home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
Text File | 1995-06-21 | 28.6 KB | 635 lines | [TEXT/ttxt] |
- TidBITS#161/01-Feb-93
- =====================
-
- It's been an eventful week. The TidBITS Forum on CompuServe opened
- and Apple took HyperCard back from Claris and added it to the
- Developer Tools group. We have the scoop on why the Apple Color
- Printer is so lame, specs on new Macs due out in a few weeks,
- lower prices on older Macs, an article on executives shuffling
- all over the place, and news of an innovative marketing program
- for CE Software's QuicKeys.
-
- Copyright 1990-1993 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/01-Feb-93
- TidBITS CompuServe Forum
- QuicKeys Test Drive
- HyperCard Folded Back Into Apple
- Why The Lame Apple Color Printer?
- Executive Turnovers
- Macintosh Price Drops
- Pumping The New Macs Out
- Reviews/01-Feb-93
-
- [Archived as /info-mac/digest/tb/tidbits-161.etx; 29K]
-
-
- MailBITS/01-Feb-93
- ------------------
- This week I'll make like a toggle switch and flip-flop. First I
- said the AppleCD 300 was impossible to find, then I heard from a
- bunch of people who had seen them and my local dealer had some,
- but this past week I've received agonized requests asking what
- strings I pulled to buy one. Sorry folks, I didn't pull any
- strings other than lining up early. The drives are shipping,
- though clearly many dealers don't have them. If it's any
- consolation for those of you waiting, I like my AppleCD 300 a lot.
-
-
- Adam as information server
- I like providing useful and timely information to people - that's
- why I write TidBITS. However, recently I've been hammered by email
- from readers searching for information that may exist in back
- issues of TidBITS. I normally try to help and search in Easy View
- on the my TidBITS archive. Now that I'm having trouble keeping up
- with my email, I ask that you try to do those searches on your
- own. It's not difficult to get back issues and Easy View from
- sumex or another archive site, and if you are on the Internet, you
- don't even have to do that since Ephraim Vishniac added TidBITS to
- the WAIS (see TidBITS#160). Information on obtaining back issues
- and searching the WAIS is in the automatic reply file you get if
- you send email to <info@tidbits.com>, and please, use that
- automated information. It will give me more time to work on
- TidBITS and less stress for my wrists, both of which will ensure
- that TidBITS continues to improve. Remember, the address for
- automatic information is:
-
- info@tidbits.com
-
- Thanks for helping remove an unnecessary load, and as always,
- don't hesitate to send information, comments, or suggestions. I'll
- reply eventually.
-
-
- TidBITS CompuServe Forum
- ------------------------
- Thanks to Neil Shapiro and MAUG, we now have our own message
- section and file library on CompuServe. The new section is #5 in
- the just-opened Macintosh D Vendors Forum (GO MACDVEN), and in a
- week or so you should be able to use GO TIDBITS. I've uploaded all
- the back issues there in chunks of ten, and new issues will appear
- in that file library as well as in the current places in MACCLUB
- #8, ZiffNet/Mac, and the Desktop Publishing Forum.
-
- Navigator users will have to add a new tile to visit MACDVEN in an
- automated session, but that's easy to do. Open your database with
- Show Database under the Session menu, then go into the following
- nested areas: Macintosh Support -> Macintosh Support Forums ->
- Macintosh Vendor Forums. From your Arrange menu choose Add New
- Tile, make sure the Forum radio button is selected, in the Tile
- name box type "Mac D Vendor Forum," in the Comment box type
- "TidBITS & Company Product Support," and (this is the important
- one) type "MACDVEN" into the GO code box. Double-click on the new
- tile to open and activate it, and then close all the windows you
- just opened.
-
- As I said, we have a TidBITS message section as well as a library
- section in MACDVEN. I encourage those of you on CompuServe to stop
- by to discuss TidBITS articles (that would have been fun with the
- massive discussion prompted by the pornography articles), suggest
- ideas for future articles, or just schmooze. I'll try to post some
- rough drafts and article ideas up there so you can preview what
- might be in the next issue (and so I can do reality checks on if
- I'm saying something dumb).
