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- TidBITS#174/26-Apr-93
- =====================
-
- Lots of little bits this week, including comments, corrections,
- and tips about System 7. Mark Anbinder covers the malicious
- INIT-M virus along with an excellent offer for a
- MS Mail/Internet gateway that expires at the end of the week.
- On the lighter side we have Ian Feldman's intriguing list of
- fiction set in computer or programming environments. Finally,
- a look into the future at the PowerBook 145B, the next cheap
- PowerBook, and what it means for Apple.
-
-
- This issue of TidBITS sponsored in part by:
-
- * Dantz Development -- 510/849-0293 -- dantz@applelink.apple.com
- For Retrospect 2.0 upgrades, call 800/225-4880.
-
- For an index of files on Dantz Development and their products,
- please send email to <sponsors@tidbits.com>. To receive all
- this information in one 73K file, please send email to
- <dantz-all@tidbits.com>. To receive a 29K compressed version of
- the same file, please send email to <dantz-comp@tidbits.com>.
-
-
- 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
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- AOL: Adam Engst -- Delphi: Adam_Engst -- BIX: TidBITS
- TidBITS -- 9301 Avondale Rd. NE Q1096 -- Redmond, WA 98052 USA
- -----------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Topics:
- MailBITS/26-Apr-93
- Malicious Virus On The Loose
- PostalUnion Unites MS Mail, Internet Mail
- Fiction in Computer Science
- PowerBook 145B & Apple Strategy
- Reviews/26-Apr-93
-
- [Archived as /info-mac/digest/tb/tidbits-174.etx; 30K]
-
-
- MailBITS/26-Apr-93
- ------------------
-
- **UnMountIt Availability** -- George Headley <headley@macc.wisc.edu>
- writes to tell us that UnMountIt, the free utility from Apple that
- aids in unmounting shared removable volumes, is available on
- <ftp.apple.com> for anonymous FTP. Look for /dts/mac/hacks/fsid.hqx
- which contains several utilities in disk image form (use DiskCopy
- to read it).
-
-
- **Quadra 700 Comments** -- Brian Hughes <hades@coos.dartmouth.edu>
- writes to tell us that Glenn Fleishman's editorial on the Quadra
- 700 had some incorrect information. The LC and LC II max out at
- 512K of VRAM, which is enough for 16-bit color on the 12" monitor
- only (8-bit color on the 13"/14" monitor), and the LC III tops out
- at 768K VRAM, which will handle 16-bit color on monitors up to
- 13"/14".
-
- Michael Peirce <peirce@outpost.sf-bay.org>, author of Smoothie,
- which smooths jaggies in on-screen presentations, comments that
- Apple might be throwing a bone to the video card manufacturers,
- who would otherwise lose customers who have 24-bit internal video.
- Otherwise, Apple risks losing these manufacturers to the Windows
- market, where fast, high-quality video is an absolute necessity.
- Michael also notes that many people doing high-end 24-bit color
- work also need big monitors, and even the 24-bit color on the
- Quadra 700, 900, and 950 only works up to 16".
-
-
- **Damaged Fonts** -- Lloyd Lim <lim@cs.ucdavis.edu> says that a
- good check for bad font files, along with other files with
- resource forks, is to run John Norstad's excellent virus fighter,
- Disinfectant (now at version 3.2, see below), which checks for and
- reports damaged resource forks. It may not catch all types of
- damage, but it is a useful troubleshooting tool.
-
-
- **More System 7 Answers** -- Brian Jewett <bjewett@ncsa.uiuc.edu>
- adds another thing to check for when experiencing Bad F-line
- errors. After much trouble, he discovered the culprit was an old
- ROM in his RasterOps video board, which was apparently not 32-bit
- QuickDraw-friendly. So consider older hardware in strange
- troubleshooting situations.
-
- Quinn <quinn@cs.uwa.edu.au> chimes in that if you experience a
- weird system error while running on a 68040 machine, it's worth
- testing with the caches off. There are utilities to shut them off
- flexibly, but you can also open the Cache Switch Control Panel,
- hold down the option key, and click the More Compatible button. If
- your Cache Switch Control Panel is missing, look on your System
- disks; it usually ships on the Tidbits disk.
