home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
Text File | 1995-06-21 | 28.4 KB | 657 lines | [TEXT/ttxt] |
- TidBITS#170/29-Mar-93
- =====================
-
- New Macs? Yup, but the Apple Workgroup Servers may not knock
- your socks off. David Blatner's essential "Desktop Publisher's
- Survival Kit" from Peachpit Press stands a better chance. We
- also have two reports from user group land, including a new
- Internet SIG of the Boston Computer Society, and a sad story
- of online unpleasantness. Digital sex crops up again, and if
- you think that's exciting, check out the new Apple Internet
- Router upgrade. Whee!
-
- 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/29-Mar-93
- TwoBITS/29-Mar-93
- Apple Internet Router Upgrade
- Nisus Terminology
- Virtual Sex?
- Apple Workgroup Servers
- BCS Internet SIG
- A Tale of Two Cities
- Crash DTP Survival Course
- Reviews/29-Mar-93
-
- [Archived as /info-mac/digest/tb/tidbits-170.etx; 29K]
-
-
- MailBITS/29-Mar-93
- ------------------
- I'm trying something new. Since I receive a ton of information
- that doesn't warrant detailed exploration in TidBITS, I'm starting
- a new section called TwoBITS that will address deserving
- announcements but will do so in only two sentences (and contact
- info). Let me know how you like it after you've seen a few.
-
-
- TwoBITS/29-Mar-93
- -----------------
- Practical Peripherals announced significant price cuts on various
- modem models. Perhaps the most interesting reduction is the
- PM14400FXMT, a v.everything external data/fax modem whose list
- price dropped from $399 to $299.
-
- Practical Peripherals -- 805/497-4774 -- 805/374-7272 (fax)
-
-
- After Dark Module Contest '93
- Entries are now available from Berkeley Systems for their 1993
- contest for best After Dark module in each of three categories:
- Macintosh, Windows, and Computer Artist. Prizes for the contest,
- which ends 15-Jul-93, range from the $10,000 Grand Prize to
- various pieces of hardware for runners-up.
-
- Berkeley Systems -- 510/540-5535 x 600 -- 510/540-5115 (fax)
-
-
- Apple Internet Router Upgrade
- -----------------------------
- by Mark H. Anbinder, Contributing Editor -- mha@baka.ithaca.ny.us
- Technical Support Coordinator, BAKA Computers
-
- Users of Apple's Internet Router 2.0 package can now purchase the
- Internet Router Basic Connectivity Package upgrade kit through the
- mail. You must mail your original Internet Router 2.0 disk (part
- number 690-5327-A); your name, company name, shipping address (no
- P.O. boxes), and telephone number; proof of purchase showing the
- date on which you bought Internet Router 2.0; and appropriate
- payment.
-
- The price is $49 plus local sales tax if you bought Internet
- Router 2.0 after 01-Nov-92, or $149 plus local sales tax if you
- bought it earlier. Accepted payment forms are a check payable to
- Apple Computer, Inc., or credit card information including card
- number, expiration date, the name on the card, and the card's
- billing address. Apple accepts Visa, MasterCard, American Express,
- and the Apple Credit Card.
-
- Mail all that to:
- Apple Computer, Inc.
- Attn: Apple Internet Router Upgrade Program
- P.O. Box 7043
- Dover, DE 19903
-
- Apple says users should allow three to seven days for delivery.
-
- Information from:
- Apple propaganda
-
-
- Nisus Terminology
- -----------------
- Jim Bates from Nisus Technical Support wrote to tell us that they
- prefer to use the term "hardware enabling" when talking about the
- ADB-based hardware copy protection device, colloquially called a
- "dongle." Jim also mentioned that he had read somewhere that
- "dongle" stems from the name of the man who invented it, Don Gill.
- No idea as to the truth of that bit.
