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- TidBITS#159/18-Jan-93
- =====================
-
- We continue with coverage of Macworld Expo, focussing this time on
- the seamy underside of the show. That's right, booth bimbos!
- Madonna's "Sex" it's not, but we also look at the rapidly
- growing crop of adult CD-ROMs. In more mundane Macworld news,
- we have an article on Apple's new printers and scanner, a short
- review of Now Up-to-Date 2.0, and clarifications of earlier
- articles on the IIvx and A/UX, the Video Toaster, and the
- FirstClass BBS deals.
-
- 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/18-Jan-93
- IIvx & A/UX
- FirstClass Deal Clarification
- Darker Video Toaster Reality
- New Printers & Scanner
- Booth Bimbos
- Booth Bimbos on CD-ROM?
- Now Up-to-Date 2.0
- Reviews/18-Jan-93
-
- [Archived as /info-mac/digest/tb/tidbits-159.etx; 29K]
-
-
- MailBITS/18-Jan-93
- ------------------
- Mark Johnson of Apple writes, "After many months of requests, I
- have finally updated ftp.apple.com [130.43.2.3] to include
- historic versions of Macintosh system software. Now you will find
- System 5.0 through 7.0.1 and System 7.0 Tune-Up 1.1.1 in the
- /ftp/dts/mac/sys.soft/ directory.
-
- These are US systems only, and NO, future versions will not be
- available for FTP. If I can update the international systems with
- 7.0.1, I will do that next. Thanks for your patience.
-
- Information from:
- Mark B. Johnson -- mjohnson@apple.com
-
-
- SyQuest 3.5" Units
- Daniel Andresen sent this information about SyQuest drives: "I
- spoke with a SyQuest rep a Macworld Expo, and she confirmed that
- the 3.5" 105 MB SyQuest units would be out "within ninety days."
- She said only the IDE version was finished at this time, with the
- SCSI version to follow. She also refused to speculate on pricing,
- and was not even willing to say whether it would be cheaper or
- more expensive than the 5110c's (5.25" SyQuests)."
-
- Information from:
- Daniel Andresen -- westmx!dandrese@uunet.UU.NET
-
-
- IIvx & A/UX
- -----------
- In an effort to clarify Mark's article on the incompatibility
- between the IIvx and Apple's Unix operating system, A/UX 3.0
- (TidBITS#157), Pythaeus writes:
-
- The Mac IIvx does not run A/UX 3.0 for the same reason that System
- 6 does not run on the Quadra 700: the CPU was released long after
- the system software shipped, so the operating system (OS) can't
- possibly know about the addresses and capabilities of the new
- hardware. A/UX 3.0 does such a good job of making Unix look like a
- Macintosh that people forget the operating system is Unix, not
- MacOS. A/UX does not sit on top of System 7 (a la Tenon), but the
- other way around. It makes no sense to talk about A/UX being
- "System 7.1 compatible" once you understand this fact. Unless the
- hardware designers bend over backwards to maintain compatibility,
- you will always need a new OS (or new OS components) to support
- new hardware. The Mac IIvx was released after A/UX 3.0, and
- contains new ASICs (like its sound chip), so A/UX 3.0 has no clue
- what to do.
-
-
- FirstClass Deal Clarification
- -----------------------------
- Maury Markowitz of SoftArc writes:
-
- I saw the note about the FirstClass upgrade in TidBITS#157. I'd
- like to clarify my poorly written CompuServe statement.
-
- SoftArc has two pricing schemes for FirstClass. The price list is
- for our corporate customers, who make up the majority of our
- business. We also have a series of "BBS Specials" for those people
- who want to set up a truly public BBS - free access etc. The BBS
- Specials are less expensive overall, and include the command-line
- interface for VT100 access. The prices for these systems (all of
- which include all manuals, a hardware-handshaking cable, two
- network users and two ports) are:
-
- 250 user system: $295
- 500 user system: $395
- 1000 user system: $495
-
- We offer the upgrade deal for both price lists, with a twist. If
- you are purchasing a system from our commercial price list, you
- get $100 off - right off the top. If you are purchasing a BBS
- Special, you get the "next largest system". In other words, a 500
- user system will cost $295 with the trade in, and the 1000 user
- system is $395.
