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- TidBITS#169/22-Mar-93
- =====================
-
- A look at the murky world of Apple repair anchors this issue, and
- supporting topics include a report about mouse button problems,
- a review of Peachpit Press's "Silicon Mirage," various and
- sundry SyQuest drive news, an announcement of upcoming events
- put on by an email-accessible computer bookstore, and a number
- of useful notes about new Apple servers, the LC III, and a Duo
- 230/PowerPoint 3.0 conflict.
-
- 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-Mar-93
- Computer Literacy Comes of Teen-Age
- VideoShop 1.0 Free Offer
- Other SyQuest News
- Silicon Mirage: A Virtual Review
- Mouse Button Problems
- Apple Repair, Part 17
- Reviews/22-Mar-93
-
- [Archived as /info-mac/digest/tb/tidbits-169.etx; 30K]
-
-
- MailBITS/22-Mar-93
- ------------------
- The European pricing article in TidBITS#168 prompted a tremendous
- response, which I've forwarded in part to various groups, where I
- hope the discussion will continue. It's difficult and time-
- consuming for me to repost comments so please, consider posting
- comments to a group before sending them to me personally. If you
- do send them to me, please note if you DON'T want me to repost
- them anywhere (I avoid anything that's obviously sensitive, but
- I'm not omniscient).
-
-
- Apple Announcements
- Apple announced a bunch of network-oriented products today,
- including several dedicated servers based on the Centris 610,
- Quadra 800, and Quadra 950, a new text-retrieval package called
- AppleSearch, and two new versions of AppleShare, called AppleShare
- 4.0 and AppleShare Pro, that offer higher performance for more
- users. AppleShare 3.0 will stick around for small workgroups. I'll
- try to write more on these announcements in a future issue.
-
-
- PowerPointing a Duo
- Andrew Nielsen reports, "We've discovered a problem with the Duo
- 230 and Microsoft PowerPoint 3.0, which rampantly crashes the Duo
- when launched. A bit unpleasant, although Microsoft says there's a
- patch on the way."
-
- Information from:
- Andrew D. Nielsen -- anielsen@uniwa.uwa.edu.au
-
-
- LC III Quirk
-
- Matt Strange writes:
- After a frustrating few hours trying to configure some LC IIIs
- yesterday, I discovered something you may not know - but
- definitely should.
-
- According to Katie Kenny of Farallon, "Due to a last minute change
- in the design of the LC III, any add-on card that has an FPU on it
- will crash the machine." [Indeed it will!] "The remedy is to
- remove the FPU from the card and put it in the socket on the
- motherboard."
-
- My experience showed this to be a real problem and a real
- solution. Hope this saves you a headache down the road somewhere.
-
- Information from:
- Matt Strange -- Matt_Strange@baka.ithaca.ny.us.
-
-
- Computer Literacy Comes of Teen-Age
- -----------------------------------
- by Ian Feldman -- ianf@random.se
-
- Flower Power, Jefferson Airplane, hot tubs, Apple, and now this.
- Northern Californians should be made liable for additional taxes
- for, in our galaxy, the unique privilege of having the Computer
- Literacy Bookshops (CLB) in their own backyard. The CLB are the
- only major computer and technology bookstores accessible globally
- via Internet email for information and book orders. Perhaps this
- doesn't sound like much to U.S. residents of large cities where
- there may be other equally well-stocked outlets for current
- computer literature. For non-U.S. researchers the CLB may be the
- first and last resort for books not otherwise available. And now
- they're celebrating a 10th anniversary with a program that could
- easily put any major computer-scientific conference to shame.
-
- Indeed, as Gene Miya recently summed it up on the net: "People
- have flown in thousands of miles to attend Comp Lit events to hear
- notables from Don Knuth and Gene Amdahl to Cliff Stoll. Not to
- mention that every one of us who first walked into the place spent
- $300 in less than a hour of browsing: finding classics, finding
- the latest computation books on some subject."
-
- Enough hype; here are the highlights of CLB's 10th Anniversary
- events next week - space doesn't permit publishing the full
- program but those of you with access to Usenet may be able to look
- in rec.arts.books/alt.books.review for Gene Miya's recent article
- with Message-ID: <1993Mar15.182607.26570@nas.nasa.gov>, or request
- it directly from CLB.