-
- The Nisus dongle is actually called the PETlock, in part because
- it's a cool name and in part because it is based on "Paragon
- Enabling Technology." One reason Nisus prefers the more
- politically correct term "hardware enabler" is that Nisus doesn't
- cease to work without the dongle. Instead, Nisus acts like the
- demo version, with saving disabled and "Nisus Demo" plastered over
- all printed pages. I appreciate that because I think most people
- could do basic word processing for a short time in that mode in
- case of a dongle failure, pasting new text into a TeachText
- document for saving, for instance. Nonetheless, I hope that Nisus
- would ship a new dongle as fast as FedEx would allow to anyone
- whose dongle failed. I'd go nuts if I lost the use of Nisus for a
- few days, and I even have other word processors to use.
-
- Despite the "enabling" that goes on, I think Nisus should use the
- more-obnoxious term "copy protection" instead, if only to bring
- attention to the fact that the point of this device is to reduce
- piracy. Nisus has stated publicly that they don't like using the
- dongle any more than anyone else, so it's in everyone's best
- interests to raise awareness of the piracy problem in various
- parts of the world. Only when people know about the problems
- piracy causes will they stand up for elimination of both piracy
- and obnoxious copy protection.
-
- Failing that, how about if Nisus got together with Global Village
- and put the guts of a TelePort ADB modem into the dongle? At least
- then you'd have something useful hanging off your ADB port.
-
- As an aside, I now have Nisus 3.4L, and although I like it a lot,
- I immediately hit a bug that Nisus knows about and is fixing. If
- you spell check a word longer than 32 characters (such as a Unix
- directory path), the checker helpfully reports a "Spelling checker
- error." Until Nisus has a fix ready, if you receive the error
- message, simply move the cursor below the too-long word (command-
- click in the main document to do this without sending the Check
- Spelling window to the back - a slick touch), and start the check
- again. It will fail again at the long word, but you'll know that
- everything in between was checked. Using the Ignore Spelling style
- doesn't work, sorry. Nisus said they'd send me an updated version
- as soon as they had it fixed, but you do have to call if you want
- the fix since it's not something that most people will ever
- notice.
-
-
- Nisus Writer Upgrade
-
- Mel Martinez writes:
- You should also point out that despite the nominal charges for
- upgrading to Nisus 3.4L ($20) or 3.4C ($120), those Nisus users
- who ordered the Nisus XS upgrade before 09-Jun-92 are entitled to
- receive that upgrade free when it ships, hopefully in a few
- months. Also, Nisus XS has been renamed Nisus Writer. This, I
- guess, brings the name in sync with the popular Japanese version
- of Nisus which is called SoloWriter.
-
- I am glad to see Nisus continue to remember their early supporters
- by offering the next major upgrade to them free. However, I would
- be even happier to see it ship.
-
- [I think the name change may also have been a marketing move to
- improve Nisus's name recognition. If you don't know that Nisus is
- a word processor, the name "Nisus" won't clue you in. "Nisus
- Writer" implies that the program is a word processor. I approve of
- this move a great deal - in part because Tonya and I came up with
- the same name independently when talking about reasons why Nisus
- had name recognition troubles. Naming is important, and it
- certainly hasn't helped the almost-unknown word processor Taste,
- which could be a recipe database for all you can tell from the
- name. -Adam]
-
- Information from:
- Jim Bates, Nisus Tech Support -- NisusTech@aol.com
- Mel Martinez -- mem@JHUFOS.pha.jhu.edu
-
-
- Virtual Sex?
- ------------
- by Keith Bourgoin -- kbourgoin@chaparral.fse.ulaval.ca
-
- Although Tonya Engst's book review of "Silicon Mirage" wasn't
- specifically intended to cover the topic of "virtual sex," some
- points need to be clarified. Even though I am NOT an expert in
- virtual reality (VR), I participated in a network conference on
- that subject a year ago as an interested party and would like to
- mention some of the finer details and conclusions we agreed on in
- the conference.
-
- Tonya says, "It turns out that virtual reality has little to do
- with sex." I am sorry to say that as a quickly evolving technology
- and because it has always been the case, exploitative people will
- surely use VR as another sex-oriented product in an already huge
- industry. This is where the real problem arises.
