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- TidBITS#151/09-Nov-92
- =====================
-
- This issue overflows with a review of WriteNow 3.0, the syllabus
- for a free online course, "Navigating the Internet," and an
- alternative view of the Duo. We also crammed in some short
- announcements, including news of Disk First Aid 7.1, which fixes
- the disappearing files and folders bug, a letter about font
- clone piracy, and a warning for CPU users who have a
- just-released PowerBook. Tune in next week for all the great
- stuff that wouldn't fit!
-
- 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 - email for details.
-
- 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/09-Nov-92
- Navigating the Internet: An Interactive Workshop
- WriteNow 3.0 Review
- Duo, An Alternative View
- Reviews/09-Nov-92
-
- [Archived as /info-mac/digest/tb/tidbits-151.etx; 29K]
-
-
- MailBITS/09-Nov-92
- ------------------
- Mark Johnson, keeper of Apple's anonymous FTP site announced that
- Disk First Aid 7.1, which fixes the disappearing files and folders
- bug, is now available on <ftp.apple.com> in the directory:
-
- /ftp/dts/mac/sys.soft/hdsc/
-
- [We strongly recommend that you run this new version of Disk First
- Aid on your hard disks. You never know when that disappearing
- files and folders bug might bite you, and even if you have System
- 7 Tune-Up 1.1.1 installed, the damage may have been done before
- you installed Tune-Up.]
-
- Information from:
- Mark B. Johnson -- mjohnson@apple.com
-
-
- Font Clone Pirates
- Carter Scholz writes, "I'd like to add something to Mark Nutter's
- review of SoftKey's KeyFonts package in TidBITS#146. Mark writes,
- "...the fonts aren't the genuine fonts from the original designer.
- Rather, each font is a clone of the original." This means, of
- course, that SoftKey is not paying royalties to the designer of
- the font. Although this practice is technically legal in the USA
- (one of the few countries in which type fonts are not protected by
- copyright law), it is ethically bankrupt. A well-designed font can
- take man-years of effort. Hermann Zapf, the designer of Palatino,
- Optima, and many other beautiful fonts, from whom SoftKey has
- stolen their "Palamino," "Optim," and "Chancery" has long
- attempted to educate type users on this point. From the designer's
- viewpoint, a "clone" is even worse than outright theft, because
- the clone is usually a poor copy that corrupts the designer's work
- while depriving him of compensation."
-
- Information from:
- Carter Scholz -- csz@well.sf.ca.us
-
-
- atob/btoa Translator
- Numerous people informed us that StuffIt Deluxe and StuffIt Lite
- 3.0 come with a defunker for the atob/btoa format (along with many
- others) that we mentioned last week. I'll have to check my copy of
- StuffIt Deluxe to figure out what my problem is.
-
-
- CPU and the new PowerBooks
- Conrad Halling wrote to tell us of problems with Connectix's CPU
- utility and the new PowerBooks. If you have one of those machines
- and CPU, send in your registration card, because Connectix has a
- free upgrade for registered users of those machines. In the
- meantime, Conrad reports that CPU's LCD Saver doesn't work if you
- switch screen depths, and there appears to be a problem with the
- backlight coming back on after it has dimmed.
-
- Connectix -- 800/950-5880 -- 415/571-5100
-
- Information from:
- Conrad Halling -- chh9@midway.uchicago.edu
- Brian Grove, Connectix -- 75300.1546@compuserve.com
-
-
- Navigating the Internet: An Interactive Workshop
- ------------------------------------------------
- [We think so highly of the idea of a free, electronic, workshop
- given over the Internet that we couldn't resist including this
- announcement. We'll be curious to see how well it works, being one
- of the first courses provided worldwide over the Internet,
- breaking down numerous physical, geographic, temporal, and
- financial barriers. Kudos to the brave souls running the course!]
-
-
- 16-Nov-92 through 11-Dec-92
- "Navigating the Internet: An Interactive Workshop" is intended for
- new or infrequent users of the network of networks called the
- Internet. It is designed to give an overview of several operating
- systems used on the Internet and to give examples of the resources
- available over the Internet.
-
- The only requirements are that the user have access to the
- Internet and can read basic email. Unix, VMS, and VM will be the
- primary operating systems covered in the workshop.
-
- Participants will be sent instructions by email.
-
- A BITNET LISTSERV provided by the University at Buffalo will be
- used for interactive answering of questions and solving problems
- with additional help by email.
