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- TidBITS#165/22-Feb-93
- =====================
-
- This week we look more closely at component level repair and
- whether or not it is reasonable to expect Apple to do it,
- report on a deal from Connectix that, in an unusual move, is
- only open to users of online services, and present much-awaited
- benchmarks on the just-released machines, again from Tom
- Thompson and BYTE Labs. Also, those of you on the Internet
- can check out parts of "The Internet Companion," available
- via anonymous FTP.
-
- 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/22-Feb-93
- Online Books
- Connectix Online Offer
- Apple Repair, Continued
- February Mac BYTE Benchmarks
- Reviews/22-Feb-93
-
- [Archived as /info-mac/digest/tb/tidbits-165.etx; 28K]
-
-
- MailBITS/22-Feb-93
- ------------------
- Lots of people have asked us where they can get the 32-bit Enabler
- and the Macintosh Hardware System Update. As yet, they have not
- appeared where the net public can find them. We have received
- contradictory information about whether or not these programs have
- even been released, so as a result, our advice is to sit tight for
- a bit and not worry.
-
-
- Online Books
- ------------
-
- Fred Berg writes:
- Parts of "The Internet Companion" by Tracey LaQuey and Jeanne C.
- Ryer, which was reviewed in TidBITS#164, are available via
- anonymous FTP from <world.std.com> in the directory:
- </OBS/The.Internet.Companion./>.
-
- Barry Shein adds:
- Further chapters will be released in the future. See the README
- and COPYRIGHT files in that directory for more details. Direct
- comments and questions about the book to:
-
- internet-companion@world.std.com
-
- This pioneering effort is a step in bringing together the online
- electronic and print media, enabling authors to explore new
- avenues of publishing their works. Comments and inquiries are
- welcome via email to <obs@world.std.com>.
-
- Information from:
- Fred Berg -- Fred_Berg@qmcumc.mail.cornell.edu
- Barry Shein -- bzs@world.std.com
-
-
- Connectix Online Offer
- ----------------------
- Connectix, makers of Connectix PowerBook Utilities (CPU), Virtual
- 3.0, MAXIMA, Hand-Off II, and the new InfoLog, is offering lower
- than normal prices to online services users. Since you're reading
- TidBITS, there's a good chance you fit that category. The offer
- involves ordering direct from Connectix, so the prices are
- excellent - noticeably better than mail order (I found a few mail
- order prices for comparison in the table below). Add $4 for
- shipping in North America, $10 for international orders (for one
- or more), and if you're in California, add the 8.5% state sales
- tax. Although international orders are fine, Connectix cannot
- accept orders from all countries due to agreements with local
- resellers, to whom Connectix will refer you if necessary.
-
- Product List Mail Online
- --------------------------------------------------------
- Connectix PowerBook Utilities (CPU) $99 49 39
- Virtual 3.0 99 39
- MAXIMA 2.0 69 45 29
- InfoLog 149 44
- HAND-Off II 99 55 39
-
- If you are on AppleLink or America Online, Connectix has online
- order coupons you can download and redistribute. On AppleLink,
- check for AppleLink -> Third Parties -> Connectix -> Connectix
- "On-Line Coupon" and on America Online, look in a new Connectix
- Forum opening next week in the Macintosh Utilities Forum. It may
- also be worth checking on Connectix's forum on CompuServe in the
- Macintosh A Vendors forum (MACAVEN).
-
- If you can't get a coupon, send your name, organization, street
- address, city, state, zip, and phone number; email address and
- service (I imagine "Internet" is fine for most of us); and credit
- card type (Visa, MasterCard, or American Express), number, and
- expiration date to Connectix at an electronic address below. Sorry
- to list all that out like that, but I have confidence you can
- figure it out.
-
- Connectix says it will take about 10 days for delivery and the
- offer is void where prohibited (I like that phrase. It reminds me
- of a sign I saw once that said "Illegal activities prohibited."
