files
- for RBBS, PCBOARD and OPUS so sysops can use it right away. This
- disc was made in September 1992.
-
-
- Shareware note
- Many of the programs on these CD-ROMs are freeware or shareware,
- and may have restrictions and obligations regarding their use, and
- the producers duly note the user's obligations to pay a fee when
- requested. Any author of a program on one of these CD-ROMs is
- entitled to a free disc.
-
- Since most of the CD-ROMs have ready-to-use indexes for popular
- BBS programs they make a great collection for bulletin board
- operators who want to offer Internet material without the high
- cost of a direct Internet link or email gateway.
-
- The prices for these CD-ROM collections are extremely reasonable.
- All the discs are on ISO-9660 format and as such should work on
- all platforms. If you wish to order via email (be aware that email
- is not absolutely private), you can do so by sending Pacific
- HiTech your name, address, phone number, and VISA/MasterCard
- number and expiration date.
-
-
- Contact the company at:
- Pacific HiTech, Inc.
- 4760 Highland Drive, Suite 204
- Salt Lake City, Utah 84124
- 800/765-8369 (orders only, please)
- 801/278-2042
- 801/278-2666 (fax)
- 71175.3152@compuserve.com
-
- Walnut Creek CD-ROM
- 1547 Palos Verdes Mall, Suite 260
- Walnut Creek, CA 94598
- 800/786 9907
- 510/947-5996
-
-
- QuickMail/AppleShare Problem Fixed
- ----------------------------------
- by Mark H. Anbinder, Contributing Editor
-
- CE Software announced that one long-standing annoyance for server
- administrators, incompatibility between CE's QuickMail server
- software and Apple's AppleShare 3.0 file server software, is a
- thing of the past. Apple's upcoming AppleShare 3.0.1 release
- purports to fix the incompatibility, and intensive testing at CE
- has confirmed this. CE's Director of Technical Services, Christian
- F. Gurney, says that, "Based on the results of these tests,
- QuickMail 2.5.x and AppleShare 3.0.1 are compatible when used on
- the same Macintosh acting as a mail and file server."
-
- CE's test scenarios included exercising QuickMail, AppleShare's
- file server and AppleShare's print server by sending QuickMail
- messages, reading and writing files, and sending print jobs. The
- tests were conducted on 68030 and 68000 Macintosh systems running
- System 7.0.1.
-
- Gurney also reported that the QuickMail server software is still
- incompatible with the file sharing feature of System 7. CE fixed
- this problem in an upcoming release of QuickMail. Version 2.6 is
- planned for release later this year.
-
- An update to AppleShare 3.0.1 will be available to registered
- owners of version 3.0, though Apple has yet to announce the
- specific upgrade path. According to Apple's Customer Assistance
- Center, the new software is expected to be released this week, and
- TidBITS will pass on additional information when it arrives. In
- the meantime, please don't call Apple (and certainly not CE!) for
- a release date or upgrade information.
-
- CE Software Technical Support -- 515/224-1953
- CE_SUPPORT%cedsm@uunet.uu.net
- Apple Customer Assistance Center -- 800/776-2333
-
-
- Gateways III/America Online
- ---------------------------
- Perhaps the most important new Internet gateway comes from the
- commercial service America Online. Although America Online took
- their time making the gateway available, it seems that they
- prompted two of the other commercial services, GEnie and Delphi,
- to open up Internet links as well. I'm sure it's not a specific
- cause-and-effect relationship, but that's the impression one gets
- from the outside.
-
-
- America Online to Internet
- Sending email from America Online to the Internet (or any other
- service, like CompuServe or MCI, that also has an Internet
- gateway) is easy - you merely type the Internet address into the
- normal mail To: box. Otherwise mail works exactly the same as when
- you send it to another America Online member. Despite the ease of
- use, America Online has a few limitations on Internet mail that
- make it a less useful than it might be otherwise, but that's what
- you get for free use - there's no surcharge for Internet email.
-
- Like normal America Online email messages, you can't put more than
- 32K in the text of the message. That usually poses no problem on
- America Online because you can attach files to circumvent that
- limit, but file attachments don't work to the Internet. You also
- can't forward mail from America Online to the Internet, but copy
- and paste into a new mailfile makes that a moot point. All fonts
- and styles disappear of course, but that shouldn't surprise
- anyone. For basic email to the Internet, America Online's gateway
- works fine.
-
- If you wish to find out more about America Online's Internet
- gateway from America Online itself, use the keyword INTERNET (type
- command-k to bring up the keyword dialog box), and America Online
- will transport you to the appropriate area.
-
-
- Internet to America Online
- Creating the Internet version of an America Online address
- requires that you know the conversion rule. You ignore the case,
- remove the spaces, and add "@aol.com" to the end of the address.
