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- TidBITS#152/16-Nov-92
- =====================
-
- Great reviews this week, including Now Utilities 4.0.1 and Rich
- Wolfson's excellent book, The PowerBook Companion. Other
- articles include news of an updater for Word 5.1, WordPerfect
- buying BeagleWorks, a great way to roll your own Portable
- DeskWriter, and a tip that could avoid serious hair-pulling for
- tech support people. Read on, or forever be woefully uninformed!
-
-
- This issue of TidBITS sponsored in part by:
-
- * Nisus Software -- 800/922-2993 x305 -- paragon@weber.ucsd.edu
- For info on Nisus or QUED/M contact us. Updates now shipping!
-
- For detailed information on Nisus Software and their products,
- please send email to <sponsors@tidbits.com>. For information on
- all of Nisus's products, send email to <nisus-all@tidbits.com>.
-
- 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/16-Nov-92
- Driver Education
- PerfectWorks
- Portable DeskJet Trick
- Travels with Charley
- What's Up, Now?
- Reviews/16-Nov-92
-
- [Archived as /info-mac/digest/tb/tidbits-152.etx; 29K]
-
-
- MailBITS/16-Nov-92
- ------------------
- We'd like to welcome our new sponsor, Nisus Software, publishers
- of Nisus, Nisus Compact, and the programmer's editor QUED/M. You
- can get an index of their information files (and find out how to
- request files) by sending email to <sponsors@tidbits.com>, or to
- automatically receive a 38K file containing all six information
- files, send email to <nisus-all@tidbits.com>. This file will not
- pass through the AppleLink or America Online gateways, so users of
- those services must request files individually.
-
- Among other useful information, Nisus Software's files include
- news about the just-updated QUED/M, Nisus hints and tips, using
- Nisus foreign-language versions (the only foreign language word
- processor available in the US, according to MacWEEK), descriptions
- of Nisus Software's other products, and instructions on how to get
- free demo versions of Nisus and Nisus Compact.
-
- Many thanks to Nisus Software for supporting TidBITS!
-
-
- Mail.Test Mistake
- Last week Yoshiki Shibata accidentally sent a message to our
- mailing list that slipped through the LISTSERV's setting that
- allows only me to post to the group. The LISTSERV promptly
- distributed it to everyone on the list. Yoshiki apologized
- immediately, and certainly meant no harm. If you haven't replied
- to the message already, please don't - all replies come to me, and
- I've received some 300 responses.
-
- Interestingly, the text of Yoshiki's message was essentially, "How
- are you?" and the vast majority of the responses were an
- optimistic, "I'm fine," although a few people qualified that
- statement. The winner was Phil Ryan of Melbourne, Australia, who
- wrote, "And I am quite well, were it not for the problem of trying
- to rewrite a Ph.D. in Physics, do a Law degree part-time, and work
- full-time, as well as be a father to two under-fives." Glad to see
- so many people doing so well. :-)
-
- On a related note, there's a chance that Internet users will see
- two copies of this issue. I know some of my mailfiles are being
- duplicated, and my mail host and I hope to solve the problem soon,
- so please don't inundate me with notices if you receive the issue
- in stereo. Thanks!
-
-
- Word 5.1a patcher available
- On Friday the 13th, Tony Huang posted to the Info-Mac digest,
- saying "Believe or not, there's already a updater for the newly-
- released Word 5.1. Word 5.1a fixes a bug in Word 5.1 during
- fast-saving when headers or footers are involved."
-
- Order the free updater from Microsoft Customer Service by calling
- the number below, or download it from sumex. The 10K file is
- archived on <sumex-aim.stanford.edu> as:
-
- info-mac/app/word-51a-updater.hqx
-
- To address the prevalent net question about spending $15 on the
- upgrade from Word 5.0 to 5.1, we at TidBITS feel the upgrade is
- worth it for the serious Word user. Although the tone of the
- program has not changed, Microsoft reportedly fixed a number of
- bugs and added a few features, perhaps most important of which is
- the ability to print even or odd pages. Welcome to the 1990's!