-
- The upgrade path is available for TeleFinder and Novalink Pro
- users, and we've recently added Second Site. Due to the success of
- the program, we have considered similar upgrades for TBBS and
- PCBoard when we release our Windows interface (Real Soon Now). We
- do not offer such a trade in for Hermes as the licence is not
- transferable.
-
- I should also take this time to note that we have been able to up
- the volume on some items, and have therefore lowered prices on
- these items. Effective for the last two months, the price of the
- Multiport Upgrade Package (consisting of a four port Hurdler card,
- four cables and a four port licence upgrade) is now $695, down
- from $895 for our BBS users. A new supplier of cables has lowered
- the price of our Carrier Detecting Hardware Handshake cables to
- $25, down from $35, and we will also sell these in lots of 10 or
- more for $15 per cable.
-
- Finally, I'd like to mention that with the release of Michael
- Connick's FirstClass FidoNet gateway just recently, I have been
- able to put our support BBS, SoftArc Online, onto the FidoNet. We
- will now happily accept mail at the following addresses:
-
- sales, SoftArc Online OneNet
- Maury Markowitz@1:250/250 FidoNet
- sales@saolgate.softarc.com Internet
- 70511,2065 CompuServe
- SoftArc America Online
-
- Information from:
- Maury Markowitz -- maury@saolgate.softarc.com
-
-
- Darker Video Toaster Reality
- ----------------------------
- Matthew B Cravit writes:
-
- I noticed a comment in TidBITS#158 about the Video Toaster. You
- commented that it becomes an increasingly sophisticated and cool
- system. This is true; however, being a broadcasting and computer
- science major, I thought I'd offer a couple of caveats about the
- Toaster system:
-
- * The $5,000 price mentioned on the video tape is very low. To
- actually utilize the full capabilities of the Toaster requires the
- following:
-
- 1 Video Toaster System
- 4 Time base correctors
- 1 or more Single frame controllable VCRs
- 1 or more Single frame VCR controller boards
- (These two for doing 3-D animations)
-
- Total cost for a complete system (S-VHS VCRs) is actually closer
- to $12,000 - $15,000 range.
-
- * Secondly, for anyone who works with a production studio (i.e.
- other video production equipment such as character generators,
- video switchers, etc.), BEWARE! The Video Toaster has major
- problems synching itself to other pieces of production equipment.
- Here at Michigan State, we attempted to play a 3-D animation from
- a Toaster onto a program we are producing. We fed the Toaster's
- (supposedly) genlocked, synched output into our Grass Valley Group
- Inc. video switcher, and even with a professional video engineer
- attempting to synch the Toaster and the switcher, the color
- information coming from the Toaster shifted so much that we could
- not use the resulting tape since it failed the FCC's requirements
- for broadcast video.
-
- So, the toaster is a lot more expensive than NewTek claims. It
- also has trouble interacting properly with other production
- equipment. So if you are using it on its own and have money to
- burn, it's a great system. Otherwise, be prepared to waste a lot
- of time and money for marginal results.
-
- Information from:
- Matthew Cravit -- cravitma@studentc.msu.edu
-
-
- New Printers & Scanner
- ----------------------
- by Mark H. Anbinder, Contributing Editor -- mha@baka.ithaca.ny.us
- Technical Support Coordinator, BAKA Computers Inc.
-
-
- Months ago, when Apple announced that the StyleWriter printers
- would be in short supply, some suspected Apple wouldn't
- manufacture more to meet the unexpected demand because it had a
- replacement waiting in the wings. Among the four printers Apple
- introduced last week is the sleeker, zippier, sharable StyleWriter
- II. The others are the LaserWriter Pro 600 and LaserWriter Pro
- 630, and the succinctly-named Apple Color Printer. At the same
- time, Apple added a color version of the OneScanner to its imaging
- products lineup.
-
-
- StyleWriter II
- The StyleWriter II, with its $359 suggested retail price, has a
- number of advantages over its predecessor besides its way-cool
- curvy design. The printer is approximately two times faster than
- its predecessor, eliminating one of the biggest complaints about
- the StyleWriter. Apple's new GrayShare technology offers both
- grayscale printing that the company says is comparable to the
- quality offered by LaserWriters, and the ability to share the
- printer over an AppleTalk network with other Macintosh users.
-
- The printer includes the full set of familiar LaserWriter fonts in
- TrueType format, offers a multipurpose paper tray for up to 100
- sheets of paper or fifteen envelopes, and prints up to one page
- per minute in best mode or up to two pages per minute in normal or
- draft.