- Thus, my America Online address <Adam Engst> becomes
- <adamengst@aol.com>. (For the punctuation-impaired, ignore the
- greater-than and less-than signs - they're merely showing where
- the address begins and ends and are not part of the address.)
-
- The gnomes at America Online made one decision that disturbs me.
- They decided to limit the size of incoming Internet mail to 27K.
- I'm not inherently opposed to internal limitations on incoming
- mail size, and they decided to truncate the mail rather than
- simply bouncing it back to the sender, but why couldn't they have
- used a 30K limit like AppleLink? This bothers me because I set 30K
- as my self-imposed length limit on TidBITS issues so they would
- pass through the AppleLink gateway, and here America Online lowers
- the smallest gateway size limitation to 27K. We'll look at a
- workaround for this limitation in a future issue of TidBITS.
-
- Those of you who subscribe to TidBITS on America Online through
- the Internet mailing list have experienced the truncation, and I'm
- sorry, but for the moment I'm not prepared to shrink future issues
- to 27K. I need that space each week. Because of this, I don't
- recommend that you subscribe to the TIDBITS LISTSERV via America
- Online - sometimes we save the best information for the last part
- of TidBITS.
-
-
- TidBITS on America Online
- If I don't recommend subscribing to our mailing list, how can you
- find TidBITS on America Online? Well, I'm pleased to announce that
- America Online has just opened the official, new, improved,
- family-size TidBITS library. Dedicated to TidBITS issues, you can
- find it in the Macintosh Hardware forum (keyword: MHW). The
- library holds every issue of TidBITS in setext format, and all of
- the issues since TidBITS#100 in compressed format as well. For
- those of you wanting to collect 'em all, the library will soon
- hold ten-issue archives of the entire set for easier downloading.
-
- Even better, I have direct upload capabilities so issues will be
- available immediately upon uploading, usually late Monday night,
- Pacific time. All TidBITS issues will be available in the TidBITS
- library immediately, but not in the Macintosh Hardware New Files
- library as in the past.
-
- For those of you who have become accustomed to getting your weekly
- TidBITS fix from the Macintosh HyperCard forum, where I originally
- uploaded the HyperCard format issues before 1992 and where I have
- been uploading the setext issues as well, don't worry. The TidBITS
- library will soon appear in the Macintosh HyperCard forum as well.
-
- Many thanks to Chris Ferino, the forum poobah of the Macintosh
- Hardware forum, since he arranged for the TidBITS library and went
- to all the work of uploading all the back issues individually.
-
-
- Driving a Hard Bargain
- ----------------------
- I hadn't checked up on hard drive prices seriously for some time
- because my storage needs, while continually outpacing my drive
- size, would do that to most any drive. So I stuck with my 105 MB
- drive and compressed everything in sight. When my hard drive
- seemingly died in a DWI-induced power surge, I ordered another 105
- MB drive so the Safeware insurance would cover the replacement
- cost. Then, of course, my old drive came back to life a week
- later, recovering from SCSI self-test errors to complete health,
- so I can't collect on the insurance since there's no damage.
-
- During all this I started watching prices a bit more, and although
- much lower than two years ago, prices seemed quite steady. I
- thought this was curious, but then Robert Brenstein sent me a note
- asking if I'd heard why all the mail order vendors had huge back
- order lists for the larger Quantum drives. Curiousity piqued, I
- called Paul McGraw, vice president of APS, a mail order drive
- vendor.
-
- Apparently APS has been operating most of the summer on a 400 to
- 600 unit backlog on the Quantum 240 MB drives, and although Paul
- said that they actually had a few units in stock right now, most
- mail order vendors are in the same backlog boat. Paul recommended
- that people who want that specific drive call around to satisfy
- themselves that no company has them in stock, and then get on a
- waiting list somewhere because it may be a while before most
- vendors get those Quantums in any quantity. In other words, sign
- up now or be prepared to wait.
-
- It seems that the root of this backlog traces back to Quantum
- itself. Of all the drives Quantum produced this year, only 20% of
- them were SCSI drives, the rest being non-SCSI drives for PC
- clones. That limits the supply a lot right there, but there's
- more. Big companies like Apple and Sun that use internal SCSI
- drives have first dibs on the drives, further reducing the supply
- that can reach drive vendors like APS.
-
- Being good little capitalists, we all know what happens when
- supply is low and demand is high, right? Prices stay high. Demand
- seldom changes much once it's high, so the only way for prices to
- drop is for the supply to increase, and that's what Paul sees
- happening in the next few months, mostly thanks to Maxtor, another
- drive manufacturer.