-
- Jon Pugh <jpugh@apple.com> supplies additional answers that we
- hadn't known. You can get 8-bit icons for floppies by setting the
- Custom Icon bit for the floppy by dropping it on FileTyper 4.0.
- Also, we mentioned AppleScript as a reason to upgrade to System
- 7.1, but Jon says AppleScript runs fine under 7.0 and 7.0.1.
- AppleScript is shipping from APDA, although they may not have
- disks in quantity yet.
-
- Todd Hooper <todd@dialix.oz.au> comments that reformatting your
- hard drive to retrieve that extra bit of space may cause the HFS
- bug we discussed last issue to appear. If you do reformat your
- hard disk and change partition sizes, run the Disk Bug Checker
- before you rely on the disk heavily.
-
- Alex McCormick <amcc@leland.stanford.edu> notes that zapping the
- PRAM as a troubleshooting measure is a good idea, but will require
- some work to reset your default settings (time and date and all
- that). The most important thing to watch, though, is that zapping
- the PRAM will also kill a PowerBook's RAM disk, which may contain
- information you don't have backed up.
-
-
- **HFS Clarification** -- Dave Camp <diskfixer@agora.rain.com> of
- Central Point Software and author of the Disk Bug Checker we
- mentioned last issue, wrote to clarify that Central Point Software
- wrote the free program as a service to their customers who may
- have experienced the problem. Thanks to Dave and Central Point for
- making this useful utility available to the Macintosh community.
-
-
- **PowerPoint Problem** -- We found out more details about what may
- have caused the problem Andrew Nielsen reported in TidBITS #169_
- with launching PowerPoint from his Duo. It turns out that
- launching PowerPoint 3.0 will crash any enabled Mac if you use a
- version of the Shared Code Manager earlier than 1.0.5. The Shared
- Code manager is an extension that allows OLE (object linking and
- embedding) to work with PowerPoint. You can fix the problem in the
- short term by trashing Shared Code Manager and in the long term by
- using an updated version of the Shared Code Manager.
-
- Microsoft U.S. Customer Service -- 800/426-9400
- Canadian Customer Service -- 800/563-9048
- International Customer Service -- 206/936-8661
- PowerPoint Technical Support -- 206/635-7145
-
- Information from:
- Kevin Verboort, Microsoft
-
-
- **EndNote Upgrade** -- Niles & Associates released new versions of
- the $149 EndNote and $249 EndNote Plus that work with Nisus and
- FrameMaker, should you need bibliographic features in either of
- those programs. Upgrades cost $19, and moving from EndNote to
- EndNote Plus is $99. Niles & Associates -- 510/649-8176 --
- 510/649-8179 (fax)
-
-
- **America Online Cheapened** -- America Online now boasts lower
- access rates of $9.95 per month, which includes the first five
- hours of usage at any time of day (starts 01-May-93) and $3.50 per
- hour for usage after those first five hours (starts 01-Jul-93).
- AOL still lacks 9,600 bps access, but rumors hint that it won't be
- any more expensive when it appears real soon now.
-
-
- Malicious Virus On The Loose
- ----------------------------
- by Mark H. Anbinder, Contributing Editor -- mha@baka.ithaca.ny.us
- Technical Support Coordinator, BAKA Computers
-
- Gene Spafford of Purdue University yesterday released a joint
- announcement for the various antiviral utility publishers,
- describing a newly-discovered virus (dubbed INIT-M) and a suite of
- new versions of the popular antiviral utilities.
-
- INIT-M is a MALICIOUS virus and can result in irreparable damage
- to your files, folders, and file systems. It is different from the
- INIT 17 virus announced on 12-Apr-93.