-
- It's hard to tell whether this is an advantage or disadvantage,
- but the new StyleWriter II is a single-piece unit, whereas the
- original StyleWriter is a two-piece printer. The detachable sheet
- feeder made the printer suitable for portable use. The all-in-one
- design of the new model may make it less confusing but eliminates
- the option of taking a streamlined printer along when you travel.
-
- Of course, there are better solutions for portable printing these
- days, such as the battery-powered WriteMove II from GCC and the
- Diconix line from Kodak, so portability was probably no longer a
- big concern for the StyleWriter II's designers. Still, since the
- StyleWriter is better suited to desktop printing than these
- portable printers, it is a drawback.
-
-
- Apple Color Printer
- More of a novelty in Apple's printer lineup is the Apple Color
- Printer, a $2,349 printer offering 360 dpi output on up to 11" x
- 17" paper, thanks to its Canon P691 Color Bubblejet engine. This
- printer connects to the Mac as a SCSI device but also offers
- printer sharing capability so other users on the network can use
- it. It supports Apple's new ColorSync architecture, which promises
- a standard way of matching image colors all the way from scanning,
- through editing, to output.
-
- The Color Printer bears a striking resemblance to the ImageWriter
- II (this one won't be called sleek or curvy), though at 20.5
- inches wide, it's a few inches broader than its cousin. Its use of
- four separate ink cartridges (black, cyan, magenta, and yellow)
- provides a much better color range, at a much better resolution,
- than the ImageWriter II with a color ribbon, and the separate
- cartridges also mean there's no wasting seldom-used colors.
-
- In our opinion, the Apple Color Printer is too little, too late.
- It goes up against well-established competitors, such as Hewlett-
- Packard's DeskWriter C printers, and, yes, even the more-expensive
- color printers from HP, Tektronix, QMS, and others. It has the
- very real disadvantage that, as a SCSI device, it's likely to have
- interface problems galore, and we're just not sure that it offers
- sufficient print quality to compete with printers half its price,
- much less printers twice its price.
-
- Answer us one question, Apple. Why is Apple's first real color
- printer also its first product in years (if not its first product
- ever) to sport a simple white-on-black Apple logo where the
- familiar rainbow-striped one belongs?
-
-
- LaserWriter Pro 600 & 630
- The LaserWriter Pro 600 and 630 printers may be most exciting for
- those interested in small-workgroup computing; they offer 300 to
- 600 dpi output with their Canon EX laser engines along with
- feature sets otherwise comparable to those of the LaserWriter IIf
- and IIg.
-
- Both printers sport a 25 MHz 68030 processor (the same as the one
- inside the Macintosh IIci) but varying amounts of memory (4 MB
- standard for the 600 and 8 MB for the 630, both upgradeable to 32
- MB). The 600 lacks the 600 dpi capability, which can be added with
- the optional PhotoGrade upgrade kit (i.e. a memory upgrade to 8 MB
- of RAM, and Apple's press release says, "As a special introductory
- offer, Apple will ship the LaserWriter Pro 600 with 8 MB of RAM,
- enabling users to take advantage of 600 dpi resolution and the
- superior grayscale printing capabilities of PhotoGrade."), and the
- Ethernet and SCSI ports provided by the 630.
-
- It seems a bit odd that a printer called "LaserWriter Pro 600"
- would offer 600 dpi printing only as an option, but we've given up
- trying to figure out Apple's product naming strategies. The
- LaserWriter Pro 600 retails for $2,099 and the 630 for $2,529.
-
-
- Apple Color OneScanner
- The $1,349 Apple Color OneScanner (to ship in Feb-93) can be aptly
- described as a color version of Apple's popular OneScanner,
- including the new Color Ofoto 2.0 scanning software from Light
- Source. It offers the same ColorSync technology as the Apple Color
- printer, so matching colors all the way through the image
- manipulation process will be much easier. A number of third-party
- vendors, including Aldus and SuperMac, have committed to
- supporting ColorSync, as well.