-
- Maxtor was on the brink of Chapter 11 bankruptcy some time ago,
- but with a combination of salutary factors, has managed to
- revitalize itself and become a force in the drive market again.
- According to Paul, the Maxtor 7213 200 MB unit is as good as the
- Quantum 240 MB unit for anyone who doesn't have a Quadra since the
- Maxtor drive isn't quite as fast as the Quantum, but it's still
- faster than the SCSI bus on all non-Quadras. This Maxtor drive has
- proven quite popular, and along with Quantum's higher prices, has
- given Maxtor the breathing room it needed. Now Quantum is starting
- to notice that the Maxtor drive is cutting into Quantum's
- business, so as supply goes up, price comes down and we consumers
- win again.
-
- Another factor to keep in mind is that Maxtor and other companies
- have some 1" high 500+ MB drives coming out early next year. Both
- Paul and Cliff Wildes, president of Microtech, find these large
- drives extremely interesting, because of the small form factor
- (you'll be able to use them as internal drives) and new
- manufacturing techniques. These drives and some new 1.5" high form
- factor (actually 1.62" high), 3.5" platter, 1 gigabyte (GB) drives
- (i.e., 1 GB internal drives) should help lower the prices on
- larger end of the market. That in turn should help shrink prices
- for the medium size drives as well. Cliff agreed with this,
- although he feels that the price cuts on medium size drives will
- not be as significant, but only in line with the lesser price
- reductions that have occurred over the last six months. Smaller
- drives aren't likely to become much cheaper, simply because
- they're close to rock bottom already. But hey, everyone needs a
- bigger disk anyway, right?
-
- Information from:
- Paul McGraw, APS vice president
- Cliff Wildes, Microtech president
-
-
- The 100 Phenomenon
- ------------------
- Poking around in the Sunday Seattle Times, I can't find a single
- PC-clone laptop for under $1000. Those that range around $1000 are
- all slow machines that would probably die a miserable death
- running Windows. And yet we just adopted a cute little PowerBook
- 100 named Sally for under $1000, and that includes a RAM upgrade
- to bring her up to 8 MB. I'm writing this article on the 100 while
- sitting calmly in a beanbag in the living room, ignoring the 15
- applications clamoring for attention on my SE/30. As the PowerBook
- 100 supply diminishes and the buying frenzy wanes, I wanted to
- look back at the phenomenon.
-
- It started with Apple sending all the PowerBook 100 4/40s to Price
- Club superstores. Price Club generally priced the 100 under $1000,
- occasionally as low as $800, and suddenly the slowest-selling
- model of the PowerBook was in demand. Unfortunately, the only way
- to get a 100 from Price Club was to have a Price Club store near
- you and to become a member. Membership stopped no one, but there
- simply aren't enough Price Club stores around to satisfy everyone.
- Even still, as fast as the Price Clubs could put the 100s on the
- shelf, they sold. One Price Club employee said that she'd never
- seen anything sell so quickly. The short and sporadic supply
- contributed to the frenzy, and the waiting lists grew.
-
- The high-tension relationship between Apple and its dealer network
- threatened to snap (not that either can do without the other). One
- dealer said that they could sell the 100 as quickly as Price Club
- if they could charge the same price. Perhaps heeding this call,
- and perhaps because the Price Club deal was an experiment in
- dumping cheap hardware into the consumer channel, Apple sold the
- PowerBook 2/20 to dealers for either $550 or $650, depending on
- the inclusion of the external floppy drive. Suddenly dealers could
- compete with Price Club, and compete they did.
-
- Prices to the consumer ranged from $599 on up, and it was
- relatively easy to get a machine for under $800. Of course, as we
- decided before even getting ours, 2 MB of RAM is not sufficient
- unless you wish to run System 6 (which works fine on the 100
- although you have to find version 1.3 of the Portable Control
- Panel on <ftp.apple.com>. Apple also created, but did not
- distribute in the US, a special version of System 6 (6.0.8L)
- specifically for the 100, although it's unclear what
- differentiates it other than the inclusion of Portable 1.3). Even
- still, mail order prices on a 6 MB upgrade card ranged from $250
- to $325, making an 8 MB machine an easy reality and making System
- 7 an easy install. (I can't use System 6 any more- it's way too
- clumsy, so it doesn't matter that windows open faster.)
-
- Dealers found that they couldn't keep the PowerBook 100s on the
- shelf at those prices either, but a third source quickly appeared
- for some people. Citibank offers a bonus called CitiDollars on
- selected merchandise to holders of its credit cards, and in the
- middle of all this they suddenly offered the PowerBook 100 (a
- 2/20, I believe). I don't know how many they had, but they didn't
- last long as PowerBook 100-hungry credit card users snapped them
- within several weeks.