-
- INIT-M rapidly spreads to applications, system extensions,
- documents and preference files under System 7; it does not spread
- or activate on System 6 systems. The virus spreads as the
- application files run, and is likely to spread extensively on an
- infected machine. The infection is accomplished by altering
- existing program code. Besides this incidental damage (that may,
- because of bugs in the virus code, cause more severe damage), the
- virus also does extensive damage to systems running on any Friday
- the 13th - NOT just booted on that day. Files and folders will be
- renamed to random strings, creation and modification dates will be
- changed, and file creator and type information will be scrambled.
- In rare circumstances, a file or files may be deleted. This
- behavior is similar to the previously announced (Mar-92) INIT-1984
- virus. Recovery from this damage will be difficult or impossible.
-
- Note that the next three Friday the 13ths are in August 1993, May
- 1994, and January 1995.
-
- The virus, when present on an infected system, may interfere with
- the proper display of some application window operations. It will
- also create a file named "FSV Prefs" in the Preferences folder.
-
- John Norstad has released version 3.2 of his free Disinfectant
- utility to detect and remove this virus. It is available via
- anonymous FTP from ftp.acns.nwu.edu (stored as a BinHexed self-
- extracting archive) or rascal.ics.utexas.edu (stored as a binary
- self-extracting archive), and from other usual sources.
-
- Recent versions of Chris Johnson's free Gatekeeper utility (the
- current version is 1.2.7) and Symantec's SAM Intercept (in
- advanced and custom mode) are already effective and should
- generate an alert if the virus tries to infect a file. Gatekeeper
- 1.2.7 is available from rascal.ics.utexas.edu and other FTP
- archives, as well as other usual sources.
-
- The other major antiviral utilities have new versions ready.
- Contact your utility's vendor for update information.
-
-
- PostalUnion Unites MS Mail, Internet Mail
- -----------------------------------------
- by Mark H. Anbinder, Contributing Editor -- mha@baka.ithaca.ny.us
- Technical Support Coordinator, BAKA Computers
-
- Information Electronics announced that it is shipping its fifth
- gateway to the Internet, PostalUnion/SMTP for Microsoft Mail. In
- celebration of its fifth Internet gateway product (eleventh
- gateway overall), the company is offering a pre-release special
- price of $695 for its unlimited-users package linking Microsoft
- Mail to the Internet via SMTP, instead of the full price of $995.
-
- This new gateway fits into IE's family of PostalUnion gateways,
- which take advantage of the company's rich, modular PostalUnion
- mail interchange system. The company develops a single PostalUnion
- module for each mail system, and combines these modules to create
- the needed gateway products. The PostalUnion format itself is an
- intermediate storage format that includes all mail attributes and
- capabilities of the supported mail systems, as well as a number of
- attributes and capabilities not available in current mail
- products. This ingenious approach helps the company take most of
- the drudgery out of developing each gateway, and, they say, allows
- them to pass the savings in time and expense to the purchaser.
-
- To date, the company has developed PostalUnion modules for
- FirstClass, Microsoft Mail, QuickMail, Internet via SMTP (Simple
- Mail Transfer Protocol), and Internet via UUCP . Available
- gateways include FirstClass to Microsoft Mail, FirstClass to
- Internet (both SMTP and UUCP), FirstClass to QuickMail, and
- QuickMail to Microsoft Mail. The company has a wide installed user
- base of its SMTP\QM and UMCP\QM Internet gateways for QuickMail
- (using pre-PostalUnion technology), and plans to provide an
- upgrade path for these users at a future time.
-
- The PostalUnion/SMTP for Microsoft Mail gateway offers an
- unlimited-user license (including support for multiple Microsoft
- Mail servers), a POP3 feature allowing users of both Microsoft
- Mail and a POP3 client to combine their mail into one mailbox,
- direct MacTCP support, support for the full Microsoft Mail user
- name and custom aliases, UNIX-style .signature files, automatic
- word wrap in outgoing mail, automatic support for uuencoded
- AppleSingle or BinHex enclosures, and a character translation
- table to turn the Mac's extended character set into readable text
- for the rest of the universe.
