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- TidBITS#158/11-Jan-93
- =====================
-
- Macworld Expo news here! We have our informal awards, focussing on
- products like Retrospect 2.0, StuffIt Deluxe, The Journeyman
- Project, and Envisio's SmartStack. We look more closely at
- Apple's Adjustable Keyboard and MAXA's Alert, which promises to
- fix all your problems automatically. Also check out a new Trojan
- report and a note from the author of Gatekeeper along with Mel
- Martinez's clever method of integrating Nisus and Expressionist
- with QuicKeys.
-
- 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/11-Jan-93
- YAT - Yet Another Trojan
- Gatekeeper Message
- Nisus and Expressionist
- Macworld Expo SF 1993
- Most Interesting Hardware: SmartStack
- Booth Most Likely to Drive You Stark Raving Mad
- Best Giveaway: Video Toaster Tape
- Best Buttons: Peachpit Press
- Best Hat: Robin Williams
- Best Financial Reason to Attend: StuffIt Deluxe
- Most Promising Game: The Journeyman Project
- Apple Adjustable Keyboard
- Alert! Most Likely to Succeed, If...
- Reviews/11-Jan-93
-
- [Archived as /info-mac/digest/tb/tidbits-158.etx; 28K]
-
-
- MailBITS/11-Jan-93
- ------------------
- Phew, what a week! Macworld Expo is always a trip, figuratively
- and literally, and this year was no exception. We'll have news
- from the show for the next few issues, but first, I have to clear
- up a few things from last week.
-
-
- Lotus Number
- Leon Campbell writes, "I called the 800 number for the $49 upgrade
- to Lotus 1-2-3 mentioned in TidBITS#157 and the operator said she
- only knew about the $119 upgrade price. I read her the TidBITS
- piece and she put me on hold for a couple of minutes and came back
- with the message that the number I called could not do the $49
- upgrade. She gave me another number - 800/343-5414. I called and
- they took care of the order very nicely.
-
- Information from:
- Leon Campbell -- campbell@brahms.udel.edu
-
-
- Nisus Drag & Drop
- Thomas Robb writes, "SoloWriter 1.3, the 'Japanized' version of
- Nisus, has drag & drop already! I'm not sure if Ian Shortreed, the
- 'Japanizer,' wrote the code on his own or if Nisus gave it to him,
- but it's there, according to the 1.3 literature."
-
- Information from:
- Thomas N. Robb -- trobb@ksuics.kyoto-su.ac.jp
-
-
- Compatibility Checker Comments
- Peter Galko writes, "I found that the Compatibility Checker
- reported parts of the 7.1 stuff Apple sent me as a beta tester of
- 7.1 were supposedly incompatible with 7.1! It also reported that
- there is a newer version of Adobe Illustrator (later than the
- latest). Apparently Apple used an outside contractor to collect
- the data, and they made a few mistakes, to say the least."
-
- Information from:
- Peter Galko -- galko@trix.genie.uottawa.ca
-
-
- YAT - Yet Another Trojan
- ------------------------
- by Jeff Shulman -- kilroy@netcom.com
-
- There is a version of "CPro 1.41.sea" [masquerading as an update
- to Compact Pro -Adam] that is really a Trojan. It will attempt to
- erase your startup volume and any floppy in disk drive one. We
- haven't finished fully analyzing it yet so it is possible it _may_
- do more. So far it has only been sighted in Michigan. You can tell
- it from any legitimate version by a 312K snd resource called "log
- jingle."
-
-
- Gatekeeper Message
- ------------------
- by Chris Johnson -- chrisj@emx.cc.utexas.edu
-
- Users of Gatekeeper 1.2.6 will soon receive a warning stating that
- 1.2.6 is out of date and should be replaced with a more recent
- version. This warning appears automatically when modern versions
- of Gatekeeper exceed six months in age and is intended to prevent
- people from unwittingly depending on obsolete versions of the
- program which may no longer offer effective or safe protection
- from viruses. In spite of the warning, though, Gatekeeper 1.2.6
- remains FULLY functional.
-
- The six month time limit was chosen because it seemed likely that
- due to the need for periodic bug fixes, functional improvements,
- and code to stop new viruses, new versions would always be
- released within six months of each other. Unfortunately, the
- testing/debugging phase for Gatekeeper 1.2.7 has run unexpectedly
- long and delayed its release beyond the anticipated six months.