-
- Right now, VR is in its infancy and we are still far from publicly
- available computer-generated animations that are credible as
- reality. But as is often the case, the creation of a niche market
- for virtual sex will finance technological advances, leading to a
- finer quality of consumer VR within years. This forces us to take
- a stand on the matter very quickly.
-
- With the advent of consumer VR, we will be flooded with a mass of
- VR peripherals that will cover the broad spectrum of sensations
- that a person can experience in real life, including sex. It is
- difficult NOT to imagine such peripherals considering the huge
- number of sex-oriented mechanical devices in sex shops. With the
- coming of peripherals capable of simulating the stimulus of sex in
- a fantasy reality, we are giving people the means to reinforce
- this pretend reality, a reality in which sex could conceivably be
- exaggerated beyond reality into imagination. In fact, we are
- creating the perfect device to transform people into sex-obsessed
- schizophrenics, people who can't distinguish reality from fiction.
- These devices could cause serious mental and sociological
- problems. [Of course, this applies to many different topics within
- a broad-based virtual environment, and is equally as harmful in
- those cases as well. -Adam]
-
- The conclusion we drew in the VR conference was that even though
- VR is an interesting and promising technology, it must be closely
- supervised to achieve its true potential; without this
- supervision, VR could become another dangerous technology that
- could cost millions in medical care, social rehabilitation, and
- perhaps even lives. It is high time we address the possible abuses
- and deal with them while we still hold the reins.
-
- [For those interested in the arguments that always swirl around
- when sex is mentioned, check out the cover story in NewMedia
- magazine's April issue, entitled "Digital Sex: Technology, Law, &
- Censorship." Suzanne Stefanac provides an excellent and thoughtful
- overview of many of the issues we raised in TidBITS#159 and #160,
- and she touches briefly on the issues Keith mentions above. -Adam]
-
- NewMedia Magazine -- NewMediaMag@mcimail.com
-
-
- Apple Workgroup Servers
- -----------------------
- by Tonya Engst, TidBITS Editor
-
- Last week Apple introduced three new flavors of Macintosh, the
- Apple Workgroup Servers 60, 80, and 95. They closely resemble
- their cousins, the existing Centris 610, Quadra 800, and Quadra
- 950, much as the Performa 200, 400, and 600 closely resemble the
- Classic II, LC II, and IIvx.
-
-
- Old Macs telling a new story
- The Apple Workgroup Servers (AWS) 60 and 80 represent the low- and
- medium-end of what you can buy. The AWS 60 comes standard with
- onboard Ethernet, unlike its Centris 610 cousin, which offers
- onboard Ethernet only optionally. Both the AWS 60 and 80 ship
- standard with large hard drive configurations and a faster version
- of AppleShare, AppleShare 4.0, which only works on 68040 Macs.
- AppleShare will come pre-installed, hopefully making life easier
- for busy network administrators. Apple plans to ship these
- configurations in July, and since the hardware should be ready,
- the delay probably comes from finishing up AppleShare 4.0.
-
-
- Hardware in a hurry
- The AWS 95 offers more interesting changes than the others. It
- resembles the Quadra 950 but includes a built-in PDS accelerator
- card that speeds operations with a 128K or 256K static RAM (SRAM)
- cache and two SCSI direct memory access (DMA) ports. Other
- uncommon hardware includes parity RAM, which ensures that memory
- reads and writes are completely accurate. This doesn't much matter
- except in utterly critical tasks, but I gather that certain U.S.
- government contracts require this level of computing safety.
-
- Software on the AWS 95 supports the speed offered by the hardware.