-
- Orders for this gateway at the introductory price of $695 must be
- pre-paid by check (New York State customers must add sales tax.
- Credit card orders are not accepted, and purchase orders must be
- accompanied by check). Canadian customers should add $15 for
- shipping, and all other non-U.S. customers should add $30. U.S.
- customers will receive second-day UPS Blue shipping where possible
- at no extra charge. The offer expires at the end of this week, as
- the software is being released on 01-May-93. Send to:
-
- Information Electronics
- 520 West Lake Road
- Hammondsport, NY 14840 USA
- 607/868-3331
- 607/868-3333 (fax)
- infoelect@ie.com
-
- Information from:
- Information Electronics propaganda
-
-
- Fiction in Computer Science
- ---------------------------
- by Ian Feldman -- ianf@random.se
-
- Some time ago I asked in the rec.arts.books group on the Usenet
- about preferably-non-Science-Fiction books set in academic
- Computer Science or _programming_ environments. Judging from
- results of that survey there don't yet seem to be many such works
- that deal with the everyday dilemmas faced by programmers
- (technical and moral). This is why you'll also find below a number
- of cyberpunk, rather than strictly-programmer, titles. Unlike the
- rest of TidBITS, this list has been formatted _primarily_ for
- paper printout and, at 69 lines in length, should therefore fit
- easily on a single page. Enjoy!
-
- ================ ------------------------------------------------------------
- |||||||| SciP+Fi ction set in C-Sci\programming environs list by Ian Feldman
- ..........:::::: ---------------------------------------- ---- --------------
- Written by:_____ _Book Title_; publisher'year, pp v2.7 ISBN
- ----------- =============================== ------- ==== ##############
- John Brunner _Shockwave Rider_; Ray/Ballantine'84 $5_______ 0-345-32431-5
- "cracking the net to free information for the common good"
- Pat Cadigan _Mindplayers_; ("an absolute must-have" --Bruce Sterling)
- Pat Cadigan _Synners_; Bantam $5; (virtual reality)_______ 0-553-28254-9
- Orson Scott Card _Lost Boys_; Harper Collins'92; (programmer and family
- encounters strange events in North Carolina)
- Denise Danks _Frame Grabber_; St.Martin's, hrdb [GBP]17____ 0-312-08786-1
- computer-illiterate journalix tracks down murderer via BBS
- Toni Dwiggins _Interrupt_; ("a techno-mystery set in Silicon Valley")
- Michael Frayn _The Tin Men_; Fontana, ("inspired lunacy" but out of print)
- David Gerrold _When HARLIE was One Release 2.0_; Bantam'88__ 0-553-26465-6
- William Gibson _Count Zero_; (computers as gods, part of a trilogy)
- William Gibson _Mona Lisa Overdrive_; (virtual reality)______ 0-553-28174-7
- William Gibson _Burning Chrome_; (cyberpunk short stories)___ 0-441-08934-8
- William Gibson _Neuromancer_; (industrial espionage)_________ 0-441-56959-5
- (author guilty of inventing the cyberpunk genre)
- James Hogan _The Genesis Machine_; Del Ray'87 $3__________ 0-345-34756-0
- James Hogan _Thrice Upon A Time_; ("time travel for information")
- James Hogan _The Two Faces of Tomorrow_; Del Ray'79_______ 0-345-27517-9
- ultimate test of AI-OS by letting it run a spacelab -> amok
- Stanislaw Lem _His Master's Voice_; (failed attempt to decode ET-message)
- Tom Maddox _HALO_ ("remarkable SF of robots & artificial intelligence")
- George RR Martin _Nightflyers_; Tor Books'87___________________ 0-8125-4564-8
- R A MacAvoy _Tea with the Black Dragon_; ("mystery around a computer
- fraud situation; computing bits ring true.")