- What, and they're OK everywhere else?). Finally, all of
- Connectix's products have a 30-day, money-back satisfaction
- guarantee. I approve. You can order one of each product per email
- address, and the prices expire 30-Jun-93.
-
- You can order these products via email or, if you prefer (and we
- don't) via fax. As much as it's a bit clumsy to order this way,
- you can see how much money goes into the software distribution
- channel. If more companies conducted business online, we'd have
- cheaper software and less packaging waste since the companies
- would be interested in shipping smaller packages, not in creating
- hefty boxes to look good on shelves. Connectix, by the way, is
- good about packaging if the copy of Virtual 3.0 I just received is
- any indication. The disk is in an envelope inside the slim manual,
- and the whole thing is shrink-wrapped. No box, little waste.
-
- And to preempt comments, yes, I know that if we rid ourselves of
- the software distribution channel that dealers won't be able to
- stay in business and provide the tech support users require
- (although Roy McDonald of Connectix made a point of telling me
- that Connectix provides toll-free support). In this instance, I
- fall back on running dog capitalist theory and say that the market
- would adapt.
-
- Some people have legitimate concerns about sending credit card
- numbers through email. I expressed that concern to Roy, who said
- they set up the fax for this reason, and so far they have received
- three times as many responses via email as via fax. I'm glad that
- email is beating fax, but I'd like to see (and if I get bored
- someday I may write it) a HyperCard stack or application that has
- fields for the relevant data, does error checking, and then writes
- data to an encoded text file. The coding scheme could be as simple
- as a slightly modified rot13 (take the ASCII value of each letter,
- add 13, convert back to a letter, and repeat), but it would ensure
- basic privacy. There's no point in trying to protect that number
- too hard - if people want to steal it they will anyway and you
- will have to rely on your bank for help. The other value of this
- program would be to allow automatic data entry of the orders with
- a moderately intelligent mail system.
-
- Send your email order to:
- CONNECTIX.CS@applelink.apple.com
- connectix@aol.com
- 75300.1546@compuserve.com
- 415/571-5195 (fax)
- 800/950-5880 (voice)
-
- Information from:
- Connectix propaganda
- Roy McDonald, Connectix -- connectix@applelink.apple.com
-
-
- Apple Repair, Continued
- -----------------------
- Just as our modem issue garnered many comments that you'll see in
- a future issue, so did Fred Condo's open letter complaining about
- Apple's repair policies. People brought up many excellent points
- about why Apple doesn't officially do component level repair,
- which I'll try to represent here.
-
- As Keith Bourgoin <kbourgoin@chaparral.fse.ulaval.ca> wrote, Apple
- is essentially saying, "We don't make those CD-ROM drives, so we
- can't get the individual parts even if we wanted them." Think of
- it like this: Sony builds a CD-ROM drive for Apple and stamps an
- Apple logo on it. That drive doesn't even necessarily appear in
- Apple's factories. A glaring example is the Apple Color Printer,
- which goes straight from Canon's factories to Apple's warehouses.
- Apple never gets the individual parts that make up that CD-ROM
- drive or color printer. Thus, when Apple provides repair parts,
- they provide a "unit" from Sony or Canon.
-
- In that sense, Fred's specific complaint isn't Apple's fault, but
- Sony's. And, as Jeff Provost <jp57+@andrew.cmu.edu> wrote, getting
- through to Sony's parts department is an exercise in frustration.
- If you connect to a large company's parts department, as Bill
- Coderre <bc@apple.com> said in another mailfile (and to be clear,
- Bill says he is not the Official Apple Voice Of Truth[tm]), they
- may refuse to sell you a single gear. A bag of 50, sure, but since
- the company Bill was talking about wouldn't sell anything for less
- than $50 for bookkeeping reasons, the customer had to buy a bag of
- 50 gears. I guess that's better than buying a new widget, but not
- much better.