-
-
- Computer Literacy Bookshops 10th Anniversary Events
- Sun, Mar 21 - Virtual Reality Day, many attractions
- Mon, Mar 22 - Animation Night, many attractions
- Tue, Mar 23 - Unix Night, many attractions
- Wed, Mar 24 - Object-Oriented Night, many attractions
- Thu, Mar 25 - Chip Night (Intel 486 architecture)
- Fri, Mar 26 - Bonus Day (value pack for all purchases over $70)
- Sat, Mar 27 - Windows Day
- Sun, Mar 28 - Multimedia Day - "Come, Human, Spin In My Web!"
- Mon, Mar 29 - 10 Percent Off Day (in all 3 stores; in-person
- sales only)
- Tue, Mar 30 - "Things That Make Us Smart," book and talk by
- Don Norman
-
- Each day there are giveaways from major book and software
- publishers and CLB offers 10 percent off on that day's topics and
- related literature.
-
- * Please note: all events take place at:
- Computer Literacy Bookshops, Inc.
- 2590 North First St. (at Trimble Road)
- San Jose, CA 95131
- 408/435-1118
-
- info@clbooks.com
-
- Information from:
- Eugene N. Miya -- eugene@wilbur.nas.nasa.gov
-
-
- VideoShop 1.0 Free Offer
- ------------------------
- by Don Rittner -- afcmns@aol.com
-
- SyQuest and DiVA are offering a free full working version of
- DiVA's VideoShop 1.0 pre-loaded on 5.25" removable SyQuest
- cartridges. (You do have to buy a 44 MB or 88 MB cartridge,
- though.) Most SyQuest integrators are offering the deal, which
- ends 30-Apr-93, although it may be extended a few more weeks. Some
- bundling deals are also offered (drive, software, and video
- capture card), although they may vary. DiVA and SyQuest will
- provide full technical support.
-
- VideoShop, a QuickTime-based video editor for creating and editing
- digital movies on a Mac, retails for $599. The cartridges also
- include a HyperCard edition of the VideoShop manual (you can order
- a hard copy if you want), a library of video and sound clips from
- The Image Bank CD Collection, and the SyQuest/SCSI Probe utility
- for mounting any cartridge.
-
- If you are thinking about getting into multimedia and you own a
- SyQuest removable, this deal is hard to pass up. You can try your
- hands at multimedia without the large investment of camcorder,
- hard drives, software, etc. The software alone is worth the price
- of a hard drive, but you can own it for the price of a cartridge!
- For more info, contact your local SyQuest dealer or call SyQuest
- at 800/245-CART.
-
-
- Other SyQuest News
- ------------------
-
- Third Party Cartridges
- An independent company, Nomai, has started selling cartridges in
- Europe for use with SyQuest drives. That sounds innocuous enough,
- but SyQuest filed a suit late last year to prevent Nomai from
- shipping cartridges and claimed in the suit that Nomai's
- cartridges could possibly damage the SyQuest drive's read-write
- head and that could in turn cause data loss on other SyQuest-brand
- cartridges. In addition, SyQuest claims that unlike true SyQuest
- cartridges, Nomai's cartridges will not work with its forthcoming
- 5.25" 200 MB removable drive. Nomai claims a return rate of less
- than 1 in 1000 on the tens of thousands of cartridges it has
- currently shipped in Europe.
-
-
- Standard Mounting Techniques
- Last month SyQuest announced a standard that would ensure that no
- matter what formatter you used, you could always mount other
- SyQuest cartridges. The problem stems from the Mac retaining in
- memory the driver of the first cartridge inserted, and that driver
- may flake out if subsequent cartridges are formatted with
- incompatible formatting software. In MacWEEK 08-Feb-93, Steve
- Goodman of Hard Disk Toolkit-maker FWB expressed dissatisfaction
- with SyQuest's proposed standard, saying it is an "absolutely
- lame, lowest-common-denominator approach." SyQuest's Pat Allen
- responded, saying FWB had misunderstood. I'm staying out of this
- argument, but I'm intrigued by the fact that SyQuest seems to have
- a brand of reality not shared by some other companies. SyQuest may
- be in the right, but they certainly have attracted controversy.
-
- Casa Blanca Works, makers of the Drive7 formatting utility
- announced last week that version 2.3.4 of Drive7 supports
- SyQuest's standard for driver compatibility.
-
-
- New SyQuest drives
- We already mentioned the new 200 MB 5.25" drive that SyQuest is
- working on, and the company has plans for other drives in
- different form factors, including 3.5" and 2.5" versions, as well
- as even a 1.8" size drive that could hold up to 100 MB for use on
- the PCMCIA cards likely to be commonly used on portable computers
- and personal digital assistants (that's a really awkward name -
- how about we agree to call them "gerbils" and forget the tortured
- phraseology?). It appears that Mass Microsystems will have the
- first 105 MB 3.5" SyQuest drives. Mass Micro will sell the
- internal version for $949 and the external version for $1,049, in
- contrast to prices around $1,500 for the 128 MB magneto-optical
- drives.