- Network administrators buying an AWS 95 need a rudimentary
- knowledge of A/UX, because this machine ships with AppleShare Pro
- running under A/UX, which allows the hardware to work to spec and
- provides multi-threading and multi-tasking, making it possible for
- a crowd of people to simultaneously read and write from the
- server. The AWS 95 also ships with a four-user pack (for the
- server and three clients, and you can buy more user packs from
- Dantz) of Retrospect Remote 2.0 A/UX. Dantz's new release can
- backup both Unix and Macintosh file formats. The machine comes
- with A/UX and AppleShare Pro pre-installed and should ship
- shortly.
-
- The AWS 95 will provide a true SCSI challenge for those
- interested. In addition to the two SCSI DMA ports, the computer
- sports two regular SCSI ports. At seven devices per port, you
- could theoretically attach 28 devices [In your dreams! -Adam].
- Various magazines suggest that 20 to 25 devices will be more
- realistic, with a combination of internal and external devices.
- Perhaps a hardware company could sponsor an annual contest where
- SCSI configuration experts could gather and compete to see how
- many devices they could successfully attach to an AWS 95 with
- bonus points going to the person with the longest SCSI chain
- length.
-
-
- Software
- Aside from Retrospect Remote 2.0 A/UX, other software for the new
- servers will include a special version of the Oracle7 database
- from Oracle, a version of 4D Server from ACIUS, and possibly some
- deals with Sybase and Informix, companies that are big in the
- large-scale database market. Later this year, Apple will also
- release AppleSearch, a full text search application, complete with
- relevance ordering and XTND capabilities.
-
-
- Overall
- The AWS 60 and 80 will only succeed if Apple can separate them
- sufficiently from the Centris 610 or Quadra 800 in terms of
- features and pricing. Otherwise people will simply purchase a
- comparable Centris or Quadra and configure it with network
- software and third-party hard drives. Without competitive pricing,
- these Macs will only sell to people who wish to blithely purchase
- a Macintosh server, without taking the time to do more research
- than scan a colorful Apple brochure. Since pricing will range from
- $3000 for the cheapest AWS 60 to $13,000 for the snazziest AWS 95
- (upgrades from the Quadra 900 and 950 will be available), cost
- will be a major issue.
-
- The AWS 95 is the most interesting of the lot, and you would be
- hard pressed to match its functionality. Also, Dantz doesn't
- currently plan to market Retrospect Remote A/UX 2.0 separately.
- For those who need the fastest server possible now, the AWS 95
- should fit the bill. For those who can wait, Cyclones and PowerPCs
- may soon provide even more alluring speeds.
-
- Dantz Development -- 510/849-0293 -- 510/849-1708 (fax)
-
- Information from:
- Pythaeus
- Apple and Dantz propaganda
-
- Related articles:
- MacWEEK -- 08-Mar-93, Vol 7, #10, pg. 1
- MacWEEK -- 22-Mar-93, Vol. 7, #12, pg. 1
- Macworld -- May-93, pg. 64
-
-
- BCS Internet SIG
- ----------------
- The Boston Computer Society, the world's largest computer user
- group, has created an Internet Special Interest Group (ISIG) in
- response to increased interest in the Internet, without doubt the
- coolest thing happening in communication today. You have to be a
- BCS member or an MIT person to join the ISIG, but anyone can
- attend the meetings or join the ISIG's Internet mailing list.
-
- ISIG provides an opportunity for members to explore two common
- questions about the Internet. Ever wondered what the Internet is
- good for, or how you could access and use it? Then the ISIG can
- help. Like standard user group SIGs, the ISIG will have local
- monthly meetings and will offer other user group services to
- people in Boston, such as free and low-cost classes, but members
- outside of Boston receive a monthly newsletter and free support
- via phone or electronic mail.
-
- "This is a big step for the BCS," said ISIG Director Michael
- Barrow, a computer systems consultant at MIT. "Until now, there
- was no place for people outside the universities and the computer
- industry to learn about the net."