-
- So, some form of 1.2.7 will be made available as soon as possible
- (if it has bugs, it certainly has far fewer than 1.2.6), and, in
- the meantime, Gatekeeper 1.2.6 remains as functional as ever even
- though it will complain about being out of date once every five
- days.
-
- I apologize for any inconvenience.
-
- When 1.2.7 is available, an announcement will be posted in the
- comp.sys.mac.announce newsgroup, and the file will be sent to all
- major Macintosh archive sites, and posted to the comp.binaries.mac
- newsgroup.
-
-
- Nisus and Expressionist
- -----------------------
- Oops, I blew this one big time, writing last issue that
- Expressionist was from Macreations and not Prescience, the company
- that actually makes Expressionist. Sorry about that, Prescience.
- In addition, Mel Martinez passes on this useful information on how
- to link the current versions of Nisus and Expressionist.
-
-
- Mel writes:
- Expressionist and Nisus XS should be able to communicate
- seamlessly through Apple events. Although Expressionist might end
- up bundled with Nisus XS, I doubt it will be incorporated into the
- program. With Apple events, there is no real need to do so.
-
- Keep in mind that it is not necessary to wait for Nisus XS in
- order to tightly integrate Expressionist and Nisus. Using
- QuicKeys, you can easily set up hot keys that let you edit an
- Expressionist equation that you pasted into Nisus earlier.
-
-
- Linking Nisus and Expressionist
- In Nisus, select the equation by double-clicking or click-drag.
- Then press a QuicKeys key-combination to move the equation from
- Nisus back into Expressionist for editing (I use command-
- option-E).
-
- The QuicKeys sequence macro looks like this and will do the
- following:
-
- * Change the Nisus clipboard to a designated 'equation' clipboard.
- (This saves the current contents of the clipboard. I use clipboard
- 9 for equations.)
-
- * Use command-C or Copy to place the equation in the clipboard.
-
- * Call up Expressionist using an application QuicKey. (You could
- also use a Apple menu item via an alias.)
-
- * (optional) Create a new Expressionist window by using command-N
- or New. This ensures that a window is open and that you don't
- overwrite any existing equation.
-
- * Use command-V or Paste to paste the equation into Expressionist.
-
- Now that you're in Expressionist with your equation, edit it to
- your heart's content. When you finish, press your QuicKeys
- combination to copy the equation in Expressionist, return to
- Nisus, and paste it in over the old version of the equation (I use
- command-option-N).
-
- This second QuicKeys sequence macro looks like this and will do
- the following:
-
- * Command-A or Select All to select the equation in Expressionist.
-
- * Command-C or Copy to copy it to the clipboard.
-
- * (optional) Command-W or Close to close the window (you must also
- then include a step to decide not to save the equation in
- Expressionist. If you have Escapade or a similar tool installed, a
- simple N will suffice.).
-
- * (optional) Command-Q or Quit to quit Expressionist. Not
- recommended.
-
- * Bring Nisus back to the front using the application menu in the
- upper right-hand corner (this is the best way, believe me).
-
- * Command-V or Paste to paste the equation at the current
- selection point in Nisus. If you haven't monkeyed around, the old
- version of the equation should still be selected and will be
- overwritten by the new version.
-
- * (optional) Restore the clipboard to your default clipboard in
- Nisus (usually clipboard 0).
-
- This works quickly and smoothly on both a IIsi and a Quadra. Note
- that because Nisus has multiple Undos, you can always undo the
- pasting of the edited version of the equation and go back to the
- original.
-
- This technique also applies to combining almost any tools such as
- equation editors, table editors, or graphics programs with not
- only Nisus, but other word processors as well. Nisus's main
- advantage is its multiple clipboards and multiple Undos (as a
- safety net). Also, Nisus's macro language allows one to combine
- powerful internal Nisus macros with QuicKeys's interapplication
- abilities. For example, a Nisus macro can systematically search
- for a type of item (such as data) in a Nisus file, then use
- QuicKeys to call up some other program to operate on it, return to
- Nisus with the changes and then continue looking for the next
- item.