-
- Once again, thanks to the kind folks on CompuServe for setting
- this up for us!
-
- Information from:
- Neil Shapiro, Chief Sysop -- 76703.401@compuserve.com
-
-
- QuicKeys Test Drive
- -------------------
- by Mark H. Anbinder, Contributing Editor -- mha@baka.ithaca.ny.us
-
- In the ever-increasing competition for just a little bit more
- market share, third-party manufacturers and publishers, and the
- dealers that handle it, have to come up with increasingly creative
- ways to peddle product lines. Some companies, such as Apple,
- irritate the traditional dealers by going through other channels,
- or even competing directly. Others, such as CE Software, find the
- best of both worlds.
-
- This week, CE Software is introducing its "QuicKeys Test Drive,"
- an experimental marketing program that, if it works, could
- revolutionize the way companies publish and market products. The
- test drive consists of the typical "crippleware" demo disk that
- gives potential customers just enough of a taste of what the
- product can do to get them hooked, then tells them to buy the real
- thing at a discount.
-
- What makes the QuicKeys Test Drive different from the ordinary
- demo disk, though, is that dealers who distribute the Test Drive
- disk receive a commission for every sale they generate. When the
- user calls CE's toll-free sales line, the operator asks for the
- serial number encoded on the disk. That number identifies the
- source of the disk and tells CE where to send the check.
-
- Dealers who are otherwise reluctant to give out demo disks,
- fearing that customers will bypass them when buying the product,
- will undoubtedly be pleased with this approach, which recognizes
- the dealer's role in recommending or promoting the product. CE
- Software obviously stands to gain as well, because people who have
- tried the product are more likely to buy it. The end user wins
- too, since this promotion carries with it a discount price that
- brings it in line with mail-order pricing.
-
- If you're interested in trying the latest QuicKeys, by all means
- give your friendly neighborhood CE Software dealer a call. You may
- like what you see, and if not, you may get a free blank disk out
- of the experience!
-
- [It appears that the QuicKeys Test Drive software will be
- available in various places online, but according to Jim Sheldon-
- Dean, product manager for QuicKeys, since the purpose of the
- marketing program is to compensate resellers for lost sales, not
- reward the promoter, archive sites won't be able to earn money
- from this promotion. However, Mark and I have planted the seeds of
- such a concept at CE, and in the future user groups and archive
- sites may be able to earn money based on the number of copies of a
- program they recommend. I'm sure abuses could happen (such as
- recommending WhizzyWriter over the WriteStuff because the user
- group earns money for each WhizzyWriter sold to a user group
- member), but on the whole, I applaud CE for coming up with an
- innovative idea that could possibly grow into an entirely
- different method of software distribution. CE's technique could
- result in lower prices and users would have a better chance to
- determine if a package would fit the bill. Interesting
- stuff. -Adam]
-
- Information from:
- CE propaganda
- Jim Sheldon-Dean, QuicKeys Product Manager
-
-
- HyperCard Folded Back Into Apple
- --------------------------------
- A month or so ago, a friend implored me to try and find the dirt
- on what was happening with HyperCard. I hadn't heard much of
- anything in a long time, which meant to me that the program was
- dying a slow and unnecessary death. Late last week Apple announced
- that HyperCard would have a new lease on life - on the Apple
- campus.
-
- Apple plans to merge future versions of HyperCard into the
- AppleScript environment, something which should go over well with
- potential AppleScript users. Heizer Software probably won't be
- pleased to hear that their forthcoming front end to AppleScript
- will compete with HyperCard instead of just an Apple event-based
- interface environment from UserLand for Frontier scripts.
-
- AppleScript will offer control and integration of the Macintosh
- environment via a scripting language that works with Apple events.