-
-
- Lower Prices
- At the same time, Apple has reduced the retail prices of several
- of its previous imaging products, as follows:
-
- LaserWriter IIf w/Toner & Cassette $1,869
- LaserWriter IIg w/Toner & Cassette $2,309
- LaserWriter IIf Controller Board $1,015
- LaserWriter IIg Controller Board $1,455
- Personal LaserWriter NTR w/Toner & Accessory Kit $1,649
- Apple OneScanner w/Accessory Kit $949
- Apple OneScanner w/Accessory Kit for Windows $1,059
-
- So, not only has Apple introduced a good crop of imaging products
- at reasonable prices, but it has also brought some of its existing
- products closer to the reach of users lacking deep corporate
- pockets. There are some odd problems with the new products, and it
- remains to be seen how they'll do in the marketplace. The best
- news, we feel, will be the significant price drops on the existing
- technology. The star? Inexpensive IIf and IIg upgrades for all our
- old LaserWriter II printers!
-
- Information from:
- Apple propaganda
-
-
- Booth Bimbos
- ------------
- Those of you who have gone to Macworld have encountered the booth
- bimbo phenomenon. It's not a sexist phenomenon as such, applying
- equally to the pretty young men and women who work as scenery at
- various booths. Universally, these people have no clue about the
- products they represent; instead they hand out buttons and
- propaganda, smile nicely, and act as props for the larger show
- that goes on around them.
-
- It's easy to condemn large companies for using booth bimbos
- instead of bringing some of their overworked and underpaid
- technical support staff, some of whom even look like normal people
- and most of whom will answer most any technical question. Small
- companies that have small staffs should get a little slack,
- although you wonder how they can afford to spend so much money on
- a large booth that needs booth bimbos, but can't afford or don't
- need the staff normally. Smaller companies like Aladdin, Dantz,
- and Nisus manage without booth bimbos, pressing their entire
- staffs and the occasional friends, relatives, or significant
- others into service as necessary.
-
- The subject of booth bimbos rises to the surface every Macworld in
- one way or another, buoyed by hot air, fluff, and hairspray, and
- this year it was prompted by a real-world description of what a
- booth bimbo will go through to look "sexy, but not sleazy... or
- maybe just a little bit sleazy." The booth bimbo in question
- lacked a certain physical attribute to achieve the required look,
- but being resourceful (she apparently described herself as a
- drummer, dancer, and actress - I wonder if she added booth bimbo
- to her resume?) she enhanced herself with two cleverly placed
- sweatsocks and about nine feet of duct tape (right, the sticky,
- strong, grey stuff) to create the illusion of bustiness.
-
- After squirming into the booth's costume, a petite jumpsuit that
- zipped up the front, she lowered the zipper to just above the duct
- tape region and then employed the age-old technique of finding an
- excuse to constantly bend down for maximum cleavage exposure. And
- all most people wanted was specs and to find out if the product
- being hawked was compatible with their existing hardware. Sigh.
-
- Perhaps this story is an extreme look at previously secret booth
- bimbo techniques, but it comes from a reputable and rather
- irritated source closely placed to this particular booth bimbo. If
- you have an especially funny booth bimbo story, send it to us, and
- perhaps we'll do a "Best of the Bimbos" article. Eventually
- companies will realize that showgoers don't give a damn about a
- extra skin or sexy hair styles. It's certainly never entered my
- product choice process - can you imagine? "Well, WhizzyWriter has
- all the features I need, but the babes at the WriteStuff booth
- sure were cute. I'll buy the WriteStuff instead." Get real,
- people. It's not as though there's even an image involved with
- most of this stuff. "If I buy the WriteStuff bodacious women will
- see me as a macho hombre studpuffin and drape themselves over my
- body whenever I'm writing."
-
- I'd like to suggest to any company that feels it needs booth
- bimbos at the next show that they instead buy some life-size
- blow-up party dolls of both sexes, dress them in appropriate
- costumes, and pose them in anatomically correct booth bimbo
- positions with some propaganda in their inflatable hands. Think of
- the money saved and the smiles it will create. Alternately,
- unchain another tech support person from the phones. They like
- that sort of thing.
-
-
- Booth Bimbos on CD-ROM?
- -----------------------
- The last Expo in Boston was the first time we saw pornography
- seriously hit CD-ROM, with BodyCello displaying the first
- QuickTime adult movies. I wasn't surprised to see that, but this
- year a startling number of vendors hawked X-rated wares. I didn't
- see the CD-ROM of Macworld Booth Bimbos, but I'm sure, now that
- I've mentioned it, it will appear at the next show. You know,
- grainy QuickTime movies of naked men and women getting it on with
- SCSI devices while wrapping each other in DAT tape taken from the
- latest backup set in the heat of passion. Heady stuff.