-
- At this point I doubt many US dealers or Price Club stores have
- any model of the PowerBook 100 left because Apple has emptied
- their warehouses. Stories abound of people who bought one and
- promptly lost it to their spouses. (I'm lucky Tonya's got a 20 MB
- SE/30 with 80 MB hard disk and a nasty Compaq DOS box at work or
- she'd have ours all the time.) Such tales were met with little
- sympathy, given the price, and the complainers were advised to go
- buy another one and suffer with a mate who at least appreciated
- the Mac sufficiently to snag a PowerBook 100 when given the
- chance. [It all depends on to whom you talk. I thought we bought
- the PowerBook to replace my home Mac, a sluggish Classic, and that
- I would be nice enough to share it with Adam when he went out of
- town. And now he can't keep his hands off it. -Tonya]
-
- It's not at all hard to peg the reason for this buying frenzy. At
- the lowest range, the 100 was a bit cheaper even than the floppy-
- only Classic, and the 100 destroys the Classic in almost every
- category. Its screen is bigger, it's twice as fast, it can take up
- to 8 MB of RAM, it has an internal 20 or 40 MB hard disk (and
- let's face, there's no real difference between the two; they're
- both too small for indiscriminate storage), it can boot from RAM
- disk, it can use an internal modem, it weighs a bit over five
- pounds, and it can run from battery for a few hours. If, like us,
- you intend to mainly write on a PowerBook, there's absolutely no
- reason to buy a faster 140 or 145. In some respects, primarily
- power usage and weight, the 100 even outclasses its more powerful
- siblings.
-
- Most people forget when looking at these fire-sale prices that the
- price cuts must affect someone. The dealers and Price Clubs did
- fine on their profit margins, which leaves Apple holding the empty
- money bag. An unconfirmed report put the cost of a PowerBook 100
- to Apple at $1000. That includes design and testing along with
- manufacturing and shipping costs, I'm sure, but even still, that
- means Apple lost lots of money. Had Apple kept the 100 around
- longer, that cost per machine would have dropped as profit erased
- some of the one-time costs associated with a new machine.
-
- We don't know how many PowerBook 100s Apple sold (although we're
- guessing around 175,000) and we don't know how many they sold at
- what price. Thus, we can't accurately check the number a source
- provided, namely that Apple lost $15 million on the PowerBook 100.
- Of course, reports claim Apple made $1 billion on the PowerBook
- line overall.
-
- You can view that $15 million in several ways. First, if you own
- stock in Apple, it's not good. Second, if you're a user who
- snapped up one of those machines cheap, you don't really care
- because you got a great deal. Third, if you are an Apple manager
- in need of a way to justify the money, consider the incredible
- public relations coup those cheap prices provided. All of a
- sudden, normal people without gobs of money could buy one of
- Apple's coolest machines and they did, in droves, and they told
- all their friends about it. That looks really good and provides
- wonderful word-of-mouth advertising. In addition, the low prices
- provided extra free press coverage and megabytes of discussion
- online. Even still, people swap information about which dealers
- have machines left. Finally, in that same justification mode, I'm
- sure Apple gathered plenty of data on dumping obsolete machines
- cheaply via both existing and different channels.
-
- It may be justification, but I think the dumping policy was
- beneficial to Apple. The question now is what happens to the
- PowerBook 100. "It just goes away," you say, "because Apple
- dropped it from the price list." Not so fast. Remember that Sony
- actually designed and manufactured the PowerBook 100, and we've
- heard rumors that with Apple dropping the 100, Sony obtains rights
- to continue manufacturing it and selling it, at least outside of
- the US. We have no idea how this might work - a Sony-labeled
- PowerBook 100, perhaps, or even a new name. It's even conceivable
- that Sony could import the machine back into the US and continue
- selling it, at which point it would be the first true non-Apple
- Macintosh. Interesting stuff, and given the demand for cheap
- PowerBook 100s, Sony might well be considering it, assuming of
- course that these rumors, like all rumors, are utterly true and
- grounded in fact.
-
- Information from:
- Mark H. Anbinder, Contributing Editor
- Pythaeus
-
-
- Reviews/19-Oct-92
- -----------------
-
- * MacWEEK -- 12-Oct-92, Vol. 6, #36
- Distributed Rendering Programs -- pg. 46
- BackBurner 1.0
- DreamNet 1.0.2
- RenderPro 1.0
- YARC NuSprint -- pg. 48
- Pixar RenderMan -- pg. 50
- Caravelle Networks 2.0 -- pg. 54
- Spectator -- pg. 54
- Magnet 1.0 -- pg. 55
- Likewise -- pg. 56
- Hello -- pg. 57
-
-
- ..
-
- 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.
-
-
-
-