- Even though AppleScript has been talked about for years, and shown
- publicly for six months, it has yet to appear in a form that most
- people can use. Apple has scheduled AppleScript for release in the
- first half of 1993. By using HyperCard (or at least the ideas
- embodied in HyperCard) as the front end for AppleScript, Apple
- benefits both AppleScript and HyperCard. AppleScript needed a
- better scripting interface, and as Frontier proved, only wireheads
- can conceptualize the abstract Apple event links between programs.
- With HyperCard providing an interface for those links, the
- conceptualization should become much easier for the average user.
- As far as HyperCard goes, it will appreciate the relative freedom
- of being released from Claris's stable of productivity
- applications, where it never fit in. Although Apple made no noises
- about bundling a full HyperCard with new Macs again, and I doubt
- AppleScript will ship with all versions of System 7.1, there's
- still a sense that HyperCard is in some way back where it belongs.
- The world is safe for stacks again.
-
- On a related note, I've heard that Aldus is busy drafting a
- statement on the fate of SuperCard, the HyperCard-clone produced
- by Silicon Beach Software before Aldus purchased the company. No
- news on what the word will be, but something is definitely
- happening there. SuperCard has never quite fit with Aldus's
- product line, which is interesting given that Aldus portrays
- itself as a communication company, and perhaps the primary use of
- SuperCard, and HyperCard for that matter, is communicating
- information on screen, much as does Persuasion, Aldus's
- presentation package.
-
- Claris will continue to market, sell, and support the current
- version of HyperCard until Apple comes out with a new version
- sometime later this year. At that point, HyperCard will again
- become an Apple-labeled product, although I should note that in
- France and possibly other countries, Apple never stopped selling
- HyperCard. Response from users and others was extremely positive -
- Kevin Calhoun of the HyperCard team said only "Personally, I'm
- delighted." but declined to say more because he was so busy with
- the transition and catching up with email about the move, most of
- which, he said, was "very, very positive." Seeing Apple do things
- like this and the MODE32 deal restores one's faith in the company.
- We may not always like what Apple does, but it seems that they do
- listen, albeit with the speed of a corporate tortoise.
-
- Information from:
- Apple propaganda
-
-
- Why The Lame Apple Color Printer?
- ---------------------------------
- Pythaeus recently explained why the new Apple Color Printer is so
- lame. Apple realized they lacked a color printer, but didn't have
- one ready internally. So, Apple went to Canon and said, "Hey,
- screen an Apple logo on that color printer over there and ship it
- in our boxes, OK?" Canon agreed, and that's why we have a SCSI-
- based color printer that doesn't have a color Apple logo on it.
- Apple never sets hands on the printer, which is really a Canon
- BJC-820 in sheep's clothing.
-
- Everyone makes mistakes, and Apple apparently plans to fix this
- one as quickly as possible, although that may take a year. Perhaps
- the worst part is that the $2,349 Apple Color Printer is
- (according to tests in the Mar-93 issue of Macworld) slower than
- the $2,995 Canon BJC-820 and because it uses different drivers,
- the quality suffers. Oh well, if you want a printer in this range,
- check out that Canon printer as well as the $3,495 HP PaintJet XL
- 300.
-
- Keep in mind that if you buy this printer and call technical
- support because MegaChart won't print to it, the support person
- will offer to test it for you and call you back three weeks later
- because it took that long to find, configure, and test the
- printer. Three years from now when Apple has abandoned the printer
- the support person will snicker at you and tell you to call back
- after you've chanted a few hours of incantations to the SCSI
- daemon, reinstalled the printer driver, and performed the ritual
- tofu sacrifice. If you don't believe me, think back to the ill-
- fated Personal LaserWriter SC. What, you don't remember? It was
- introduced along with the Personal LaserWriter NT, and it lasted
- for about three months.
-
-
- StyleWriter problems
- In related news, Patrick Warn writes, "To follow-up your story on
- the StyleWriter, I discovered that the grey scale printing option
- only works on Macs with Color QuickDraw [such as the SE/30,
- Classic II, Mac IIsi, and more]. I found this out after a call to
- Apple to find out why it would not work with my PowerBook 100.