-
- That answers the question for Apple-branded equipment that Apple
- doesn't make, but what about motherboards, which Apple does make?
- Someone wrote to us with a horror story about how a picture fell
- off his wall and hit the SCSI port on the back of his IIci,
- pulling out one of the threaded holes for the SCSI cable screw. He
- said the part didn't appear integral to the motherboard, but he
- had to replace the entire board to fix it.
-
- The problem is threefold. First, Apple uses a just-in-time
- inventory method that tries to ensure when a Mac is ordered, it's
- built right then and shipped out. That's over-simplifying, but the
- idea is that Apple doesn't have a large inventory of raw parts or
- completed machines, ever. A large quantity of tiny repair parts in
- the dealer channel would cause inventory problems, tracking
- problems, and accounting problems, and as much as it's fun to
- complain, that costs money, which would raise the cost of Macs.
- Second, more and more of the parts on Apple's motherboards are
- custom designed for Apple, which means that the manufacturers only
- make as many as Apple will use. We're not talking the original IBM
- PC here, which IBM created with almost entirely off-the-shelf
- parts. Third and finally, if Apple made these parts available to
- repair centers, they would have to ensure that repair centers had
- people skilled enough to do component level repair. Would you
- trust your dealer to have someone that skilled? Some yes, some no.
-
- Also, a company may not make parts available because that
- encourages untrained people to open equipment and try to fix it.
- That's all fine if the equipment is old, but what if it's under
- warranty? Does the company honor that warranty even though your
- soldering iron slipped and melted a hole in the controller card?
-
- William Humphries <humphrie@ssc.wisc.edu> passed on an interesting
- note. Apparently Kodak lost an antitrust suit filed against it by
- a group of frustrated repair centers that could not get parts.
- William didn't have the original suit, and I haven't found it, so
- I don't know if the situation is similar.
-
- Finally, our friend Oliver Habicht <Oliver_Habicht@cornell.edu>
- from Cornell expressed an interesting viewpoint. As Oliver sees
- it, the problem is similar to the question of whether to repair
- or replace a broken VCR. When a mechanical system wears out, it
- stresses other parts of the system, and in some cases, like on a
- bicycle derailleurs, the parts wear together. Thus, when one
- breaks, it's a sign that more will break soon, and often when
- repairing a VCR, the technician replaces related, weakened parts.
- On a bike, if you replace one part of the derailleur system
- without replacing other parts, you may have trouble because the
- new part and the old ones aren't worn in the same ways and stress
- each other differently (and from experience, they'll make
- miserable whining sounds until they've worn enough so you can
- adjust them correctly :-)).Thus, the decision to not provide
- repair parts may be related to the likelihood of a successful
- long-term repair.
-
- Of course, this leaves open the possibility that independent
- people could do component-level repair. These people do exist - a
- guy we knew in Ithaca would fix a broken part rather than replace
- the motherboard, usually cannibalizing parts from dead Macs. He
- was popular, and if any of you enterprising electrical engineers
- need a job to tide you over in this tired economic climate, think
- about board-level repairs. Have enough saved up to replace a
- motherboard should you toast it, though. We would like to see more
- independent repair shops that could do this, and would ask only
- that Apple not hinder such independent people, although for the
- reasons outlined above, it would be reasonable if Apple did not
- offer additional help.
-
- I hope this explains the many reasons and views for why Apple
- doesn't provide low-level repair parts, because this policy will
- continue. With something like the Newton, there will be no
- repair - if it breaks, you'll get a new one, for free if it's in
- warranty, for a fee if it's not.
-
-
- Postscript
- Fred Condo <CONDOF@CGSVAX.CLAREMONT.EDU> passed on the rest of the
- story of his CD-ROM repair quest:
-
- Six weeks after I took my Apple CDSC CD-ROM drive in for repairs,
- and with the help of the Internet community, my local technician
- found the right Sony division to sell him the $5 gear. It cost $5.