- Vonda N McIntyre _Steelcollar Worker_; in Analog Nov'92; (blue-collar VR)
- Marge Piercy _Body of Glass_; Penguin'92, 584pp; (data piracy++) review
- finger "books=Body_of_Glass%danny"@orthanc.cs.su.oz.au
- ---> David Pogue _Hard-Drive_; Diamond'93 $5, 304pp____________ 1-55773-884-X
- (*programmer dies in accident, leaves no documentation
- behind; software firms fight for market share with virii;
- "right out of the pages of MacWorld" --Steve Brock)
- Richard Powers _The Gold Bug Variations_; Morrow '91, (famous molecular
- scientist ponders on the ?why? of love, life in EDP dept.)
- Paul Preuss _Human Error_; (nanotech computer infects brain-damaged kid)
- Thomas J Ryan _The Adolescence of P1_; ACE'79_______________ 0-671-55970-2
- (runaway AI experiment takes over mainframes, wrecks havoc)
- Bruce Sterling _The Difference Engine_; (with W Gibson) Bantam'91; finger
- "books=The_Difference_Engine%danny"@orthanc.cs.su.oz.au
- Cliff Stoll _The Cuckoo's Egg_; (non-fiction but reads like one); review
- FTP <garbo.uwasa.fi>; /mac/tidbits/1991/tb048_18-Mar-91.etx
- Tom T Thomas _ME_; ("smart computers")
- Vernor Vinge _Across Realtime_; Baen Books_____________ [several titles
- Vernor Vinge _Tatja Grimm's World_; Baen Books__________ soon available
- Vernor Vinge _The Witling_; Baen Books___________________ as Millennium
- Vernor Vinge _Threats and Other Promises_; Baen Books_____ Books in UK]
- Vernor Vinge _True Names & Other Dangers_; Baen Books'87___ 0-671-65363-6
- Vernor Vinge _A Fire Upon The Deep_; Tor Books, 640p, $6___ 0-8125-1528-5
- ("essentially about the future of the Internet")
- John Varley _Press Enter_; ("Short story, gruesome, but good")
- Ed Yourdon _Silent Witness_; ("Computer crime caper story; gumshoe
- has to explain intricacies of computer OS to girlfriend")
- Herbert W Franke _Das Zentrum der Milchstrasse_; ("the center of the galaxy")
- Herbert W Franke _Letzte Programmierer_; ("'the last programmer';
- I do NOT mean Frank Herbert!")
- Emil Zopfi _Computer Fuer 1001 Nacht_; Limmat Verlag, Switzerland
- Emil Zopfi _Jede Minute Kostet 33 Franken_; (last 4 in German; last 2
- "set in the commercial computing world of the early 70's")
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
- current version of this list via 'finger "scip+fi%danny"@orthanc.cs.su.oz.au'
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
- compiled 930424; % mail -s "additions/ comments/ updates --->" ianf@random.se
- ================ ============================================= ==============
-
-
- PowerBook 145B & Apple Strategy
- -------------------------------
- After all my yammering about what a wonderful idea the PowerBook
- 100 suddenly became after Apple dropped the price, it looks like
- the powers-that-be at Apple listened. Or, should I say, that's
- what those of us doing the yammering would like to believe. On
- June 15th, Apple will announce the PowerBook 180c (active matrix
- color screen on a PowerBook 180) and the 145B. I don't know what
- that "B" stands for, but I suspect "budget" or "bare bones" or
- perhaps something totally nonsensical like "brillig." That's
- right, we're going to see another cheap PowerBook. Rumored prices
- currently range from $1,300 to $1,500.
-
- The 145B, according to one source, will replace the 145, but it
- won't differ significantly from its predecessor. In fact, the only
- technical difference that I'm sure of is that the 145B will have a
- slight daughterboard modification to will provide 4 MB of RAM
- soldered on. The RAM slot will remain the same, but don't bother
- putting a 6 MB card in since the 145B will still only address 8 MB
- of RAM total.
-
- So how else will the 145B differ from the 145? It won't ship with
- System disks (but it will come with a backup program that I
- suspect will be the one that comes with the Performas), it won't
- have a microphone, and it may ship with ARA Client and a bunch of
- software demos on the hard disk. Those are small changes, but when
- multiplied over many thousands of machine they may make a
- significant difference to Apple's bottom line. I wouldn't even be
- surprised to see the 145B ship with documentation on a diet.