- Also, although the new StyleWriter II driver works with the old
- StyleWriter, don't use the head cleaning option! It will damage
- the printer. I believe this is because the StyleWriter II driver
- tells the printhead to go to a place that does not exist on the
- original StyleWriter."
-
- [Lame, but it makes sense that grayscale printing would be related
- to internal Color QuickDraw. Perhaps more upsetting, Apple's
- StyleWriter II spec sheet specifically ignores this issue, setting
- some customers up for a disappointment. -Tonya & Adam.]
-
- Information from:
- Patrick Warn -- warn@emba.uvm.edu
-
-
- Executive Turnovers
- -------------------
- On January 4th, Roger Heinen, senior vice president and general
- manager of Apple's Macintosh Software Architecture Division,
- resigned to take a position at Microsoft as vice president of
- Database and Development Tools. Rumor has it that Mr. Bill made it
- worth Heinen's while to leave. I waited to say anything about this
- because I wanted to see if any juicy news came out of it.
- Unfortunately, there's not a lot to report.
-
- Apple's president and COO, Michael Spindler, offered the
- traditional platitudes (I'd rather he offered platypuses, but I
- suppose that's out of the question) about wishing Heinen well, but
- you have to suspect that the top Apple brass is worried about
- Heinen leaving. Projects that came from Heinen's team during his
- three years at Apple include System 7 and QuickTime, and even if
- Heinen is contractually limited from revealing Apple confidential
- secrets, you still have to wonder. Apple announced eight days
- later that David Nagel, previously senior vice president of
- Apple's Advanced Technology Group, will replace Heinen and serve
- as temporary head of ATG until Apple can find a successor.
-
- In other boardroom beatings, John Akers, chairman of IBM, will
- step down in the next few months. I believe the dollars behind
- that move number around $5.64 billion, with a negative sign
- somewhere in front. That's a lot of money to lose in a quarter,
- and about $4 billion more than IBM lost last year in the fourth
- quarter. Bean counters hate counting out that many beans and
- giving them to other people. The question, of course, is what form
- IBM will appear in after it recovers, which it will do at some
- point. IBM is too large to go away as we know it. Interestingly,
- it appears that one of the top names considered as a replacement
- is Apple CEO John Sculley, along with the Intel President Andrew
- Grove, Motorola Chairman George Fisher, GE Chairman Jack Welch,
- and even Ross Perot.
-
- One thing to note. As much as IBM bashing is a good time, keep in
- mind that IBM in the past has had enough money to devote a great
- deal to basic research, the sort of research that will never earn
- any money in our lifetimes. Over the past decade, IBM has spent
- $50 billion on R&D, and that's more than any other company ever.
- Writing IBM with individual xenon atoms is neat, but useless...
- today. Who knows what we may lose if IBM's research arms shut down
- entirely?
-
- Information from:
- Apple propaganda
-
- Related articles:
- MacWEEK -- 25-Jan-93, Vol. 7, #4, pg. 34
-
-
- Macintosh Price Drops
- ---------------------
- by Mark H. Anbinder, Contributing Editor -- mha@baka.ithaca.ny.us
-
- Augury of upcoming Apple product introductions is often made
- easier by the company's tendency to dramatically lower prices
- shortly before they add new items to the hardware lineup. Last
- week, Apple allowed us to anticipate a group of new products
- (expected, according to rumor, to be introduced at Macworld Expo
- in Tokyo on 10-Feb-93) by dropping many of the prices (suggested
- retail and/or "real" end-purchaser prices) on the bottom half of
- its product line.