-
- Microsoft Customer Service -- 800/426-9400
-
- Information from:
- Tony Huang -- tonyh@lynx.msc.cornell.edu
-
-
- Driver Education
- ----------------
- Steve Kalkwarf writes "We received about a dozen Macintosh
- Classics earlier this year. I discovered that if I had them on an
- AppleTalk network with machines of any other type, they would
- crash when I connected to them with Apple's Likewise network
- distribution software (the best $150 I ever spent). If they were
- the only machines powered up, everything worked fine. Last night I
- found the problem. Apparently Apple took a bunch of their System 6
- Macs and installed System 7 WITHOUT UPDATING THE HARD DISK DRIVER.
- When I unboxed the machines, I noticed the boxes had been opened
- and retaped, and one box had a serial number label (from the
- outside of the box) on the inside of the box that listed System 6
- as the installed system. Running the 7.0.1 HD Setup program and
- updating the driver cleared everything up. If any TidBITS readers
- are having bizarre problems with Classics that came with System 7
- installed, I'd check the driver."
-
- Information from:
- Steve Kalkwarf -- kalkwarf@netcom.com
-
-
- PerfectWorks
- ------------
- No, it's not another integrated package. Several weeks ago, Beagle
- Bros. closed its doors and is no more. WordPerfect Corporation has
- acquired BeagleWorks, the flagship product of Beagle Bros, along
- with the list of registered users, the program, and the code.
- WordPerfect plans to support existing BeagleWorks users, but the
- program's name will change to WordPerfect Works (we preferred
- WorksPerfect, though that might be pushing it, given some quirks
- we've heard of). Beagle Bros. President Mark Simonsen will
- continue as director of development.
-
- Although we mourn the passing of Beagle Bros., a long-standing
- company from Apple ][ days, the acquisition is probably for the
- best for BeagleWorks. The program had trouble competing with
- ClarisWorks and GreatWorks, whose developers have more marketing
- clout. It was plagued by delays and early bugs, and despite its
- undeniable power, BeagleWorks is harder to use than ClarisWorks.
- From what we've seen of BeagleWorks and its full-support of
- Publish & Subscribe for data transfer between modules, it's best
- thought of as an integrated package for a power user, someone who
- doesn't need full power but wishes to move data among numerous
- programs. We wish BeagleWorks well in its new home.
-
- Information from:
- WordPerfect propaganda
-
-
- Portable DeskJet Trick
- ----------------------
- We said in TidBITS#146 that Hewlett-Packard had come up with a
- Portable DeskJet, but no corresponding Portable DeskWriter, a
- seemingly-obvious move given the popularity of the PowerBooks. We
- don't have news about a Portable DeskWriter, but it turns out
- that you can achieve the same functionality using the PowerPrint
- 2.0 collection of printer drivers from GDT Softworks.
-
- Generally available for about $95, PowerPrint supports over 1,000
- printers, and according to Steve Gully of GDT, the HP DeskJet 500
- driver works fine with the Portable DeskJet. PowerPrint includes a
- spooler and a parallel-to-serial converter cable for hooking to
- printers that only have a parallel port. If you travel regularly
- with a PowerBook and want to use printers wherever you end up,
- PowerPrint would be a good addition to your travelling kit.
-
- GDT Softworks -- 800/663-6222
-
- Information from:
- Steve Gully -- 72137.3246@compuserve.com
- Michael E. Costello -- Michael_E._Costello@fourd.com
-
-
- Travels with Charley
- --------------------
- So you bought a Power Book, perhaps one of those cute 100s? It's
- different from your desktop Mac, isn't it? I recommend that you
- read its manual - it was the first Apple manual I've read in
- years, but I was curious. It helped, a little, but I still had
- questions.
-
- Then I came across Richard Wolfson's "The PowerBook Companion,"
- (Addison-Wesley, $24.95, ISBN 0-201-6088407) and, to set the tenor
- of this review, I think Apple should license Rich's book and ditch
- the manual. Sure, Apple has that snazzy 80% Garamond font and
- slick paper, but Apple's manual doesn't answer enough real world
- questions. Rich's book answers all my questions, and periodically
- I go back to it when I think of a new question. The answer is
- usually there.
-
- In addition, if you regularly travel with a Mac, any Mac, buy this
- book. It gives excellent advice on what to bring, why to bring it,
- how to power it in electrically-challenged situations, and most
- importantly, how to take your Mac through airport security. Hint:
- it's OK to run the Mac through the X-ray machine - put it on the
- belt close to the flaps and far from the end where the magnetic
- field from the motor could possibly do damage. That will save you
- having to demo the Mac for the airport security people, who by
- definition cannot have a sense of humor. Rich even printed X-rays,
- taken at a medical friend's office, of his two PowerBooks, which
- work perfectly even now. (Yes, I asked him.)