-
- The immediate response, especially from tech support people who
- get their jollies from having troubleshooting-challenged customers
- boot with the Disk Tools disk, will undoubtedly be an outraged
- squawk. But think, folks. How many people would buy PowerBook
- 145Bs as their only Macs? I'm willing to put money on that number
- being low. And, to further lower the number of people affected,
- how many of those PowerBook 145B-only users would be sufficiently
- inexperienced to fail to realize they can get System 7.0.x for
- free? So everyone should already have or can easily get a set of
- System disks (and please do, folks, if only to appease the
- overworked tech support therapists). I have at least three sets of
- System disks right now, and a number of sets of documentation,
- none of which I ever read.
-
- [I suppose Adam is right, but I hope Apple sells that 145B with a
- warning right on the box - "This Macintosh does not come with a
- set of System 7 disks. Proceed at your own risk." -Tonya]
-
- Oh, and the microphone? Neat idea, but the support for sound in
- Macintosh applications has generally been abysmal. I'm not talking
- about sound for sound's sake, but sound for productivity's sake. I
- doubt many people will miss the microphone.
-
- I think the 145B is an excellent idea as I currently understand
- it. This isn't say that some little detail won't appear later on
- that will change my mind, such as learning (and this is
- hypothetical!) that another missing feature is the one-year
- warranty. That would bug me.
-
- Apple has shown that dropping the price on soon-to-be obsolete
- machines works well; it increases market share and customer
- loyalty, although it probably doesn't affect the large corporate
- accounts much, and they exert an unfortunately disproportionate
- level of influence. But can this sort of price drop work on a
- machine that isn't yet on the endangered list? The concept of
- stripping a machine down to the bare minimum is certainly not new.
- The technique originated in the computer industry with the no-name
- PC-clone manufacturers who would put together a customized system
- for you or let you buy only those parts you wanted. And, those
- prices that were so commonly batted around for extremely cheap PC
- clones often didn't include DOS or manuals or even necessary
- cables at times. Hmm, pre-format the hard disk and don't include
- the operating system and some other package stuff. Sounds like the
- 145B.
-
- This technique serves the picky power user perfectly. When I buy
- my next Mac, I will want a minimum of 20 MB of RAM and a lot more
- hard disk space than I have now. The Apple monitors are nice, but
- I've heard good things about NEC's recent entries, and frankly,
- I've never liked the feel of Apple's keyboards, especially the
- el-cheapo one that came with the Classic. So why should I pay for
- Apple memory, hard drives, monitors, and keyboards when I can buy
- equipment more suited to my work style for less money elsewhere?
- Support isn't a big issue; I know what I'm doing. So, for
- instance, I'd like a Quadra 800 with no hard drive and only the
- motherboard memory. Nothing else. If you're like me, machines like
- that 145B are just what you want.
-
- The negative aspects of this technique are obvious. Many don't
- wish to make lots of choices from the Macintosh buffet. They want
- to give someone money and have the system up and running out of
- the box, plain and simple. And, equally as clearly, Apple earns
- less money which could affect the company negatively and result in
- less or slower innovation. But still, I think there is room in
- Apple's product line for stripped models of certain Macs.
-
-
- Another view
- In his first column for Macworld (Jun-93), Guy Kawasaki (what does
- he really _do_ in the industry these days, other than push
- TouchBASE and Norton Essentials for PowerBook at user group
- meetings?) suggests that Apple bless three models of the Macintosh
- and discontinue the rest in order to make it easy for people to
- decide which model to buy. Guy's suggestion has some attraction,
- especially for the indecisive and for those poor tech support
- people, who are having trouble keeping up with the Macintosh of
- the month since they have to know every model. And, from the
- perspective of Guy, a man who left Apple just after the
- introduction of the Macintosh SE and Macintosh II, it's not in the
- least bit surprising.