-
- Instructor Richard J. Smith
- Assistant Director of Technical Services
- University of Southwestern Louisiana
-
- VMS & VM adaptation by Jim Gerland
- Systems Consultant
- University at Buffalo
-
- Guest lecturer Dr. Chris Tomer
- University of Pittsburgh
-
- Contributions by Peter Scott, Charles W. Bailey Jr.,
- and others will be included.
-
-
- Week 1
-
- * Internet Mail -- Instructions on how to use basic email
-
- * Unix, VMS, VM basics -- How to create, read, edit, copy, and move
- files in Unix, VMS, VM.
-
- * User information -- How to find addresses with WHOIS, how to
- finger users, finding files with Archie, and printing basics.
-
-
- --------------------
- Thanksgiving Break (USA) November 25-29, 1992
- --------------------
-
-
- Week 2
-
- * FTP -- File Transfer Protocol will be explained with instructions
- on how to FTP a document.
-
- * FTP -- Explanation and instructions on how to FTP pertinent
- Requests for Comments (RFC). Reading a file in FTP.
-
- * FTP -- Instructions on how and where to get Internet reference
- guides, an electronic book, a Supreme Court decision, and several
- PC games.
-
- * Instructions on how to subscribe to electronic journals.
- Instructions on FTPing a directory of electronic journals. Reading
- news.
-
-
- Week 3
-
- * Telnet -- Telnet will be explained with instructions on how to get
- to several OPACs. Capturing a file.
-
- * Telnet -- Explanation and instructions on getting to and exploring
- CARL.
-
- * Telnet -- Explanation and instructions on getting to and exploring
- Freenet.
-
- * Telnet -- Using the ERIC database.
-
- * Evaluation
-
-
- Registration Fee: free
-
-
- AUTOMATED REGISTRATION (preferred)
- To register for "Navigating the Internet: An Interactive Workshop"
- send the following email message (no subject heading) to:
-
- listserv@ubvm.cc.buffalo.edu
-
- In the body of the email message write:
-
- sub navigate yourfirstname yourlastname
-
- (If the above instructions are unfamiliar to you, ask for
- assistance from your computer center.)
-
-
- EMAIL REGISTRATION
-
- Send email requesting registration to:
-
- rs@usl.edu
-
-
- U.S. POST REGISTRATION
-
- Richard J. Smith
- Dupre Library
- 302 St. Mary Blvd.
- University of Southwestern Louisiana
- Lafayette, LA 70503
-
- Include your name and email address
-
-
- PHONE REGISTRATION
-
- Richard J. Smith -- 318/231-6399
-
-
- WriteNow 3.0 Review
- -------------------
- by Tonya Engst -- TidBITS Editor
-
- Looking for a useful word processor weighing in at 287K on the
- hard disk and consuming 490K of RAM? Take a hard look at WriteNow
- 3.0 from T/Maker. Looking for a word processor that sorts,
- computes, charts, slices and dices? Look elsewhere. WriteNow's
- features fall short in a few important areas, but what it does do,
- it does with a rare attention to detail.
-
- First, a little background. I know Word cold. I use Nisus
- casually, and frequently listen to Adam's opinions about it. I
- used WriteNow 2.0 several years ago as my primary word processor.
- So if I don't mention MacWrite or WordPerfect, it's due to lack of
- information. In addition, another WriteNow user, Tad Davis,
- contributed some information. Let's look at WriteNow's especially
- good features first.
-
-
- A manual to die for
- The manual's authors avoided corporate-speak and used a clear,
- conversational tone. The manual includes word processing basics
- that most TidBITS readers can skip and an excellent conceptual
- discussion of how WriteNow ticks. Details show up in a reference
- guide to the menu commands, an extensive trouble-shooting chapter,
- and a useful appendix. The appendix offers specific information
- about file conversion, label templates, and a bundled Date Control
- Panel that allows you to change the Macintosh system date to
- virtually any format.
-
-
- Stylish styles
- It's becoming fashionable for word processors to offer character
- styles, and T/Maker has implemented character styling wonderfully.
- T/Maker's programmers carefully considered the interaction between
- character and paragraph formatting, and paid attention to creating
- an easy interface. For example, assigning keyboard shortcuts to a
- style is trivial - in the Style dialog box, you simply pick from a
- pop-down menu of the available keyboard shortcuts. WriteNow
- indicates current style usage via unobtrusive pop-up menus in the
- bar at the bottom of the document window.