-
- The book begins with specs and comparisons of the various
- PowerBooks (this edition covers the 100, 140, and 170 - Rich is
- working on a new edition for the new PowerBooks). Rich then
- touches on upgrades you might want, from more RAM (YES) to a
- larger hard drive (maybe) to a carrying case (yes).
-
- Then he discusses basic usage and system software. Configuring a
- PowerBook is a task of a different color, and as long as I'm
- trampling equine allusions, you'd do well to check the System
- Folder's teeth. Rich offers specific suggestions about what to
- remove, including a chart that lists everything and the sizes
- involved, and then repeats the process for RAM usage, providing a
- useful chart of memory uses and the trade-offs involved. Since you
- may wish to jam a System Folder into a RAM disk and boot from
- that, memory usage takes on new meaning with a PowerBook.
-
- Although Rich covers third party PowerBook hardware and software,
- he doesn't look deeply into those subjects, which makes sense
- given the speed at which the industry moves. He spends time on
- using and caring for PowerBook batteries, both in and out of the
- machine. For many of us desktop Mac folks, this will be the most
- valuable section of the book, because our years of Mac use don't
- help in knowing how to conserve power. The basics? Turn down
- backlighting as far as possible, turn AppleTalk off (use Jon
- Pugh's free ToggleAT FKEY), and avoid hard disk usage by running
- entirely in RAM if possible. We put the System Folder on a RAM
- disk, boot from the RAM disk, run Nisus Compact, which loads
- entirely into RAM, and save documents to the RAM disk. Other
- helpful hints in this section include the actual voltages for good
- batteries (5.7 to 7 volts) and the warning NOT to use ANY other
- power adapter to charge the PowerBook.
-
- In his section on connections, Rich offers ideas on how to make a
- SCSI chain work. Although he skips my favorite (ritual tofu
- sacrifice), the rest helps with the more complex PowerBook SCSI
- configurations. Other real world advice shows up in the section on
- upgrading, where Rich walks you through taking a PowerBook apart.
- Although I haven't done so, the instructions seem clear and
- complete. I appreciate an author not treating me, the reader, as a
- complete idiot and assuming there's no way I could open a
- PowerBook and do good.
-
- The worst nits I can pick are that Rich capitalized the "W" in
- Macworld incorrectly (which he promised to fix in the next
- edition); when talking about modem compression he doesn't mention
- that it does no good when the file is already compressed; and he
- occasionally uses the term "AppleTalk" when the Apple Nitpicking
- Police (who once pulled me over for this offense) would prefer he
- used "LocalTalk."
-
- In the end, I view this book as an extremely knowledgeable friend
- telling me all I want to know about the PowerBook. Outside of the
- book, Rich spends time on CompuServe answering questions (and not
- with an obnoxious "Read my book." answer, either), and his online
- writing strongly resembles the clear, uncomplicated writing style
- in this book (which is due in part to longtime Macintosh author
- Sharon Zardetto Aker's editing). If you feel that you don't know
- enough about your PowerBook (and I'm still learning), ask Rich by
- reading this book. And no, he didn't pay me to say so. Highly
- recommended.
-
- Addison-Wesley -- 800/447-2226 -- 617-942-1117 (fax)
-
- Information from:
- Rich Wolfson -- 72467.617@compuserve.com -- wolfsonr@aol.com
- wolfson@apollo.montclair.edu
-
-
- What's Up, Now?
- ---------------
- by Matt Neuburg -- clas005@csc.canterbury.ac.nz
-
- Now Utilities (hereinafter, NU) is a collection of system
- extensions, most of which started as shareware or freeware on the
- nets, where faithful fans could not imagine life without them. By
- giving these programs a home, Now Software ensured the
- functionality would remain even when other utilities might fall by
- the wayside of system software upgrades.
-
- The neat part was that Now didn't steal the shareware ideas, but
- co-opted the original authors. It was a win-win situation. Our
- hacker heroes could make some well-deserved money. Non-netters
- could obtain these great utilities, and netters who owned one of
- the utilities in shareware form got a great discount on the
- commercial package.
-
- Then the story took an odd twist, when Now Software announced NU
- 4.0.