-
- [I use Nisus, Frontier, and QuicKeys to automatically reroute
- certain bang-routed uAccess UUCP mailfiles while I'm on vacation
- for just this reason. -Adam]
-
- Information from:
- Mel Martinez -- mem@jhufos.pha.jhu.edu
-
-
- Macworld Expo SF 1993
- ---------------------
- Although I don't think Macworld Expo had any stunning surprises
- this year, it did feature more promising new products and solid
- upgrades than I recall from previous years. Perhaps the hardest
- part this year was remembering everything that I wanted to write
- about after the fact, but here are some of the lights, mostly
- high, a few low.
-
-
- Best New Interface: Retrospect 2.0
- Although PageMaker 5.0 added some nice interface elements such as
- the ability to drag objects from one document to another, they
- also left in some major interface idiocies, such as one setting
- that requires navigating through five modal dialog boxes. Thus,
- the best new interface award goes to Dantz for their clever
- interface work with Retrospect 2.0. Although Retrospect 1.3 was
- relatively easy to use once you understood its idiosyncracies, it
- was never a striking example of good design. From the demo I saw
- of Retrospect 2.0, Dantz has rectified that error and then some.
-
- Almost everything is done from a main modeless window that
- superficially resembles a non-scrolling System 6 Control Panel.
- Five icons line up along the left, controlling functions such as
- instant backup, scripts, reports, configurations, and tools. When
- you select one with the mouse or by typing the first letter of its
- name, additional options appear to the right, and again, you can
- select items in that part of the window by first letter or by
- clicking. I especially liked Dantz's use of the keyboard since it
- makes sense to use the keyboard as a controller device when it
- cannot be used for text input.
-
- The other main interface element that improved significantly is
- the scripts, which now appear in a single window, showing you the
- source, destination, criteria, options, and schedule in a clean
- and easily understood list. Creating and reading selection
- criteria has become easier, and once created, modifying and using
- the criteria is also much better. You can even view the files to
- archive when you have multiple sources selected for archiving,
- something which irritated me in the previous version. I could go
- on, but take my word for it, Dantz did an amazing job on the
- interface. I don't believe the functionality has changed
- significantly although Dantz did add a few things like faster
- compression and additional hardware support.
-
- Dantz -- 510/849-0293 -- dantz@applelink.apple.com
-
-
- Most Interesting Hardware: SmartStack
- -------------------------------------
- Given that I don't specialize in any particular area, I don't get
- excited about advances in printer or modem or whatever technology.
- However, one thing other than the Apple Adjustable Keyboard (more
- on that in a bit) did catch my attention. Envisio, now owned by
- Mirror, introduced the SmartStack, a device that allows you to
- vertically stack up to seven SCSI devices in a single unit. Drives
- in the SmartStack do not connect to each other using cables,
- instead, the drives actually plug into each other. Envisio hopes
- that this new way of connecting drives will reduce cable clutter,
- interference, and SCSI errors. For $249, you buy a SmartSource
- base for the bottom of your stack, which includes SCSI connectors
- and a fan, and a top unit that offers another cooling fan and a
- SCSI loopback connector so you can chain additional existing SCSI
- devices. The SmartModules that contain the actual SCSI devices
- stack neatly between the SmartSource and the cover module.
-
- Envisio has ten SmartModules available now, including hard drives
- ranging from 127 MB to 1 GB, a 128 MB removable optical drive, and
- a 2 GB DAT drive. You are limited to modules produced by Envisio
- or specifically engineered for the SmartStack, but Envisio is
- negotiating with other manufacturers and working on additional
- modules to accommodate network interface modules, CD-ROM players,
- modems, disk arrays, and possibly even SyQuest drives turned on
- their sides. SyQuest should also have a 105 MB 3.5" removable
- drive out sometime this spring, according to various rumors I
- heard, and that drive will fit within the horizontal size of the
- SmartStack. Although some additional engineering is required, the
- lack of a power supply or additional connectors on each module
- should help keep the prices competitive, if not specifically low.
- The SmartStack is worth a look, especially if you are buying a new
- system and don't already have a number of external SCSI storage
- devices.
-
- Envisio -- 612/628-6288 -- 612/633-1083 (fax)
- envisio@applelink.apple.com
-
-
- Booth Most Likely to Drive You Stark Raving Mad
- -----------------------------------------------
- This award goes to the intensely designed Pinnacle Micro booth,
- which had fully enclosed walls and ceiling and a funky green neon
- waterfall. The walls seemed to be a brushed aluminum with a three
- dimensional design etched into them in such a way that I kept
- looking into the wall trying to make sense of the pattern.