- His labor cost $65, for a $70 total. That this is preferable to
- Apple's $500 module swap is, I should hope, self-evident. In an
- installation whose CD-ROM drive was an economic necessity and not
- something of a luxury, my decision would have been an instant
- replacement of the drive with something from NEC. Sony and Apple
- have lost my peripherals patronage until this policy changes. They
- have been publicly chastised here on the Internet (my email is
- running 100% anti-Apple on this). Surely this loss of good will
- must count against any fiscal savings Apple achieves by their
- policy.
-
- [Just don't expect decent service from NEC - most NEC tech support
- horror stories involve explaining Mac basics to the technician. I
- don't believe Apple and Sony stand alone in this sort of policy,
- since I remember reading of a journalist's equivalently-convoluted
- quest for a new ball for his IBM PS/2 mouse. -Adam]
-
- I will continue to buy Apple's wonderful computers whenever I need
- a computer. I won't buy any of their peripherals unless they make
- a commitment to repair the things at a reasonable price after the
- sale.
-
- [Fred offered rebuttals to the explanations as to why Apple cannot
- officially handle component-level repair, but we cannot spare the
- space. Suffice it to say that Fred feels that Apple could overcome
- the objections if they wished. Apple, or at least the people who
- responded to Fred's original letter, feels differently, so for the
- moment we will have to agree to disagree, and we can all
- individually decide if we wish to consider how companies handle
- this issue in our purchasing plans. -Adam]
-
-
- February Mac BYTE Benchmarks
- ----------------------------
- by Tom Thompson -- tomt@bytepb.byte.com
- BYTE Senior Tech Editor at Large
-
- According to preliminary BYTE low-level benchmarks, the new Macs
- introduced 10-Feb-93 are performance winners. Internally, they
- indicate interesting directions that Apple is taking. I'll avoid
- some technical details, since you've probably read numerous
- articles on these machines already.
-
- The Color Classic's 16 MHz 68030, 10 MB RAM ceiling, and built-in
- 512- by 384-pixel display sounds suspiciously like the feature set
- of the Mac LC II. This happens to be the case: according to
- developer notes, the Color Classic places most of the LC II's
- components into a compact Mac chassis. The low-level benchmarks
- confirm this: the Color Classic's performance is virtually
- identical to a Mac LC II. The exception is that, unlike the Mac LC
- II, the Color Classic can have a 68882 FPU installed.
-
- The Mac LC III posts nearly the same performance as a Mac IIci.
- Note that the system we tested lacked an FPU. This is decent
- amount of horsepower to pack into the LC's small frame, and it
- should continue as one of the top sellers in Apple's product line.
- I've talked to several LC/LC II owners who plan to purchase the LC
- III upgrade when they can.
-
- Now we get into interesting territory. Compare the test results of
- the Centris 610 to that of the Mac IIfx. As you can see, the 20
- MHz 68040-based Centris 610 easily outguns the 40 MHz, 68030-based
- Mac IIfx. The floating point performance is very good, especially
- since the Centris 610 I tested had an FPU-less 68LC040 processor.
- (However, the IIfx lacked the boost of Omega SANE in its floating-
- point calculations.) This computer is definitely the answer to the
- "I can buy a killer 486 system for around two grand" argument.
-
- The 25 MHz Centris 650 just edges ahead of the 25 MHz Quadra 700.
- Several design changes help. First, Apple finally cleaned up the
- memory sub-system, making it more efficient. They did this using
- an interleaved memory design in which data occupies adjacent
- memory banks, and on memory reads the hardware steps through these
- banks rapidly. The result is that burst reads eliminate two clock
- cycles on each initial address setup and for each successive read.
- Apple claims a 10 to 15 percent performance boost with interleaved
- memory, and on the average, that's what the BYTE CPU benchmarks
- saw (about 13 percent between the Centris 650 and the Quadra 700).