-
- As the below chart shows, Apple slashed prices on the lower end of
- its family: the Classic II, LC II, and IIsi. The reductions are
- most dramatic in the IIsi, which with the addition of an
- inexpensive math coprocessor (via one of the two Apple slot
- adapter cards, either of which can be had for under $200, or an
- assortment of third-party options) becomes a serious option for a
- respectable desktop computer. The IIsi rests high on the price
- performance curve with a monochrome monitor, math coprocessor,
- keyboard, 40 MB hard drive, and 3 MB of RAM coming in under $1500.
-
-
- SERIALIZED PRODUCT OLD SRP NEW SRP
-
- Macintosh Classic II
- M1543LL/A Classic II 4/40HD $1,079 $1,079 *
- M1542LL/A Classic II 4/80HD $1,209 $1,079
-
- Macintosh LC II
- M1701LL/A LC II 4/40HD w/System 7 $1,239 $1,239 *
- M1723LL/A LC II 4/40HD w/System 6.0.8 $1,239 $1,239 * **
- M1707LL/A LC II 4/80HD w/o keyboard $1,349 $1,349 *
- M1387LL/A LC II 4/160HD w/o keyboard $1,489 $1,489 *
-
- Macintosh IIsi
- M0491LL/B Mac IIsi 3/40HD $1,729 $ 969
- M0364LL/B Mac IIsi 5/80HD $1,999 $1,199
- M0954LL/A Mac IIsi 5/160HD $2,139 $1,429
-
- Macintosh Color Display (14")
- M1198LL/A Macintosh 14" Color Display $ 589 $ 539
-
- Higher Education Smart Solutions
- B1051LL/A Mac IIsi 5/80 Business S/W $2,198 $1,398 **
- B1057LL/A Mac IIsi 5/80 General Faculty $2,198 $1,398 **
-
- Products marked with * are those whose retail prices stay the
- same, but whose "channel" prices have dropped. Dealers now pay
- less for the products, which generally means the end user prices
- will drop as well. These "channel" price reductions often either
- precede or follow changes in the suggested retail price. It's
- important to realize, therefore, that a change in the SRP may NOT
- change the end user's final purchase price, since such a change
- may not have a corresponding "channel" price change. The items
- marked with ** are only available through Higher Education
- channels.
-
- The standard caveat applies here, of course. If you opt to take
- advantage of the new, lower prices on some of this equipment,
- which Apple obviously feels is heading for obsolescence, you may
- kick yourself when you see what arrives next week. Or, if you
- decide to wait, you may miss out on the chance entirely, since
- quantities are limited and are likely to be depleted quickly. No
- matter how you slice it, though, I can hardly think of those IIsi
- bargains as anything but win-win choices.
-
-
- Pumping The New Macs Out
- ------------------------
- Apple doesn't stop. They keep introducing new models of the
- Macintosh at an increasingly fast rate. If only they could ship
- those new models in quantity when they announce the fool things.
- Teasing your customers works, but only for a while, after which
- the only emotion the customers feel is pure unadulterated...
- frustration.
-
- We'd also like Apple to specify and name machines with thought to
- the people who must memorize and order new and old Macs in a
- comprehensible way. The average consumer who buys a Mac every five
- years won't care, but it's becoming increasingly difficult to keep
- the top ten facts about each Macintosh model in active brain cell
- memory, and the fact that the 165c is much like the 180 only with
- a color screen does not facilitate memorization. If it's that
- close to the 180, take a clue from Toshiba and call it the 180c.
-
- A number of people have passed on information about the new
- machines, and although I'm sure Apple will send me pounds of paper
- that tell me all about it in two weeks, I figured there was no
- reason to wait. I have to hold off on the specs on the new
- LaserWriter Select 300 and 310 for lack of space this week - wait
- for that next week.
-
-
- New Macs
- The new Macs due in two weeks span the range of the Macintosh
- line, from the low-end Color Classic to the high-end Quadra 800.
- On the whole, the prices and features look excellent, and should
- make for some good deals on the older machines, as Mark says
- above.