- Needless to say, I never did, and what with the booth's green and
- purple spotlights, bright green waterfall, and neon pink plastic
- flame thingies, I found it a truly a psychedelic experience, and
- not one I care to repeat soon. I wonder what they sell?
-
-
- Best Giveaway: Video Toaster Tape
- ---------------------------------
- NewTek carries this award with their Video Toaster demo videotape,
- which is about ten minutes of snazzy effects and animations, all
- done with the Video Toaster. The Toaster grows more and more
- impressive, and as I see it each year, I keep lusting after one
- until I realize that I will never do video production. It's just
- not a hobby I'm likely to get into in my copious spare time. I'll
- depend on others for my Video Toast. (Quick quiz: Which makes
- darker toast, a Video Toaster or a Flying Toaster?)
-
- NewTek -- 800/368-5441 -- 612/881-2862
-
-
- Best Buttons: Peachpit Press
- ----------------------------
- Due to my current status as email junkie, I give the best buttons
- award to Peachpit Press for their set of three yellow smiley
- buttons, a normal smiley, a wink, and a kiss. I picked up the
- buttons and stared at them for a few seconds the right way up, not
- getting it until I turned them on their sides the way smileys were
- meant to be. Runner-up goes to Wired magazine (supposedly the
- Rolling Stone of the computer world) for their "Get Wired"
- buttons. I haven't read much in the premiere issue of Wired yet,
- but it looks interesting and might be worth checking out at $20
- per year.
-
- Wired -- 800/769-4733
-
-
- Best Hat: Robin Williams
- ------------------------
- A truly silly award to author Robin Williams, who has the third
- edition of the Little Mac Book out (it's getting a bit bigger,
- though), and pre-release copies of a new little book called "Tabs
- and Indents." I leave it as an exercise to the reader to determine
- the topic of that book. Anyway, back to the award, Robin once
- again wore the most interesting hats of the show while the rest of
- us dressed in our "Ken and Barbie Go to Macworld" costumes. I
- unfortunately forgot my fish tie.
-
-
- Best Financial Reason to Attend: StuffIt Deluxe
- -----------------------------------------------
- The best deal of the show goes to Aladdin Systems for their
- guerilla pricing on StuffIt Deluxe and SpaceSaver (which is
- included with the complete StuffIt Deluxe package). Aladdin
- offered StuffIt Deluxe for $45 and SpaceSaver alone for $25.
- Although I understand that people don't often need the full power
- of StuffIt because SpaceSaver can create and expand StuffIt
- archives, I still think the extra $20 is worth it for the full
- package. That one time someone gives you a file that has been
- tar'ed and you can't expand it online due to disk space problems
- (which I always have - or you work on a CMS machine that wouldn't
- know tar from feathers and wants to translate it all into EBCDIC
- anyway) it's nice to have the full set of StuffIt's translators.
- It's also fun dragging things from archive to archive - an example
- of interface done right.
-
- Second prize in this category goes to Teleware for dropping the
- price on their well-reviewed MYOB accounting program and its
- just-released smaller sibling, Best Books, to $19 for the show.
- Considering MYOB's list price of $99, the show special went over
- so well that Teleware quickly ran out of packages and had to
- promise to ship them after the show.
-
-
- Most Promising Game: The Journeyman Project
- -------------------------------------------
- Presto Studios is finally shipping The Journeyman Project. I
- haven't played it yet, not having received my AppleCD 300 yet, but
- from the demos and from talking with the creators of The
- Journeyman Project, it's an impressive accomplishment and a
- ground-breaking game. The Journeyman Project is an interactive,
- non-linear game, unlike Spaceship Warlock, which is more of a
- movie. It has 400 areas, each of which has four views, and Presto
- rendered each of the 1600 scenes and then retouched each one with
- Photoshop, thus making The Journeyman Project the first
- photorealistic game. The graphics are indeed stunning, but even
- more impressive is the way Presto designed the game so you can
- solve it either peacefully or violently. The Journeyman Project
- does penalize your point total for using unnecessary violence, but
- more interestingly, it makes future actions more difficult, thus
- discouraging rampant violence. A nice change, and one I'll look at
- in more detail once I can play for a while. If you're in the
- market for a CD-ROM game, you won't do any better than The
- Journeyman Project right now, although several interesting games
- are in progress from other companies as well.