-
- First, it seemed a bit soon for a major upgrade (and major new
- fee); we know that buying software is really buying a
- subscription, but the pricier issues should appear at decently
- well-spaced intervals. Second, 4.0 was to be System 7-dependent;
- System 6 users felt abandoned.
-
- Third, 4.0 consisted, in a way, of less than 3.0.2. NU 3.0.2
- comprised ten elements; in 4.0, three are missing. MultiMaster is
- missing too as a separate item, but its functions remain in
- NowMenus, and Now added a new item, Now Scrapbook. (At one point
- an employee at Now's duplicating house wrongly told a netter that
- the three missing utilities would break once 4.0 was installed;
- nets being what they are, flames ran rampant.)
-
- Finally, 4.0 was buggy in ways that Now Software had clearly not
- anticipated, and it implemented some questionable changes. When I
- started writing this review I was full of criticism for these.
-
- But Now has largely taken the wind out of my sails with NU 4.0.1,
- which corrects the bugs and the most controversial of the design
- changes, and adds important clarifications to the manual. However
- this has happened (smart rethinking? serious attention to feedback
- from netters?), the result is an admirable product.
-
-
- Zooming In
- Here I'll consider just Super Boomerang (SB) and NowMenus (NM),
- because I take these to be the heart of NU; they both do something
- indispensable, as in their old net-ware manifestations.
-
- Hiroaki Yamamoto's Boomerang memorized names and locations of
- files and folders you had recently opened, and modified the
- Standard File dialog (SFDialog) to list these so you could bypass
- shuttling around the hierarchy. Also, the dialog came up in the
- most recently used folder, and in any folder the most recently
- used file would be pre-selected.
-
- Jorg ("jbx") Brown's hierMenus let the menubar appear under the
- mouse; it also let you choose a Control Panel as a submenu to the
- Apple menu, bypassing the tedious CP scrolling in System 6.
-
- For these achievements, Yamamoto and jbx achieved canonization,
- and perhaps hacker nirvana.
-
-
- Boomerang: the Commercial Version
- In NU 3.0.2, SB works its magic in three different places.
-
- * It installs a SB item in the Apple menu (the "Apple SB" menu),
- with the list of recent folders and files as a submenu.
-
- * It attaches a submenu to the Open menu item of every program
- (the "DirectOpen" menu), listing the recently opened files
- available to that program.
-
- * It modifies the SFDialog with a menubar of its own. The first
- three menus are Folder, File, and Drive, so you can go right to
- any recent file or folder.
-
- (For brevity I'll skip the fourth menu in the SFDialog, which does
- neat stuff, but doesn't bear heavily on the comparison between
- 3.0.2 and 4.0.1.)
-
- The fifth menu added to the SB menubar is Groups. Here, you make
- each program a member of one of five groups (there is also an
- automatic catch-all group, Universal), so that the groups consist
- of programs that do roughly the same thing. The SFDialog then
- always appears preset to the present program's group, and when you
- choose its Files or Folders menu, only those belonging to a
- program in that group are shown. But you can change groups via the
- Group menu, so you can quickly reach any recent file or folder.
- The Apple SB menu matches the program group you're in, defaulting
- to Universal if the Finder is to the front; but the first item of
- the Apple SB menu is Open, giving the SFDialog, where again you
- can change groups and go right to your goal. The Groups feature
- thus lowers the number, and increases the relevance, of entries in
- the Files and (especially) Folders menus, and lets you use any
- program's SFDialog to quickly launch another program's recent
- document.
-
- SB 4.0.1 is both better and worse. It is smarter than 3.0.2 about
- knowing that a file has been opened, and adding it (whether
- document, program, or DA) to the full list of recent files, even
- when it wasn't opened through the SFDialog; 3.0.2 tries to do
- this, but isn't always successful. Both 3.0.2 and 4.0.1 are also
- smart about knowing which recent files can be opened by the
- present program, but in 4.0.1 you now have three choices:
-
- * to limit recent files to those actually opened by the present
- program, and folders to those containing them;
-
- * to include some other recent files that the present program can
- open, and the folders containing them;
-
- * or to use Groups, so that all openable recent documents
- belonging to programs in the present Group are shown, and folders
- containing them, plus any folders designated "permanent" for that
- Group - and a mere single keystroke at any time will so designate
- a folder.