-
- The RAM configurations struck us as interesting. The desktop
- machines offer at least one slot for additional RAM. These slots,
- however do not take the usual 60-pin SIMMs that Mac aficionados
- are used to. Instead they sport what Apple will tout as "industry
- standard" 72-pin SIMMs. We hope to have more details in a future
- issue, but one reason for the change is to eliminate the rules
- concerning banks of RAM and SIMM placement.
-
-
- Color Classic
- The 4 MB Color Classic looks like a pudgy Classic II with a
- facade-style front. The exciting thing about this machine (one
- hopes) will be its built-in, 10-inch, 76 dpi, 512 x 384 pixel,
- Sony Trinitron color monitor that does 256 colors standard, and
- accepts 256K more VRAM for 32,768 colors.
-
- The Color Classic uses a slightly modified LC II motherboard. As
- such it accepts LC PDS cards, uses a 16 MHz 68030, suffers from a
- 16-bit data bus, and only addresses up to 10 MB of RAM. Rumors
- imply that you will be able to upgrade this Mac to a PowerPC in
- the vaporous future. I'll believe it when I see it, but it does
- come with a socket for a math coprocessor should you need one. All
- this for a suggested retail price of $1,279 in the 4/40
- configuration.
-
-
- LC III
- Apple has finally broken their ban on using the number three in a
- machine name, a ban reportedly started when the Apple III flopped.
- I predict that the LC III will not suffer the Apple III's fate -
- it's basically a IIci in an LC case with its 25 MHz 68030 and full
- 32-bit data bus.
-
- The LC III's expansion slots make sense for a cross between the
- now outdated LC/LC II and IIci, with a single NuBus slot (although
- the internal size limits the NuBus card length to 6.5 inches), an
- LC-type processor-direct slot, and a socket for a math
- coprocessor.
-
- The LC III takes up to 36 MB via a new single 72-pin SIMM slot.
- Its internal video can do 256 colors, expandable to 32,768 with
- more VRAM. Interestingly, the LC III will include RAM disk
- software - presumably the same sort that comes with the
- PowerBooks. The price is pretty good at $1,379 for a 4/80
- configuration with no monitor. After a long life in the Apple
- product line, the IIci will no longer be sold, so look for some
- major price cuts in the near future.
-
-
- Centris 610
- The Centris 610 introduces a new case design reminiscent of a fat
- LC, and sounds like a promising machine. It features a 68LC040 and
- can include an on-board Ethernet adapter and internal CD-ROM
- drive. The Centris 610 expands to 68 MB of RAM via two 72-pin SIMM
- slots, includes RAM disk software, and has the basic 256-color
- internal video. Apple claims the Centris 610 will check in at
- about twice the speed of a IIci, even without a math coprocessor.
- Like the IIsi, the Centris 610 takes an adapter card that lets you
- choose a single NuBus or PDS slot, but it apparently does not have
- a math coprocessor on that adapter card. Bummer. The 4/80
- configuration will run you $1,859, without a monitor, of course.
-
-
- Centris 650
- The Centris 650, oddly enough, uses the same case as the IIvx and
- Performa 600. The 650 uses a 25 MHz 68040 and is slated to replace
- the Quadra 700. Unlike the 610, the 650 holds up to 132 MB of RAM
- via four 72-pin SIMM slots, has three NuBus slots, has an inline
- 68040 processor-direct slot, includes a socket for a math
- coprocessor, and even has an 8K cache architecture. The two
- machines share similar video abilities, RAM disk software,
- optional on-board Ethernet, and an optional internal CD-ROM
- drive. The price is still decent, at $2,699 for a 4/80 machine
- sans monitor.
-
-
- Quadra 800
- The Quadra 800 is basically a Quadra 950 in an upright mini-tower
- case. It uses the same 33 MHz 68040 and comes with three NuBus
- slots, but because the Quadra 800 uses interleaved memory (when
- SIMMs are placed in adjacent banks, I hear) and has an 8K
- integrated cache, it is supposed to clock in 5-10% faster than the
- 950. Like the Centris 650, the Quadra 800 has three NuBus slots
- and an inline 68040 processor-direct slot (which blocks one of the
- NuBus slots, unfortunately), and you can install an internal
- CD-ROM drive. Memory expands to 136 MB from the 8 MB on board. The
- price goes up fast at this level, a whopping $4,679 for a 8/230
- configuration.