- Also, the I/O bus on the Quadra 700/900/950 has gone away: it's
- been folded into a custom ASIC (Application Specific Integrated
- Circuit) called the IOSB. The IOSB is clocked at CPU speeds, so on
- the Quadra 800 most I/O functions operate at 33 MHz. (An exception
- is Ethernet, since these transceivers are clocked at 16 MHz.)
- Finally, the engineers eliminated one wait state from the built-in
- video's VRAM frame buffer, speeding that subsystem up. The result
- is Quadra performance in a IIvx frame.
-
- The Quadra 800 has all the design advantages of the Centris 650.
- Its performance is a tad faster than the Quadra 950's. The smaller
- mini-tower form factor allows you to park it under the desk or on
- a desktop.
-
- The PowerBook 165c is nearly equal to the PowerBook 180 in
- performance. However, the display performance is much slower. The
- reason is that while earlier PowerBooks used dual-ported VRAM for
- display frame buffers, the PowerBook 165c uses DRAM. The display
- speed slows when the display controller and CPU contend for access
- to this DRAM. Note that the PowerBook 165c QuickDraw test, which
- uses QuickDraw heavily, ran nearly as fast as the PowerBook 180.
- Since most Mac applications make heavy use of QuickDraw, the
- PowerBook 165c's screen drawing shouldn't appear as slow as the
- tests indicate. For example, BYTE's Slow test algorithmically
- fills successive circles using a seed fill, rather than a
- QuickDraw region fill, so the effects of DRAM on the video
- subsystem are emphasized. If you think a PowerBook 165c is part of
- your future, check out the display quality and speed before
- buying.
-
- This latest crop of Macs also indicates interesting design trends.
- First, many of the Macs provide (typically with a VRAM upgrade)
- 16-bit video. The PowerBook 165c is the exception. I call these
- Macs "video-ready," in that to adequately represent a frame-
- grabbed image or QuickTime movie made from an NTSC signal, a Mac
- must have a 16-bit display. In this sense Apple is incorporating
- multimedia support across its desktop product line. Also, with the
- phasing out of the 68000-based Classic, a grand unification of Mac
- application software can begin. Until now, a developer had to
- contend with supporting both old QuickDraw (the 68000-based
- version, which knows nothing of color) and the current
- 68020/68030-based QuickDraw, which knows of color, GWorlds, and
- pixels of various sizes. Now the Color Classic uses the same
- "universal code" found in all Mac ROMs since the IIci up to the
- Quadras. This universal code consists of 68030-based object code
- that implements 32-bit QuickDraw and some virtual memory
- mechanisms.
-
- Certainly there are still millions of 68000-based Macs to support,
- but over time we can expect the developer's life to get easier
- because of this unified environment. Furthermore, at some point
- developers can compile applications exclusively to 68030 code,
- producing faster applications.
-
- Last but not least, if anything moves Macs, it's the computer
- stores eliminating old inventory. I heard of amazing fire-sale
- prices on the Mac IIci ($1500 for the Mac, keyboard, and monitor)
- and the IIsi.