-
- For more information contact:
- Michael Barrow, Boston Computer Society
- 617/252-0600 -- 617/491-4580 -- 617/577-9365 (fax)
- bcs-isig-request@mit.edu
- FTP to: isig.mit.edu
-
- Information from:
- BCS propaganda
-
-
- A Tale of Two Cities
- --------------------
- by Roz Ault -- roza@aol.com
-
- The world's largest Macintosh user group, Berkeley-based BMUG,
- recently set up a second bulletin board system across the country
- in Boston. Boston, of course, is home to the other big Mac user
- group, the Macintosh arm of the Boston Computer Society (BCS).
- BMUG's Boston BBS arose because of internal political problems
- within BCS that caused the resignation of the volunteer sysops on
- the BCS Mac BBS. We thought a brief look at this story might shed
- light on problems that can affect volunteer user groups and
- suggest ways of avoiding similar problems.
-
- The Boston sysop team left BCS because of frustrations over BCS
- internal politics and lack of BCS support for online services. The
- BCS team had cooperated with BMUG on joint promotions that
- directly benefited the BCS Mac BBS to the tune of several thousand
- dollars. Nevertheless, the Mac group as a whole was running a
- serious deficit. The recently-appointed BCS president, Robert
- Grenoble, wasn't pleased and labeled the sysops' activities an
- "embarrassment" to the BCS. It's unclear whether he felt the
- relaxed style of BMUG was unbefitting the BCS image, or whether
- his objection was to some violation of administrative protocol
- within the BCS hierarchy.
-
- At any rate, the sysops' resignations set off a chain of events
- that raised a furor in the Boston online community. The BCS
- employee sent to take over management of the DOS-based Mac
- bulletin board soon began deleting messages critical of the BCS,
- including private email messages. He reduced the access of many
- remaining Mac activists, then when some of those volunteers
- resigned in protest, he deleted their resignation messages, which
- set off yet another round of resignations.
-
- BCS President Grenoble, when questioned by a local newspaper on
- this issue, was quoted as saying there was no censorship, just
- deletion of "disruptive" and deliberately inflammatory messages
- by people using the system for personal, and juvenile, grudges.
- However, since Grenoble himself doesn't use bulletin boards or
- email, he probably failed to understand what a passionate response
- the message deletions would evoke (or how quickly the whole issue
- would probably have blown over, had the so-called inflammatory
- messages simply been ignored).
-
- As computers become more a business tool and less a homebrew
- hobby, many user groups are having a hard time defining roles and
- rules. Can one group meet the increasingly diverse demands of the
- corporate user, the home user, the novice user, the power user?
- How do you attract and keep volunteers, while keeping them under
- some semblance of organization? How do online services fit into
- the over-all user group mission? What is this mission anyway? User
- groups need to come up with good answers to convince people
- they're worth the price of a membership.
-
- People interested in comparing the online answers from BCS and
- BMUG can call (via modem):
-
- BCS Mac BBS -- 617/864-0712
- BMUG Boston BBS -- 617/721-5840
- Planet BMUG BBS (Berkeley) -- 510/849-2684
-
- BCS Mac is a DOS-based TBBS board. The BMUG systems run on
- FirstClass. Although you can call BMUG in command-line mode with a
- regular communications program, the FirstClass client software is
- free from most online services, or from various Internet sites,
- including sumex-aim.stanford.edu (archived as info-mac/comm/first-
- class-user-207.hqx).
-
- [As a quick disclaimer, Roz was involved in the unpleasantness on
- the BCS Mac BBS, and is currently working with the BMUG Boston
- BBS. -Adam]
-
-
- Crash DTP Survival Course
- -------------------------
- by Bill Dickson -- wrd@halcyon.com
-
- Before, I couldn't even kern "Desktop Publisher." Now I are one.
-
- So there I was, in a mild state of panic, babbling semi-coherently
- at Adam over the phone. The manager of the Kinko's at which I work
- had decided to make the desktop publishing position official,
- which meant I could apply for it and try to escape boredom, bad
- hours, and poverty in a single stroke. Sadly, the extent of my
- desktop publishing ability was a general competency with the Mac
- combined with a working knowledge of Microsoft Word 4.0. Not
- exactly the foundation of an empire.