-
-
- PowerBook 165c
- As far as we can tell, the PowerBook 165c is a PowerBook 180 with
- a 9-inch, 256-color, passive-matrix screen. It uses a 33 MHz 68030
- and a 33 MHz 68882 math coprocessor, has 4 MB of RAM expandable to
- 14 MB, and includes the same internal slots and external ports.
- Apple claims battery life will be between 1.5 and 2 hours, but
- early reports we've heard that suggest times more like 45 minutes.
- Ouch, but if you absolutely need that color screen... The
- PowerBook 165c is a bit heavier and thicker - about seven pounds
- in the end. Price? $3,599 with the 80 MB hard disk.
-
- Information from:
- Pythaeus
-
-
- Reviews/01-Feb-93
- -----------------
-
- * MacWEEK -- 25-Jan-93, Vol. 7, #4
- Macintosh Duo 210 and 230 -- pg. 1
- Aldus Fetch 1.0 -- pg. 41
- Public Utilities 1.0 -- pg. 41
- Spiral 1.0.1 -- pg. 42
- PicturePress 2.5 -- pg. 44
- Macintosh Duo Dock -- pg. 45
-
- * MacUser -- Feb-93
- Microsoft PowerPoint 3.0 -- pg. 50
- FileMaker Pro 2.0 -- pg. 52
- Now Utilities 4.0 -- pg. 54
- InTouch 2.0 -- pg. 55
- MacroModel 1.0 -- pg. 57
- GCC WriteMove II and Kodak Diconix 180si -- pg. 62
- MiniCad+ 4 -- pg. 67
- Adobe Premiere 2.0 -- pg. 71
- VideoVision -- pg. 75
- DocuComp II 1.0.1 and UpDiff 1.0 -- pg. 87
- CPU -- pg. 91
- Audioshop -- pg. 91
- Silver Cloud -- pg. 91
- Diamonds -- pg. 92
- Personal RecordKeeper -- pg. 92
- Kid Pix Companion -- pg. 92
- Magnet -- pg. 94
- Drive7 -- pg. 96
- Hard Disk Toolkit Personal Edition -- pg. 96
- AccessPC -- pg. 97
- Macintosh PC Exchange -- pg. 97
- Telecom Software -- pg. 100
- MacIntercomm 1.0
- MicroPhone II 4.0.2
- Smartcom II for the Macintosh 3.4
- White Knight 11.14
- ZTerm 0.90
- Reminder Programs -- pg. 112
- AgentDA 2.1
- Alarming Events 1.1
- DateBook 1.5
- DayMaker 1.01
- Easy Alarms 2.0.3
- First Things First 3.0
- Now Up-to-Date 1.0.1
- PowerBook and SCSI Display Adapters -- pg. 210
- Aura ScuzzyView
- Lapis PowerBase I
- LifeTime Video+ PB140/170
- Mirror PowerVision
- Mirror ViewPort
- Radius PowerView
- System 7 Utility Collections -- pg. 257
- 7th Heaven 2.0
- Super 7 Utilities 1.0
- System 7 Pack 3.0.1
- Xtras for System 7 1.0
-
- * BYTE -- Feb-93
- Macintosh Accelerators -- pg. 198
- (too many to list)
- Adobe Premiere 2.0 -- pg. 205
-
-
- ..
-
- This text is wrapped as a setext. For more information send email
- with the single word "setext" (no quotes) in the Subject: line to
- <fileserver@tidbits.com>. A file will be returned promptly.
-
- Remember, for information on TidBITS, how to subscribe to our
- mailing list, and instructions on finding back issues or searching
- back issues in the WAIS, send email to <info@tidbits.com>.
-
-
-
-