-
- In 3.0.2, with only five Groups, the Universal group menus easily
- become overloaded, dropping important but less recent items. In
- 4.0.1, you get seven Groups; a single keystroke at any time clears
- a SB menu item on the fly; SB remembers up to 500 total items; and
- menus can be limited to any number of items up to 99. So menus
- will stay more current. On the other hand you can't switch Groups
- within the SFDialog - the Groups menu is gone. So if I have a Text
- program group and a Graphics program group, I can't just launch a
- MacDraw document from TeachText's SFDialog via SB, as I used to in
- 3.0.2; I have to hope it's in the Apple SB menu, or launch MacDraw
- first. I see this as a bad design decision.
-
- Other 4.0.1 improvements: Recent folders in the Apple SB and
- DirectOpen menus are accessed hierarchically (in 3.0.2, you scroll
- down a huge single menu of all files and folders in the Apple SB
- menu, and the DirectOpen menu has no folders). Hierarchical folder
- menus run in both directions, up and down, for more mobility (but
- limited to a depth of two sublevels, though that's one more than
- 3.0.2). All SB menus can show the pathname of an item with a
- keystroke at any time! And Now shrunk 3.0.2's confusing panorama
- of 18 "hot key" shortcuts to a basic set of four.
-
- Alas, the greatest drawback of SB 3.0.2, that it increases the
- delay before the Standard File dialog appears, has not been cured
- in 4.0.1; perhaps it can't be.
-
-
- NowMenus: the Commercial Version
- In System 6, NM 3.0.2 does what the shareware version did, plus
- you can have menus pop down and stay down, so you can choose an
- item without mouse-dragging (reducing repetitive stress
- injuries!). In System 7, it turns the Apple menu hierarchical.
- This means, among other things, that you can alias your whole hard
- drive in the Apple menu and go down the hierarchy of submenus (to
- a depth of four sublevels) to reach a file or folder, without
- opening windows in the Finder.
-
- NM 4.0.1 improves this. Submenus representing contents of folders
- come up more quickly; the hierarchical Chooser submenu now
- operates correctly, so you can bring the Chooser up with a driver
- pre-selected; and the Monitors CP is hierarchical, so you can
- change color depth quickly.
-
- This version is a major rewrite, with menus acting in entirely new
- ways. Menus can be any font and size. Folder and file items can
- have icons (color if desired). You can rearrange the Apple menu
- without renaming its items. You can press keys while the mouse is
- on a menu item to (among other things) change the keyboard
- shortcut for any menu item in a program, including the Finder!
-
- Sadly, though, NM disables a tiny free extension on which I depend
- heavily: Dropple Menu. This allows you to drag an icon onto the
- Apple menu, down the hierarchy of submenus, and onto an item
- representing a folder; your original file is then moved/copied
- into that folder. I use this for all moving and copying of files;
- it's much neater than first finding the folder I want to move
- into. Dropple Menu works under NM 3.0.2 but breaks under 4.0.1.
-
- A major worry with NM 4.0.1 is compatibility. Such strong changes
- to the menu definition may conflict with some applications.
- Fortunately, NM has some intelligence about what programs it
- should avoid, and can be set for additional exclusions; the pop-up
- menubar and the hierarchical Apple menu still work everywhere,
- which is the important thing.
-
-
- NowMenus: the MultiMaster (MM) Component
- MM 3.0.2 is a launcher. From an icon in the menubar or by a
- keyboard command, you get a list of programs, which you have
- created; attached to each program can be a list of documents. Now
- you can launch what you can see.
-
- The big changes in 4.0.1 are increased flexibility and ease of
- configuration, and communication with SB via a new extension, Now
- Toolbox. You can configure many "launch menus," and into each put
- any folder, program, document, or control panel, rearranging the
- order in each launch menu. And, among the "items" you can add to a
- launch menu are lists of recent programs, documents, or folders.
- You can even modify these lists, to make an item permanent or to
- remove it, by pressing a key while viewing the menu.
-
- Further, you can create "worksets," combinations of programs and
- documents, all of which will be launched together by selecting
- that workset from a launch menu, or by double-clicking an icon in
- the Finder. Also, NM replaces Understudy, letting you configure
- what programs will open documents whose creator you don't own, and
- it replaces AppSizer, automatically resizing an program's memory
- allotment temporarily if there isn't enough memory otherwise, or
- letting you resize on the fly.