-
- WriteNow's styles outclass those in Word (which lacks character
- styles) and Nisus (which does have them, although without such a
- nice interface). WriteNow's implementation is the easiest to
- figure out without looking at the manual, its manual explains the
- details, and it has many nice touches with only a few odd quirks.
-
- I'd like to see an Apply button for viewing a changed style while
- still in WriteNow's Style dialog box. Tad Davis objected to
- WriteNow's lack of Space Before and Space After options for
- styling paragraphs, which let you define consistent amounts of
- white space between styled paragraphs, without typing additional
- hard returns.
-
- Peter Shank of T/Maker responded to Tad's objection, saying he
- hopes Space Before and Space After styling show up in future
- versions, but for now, users can work around this difficulty by,
- for example, setting up a BodyText style always followed by a
- SpaceBetween style with the SpaceBetween style always followed by
- BodyText.
-
-
- Functional print merge
- The print merge works much like it does in Word, sans the Word 5.0
- print merge helper, OR and AND conditionals, and tables. Without
- tables, WriteNow compares poorly to Word since tables simplify
- creating, error-checking, and sorting a data document (and
- WriteNow has no Sort function). Also, tables simplify designing
- custom labels.
-
- WriteNow has two print merge features that I'd like to see in
- Word. First, an OMIT command, which allows you to specify a
- condition for a record to be omitted from a merge (i.e. omit
- people under age 25). Second, in WriteNow, you need not specify
- the data file. You simply type <<DATA ?Human, what data file shall
- I use today?>>. When you merge, WriteNow prompts for a file with
- that question.
-
-
- Miscellaneous Nice Touches
- WriteNow abounds with unexpected features. To create a horizontal
- line, simply choose Insert Horizontal Line from the Format menu
- and select from the many variations.
-
- The Clean Up Windows command offers five different multiple-window
- displays. Nisus has similar features, but Word offers almost
- nothing here. Nisus can split a window horizontally or vertically
- and scroll the two halves independently, a feature that WriteNow
- lacks and that Word offers only on the horizontal.
-
- Print Preview, though slow to redraw, provides a one-, two-, or
- many-page view; a magnifying glass; a scrolling hand; and the
- ability to click anywhere and flip back to that spot in regular
- view. I especially like the icons in the Preview since they look
- like the tasks they represent.
-
- If you change printers and then try to print, many programs remind
- you to choose Page Setup before printing. WriteNow reminds you and
- then pops you into Page Setup automatically. In the Print dialog
- box, WriteNow offers the ability to print only odd or only even
- pages, something that Nisus does and Microsoft has finally added
- to Word 5.1. On to the good-and-bad features.
-
-
- Ruler details
- The ruler, which gives audible feedback when you move the tab and
- margin markers, would be great, except that it has its own window.
- You have to first click in the ruler, then do your formatting, and
- then click out of it.
-
- Conveniently, WriteNow's side margins go by paragraph. In Word,
- the margin applies to the entire document, and the ruler triangles
- adjust the indents for individual paragraphs. WriteNow's ruler
- shows literally how far from the edge things will print, unlike in
- Word where you must calculate to figure out what's going on.
-
- WriteNow has no specific top or bottom margin. These margins are
- just the amount of space that the headers, footers, and footnotes
- take up. This method works nicely, but I find it a bit convoluted
- without the manual's explanation.
-
- Although you can set up multiple headers and footers, and even
- vary them on even and odd pages, you can't automatically suppress
- them on a given page. If you want your footer to start on Page 2,
- you have to wait until you know where Page 2 starts, and then
- insert the footer there.
-
-
- The Spell Checker
- WriteNow's button-happy spell checker window consists of rows of
- buttons. The top row has the usual commands, and the remaining
- buttons offer suggested spellings for incorrect words, so you
- can't use keyboard shortcuts to select suggestions.
-
- The spell checker has an Ignore option, which ignores a particular
- word for the life of its existence in that document. WriteNow will
- still flag the word in other documents. This is better than Word's
- ignoring a word for only that Word session. I'm not sure if I like
- it as much as Nisus's more-flexible ignoring, which provides a
- character style for ignoring text.
-
- In an approach that others would do well to emulate, you can add
- many words to a user dictionary simply by selecting them in a
- WriteNow document, opening the dictionary, and clicking the Learn
- button.
-
-
- Grammar Checking
- WriteNow doesn't have a grammar checker built in, but ships with
- Grammatik Mac. It's good that WriteNow comes with Grammatik Mac,
- but grammar checkers in general aren't so hot. They need to come a
- long way before they will be useful tools for most people.