-
- Presto Studios -- 619/689-4895 -- presto@applelink.apple.com
-
-
- Apple Adjustable Keyboard
- -------------------------
- I finally saw Apple's new ergonomic keyboard, the Apple Adjustable
- Keyboard. Its innovative features include the ability to open in
- the middle to up to a 30 degree angle, splitting the standard
- QWERTY layout (ISO for European users) so the 6, Y, H, and N keys
- sit on the right-hand side of the split. The space bar remains
- stationary in the middle and is enlarged for ease of use no matter
- what the keyboard's orientation (I approve of this since the space
- bar is the most commonly used key). The keyboard includes
- detachable palm rests and a separate extended keypad which can sit
- on the right or left side of the keyboard, attached by a short ADB
- cable. The numeric keypad offers function keys on its left side,
- then a cursor keypad, and on its right side, the numbers. Apple
- also added features never seen before on Macintosh keyboards,
- including speaker volume, mute, and microphone recording controls,
- which will be ideal for the increasing number of multimedia users.
- That's the good news, and even despite the upcoming bad news, I
- still think this keyboard is one of the best of the mass market.
-
- The bad news is that Apple only gave the keyboard the standard
- little flip-down feet for slope adjustment, and as important as
- the opening angle is, some vertical adjustment would have been
- useful. Ideally you should be able to hold your hands so that your
- thumbs are on top rather than on the inside when typing. I can see
- where vertical adjustment would be hard to engineer, but hey, it's
- my job to complain about this stuff.
-
- Potentially more serious is the way Apple used chiclet-style keys
- (like the buttons on a touch-tone phone only smaller and round)
- for the escape key, the sound keys, and the function keys. I use
- the function keys (along with QuicKeys) on my extended keyboard to
- switch between programs because the function keys are hard to
- logically or mnemonically map to application-specific functions
- and work best on system-wide functions. I'm concerned that the
- chiclet-style keys will prove enough harder to push that they may
- actually aggravate repetitive stress injuries, contrary to the
- keyboard's design. The infrequently used sound keys should be
- fine, and I wish Apple had made the Caps Lock key a chiclet key,
- since unlike all other keys it might be useful to have it small
- and round so I couldn't press it accidently. Only extensive
- testing will allow me to determine whether or not the other
- chiclet keys will be a problem, but I'm considering replacing my
- five year-old and somewhat flaky Ehman Extended Keyboard with one
- of these Adjustable Keyboards.
-
- Just today, we learned that Tony Hodges, maker of the Tony!
- keyboard, plans to sue Apple for patent infringement. The Tony!
- has been around for a while but has never shipped. When it ships
- it will cost much more than Apple's keyboard but will offer more
- in the way of customized key angles and tilting. At the moment,
- both sides are muttering legalese, so it's hard to tell what's
- what, but we'll write more about this should interesting details
- develop.
-
- I tried touch typing on the Adjustable Keyboard at the show for a
- paragraph or two, and surprisingly, even at the maximum open angle
- of 30 degrees, I made few errors. The errors I did make were on
- keys more in the middle of the keyboard, the I and the U
- primarily, rather than the keys that border the chasm. The
- keyboard's tactile feedback felt much like other Apple keyboards,
- which I don't prefer, but at least it's consistent. The unit I
- used had the keypad on the right side as it normally is, but I
- think I'd immediately try it on the left side so that I wouldn't
- have to move my right hand as far to get to my Curtis trackball
- and to off-load some non-typing duties to my left hand. No need to
- discriminate here. The keyboard will supposedly list at $219 when
- it ships next month, and it is only compatible with ADB Macs
- (everything after the Plus), and it will work with PowerBooks. The
- software for the special sound keys works with System 6.0.7 and
- later. Give it a test write at a dealer and see what you think.
-
- Information from:
- Apple propaganda
-
-
- Alert! Most Likely to Succeed, If...
- ------------------------------------
- Of the new programs I saw, MAXA's Alert shows the most promise if
- it lives up to all of their promises. Apparently the main
- developer did a lot of the work on Norton Utilities for Macintosh,
- and although his contract forbids him from working in the same
- areas as Norton Utilities, he decided to create a program that
- could work in much the same way, actually fixing problems rather
- than just reporting them. Since disk problems were out, he created
- Alert, which will scan your disk for conflicts and problems and
- fix them for you. OK, I was skeptical too at this point, so I
- pushed for some details.