-
- "So what's the problem?" Adam asked me. I explained that I had to
- learn PageMaker, FreeHand, and The Rules in approximately four
- days. "Don't worry about it," he said. "Come over tomorrow night
- and I'll help you out."
-
- What sort of help could he give me, I wondered? A crash course
- without pause for sleep? Self-hypnosis tapes? Incriminating
- photographs of the interviewers? I arrived, curious, and he handed
- me... a book.
-
- "This'll tell you everything you have to know," he told me. I
- looked skeptical. It was quite small, and a fairly sickly shade of
- green to boot. "Not everything you'll ever want to know to be a
- desktop publisher," he explained, noticing my expression.
- "Everything you absolutely must know if you plan to be one. No
- more, no less."
-
- Damned if he wasn't right.
-
- David Blatner, author of the "Desktop Publisher's Survival Kit,"
- (Peachpit Press, ISBN# 0-938151-76-2, $22.95) has successfully
- compacted a wealth of vital information into a short, quick-
- reading volume. Despite the density of information, it is easy,
- often entertaining, to read, and David explains the concepts
- clearly and simply. The book is well-organized, covering a single
- major topic in each chapter and breaking down concepts within each
- topic into easily digestible chunks. One could say that David is
- the intestinal enzyme of choice for the novice desktop publisher,
- except that he might take it the wrong way. Major topics include:
-
- * Graphic files - different types, how they work, what they're
- good for
- * Fonts - similar issues
- * Word Processing - concepts, do's and don'ts, how-to's, and copy
- editing concepts
- * Typography - how to make it look good, and why you should make
- it look good
- * Styles and Codes - how to make your life a whole lot easier
- * Scans and Halftones - how they work, how to work with them
- * Color - different kinds, how it displays, how it prints
- * Printing - different output devices, setting up, dealing with
- service bureaus, and much, much more
- * When Things Go Wrong - what can go wrong, why it might, how to
- try to fix it, and The Strangest Bug He's Ever Seen (which you
- must see to believe)
- * Software - the book also comes with a disk full of handy
- utilities, and David explains what they are and why they're useful
- to you.
-
- Note that the book does not give you instruction in any particular
- software package. It's not meant as a software tutorial or a
- manual. It explains the concepts that apply to the entire field,
- regardless of what software you use.
-
- As far as I'm concerned, the Typography and Styles & Codes
- chapters are sufficient reason for you to buy David a lot of beer
- if you run across him. They were all I needed for my immediate
- concerns. I found a wealth of useful information in the other
- chapters of the book as well, with the exceptions of the Scans &
- Halftones and Color chapters, which I didn't read past their first
- pages. To me, at least, those subjects are far more complex than
- the others, and even David was unable to simplify them to the
- point where a total novice could understand them.
-
- On the other hand, after three months on the job, I'm ready to go
- back and read those chapters. Not only will I now understand what
- they're talking about, but it's getting to the point where I need
- to understand that information. Yes, that's right; I got the job,
- and I can honestly say that I don't think it would have happened
- if not for the "Desktop Publisher's Survival Kit." Before, I was a
- measly weekend shift supervisor with no night life, no money, an
- old Apple IIgs, vast debt, and a cupboard full of Mission Macaroni
- and Cheese dinners. Now, I'm a desktop publisher with a Duo 210,
- lots of friends, a good social life, and enough money to brew a
- little beer on the side. I think I may be losing weight and
- gaining a deeper understanding of the cosmic truths as well.
-
- Will the "Desktop Publisher's Survival Kit" do all this for you,
- too? There's only one way to find out.