-
-
- BYTE Low-level Macintosh v2.0 benchmark results (preliminary)
- (all figures in seconds, other than the Indexes):
-
- Table 1
- Clr Classic LC II LC III IIci C610
- CPU
- Matrix 18.7 18.6 10.5 10.2 4.3
- 8-bit move 94.1 94 51.6 49.1 29.8
- 16-bit move 53.9 53.8 27 24.6 16.6
- 32-bit move 40.6 40.5 14.7 12.3 10.3
- Sieve 9 9 5.2 5.1 2.7
- Sort 11.4 11.4 6.2 5.8 2.5
-
- FPU
- Math 60.2 186.9 105.6 70 37.9
- Sin(x) 17.8 95.6 54 34 19.7
- e^x 18.1 102.9 58.3 45.8 20.9
-
- Video
- TextEdit 3.4 3.6 1.9 1.8 1
- DrawString 1.7 1.8 1 1.1 0.5
- Slow Graphics 27.6 27.1 14.3 10 4.4
- QuickDraw 0.3 0.4 0.2 0.2 0.1
-
- Indexes
- CPU Index 1.04 1.04 2.03 2.18 3.86
- FPU Index 4.72 1.04 1.83 2.66 5.07
- Disk Index 1.24 1.01 1.48 1.06 2.12
- Video Index 1.08 1.03 1.95 2.17 4.37
-
- Dhrystone 2000 2083 5000 5555 16666
-
-
- Table 2
- IIfx C650 Q700 PB180 PB165c Q950 Q800
- CPU
- Matrix 6.1 3.5 3.5 8.2 8.9 2.6 2.6
- 8-bit move 32.5 22.8 25.7 39.6 40.3 19.3 17.9
- 16-bit move 16.7 12.6 15.5 21 21.9 11.7 10.2
- 32-bit move 8.8 7.5 10.6 11.7 12.5 8.1 6.5
- Sieve 3.2 2.2 2.3 4.1 4.3 1.7 1.6
- Sort 3.7 2 2 4.9 5.2 1.5 1.5
-
- FPU
- Math 45.8 6.1 6.1 25.7 27.4 4.6 4.6
- Sin(x) 21.8 2.8 2.7 8 8.4 2.1 2.1
- e^x 29.5 2.8 6 8.2 8.6 4.7 2.1
-
- Video
- TextEdit 1.7 0.8 1.3 2 14.3 0.8 0.7
- DrawString 1.2 0.4 0.8 1.2 13.2 0.4 0.3
- Slow Graphics 6.2 3.6 3.7 12 21.2 3.6 2.8
- QuickDraw 0.1 0.1 0.1 0.2 0.2 0.1 0.1
-
- Indexes
- CPU Index 3.36 4.98 4.4 2.6 2.47 5.85 6.36
- FPU Index 4.1 35.25 27.52 10.68 10.07 35.8 46.71
- Disk Index 1.77 3.1 1.83 1.72 1.51 3.35 3.12
- Video Index 2.68 5.29 3.93 2 0.52 5.89 7.02
-
- Dhrystone 10000 16666 16666 5555 5000 25000 25000
-
- Notes:
- Mac Classic II has an index = 1.
- Mac IIsi equipped with FPU and Apple video board.
- Mac IIci equipped with Apple cache board and used Thunder/24
- display board without acceleration.
- All systems ran System 7.1 with AppleTalk off and
- extensions disabled.
- Mac LC III lacked FPU.
- Centris 610 lacked FPU.
- Color Classic equipped with FPU.
- Disk tests removed for brevity.