-
- I counted at least four, and maybe five vendors selling adult
- CD-ROMs. Most included pictures or QuickTime movies, although one
- had gone so far as to build a game into the CD-ROM so you had to
- win to see skin. The game? Nothing too challenging - scissors,
- paper, rock against a random computer picker. Reactor advertised
- Virtual Valerie II, though I didn't see a demo so it might not be
- shipping. Based on the handout, Valerie and her environs have been
- rendered in 3-D this time, but game play remains similar.
-
- I commented on the increase to a man working at one of these
- booths, and he said that they market what sells, and sex sells. I
- guess he's right, although I wonder why people put up with low-
- resolution photos and terrible QuickTime movies (using a slower
- machine with less RAM to watch these movies results in lousy
- performance, in all senses of the word) when they can visit a
- video store and choose from lots of titles or buy a Playboy with
- high-quality, full-color photos and those gripping interviews that
- everyone pretends to read instead of ogling the models. Then
- again, as Gerard van der Leun said in the premiere issue of Wired
- magazine, "Sex is a virus that infects new technology first." That
- explains the initial popularity of VCRs, and it looks as though a
- number of vendors believe the same thing will happen with CD-ROM
- drives. In the same "This is a Naked Lady" article, Gerard also
- said, "Sex, as we know, is a heat-seeking missile that forever
- seeks out the newest medium for its transmission." Seems apt.
-
- Of course, if I truly objected I would not provide all the phone
- numbers. But then again, if I were offended by this stuff, I
- wouldn't have written this article. I think the movement is
- interesting, though I would far rather play The Journeyman Project
- on CD-ROM once Apple ships the AppleCD 300; although the latest
- rumors we've heard on that front say not to hold your breath, as
- you will turn blue and die well before the external CD-ROM drives
- appear at your dealer. It seems that Apple doesn't have enough of
- them, and those that it does have go into the IIvx and Performa
- 600.
-
- BodyCello -- 800/922-3556 -- 619/536-2397 (fax)
- Bonobo Productions -- 310/452-5613
- Laser Concepts -- 800/882-6959 -- 818/884-9437
- 818/884-6959 (fax) -- LASERCPTS@aol.com
- Pixis -- 800/697-4947 -- 714/753-9709 -- 714/753-9255 (fax)
- Reactor -- 312/573-0800
-
-
- Now Up-to-Date 2.0
- ------------------
- I'm particular about calendar applications. I want complete power
- over repeating events, the ability to create to do items with
- varying levels of priority, non-modal reminders that won't
- interrupt my automated email procedures, and the ability to easily
- see what's coming up in the next week or so. For a year or so I
- used and liked the shareware Remember? from Dave Warker, and then
- Now Software sent me Now Up-to-Date 1.0 (NUD) to evaluate. I liked
- version 1.0, but I had some serious reservations, and as is my
- wont, I made my opinions known to Now. This put me on the beta
- list for version 2.0, and I'm pleased to report that Now
- implemented almost all my suggestions and fixed all my complaints
- in the latest version of NUD, which shipped at Macworld SF.
-
- NUD attempts to serve as a complete calendar and To Do program for
- individuals and as a network-based scheduling system for groups.
- It offers public events, so that in an office situation
- individuals can keep their own personal events and also tap into
- various group events for tracking meetings, vacation days,
- birthdays, and the like. In either case, the calendar system
- updates well across multiple machines, so you can have your
- calendar on a desktop computer and take it home with you on a
- PowerBook too. This article focuses more on NUD's capabilities for
- a single person, because that's how I use it.
-
-
- Views
- NUD excels in the number of views to your schedule that it
- provides. You can view events in Year, Month, Week, Multi-Day,
- Day, and List views, and you have a fair amount of control over
- how each view looks. One thing I appreciate is that you can edit
- events easily in any view other than Year, and to make basic
- changes to an event like the time or its title, you don't have to
- enter the Event Info windoid that holds all the event's data.
-
- I don't need to specifically schedule events throughout the day
- since I work at home and have few meetings. As such, I leave the
- Month view open on my main 13" screen so I can glance at it to see
- what's happened and what's coming up. I like Month view best for
- viewing floating Post-It notes and floating banners (good for
- showing how long guests will stay, etc.). In Month view you can
- paste graphics into days (such as a Mac icon on October 19th every
- year for Apple's product introductions :-)), or you can have them
- free-floating like a banner or Post-It note.