-
- Information from:
- Pythaeus
- Casa Blanca Works propaganda
-
- Related articles:
- MacWEEK -- 08-Feb-93, Vol. 7, #6, pg. 6
- MacWEEK -- 15-Feb-93, Vol. 7, #7, pg. 10
- MacWEEK -- 22-Mar-93, Vol. 7, #12, pg. 10
-
-
- Silicon Mirage: A Virtual Review
- --------------------------------
- by Tonya Engst, TidBITS Editor
-
- The mass media recently published a number of articles about
- virtual reality. I've read a few of them, one in the New York
- Times some months ago, and two more in Seattle-based periodicals.
- I encountered rather seamy looks at virtual reality, mainly
- discussing if and when we will be able to conduct perhaps the
- ultimate form of "safe" sex, teledildonics. To me, virtual sex
- sounds as interesting and appetizing as a liver facial, and the
- pictures of people doing virtual reality made them look like the
- Star Trekian Borg, so I wrote off virtual reality until I read
- Peachpit Press's "Silicon Mirage," by Steve Aukstakalnis and David
- Blatner (ISBN# 0-938151-82-7, $15).
-
- It turns out that virtual reality has little to do with sex and
- less to do with the Borg. Virtual reality concerns technologies
- that could radically change what we do with computers and how we
- do it. Silicon Mirage is for people who wish to know where we are
- heading and for people who wish to dream about where we might go.
- The book offers a detailed tour and reference to what's happening
- with virtual reality.
-
- Silicon Mirage starts out by reviewing and expanding on the
- average understanding of how human sensory systems function and
- explains how virtual reality researchers use this knowledge to
- simulate sensation. It then provides a tour of virtual reality
- input devices. People with repetitive strain injuries will enjoy
- this section since the mouse and keyboard receive little mention.
- This part of the book, though clearly written, does not constitute
- escapist reading and you may find yourself skimming through some
- of the longer bits of detail. The wade is worth the work; at some
- point you'll realize the amazing potential of this research and
- your mind will spin inside out. The personal computer revolution
- will be trivial in comparison if virtual reality becomes real, as
- oxymoronic as that may sound.
-
- The book discusses current and anticipated virtual reality
- applications and research in a variety of fields such as medicine,
- architecture, entertainment, business, and science. Silicon Mirage
- winds down with thoughts about societal challenges that must be
- met for virtual reality to come to life. Silicon Mirage will add
- to your vocabulary, remind you of that report you did in sixth
- grade about the human ear, and give you wonderful tidbits for
- casual conversation. Recommended.
-
- [As an aside, it appears that VPL, one of the main virtual reality
- companies, has closed its doors. This isn't to imply virtual
- reality is dead - but it must evolve to survive in the mass market
- business world from the specialized niches it currently occupies.
- -Adam]
-
- Peachpit Press -- 800/283-9444 -- 510/548-4393
- 510/548-5991 (fax)
-
-
- Mouse Button Problems
- ---------------------
- by Liam Breck -- breck@zonker.ecs.umass.edu
-
- Almost two years ago I began noticing posts on Usenet about
- Macintosh mouse problems in which the mouse button appears to
- stick, not mechanically, but in effect. The reports included Macs
- with a wide variety of software and hardware configurations. I
- figured, well, by the time I buy my new Mac, Apple will have fixed
- the problem. But last July when my LC II arrived, so did a nice
- little mouse having an intermittent problem with its button.
-
- In August, I talked to representatives of the Apple Customer
- Assistance Center (ACAC) at Macworld Expo. They had not heard of
- the trouble, so I began gathering reports about it via the
- Internet. In four months I collected over 100 detailed accounts.
- In November, I found a contact at Apple's Customer Support -
- Escalation and Response Group and forwarded the reports to them.
- They acknowledged the problem and said they were starting an
- investigation that would take several months.
-
- From the reports and my own experience, I believe the problem is
- caused by a production flaw that affected the miniature switch in
- the mouse, and not by a system software or main logic board
- problem. This has NOT been confirmed, however, by Apple or by
- independent testing. Over 90% of the reports implicate mice
- manufactured in Malaysia.