-
- Unfortunately, you can't separate all these features from the rest
- of NM. I'd rather they still resided in separate components so I
- could use them with NM 3.0.2 and Dropple Menus. Also, a thing I
- disliked about MM 3.0.2 has not changed: the lists are not
- hierarchical. Documents can be attached as submenus to programs;
- but programs themselves cannot be made submenus to anything. So if
- you want a really extensive list of your programs, you get a huge
- scrolling menu. I prefer Jeremy Roussak's Apollo (currently
- freeware, soon to be shareware), which, though providing only one
- launch menu, lets it consist of meaningful categories that you
- create, into which the programs are grouped as submenus. It seems
- to me that NM provides power without a convenient interface to
- access it.
-
- NM 4.0.1 supposedly gives you many launch menus, so in theory you
- could have one launch menu for graphics programs, another for text
- programs, etc. Not so, in reality. Here's why. There are three
- ways to make a launch menu appear: as a pull-down from an icon in
- either corner of the menubar (that's two menus); as a pop-up when
- you press the mouse on the desktop (that's one more); and as a
- pop-up when you press the mouse with any combination of four
- modifier keys, except Shift, Command, or Option alone (that's 12
- more).
-
- But in fact many combinations are out, because other programs use
- them. I can't use the simple desktop pop-up, because it pops up
- when I'm dragging an icon on the desktop. I can't use the option-
- click or command-option-click pop-ups because they pop up when I
- use those combinations in HyperCard. In fact, any combination of
- modifiers and mouse used in any of your programs means that that
- combination can't be used for a launch menu, or it will interfere
- with other operations. If you have a lot of programs and
- extensions that rely on mouse-plus-modifiers you may be left with
- very few possible combinations.
-
- Besides, who can _remember_ a bunch of modifier-key combinations?
- A combination of modifiers with a letter-key to bring up a
- windoid, as in MM 3.0.2, would have been easier.
-
-
- Dubious Conclusion
- Now Software is trying to improve your control and convenience in
- innovative ways, and I am grateful. But it is perhaps because my
- expectations and hopes for this upgrade were so high that I remain
- dubious about NU 4.0.1.
-
- No one should live without SB, that much is clear. In 3.0.2, the
- presence of SB alone justified the price of the whole package.
- Some of the new features of SB 4.0.1 are aesthetic, and I'm not
- convinced that the new Groups system is as good as the old; but on
- balance SB 4.0.1 remains a major must-have.
-
- On the other hand, I regret NM 4.0.1 because it disables Dropple
- Menu, and I'm not happy with the interface to the launcher. NM
- 3.0.2. is stable and friendly, so I may stick with it and Apollo
- as a launcher and continue to fill in NM's other new functions
- with extensions I already own, many of them freeware.
-
- I realise this doesn't tell you what to do (not that TidBITS
- readers would stand for such a thing anyway). If you own NU 3.0.2,
- perhaps you'll consider the upgrade price worth the gamble
- regardless, especially since you can mix-and-match like me. Now
- has said that they will upgrade NU 3.0.2 to be compatible with
- future versions of the System, but don't look for that to last
- indefinitely. And who knows what will be in NU 5.0?
-
- While still scratching my head over some of Now Software's
- decisions, I heartily acknowledge their dedication, ingenuity, and
- sheer programming skill. Now Utilities 4.0.1 is a productivity
- powerhouse, and has eradicated much of the bad taste that 4.0 left
- in my mouth. The bugs aren't all gone: I still get crashes from SB
- and NM, sometimes with loss of various settings, particularly at
- crucial times like when the SFDialog is trying to appear. But this
- package still deserves full Penguins and a gasp of admiration.
-
- Now Software -- 71541.170@compuserve.com
-
-
- Reviews/16-Nov-92
- -----------------
-
- * MacWEEK -- 09-Nov-92, Vol. 6, #40
- Kodak DCS 200ci -- pg. 53
- FastCache Quadra -- pg. 53
- QuadCache 25 -- pg. 53
- Action! 1.0 -- pg. 60
- JMP Design 2.0 -- pg. 61
- PhonePro 1.0 -- pg. 62
- Photoshop accelerators -- pg. 66
- Lightning Effects II
- ThunderStorm
- DocuComp II 1.04 -- pg. 67
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- ..
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