-
-
- Not so good and downright missing:
- In my experience, if you give users an inch, they'll want a mile.
- Give them underlining, and they will want overline too. Give them
- colors and they will want to print color separations. Give them
- search and replace and they will want to search for every
- paragraph having the style USER and add the word "goat," in bold
- italic, to the start of the second line in those paragraphs. Users
- will insist that this feature is vital and that they cannot
- imagine what possessed the propeller-head programmers to fail to
- put in this option. Anyhow, here's a laundry list of some features
- you won't find in WriteNow.
-
- WriteNow does columns, but cannot vary the number of columns in a
- document; you can start a document's page numbers at any number,
- but that's all you can do; no indexing or table of contents, no
- text wrap around graphics, multiple undos, non-contiguous
- selection, mathematical equations, glossary, customizable menus,
- GREP-style search and replace, or tables.
-
- A printing problem found in most, if not all, printer drivers
- relates to the suggestion in the WriteNow manual for "title
- pages" - it suggests that you start with a "zero" page number or
- "negative" page number, depending on how many unnumbered pages of
- front matter you have. The problem comes when you try to print
- those pages. The Print dialog does not recognize negative page
- numbers. You have to Print All and cancel after printing the pages
- you want.
-
-
- Conclusion
- If you believe that the word processor that dies with the most
- features wins, then you won't see WriteNow as a winner. If you
- believe that the word processor that dies with the most grace wins
- then you'll view WriteNow as a champion. As Tad Davis said, "I
- have more powerful programs, but I keep coming back to this one.
- It's the best electronic pencil going."
-
- How about a WriteNow Deluxe? WriteNow 3.0 is great for new users,
- people needing a PowerBook word processor, and users with simple
- to medium needs. These people will enjoy the elegant working
- environment that WriteNow provides. But for people who must do
- indexes or slightly fancier page layout or slightly more
- sophisticated search and replace, WriteNow is so disappointing.
- But, if you don't need the high-end stuff, you might well dub it
- the word processor for the rest of us.
-
- T/Maker -- 415/962-0195 -- 415/962-0201 (fax)
-
- Information from:
- Tad Davis
- Peter Shank, T/Maker Tech Support -- 73170.3133@compuserve.com
-
-
- Duo, An Alternative View
- ------------------------
- by Ian Feldman -- ianf@random.se
-
- Thanks to wonders of that modern monstrosity known as "global
- marketing" we can easily second-guess Apple's intentions and judge
- its image solely by creative reading between the lines. Take the
- new European PowerBook Duo brochure (the doubly-folded 8-page job,
- with a dock swallowing a Duo on the cover). I have it in Swedish
- in front of me and am sure that other versions could be found in
- many other countries. Not surprisingly, if subjected to analysis
- according to principles of investigative logic learned from a Mr.
- Sherlock Holmes, that brochure yields a lot of inside information
- about Apple itself, and of the perception that Apple holds of the
- world at large.
-
- OK, let's start with the cover: obviously we're in a home office,
- not in some glass Ivory Tower setting. Female hands with oh-so-
- long fingers (nails too long for a concert pianist) fondle a Duo.
- Dark wood, moody lighting, the works. What's that thing, right
- next to the dock? Aha, that's a crystal ball! One with etched
- outlines of the continents, a crystal-ball globe! Hmm... Apple has
- designs on the world.
-
- Conclusions of the cover: Apple can afford to hire a first-hand
- (sic!) hand model for its Duo-posing. Obviously, the company feels
- that a Duo is NOT the solution all by itself. You need a dock. And
- there's still a place for a crystal ball.
-
- We now switch to the inside. The headline proclaims, in Apple's
- 80%-squeezed, global-image-standardized Garamond type, "the best
- of two worlds." A different woman's hand hovers over a stationary
- dock's keyboard, frozen for all eternity in the process of
- extracting a closed Duo from the slot. And you can see right
- through her hand so no detail of the keyboard beneath is obscured.
- Clearly, this woman is no concert pianist either, but one
- afflicted by the Common Advertising See-Thru (CAST) syndrome,
- that's so prevalent among people appearing in computer ads of
- recent years.
-
- Unfolded twice over we see two headlines, "Best among portable,"
- and "Best among stationary," accompanied by pictures showing a Duo
- 230 alone and inserted into a dock. Once again, the hands shown
- typing are of models with that CAST syndrome. Come to think of,
- they could be hands of the invisible Chevy Chase, doing a bit of
- commercial work between real acting jobs.