-
- Alert essentially goes through your disk and looks for things that
- it knows are wrong. So, if you have a program that requires a
- minimum memory partition of 1024K and for some reason you (or
- someone) has set it to 666K, you're probably going have problems
- (potentially of more than one sort). Alert will discover that
- problem, and can fix it by increasing the memory partition,
- without you doing anything. It can also do things like determine
- that certain programs aren't 32-bit clean and that you are running
- in 32-bit mode even though you don't have more than 8 MB of RAM
- and you aren't using lots of virtual memory. As a fix, Alert turns
- off 32-bit addressing, and using a database which MAXA promises
- will be the most extensive in the industry (more comprehensive
- than the one that comes with Help! from Teknosys), Alert will
- provide you with the phone numbers for the vendors of the
- offending programs so you can find out how to upgrade. The
- database will be either free or cheap for two years after
- purchase, unlike Help's quarterly subscription deal.
-
- To make Alert more useful to consultants, MAXA designed it to work
- not only over an AppleTalk network, but also over a modem. So if
- you're an independent consultant and a client calls with a
- problem, you can run Alert over a modem connection to determine
- and automatically fix the problem on their machine.
-
- My basic impression of Alert is that if it works and has a great
- deal of depth (and those are big IFs) it will become an important
- tool for all of us who are in some way responsible for keeping
- less-knowledgeable users' Macs running (Hi Mom!). Unfortunately,
- it's the sort of program that will require extensive testing on
- many Macs before I'll be able to make that judgement, and since
- it's not shipping yet, it will be a while before I can start the
- testing process. If it turns out that Alert never tells you
- anything you didn't already know, or if it isn't complete in its
- reports about what it has done while you weren't looking, it will
- quickly wither away.
-
- MAXA -- 800/788-6292 (US and Canada)
-
- Information from:
- MAXA propaganda
-
-
- Reviews/11-Jan-93
- -----------------
-
- * MacWEEK -- 04-Jan-93, Vol. 1, #1
- MicroStation Mac 4.2 -- pg. 107
- Norton Essentials for PowerBook 1.0 -- pg. 107
- ToolPAKs for Canvas -- pg. 108
- PostScript Color Inkjet Printers -- pg. 122
- HP PaintJet XL300PS
- Lexmark Color JetPrinter PS 4079
- FastTrack Schedule 2.0 -- pg. 126
- ACT! for the Macintosh 1.0 -- pg. 126
-
- * Macworld -- Jan-93
- Workgroup Printers -- pg. 132
- (too many to list)
- Full Motion Video Capture Boards -- pg. 140
- (too many to list)
- Color Management Tools -- pg. 148
- (too many to list)
- LCD Projection Units -- pg. 156
- (too many to list)
- 2-D CAD Programs -- pg. 170
- (too many to list)
- Infini-D 2.0 -- pg. 180
- Microsoft Project 3.0 -- pg. 181
- FileMaker Pro 2.0 -- pg. 184
- Hard drive formatters -- pg. 188
- Drive7 2.3
- Hard Disk Toolkit 1.1.2 Personal Edition
- Silverlining 5.4
- PLI MiniArray 850 MB, PLI MiniArray 2 GB -- pg. 189
- Adobe Premiere 2.0 -- pg. 192
- WorldPort 9600 Data Modem -- pg. 193
- Object Master 1.0.2 -- pg. 194
- The Battle of Britain -- pg. 194
- IdeaFisher 2.0 -- pg. 199
- Viva 14.4/Fax -- pg. 199
- Serius Programmer 3.0 -- pg. 200
- Stat-Ref 3.2 -- pg. 200
- FlowChart Express 1.0 -- pg. 202
- Hello -- pg. 202
- LetterPerfect for Macintosh 2.1 -- pg. 204
- NihongoWare Volume 1 -- pg. 204
- Caduceus Physics 1.0 -- pg. 214
- Nolo's Personal RecordKeeper 3.0 -- pg. 214
- PathFinder -- pg. 215
- WonderPrint 1.0 -- pg. 215
- Organizer Link II -- pg. 218
- Spectacular 1.2 -- pg. 218
- Voice Navigator SW 2.3 -- pg. 220
- Managing Your Money 5.0 -- pg. 220
-
-
- ..
-
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