-
-
- Reviews/22-Feb-93
- -----------------
-
- * MacWEEK -- 15-Feb-93, Vol. 7, #7
- Macintosh Centris 610, 650 -- pg. 1
- Macintosh Quadra 800 -- pg. 1
- Multiport ARA Servers -- pg. 57
- GatorLink
- LanRover/E
- ArtBeat Professional 1.0 -- pg. 57
- Read-It! O.C.R. Pro 4.0.2 -- pg. 59
- PowerBook 165c -- pg. 64
- Macintosh Color Classic -- pg. 65
- LaserWriter Select 300, 310 -- pg. 67
-
- * Macworld -- Mar-93
- Novice Multimedia Programs -- pg. 106
- Action 1.0
- MovieWorks 1.0
- Passport Producer 1.0
- Special Delivery 1.0
- Complex Multimedia Programs -- pg. 114
- Aldus SuperCard 1.6
- Authorware Professional 1.7.1
- Course Builder 4.0
- HyperCard 2.1
- MacroMind Director 3.1
- Spinnaker Plus 2.1
- Test Factory 2.1
- Midsize Hard Drives -- pg. 124
- (too many to list)
- Apple Imaging Products -- pg. 134
- StyleWriter II
- LaserWriter Pro 600, 630
- Apple Color Printer
- Apple Color OneScanner
- Timbuktu 5.0.1 -- pg. 144
- PowerBook Duo 210, 230 -- pg. 146
- Duo Dock -- pg. 148
- Microsoft Word 5.1 -- pg. 150
- Special Delivery 1.0 -- pg. 150
- Apple Font Pack -- pg. 152
- Aldus Personal Press 2.0 -- pg. 154
- Publish It Easy 3.0 -- pg. 154
- Conflict Catcher and Other Innovative Utilities 1.0 -- pg. 164
- INITPicker 3.0 -- pg. 164
- Expressionist 3.0 -- pg. 166
- MathType 3.0 -- pg. 166
- PicturePress 2.5 -- pg. 168
- MiniCAD+4 -- pg. 168
- At Ease -- pg. 170
- Inline Sync 1.0 -- pg. 170
- Rodney's Wonder Window -- pg. 172
- America Alive -- pg. 172
- StrataType 3d 1.0 -- pg. 174
- Network Vital Signs 1.0 -- pg. 174
- Battle Chess Enhanced CD-ROM -- pg. 176
- Where in America's Past is Carmen Sandiego? -- pg. 176
- Spiral 1.0.1 -- pg. 178
- MetaDesign 3.0 -- pg. 178
-
- * BYTE -- Mar-93
- New Macintoshes -- pg. 40
- Multiplatform Email packages -- pg. 136
- cc:Mail
- Da Vinci eMail 2.0
- Microsoft Mail for PC Networks 3.0
- QuickMail 2.5
- WordPerfect Office 3.0
- 600 dpi laser printers -- pg. 156
- Dataproducts LZR-965
- HP LaserJet 4
- HP LaserJet 4M
- Lexmark 4029 10A
- Lexmark 4029 10P
- QMS 860 Print System
- TaxCut and MacInTax -- pg. 165
- PowerBook 180 and PowerBook Duo 230 -- pg. 173
- Extend+Manufacturing 2.0 -- pg. 181
-
- * MacUser -- Mar-93
- HP LaserJet 4M -- pg. 54
- Cachet -- pg. 56
- MacInTax and TaxCut -- pg. 61
- Sketcher -- pg. 68
- WealthBuilder -- pg. 69
- Action! -- pg. 73
- Alias Sketch! -- pg. 77
- Image Assistant -- pg. 81
- Expanded Book Toolkit -- pg. 85
- Square One -- pg. 85
- CheckWriter 4/0 -- pg. 85
- SimLife -- pg. 87
- Miracle Piano Teaching System -- pg. 89
- New Apple Printers -- pg. 108
- StyleWriter II
- LaserWriter Pro 600, 630
- Address Book Programs -- pg. 116
- Address Book Plus 2.0.1
- Contact! 1.0
- Dynodex 3.0
- Hello! August 1992
- InTouch 2.0.2
- MacPhonebook 3.0.6
- Super QuickDex II 2.5.6
- TouchBASE 2.0.1
- CD-ROM Drives -- pg. 124
- (too many to list)
- Workgroup Printers -- pg. 146
- Compaq Pagemarq 15
- HP LaserJet IIIsi
- QMS-PS 2000
- QMS-PS 1700
- MirrorImage 415
- Dataproducts LZR 1560
- Hardware That Fits RealTech Laser
- TI microLaser XL Turbo
- Ethernet to LocalTalk Converters -- pg. 189
- Farallon LocalPath
- Sonic Systems SuperBridge
- Asante AsantePrint
- Compatible Systems Ether*Write
- Dayna EtherPrint Plus
- Digital Products SprintTALK/25E4
- Timbuktu for Windows 1.0 and Timbuktu for Mac 5.0 -- pg. 197
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