-
- More conclusions: Apple can afford to hire plenty of models. Also
- they're not afraid to be represented in print by individuals
- stricken by modern four-letter maladies.
-
-
- Here comes the coup-de-grace: along the bottom edge of the spread
- there are 10 small pictures of a woman shown in what Apple clearly
- considers to be Recommended Poses To Assume With a Macintosh Duo.
- Starting on the left, that woman, let's call her Ann, is seated at
- a table that has "Designer Desk" written all over it. She is so
- totally engrossed in what's happening on the docked Duo's 14 inch/
- 256 color screen (32,000 with 512K of VRAM) that she has to
- support her chin with one hand while womanhandling, one assumes,
- the tiny trackball with the other.
-
- Next, Ann has turned towards us to show off her shapely legs. She
- has finished work for the day and is now in the process of
- withdrawing what looks like a greyish pizza carton from the dock.
- Soon Ann has succeeded with the task. Standing with a great mane
- of Rula-Lenska-like auburn hair, she puts the Duo into an attache
- case. Caution, Ann, you're doing it all wrong! You're supposed to
- turn the Duo on its axis so it won't occupy more than at most half
- the space inside! How else are you gonna fit the WSJ, the WWD, and
- your career woman's papers there as well?
-
- Image four: Ann has turned around and is now heading away from her
- previous position, an occasion also to show her dynamic profile.
- Thus we arrive at the center of the brochure. Surprise! Ann has
- veered off home for a change of clothes, then headed for the park
- to resume, one assumes, working for the same company that keeps
- her in designer desks, dual-modality computers, and more than one
- change of clothes. She now sports a yellow polo sweater, faded
- jeans, and Easy Rider-model leather shoes. A scarf around her
- hair, she has "casual" and "at ease with my Duo" written all over
- her body. She is writing a memo to her boss, or maybe she's the
- boss who's writing a memo to her underlings - it's hard to tell.
- In any event she's clearly enjoying the wrought-iron park bench,
- harder though it may be than her padded Designer Chair.
-
- Never mind, we're now at picture six of ten. Ann has risen and is
- once again headed somewhere. She has her Duo in a shoulder bag,
- not in a briefcase. Judging by the next picture, she was heading
- home where she keeps her Duo next to a monitor next to a picture
- of someone obviously worth remembering and an empty(?) milk(?)
- bottle.
-
- Once again she is shown engrossed in her little new computer.
- Doesn't Ann ever rest? Is she under such pressure that she has to
- keep working all the time just to pay the basic bills? The
- brochure doesn't tell. As in the office, she has assumed that
- one-hand-under-chin-the-other-on-trackball intense position. She's
- had time enough to change clothes once more, that much we can see,
- and also for some remodelling of her hair so now she's not at all
- unlike, say, Diane Keaton impersonating a young Katherine Hepburn.
-
- In either case, she has clearly finished whatever she was working
- on since, in the next picture, she is once again moving, same
- clothes, Duo gripped tightly in her bare hand, all smile.
-
- Next pic, we know why she was smiling. Ann is seated on an
- airplane; she must've been sent off on a junket to some faraway
- balmy place, all expenses paid, no excuses! As befitting someone
- entitled to travel in Designer Armchair Class she is now wearing
- the standard Travelling Businesswomen garb: white silk shirt,
- bluish jacket, hair gathered in a bun, grey slacks, earclips,
- pumps. After all, she has an image to project and maintain, her
- company's as much as her own, has she not?
-
- So where is Ann headed and for what purpose? We are let onto the
- secret in the concluding picture. Ann is standing next to her Duo
- that's connected to a largish monitor, obviously looked at by some
- important clients. She must have brought a change of clothes with
- her because the earclips are the only element that I recognize
- from the previous setup. Uniform this time is standard Modern
- Female Pink issue, no extras. She reminds me of someone whom I
- cannot yet place. One hand on the Duo, she is pointing with the
- other at the monitor with a very low-tech, wooden pointer. What a
- letdown... couldn't she at least have used one made out of laser?
-
- And what, exactly, is it that has thus far been the objective of
- Ann's work activities? What is she pointing at on that 40-inch
- monitor? The answer, extracted with the help of a 15x magnifying
- lens and a lot of logick[tm], is a QuickTime movie of a vestibule
- of the Kendall Tower building (Greenwich Square, London, England),
- that this Havisham & Wemmick company is trying to palm off on some
- investors in today's tight money markets. This gives her away...