-
- In January I asked my contact if Apple would consider making a
- public statement about the problem and offer troubled mouse users
- a replacement mouse (that was, after all, why I took on this
- crusade!).
-
- In February they responded:
- ...all I can tell you is that Apple is always interested
- in collecting information about potential problems, but
- we do not provide details to the public regarding these
- potential issues or programs since during this
- investigative phase the information is highly confidential.
-
- Apple does not comment on rumors about products, programs,
- or promotions that have not been officially announced by
- Apple. We refrain from commenting to protect customers
- from making decisions based on incomplete or inaccurate
- information. We feel it is the best way to ensure that all
- customers are treated fairly.
-
- They told me that I won't hear anything from them until May at the
- earliest.
-
- I don't believe that the problem will occur in the new mice Apple
- is shipping. But I'm concerned that Apple will not publicly
- acknowledge the problem or offer afflicted users good mice. There
- are certainly many more instances of this problem out there.
- Recent discussion of it in the Info-Mac Digest brought me a flurry
- of unsolicited reports and calls for help.
-
- I think it's time for the folks who have had this problem to start
- talking to Apple directly. If you have experienced this problem,
- call your regional Apple Customer Assistance Center and politely
- tell them that you know they are investigating the problem and
- that you hope they will announce a program to provide afflicted
- users with new mice. If you can, tell them the mouse's serial
- number and place of manufacture (printed on the underside of the
- mouse), and that it has the trouble with your extensions turned
- off. Here's hoping a few hundred calls will prod Apple to action!
-
- United States -- 800/776-2333
- Canada -- 800/665-2775
- UK and Europe -- 33-1-49-01-49-01
- Australia -- 61-2-452-8000
- Japan and Pacific -- 81-3-5411-8500
-
- If the number is not toll-free, try calling collect.
-
-
- Other notes
- Thanks, Liam, and remember, people on the other side of the phone
- can only relay your message, so be as polite and professional as
- possible. It's also not that person's fault, he or she just bears
- the brunt of this sort of thing.
-
- In a recent MacInTouch column, MacWEEK's Ric Ford added more
- interesting details. Ric noted that he had received scattered
- reports of problems with non-Malaysian mice (I've confirmed a few
- cases of non-Malaysian mice having the virtual sticking problem as
- well), and several people told Ric that they solved the problem by
- loosening the screws on the bottom of the mouse. If you need to
- fix your mouse (Apple won't, see our article on repair below), Ric
- reported that Soft Solutions of Eugene, Oregon offers both
- component level repair and various parts for the afflicted rodent.
-
- Ric also mentioned an Apple repair program for mice that are
- sensitive to static electricity (US-made mice with serial numbers
- from AP038xxxxxx to AP103xxxxxx) and an abortive Apple plan to
- replace mice with serial numbers between LT043xxxxxx and
- LT051xxxxxx. Those mice have a defect that could prevent the mouse
- button from working, although it would seem that such a problem
- would be covered by the standard warranty. MacWEEK reported on the
- replacement plan in the 24-Feb-92 issue, but Apple apparently
- cancelled the program before it began.
-
- Soft Solutions -- 503/461-1136 -- 503/461-2005
-
- Information from:
- Ric Ford, MacWEEK -- 72511.44@compuserve.com
-
- Related articles:
- MacWEEK -- 15-Mar-92, Vol. 7, #11, pg. 60
-
-
- Apple Repair, Part 17
- ---------------------
- All this talk of what should and shouldn't be done as far as
- component-level repair made me think, and I realized that no one
- knows what goes on within Apple in terms of old parts. Let's try
- to dispel some of the mystery.
-
- The World Wide Service group does Apple's repairs. The group came
- to life through one of Apple's many reorganizations. In this case,
- reorganization improved on the old system, under which each
- geographical region did its own repair. Bringing all repair work
- under one centralized department made tracking and coordination
- easier, and thus cheaper. Remember that the bottom line is always
- green, although I suppose that allusion only works in societies
- having green money.
-
- Most authorized repair happens at Apple's dealers (not including
- the on-site service for the Performas, the mail-in services for
- the PowerBooks, and authorized corporate service providers) but as
- we know, dealers are not authorized to do much other than swap out
- part of the affected unit and replace it with a functioning part.
- The trick is that the dealer buys the new part from Apple,
- outlaying cash to keep it in stock (dealers may not be able to
- afford to keep all parts in stock) or spending somewhat less to
- special order the part for immediate use in a damaged Mac.