-
- Peachpit Press -- 800/283-9444 -- 510/548-4393
- 510/548-5991 (fax)
-
-
- Reviews/29-Mar-93
- -----------------
-
- * MacWEEK -- 22-Mar-93, Vol. 7, #12
- Photoshop 2.5 -- pg. 45
- LaserWriter Pro 600 & 630 -- pg. 45
- Wacom ArtZ -- pg. 50
-
- * MacUser -- Apr-93
- HP PaintJet XL300 -- pg. 56
- Lexmark IBM Color Jetprinter PS 4079 -- pg. 56
- VideoFusion -- pg. 59
- Microsoft Word -- pg. 66
- Lotus 1-2-3 -- pg. 67
- Infini-D -- pg. 68
- Publish It! Easy -- pg. 69
- ACT! & Shortlist -- pg. 71
- Helix Express -- pg. 79
- MacProject Pro -- pg. 87
- SAM -- pg. 91
- Conflict Catcher and Other Innovative Utilities -- pg. 91
- Star Trek: The Screen Saver -- pg. 91
- Songworks -- pg. 95
- RightWriter -- pg. 97
- Color Classic & LC III -- pg. 100
- Centris 610, Centris 650 & Quadra 800 -- pg. 106
- PowerBook 165c -- pg. 114
- Accelerators -- pg. 118
- (too many to list)
- 3.5" Magneto-optical drives -- pg. 162
- (too many to list)
- Photography CD-ROMs -- pg. 183
- (too many to list)
- COPSTalk for Windows 1.01 -- pg. 215
- Edutainment CD-ROMs -- pg. 221
- (too many to list)
-
- * BYTE -- Apr-93
- Photoshop 2.5 -- pg. 49
- PowerBook Peripherals -- pg. 173
- (too many to list)
- Aldus Fetch -- pg. 183
- Timbuktu for Windows -- pg. 185
-
- * Macworld -- May-93
- Color Ink-jet Printers -- pg. 94
- (too many to list)
- Color Thermal Wax Printers -- pg. 100
- (too many to list)
- Color Dye-sublimation Printers -- pg. 106
- (too many to list)
- Monochrome Monitors -- pg. 112
- (too many to list)
- Kai's Power Tools Volume 1, 1.0 -- pg. 128
- WriteMove II -- pg. 129
- RapidTrak 1.0.1 -- pg. 130
- FastCache Quadra -- pg. 132
- Lightning Effects & Thunderstorm -- pg. 132
- Comet CG 1.0.3 -- pg. 136
- Andrew Tobias' TaxCut for Macintosh -- pg. 139
- MacInTax -- pg. 139
- MacProject Pro -- pg. 140
- SuperATM -- pg. 142
- SpreadBase 1.0.1 -- pg. 144
- WealthBuilder 2.0 -- pg. 146
- TimesTwo 1.0.1 -- pg. 146
- AccuZip6 1.5.2 -- pg. 148
- MacPhase 1.2 -- pg. 150
- EISToolkit 2.0 -- pg. 150
- The UnMouse -- pg. 152
- DEClaser 1152 -- pg. 152
- TimeVision 1.0 -- pg. 154
- Comprehensive Review in Biology -- pg. 154
- Theorist 1.5 -- pg. 156
- DiskFit Direct 1.0 -- pg. 156
- DayMaker 2.0 -- pg. 158
- RightWriter for the Mac 5.0 -- pg. 158
- Tree -- pg. 160
- ithink 2.2.1 -- pg. 160
- CPM Graphic Tutor 1 & 2 -- pg. 162
- Expert Home Design -- pg. 162
- Monkey Island 2: LeChuck's Revenge -- pg. 164
- Star Trek: The Screen Saver -- pg. 164
- Data Desk 4.0 -- pg. 166
- Algebra -- pg. 166
- LapTrack for the Mac 1.0b -- pg. 168
- L-TV -- pg. 168
- Who Killed Sam Rupert -- pg. 174
- Sherlock Holmes, Consulting Detective, Volume II -- pg. 174
-
-
- ..
-
- 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.
-
- For information on TidBITS, how to subscribe to our mailing list,
- how to find back issues, how to search issues on the Internet's
- WAIS, and other useful stuff, send email to <info@tidbits.com>.
-
-
-
-