- our Ann is, obviously, Ann Angell, the real estate agent in charge
- of that object whose datafiles are portrayed on all the
- screenshots in the brochure.
-
- Still, this brings us to the more serious matter of all that free
- publicity extended to Superior Products, Havisham & Wemmick and
- Nakamura and Associates, the three real-estate companies whose
- names appear in Ann's onscreen data. Simple analyst though I may
- be I just know that there's no such thing as free publicity in
- today's complex business world. Everything is deeply
- intertwingled. Is Apple already owned, or about to be taken over,
- by a group of real-estate companies, perhaps with plans to use the
- California manufacturing facilities to write off profits of future
- shady deals? That Nakamura name is a dead giveaway. Clearly, this
- is no laughing matter but one that warrants further investigation
- by more competent Apple-watcher-cum-conspiracy-theorists than
- myself.
-
- Well, that's about it, folks. Now we know who Apple had in mind
- when they made the Duo... real-estate agents. Oh, yes! The woman
- Ann reminded me of: Molly Dodd, of the Days and Nights of fame.
- Pure coincidence? You may care to remember that Molly _was_ a real
- estate agent herself before giving up her job to concentrate on
- the search for Mr. Right, before she met the Indian Brahmin, the
- neighborhood garbage collector, the All-American pilot (the one
- she left in disgust because he was too perfect for love), rejected
- once again the alto-saxophonist, her divorced first husband, until
- finally meeting Him in the guise of a Hassidic all-thumbs-pianist
- from Williamsburg, N.Y. That's the kind of adventurous person whom
- Apple obviously considers worthy of a Duo.
-
- Thus we arrive at following Authoritative Conclusions From The
- Thought Server: Apple may or may not already be secretly owned by
- some Japanese real-estate conglomerate. While they're still based
- in Cupertino, CA, it is nice to know that they selected Molly Dodd
- to be their role model for a Macintosh Duo user. They could have
- picked up Margaret Thatcher and then where would we be?
-
-
- Reviews/09-Nov-92
- -----------------
-
- * MacWEEK -- 02-Nov-92, Vol. 6, #39
- MiniCad+ 4.0 -- pg. 67
- GCC WriteMove II -- pg. 67
- Sketcher 1.0 -- pg. 72
- Flatbed Color Scanners -- pg. 74
- Arcus
- SilverScanner
- SpectraPoint
-
- * MacUser -- Nov-92
- Macintosh Performas -- pg. 53
- DiVA VideoShop -- pg. 58
- MacTools 2.0 -- pg. 60
- Bank Street Writer -- pg. 62
- DateBook -- pg. 63
- M.Y.O.B. 3.0 -- pg. 72
- Personal Press 2.0 -- pg. 73
- OmniPage Direct and ScanJet IIp -- pg. 75
- JAG and Smoothie -- pg. 79
- PROmotion -- pg. 81
- PowerPort/Gold and PowerPort/Silver -- pg. 85
- Spelunx and the Caves of Mr. Seudo -- pg. 85
- Z-Nix Cordless Super Mouse -- pg. 85
- Transparent Language -- pg. 86
- Prince of Persia -- pg. 86
- Drawing Programs -- pg. BG 33
- CA-Cricket Draw III 1.0
- Canvas 3.04
- DeskDraw 3.08
- Dreams
- FreeHand 3.1
- Illustrator 3.2
- IntelliDraw 1.0
- MacDraw Pro 1.4
- Michael's Draw 1.0
- SuperPaint 3.0
- UltraPaint 1.05
- Desktop Slide Scanners -- pg. BG 46
- (too many to list)
- V.32 bis Modems -- pg. 176
- (too many to list)
- 68040 Accelerators -- pg. 210
- Apple Quadra 950 upgrade
- Applied Engineering TransWarp 040
- DayStar FastCache Quadra 700/900
- DayStar FastCache Quadra 700/900/950
- Fusion Data TokaMac II FX 33
- Impulse Performance/040
- Radius Rocket 33
- Removable Hard Drives -- pg. 216
- ETC DataPort 210
- La Cie Express Drive 240
- Mega Drive Mercury 240
- Saturae Academy 240Z/ro
-
- * BYTE -- Nov-92
- LANtastic for Macintosh -- pg. 58
- Video Presentation Programs -- pg. 238
- Adobe Premiere
- DiVA VideoShop
- Compaq Pagemarq 20 -- pg. 249
- Network Modems -- pg. 269
- Microtest Lanmodem
- Shiva NetModem/E
-
-
- ..
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