-
- Now added prioritized To Do items to NUD 2.0, and realizing that
- none of the temporal views (Month, Week, Day, etc.) made sense for
- viewing To Do items, they also added a customizable List view
- where you specify what parts of an event (Title, Priority, Start
- and Stop Time, Done status, and so on) show up in the list, and
- you define up to four ordered keys for sorting. You can create
- multiple list views (and different layouts for the Month view)
- showing different information, and you can keep multiple windows
- open at once.
-
- I'm pleased to report that NUD understands about multiple screens,
- so I can zoom my List view on my SE/30's smaller screen and it
- zooms to fill only the SE/30 screen rather than the main 13"
- monitor. Out of the many calendar applications on the market that
- I've seen, NUD 2.0 offers the greatest flexibility for viewing
- your schedule.
-
-
- Networking
- Now fixed NUD in 2.0 so that single users like myself can assign
- colors and styles to different categories of events without
- turning on NUD's powerful network capabilities, which allow
- multiple people to share a calendar over a network and keep their
- personal events private. NUD works nicely on a PowerBook, since
- when you disconnect from the network to leave, you have the latest
- version of the calendar, and when you return, NUD automatically
- updates the network calendar to account for events created or
- modified while you were away. I've only used this updating ability
- a few times, but it strikes me as easier to use and more powerful
- than the previous version.
-
-
- Reminder
- Now enhanced reminders significantly in NUD 2.0. Version 1.0 used
- a modal dialog reminder that interrupted automated email, much to
- my irritation, but 2.0 uses the technology from the AlarmsClock
- extension (now called Reminder), which previously shipped with the
- Now Utilities. In 2.0 you can choose whether reminders will be in
- a modal dialog or be non-modal, flashing reminders that replace
- the included menu bar clock and optionally make a sound. You can
- snooze or dismiss events from a menu that drops down from the menu
- bar clock, and if a To Do item is ringing, you can mark it as Done
- from the menu.
-
- Reminder's menu can display the rest of the day's events and To Do
- items, and it allows you to create new items and edit existing
- items even when the NUD application is not running. I have enough
- RAM to leave NUD running all the time, but many people will
- appreciate the ability to create and edit events without running
- the main application.
-
-
- Printing
- I seldom travel, and especially since I can keep NUD running all
- the time, I have little interest in printing my calendar. However,
- NUD provides flexibility in printing as well, allowing you to
- choose the dates to print, the page style (NUD supports numerous
- organizer sizes and styles and prints guides for punching the
- pages), and the view you want to print. The only time I've printed
- pages is when I went to Macworld and wished to have a paper
- schedule to carry around with me. NUD has a graphical Day view
- that shows how conflicting events overlap in time, making it as
- easy as possible to determine which Macworld parties to attend and
- which to skip because of time conflicts. Those who use a Sharp
- Wizard to track appointments while away from the desk will
- appreciate NUD's improved import and export routines that are not
- only more flexible but also speak directly with a Sharp Wizard.
-
- Overall, I'm pleased with NUD because Now addressed almost every
- one of my concerns about the first version and the subsequent
- betas. I still have a few quibbles, such as the inability to
- attach banners to a range of dates, and the strange interface for
- assigning a color to a category (for some reason you do that in
- the Define Sets dialog, rather than in the Define Categories
- dialog) but these are thoroughly trivial quibbles, and I recommend
- NUD highly. $65 discounted (for a single user, multi-user packs
- are available).
-
- Now Software -- 800/237-3611 -- 503/274-2800
- 503/274-0670 (fax) -- 71541.170@compuserve.com
-
-
- Reviews/18-Jan-93
- -----------------
-
- * MacWEEK -- 11-Jan-93, Vol. 1, #2
- File Synchronization Utilities -- pg. 63
- Inline Sync 1.0
- PowerMerge 1.01
- ShuttlePilot 1.01
- Update! 1.1
- STATUS*Mac 3.0 -- pg. 63
- PixelCraft ColorAccess 1.3.3 -- pg. 70
- Kai's Power Tools 1.0 -- pg. 71
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- * BYTE -- Jan-93
- Envisio ColorFrame -- pg. 66
- Desktop Mapping Software -- pg. 188
- GeoQuery 3.0
- Tactician 2.0
- Electronic Cameras -- pg. 241
- Kodak DCS 200ci
- Sony MVC-7000
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- ..
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