-
- However, Guy carefully ignores some basic marketing issues. Back
- in the spring of 1987, when Guy left Apple for ACIUS, there were
- far fewer computers, far fewer computer users, and most notably,
- far fewer Macintosh users. It's easy to keep a small number of
- people happy with a small number of choices, but as your audience
- increases in size, so does the number of different viewpoints and
- desires expressed therein. Combine that with the concept of
- filling shelf space, and you see that the SE and II could exist on
- their own because they had far less immediate competition from PC
- clones (they weren't sold in the same places, for one). Even
- still, Macs always looked outnumbered whenever they were displayed
- with other computers. That's what having 15 models of Macs does
- for you, and discontinuing all but three Macs (Guy suggests the
- Color Classic, PowerBook 160, and Centris 650) would significantly
- shrink Apple's presence in stores. Small presence, small sales.
- See TidBITS #171_ for Marc Kossover's article on shelf space wars.
-
- This isn't to imply that Apple is correct to keep ramping up the
- number of models at all times. For instance, the IIvx has never
- excited me, and with the quick introduction of the LC III below it
- and the Centris 610 and 650 above it, I can't see much reason to
- keep it around. And, as much as I like the Duos, there isn't much
- difference between them. Pick one, discontinue the other.
- Judicious weeding and the introduction of some stripped models for
- the budget-conscious power user could be the combination Apple
- needs, although with the Star Trek project at Apple putting the
- Macintosh operating system on PC machines on top of Novell's DR
- DOS, all bets are off as to what Apple's crack (or cracked?)
- marketing team will do next.
-
- Information from:
- Pythaeus
-
- Related articles:
- Macworld -- Jun-93, pg. 316
-
-
- Reviews/26-Apr-93
- -----------------
-
- * MacWEEK -- 19-Apr-93, Vol. 7, #16
- 4D Server 1.01 -- pg. 47
- DoveFax Pro+Voice -- pg. 52
-
- * Macworld -- Jun-93
- Personal Finance Programs -- pg. 119
- Aatrix Hi Finance 4.0
- Andrew Tobias' Managing Your Money 5.0
- CheckWriter 4.0
- DacEasy Light 2.0
- Dollars and Sense 5.0
- MacMoney 3.53
- Quicken 3.0
- WealthBuilder 2.0
- Macintosh Centris 610 and Centris 650 -- pg. 128
- LaserWriter Pro 600 and 630 -- pg. 130
- Public Utilities for the Macintosh 1.0 -- pg. 132
- Adobe Photoshop 2.5 -- pg. 134
- artWorks 1.0 -- pg. 136
- AppleCD 300 -- pg. 138
- WordPerfect Works 1.2 -- pg. 140
- StyleWriter II -- pg. 145
- MicroMac Plus Upgrade System -- pg. 146
- Now Up-to-Date 2.0 -- pg. 146
- MovieWorks 1.1 -- pg. 148
- 4D Server 1.0.1 -- pg. 150
- Dvorak on Typing 1.0 -- pg. 150
- Mavis Beacon Teaches Typing 2.0 -- pg. 150
- MultiDisk 150 -- pg. 152
- Interactive Training for Director -- pg. 154
- MathCAD 3.1 -- pg. 154
- Safe & Sound -- pg. 156
- Infinity Optical 3.5 -- pg. 156
- SoftPC with Windows -- pg. 158
- Expanded Book Toolkit 1.0.1 -- pg. 158
- KidDesk 1.0 -- pg. 160
- Peace of Mind 1.2.2 -- pg. 160
- FASTAT 2.0 -- pg. 162
- MacBarcoda 2.24 -- pg. 162
- Jewelbox 1.5 -- pg. 164
- Maelstrom 1.03 -- pg. 164
- The Secret Island of Dr. Quandary 1.0 -- pg. 166
- Stickybear's Reading Room 2.2a
-
- * BYTE -- May-93
- HP LaserJet 4si MX -- pg. 48
- Printer Tests -- pg. 146
- (too many to list)
-
-
- ..
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