-
- When a damaged motherboard comes in for repair, for instance, the
- dealer replaces the damaged board with one in stock (or with one
- ordered immediately), and returns the damaged one to Apple. If the
- dealer doesn't return the damaged part quickly enough, Apple
- charges the dealer the difference between the stock price and the
- lower exchange price. Although prices seem high to the user,
- dealers (as it's been explained to me) generally make little money
- on repairs. Prices for the repair parts from Apple, especially the
- stock prices, are quite high so Apple can be sure the dealer will
- return damaged equipment rather than let it float around and
- potentially be used incorrectly, either damaging Apple's
- reputation or bilking other users. Psst, wanna buy a cheap
- motherboard?
-
- Dealers need to make some money on repairs, and yet, if they
- charge too much, customers feel irritated and go elsewhere. On the
- other hand, dealers may want to charge enough to tempt customers
- into buying the latest model, which is, of course, sleeker,
- faster, and cheaper than the damaged model.
-
- Apple treats different types of returns differently, as you might
- expect. At the lowest level we find products that Apple throws
- away, although this currently only applies to mice. Why toast the
- rodents? That bottom line gets them every time because it costs
- more to deal with a dead mouse than it does to make a new one. A
- person has to unpack, fix, test, re-pack, and then place into
- storage the affected mouse, and even at the low wages a technician
- might earn, it costs more to repair than it's worth to Apple. The
- price you pay has several markups added on, so although it may
- only cost (these numbers are not real) $20 to fix a $75 mouse,
- that mouse may only cost Apple $10 new.
-
- Components, the Mac parts that are added in like hard drives,
- floppy drives, fans, power supplies, (but not motherboards),
- present interesting problems. As we said in the last installment
- of this sudsy operetta, Apple doesn't make the components in the
- current Macintoshes. Apple may have helped design the part, and
- may be the only company using it, but another company does the
- manufacturing.
-
- Many components, such as hard drives, come with warranties longer
- than the standard Apple one year warranty. This presents a
- problem, because Apple cannot currently track the individual
- components, so if a hard drive fails within its warranty to Apple,
- Apple cannot currently have the original manufacturer repair or
- replace it. Apple is working on this problem, as you might expect,
- since the cost savings, which are currently absorbed by Apple and
- not passed on to the consumer, are staggering. As it stands now,
- Apple replaces dead components and either scraps the dead unit or
- puts it on the service heap. Again, since many of these parts are
- either too difficult or too expensive to fix, much of the dead
- stuff gets trashed.
-
- For instance, opening a hard drive is not for the weak of heart,
- and probably shouldn't be done outside a clean room. Vacuuming the
- den is not a sufficient level of cleanliness. And, from experience
- (a friend and I tried to fix my dead floppy drive once), there can
- be lots of picky parts that have to be disassembled and re-
- assembled just right and in the proper order. Tightening a spring
- on a floppy drive head took my friend (a trained engineer) and me
- at least an hour, and although the drive worked perfectly when we
- were done, it only lasted for a week. Apple can't do that level of
- repair or people would be really upset.
-
- So only a small fraction of damaged components end up fixed. Even
- the ones Apple could return to the original manufacturer wouldn't
- be fixed - that company would send out a replacement after
- throwing the damaged unit away. The exception to this composting
- process is keyboards, which Apple (and possibly your dealer)
- usually does fix and reuse because the problems are usually
- simple, mechanical, and on a large enough scale to make repair
- easy and accurate.
-
- The external cases are almost impossible to repair since they are
- generally molded plastic (although the IIvx and Centris 650 share
- a metal case), and there's nothing to do with them but melt them
- down. You may as well turn any extra cases into avant garde art.
-
- Apple treats boards, which include video cards, the motherboard,
- and any daughterboards such as those in the PowerBooks (why are
- boards always feminine?), differently. Apple tries to fix them
- because the costs often work out in favor of repair. Problems like
- damaged edge connectors may not be fixed, since that usually
- indicates damage to the board as a whole. If a single chip fails,
- though, Apple often replaces that chip, making sure the rest of
- the board works properly in the process, and then puts that board
- into circulation as a service part. No repaired boards are used in
- new Macs. If a board is beyond repair, Apple recovers certain
- parts, such as the expensive CPU and the ROM chips, but RAM chips,
- resistors, and the like cost too much to desolder and test for
- reuse.
-
- As board size decreases, repair becomes less likely because the
- small, delicate parts are difficult to fix quickly and accurately.
- Apple repairs some PowerBook board failures, but the percentage is
- smaller than with desktop systems. Handheld devices like the
- Newton will probably never be repaired in favor of board
- replacement.
-
- When it comes right down it, Apple justifies repair policies with
- a resounding "Because!" To read into that further, we see repair
- as a costly and legislated process that users want (companies must
- keep computer repair parts for at least five, and possibly seven
- years after discontinuing the machine). Since Apple is a business,
- they make business decisions that may make no sense except when
- looking at the bottom line. Apple could handle repair differently,
- but they feel they would lose money. The economics are different
- between the corporate and personal scales, which is why it makes
- sense for you to get a $10 chip repaired for $50 with labor, as
- opposed to paying $400 for a new unit. You can and should do that,
- but you shouldn't expect Apple to do it. A third party can make
- money at it, Apple can't.
-
- Interestingly, I've read rumors about Apple doing on-site repair
- starting this spring. Like the Performas, desktop Macs sold in the
- U.S. would come with free, one-year, on-site service, though
- PowerBooks would have to be mailed to Apple or serviced at a
- dealer authorized to repair PowerBooks. Such a policy would
- undoubtedly come in response to moves by major PC clone vendors to
- provide similar services. I wonder how such a repair service would
- work for home Macs? If you work all day outside your home, it does
- no good to have someone appear at your house during business hours
- to fix your Mac. Of course, this repair policy might cheese off
- authorized dealers who would lose repair revenue, so I'd like to
- see Apple work with dealers so that the dealer could hire
- technicians to work evenings and weekends, or allow users to bring
- damaged Macs into the store, or offer a free pickup and delivery
- service.
-
- Information from:
- Pythaeus
-
- Related articles:
- MacWEEK -- 01-Mar-93, Vol. 7, #9, pg. 1
-
-
- Reviews/22-Mar-93
- -----------------
-
- * MacWEEK -- 15-Mar-93, Vol. 7, #11
- After Effects 1.0 -- pg. 45
- SoftPC 3.0 with Windows -- pg. 45
- ColorSense 1.0 -- pg. 48
- PowerDraw 4.0 -- pg. 48
- Super 7 Utilities -- pg. 50
- Passport Producer 1.0 -- pg. 52
-
- * Macworld -- Apr-93
- Macintosh Color Classic -- pg. 94
- Macintosh LC III -- pg. 102
- Macintosh Centris 610 and 650 -- pg. 106
- Macintosh Quadra 800 -- pg. 114
- Macintosh PowerBook 165c -- pg. 120
- 4th Dimension 3.0.1 -- pg. 126
- Image Assistant 1.0 -- pg. 127
- Music Education CD-ROMs -- pg. 130
- Mozart: The "Dissonant" Quartet
- Schubert: "The Trout" Quintet
- Richard Strauss: Three Tone Poems
- Compton's Multimedia Encyclopedia 1.00M -- pg. 132
- The New Grolier Multimedia Encyclopedia -- pg. 132
- Adobe Dimensions -- pg. 137
- Norton Essentials for PowerBook 1.0 -- pg. 138
- Canon ESP -- pg. 138
- Dynodex 3.0 -- pg. 140
- The Orchestra: The Instruments Revealed -- pg. 142
- Passport Producer 1.0 -- pg. 144
- Final Draft 2.0 -- pg. 146
- ShowScape 4.1 -- pg. 146
- Color It 2.0.1 -- pg. 148
- Paint It 1.0 -- pg. 148
- Yamaha TG100 -- pg. 148
- VersionMaster 1.5 -- pg. 150
- MicroPhone Pro -- pg. 152
- CPU 1.0j -- pg. 152
- PowerMerge 1.0.2 -- pg. 154
- ArtBeat Professional 1.0 -- pg. 156
- OrgChart Express 1.0 -- pg. 156
- A-Train -- pg. 158
- Media-Pedia Video Clips -- pg. 158
- Just Joking 1.0 -- pg. 160
- NetVirtual 2.0 -- pg. 160
- Arthur's Teacher Trouble -- pg. 162
- Hellcats Over the Pacific -- pg. 162
- The Secret Codes of C.Y.P.H.E.R. -- pg. 166
- Compare-A-Loan 4.0.2 -- pg. 166
- LoanLease Library 3.0.3 -- pg. 166
- CopyRight -- pg. 171
- SpaceQuest 1: Roger Wilco in the Sarien Encounter -- pg. 171
- Personal Font -- pg. 172
- Super 7 Utilities -- pg. 172
- Super Mines 1.0 -- pg. 174
- Cogito 1.0 -- pg. 174
-
-
- ..
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