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- TidBITS#193/13-Sep-93
- =====================
-
- This issue comes chock full of news about Adam's new book,
- InterNews 1.0 (a slick MacTCP newsreader from Dartmouth),
- new system software for the Newton, information on developing
- for the Newton, and Rupert Murdoch buying Delphi. Finally,
- you'll find additional details about various energy saving
- utilities, more problems with the Apple Adjustable Keyboard,
- and thoughts about what kind of service you can expect from
- a solvent Apple dealer.
-
- This issue of TidBITS sponsored in part by:
- * APS Technologies -- 800/443-4199 -- 71520.72@compuserve.com
- Makers of hard drives, tape drives, memory, and accessories.
- For APS price lists, email: aps-prices@tidbits.com <----- NEW!
-
- Copyright 1990-1993 Adam & Tonya Engst. Details at end of issue.
- Automated info: <info@tidbits.com> Comments: <ace@tidbits.com>
- --------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Topics:
- MailBITS/13-Sep-93
- User Expectations
- MessagePad System Update
- Developing for the MessagePad
- Adjustable Keyboard Problem
- InterNews 1.0
- Reviews/13-Sep-93
-
- [Archived as /info-mac/per/tb/tidbits-193.etx; 30K]
-
-
- MailBITS/13-Sep-93
- ------------------
- The release date on my book, The Internet Starter Kit for
- Macintosh, draws ever closer. The 650-some pages of text and the
- disk are out of my hands and should ship by the 24th of September.
- The book should be available to bookstores several days after
- that, although it may not make it on the shelves quite that
- quickly, so you may have to request it.
-
- I'm pleased about the contents of the disk, and I'd like to thank
- Hayden, my publisher, for going to bat for me on this one. Along
- with InterCon's free InterSLIP, QUALCOMM's free Eudora,
- Dartmouth's freeware/shareware Fetch, and the free TurboGopher
- from the University of Minnesota, the disk includes version 2.0.2
- of MacTCP from Apple. You can retrieve everything else for free
- via the Internet, but the only legal way to acquire MacTCP 2.0.2
- is to buy it or a product that includes it. I think I can safely
- say that my book will be the cheapest way to get MacTCP, given
- that the book will cost around $25 and MacTCP itself costs $52
- with shipping if you order from MacWarehouse.
-
- I'm especially happy about licensing MacTCP for the book, since
- many people seem to be seeking for it these days. Apple hasn't
- exactly made MacTCP readily available, and frankly, the
- documentation that comes with the package clearly wasn't designed
- for the end user. I figure you can look at it two ways. Either you
- get a neat book free when you buy MacTCP for half-price, or you
- get a $52 program free when you buy a $25 book. Either way, the
- net community wins, which remains one of my major goals in life.
-
-
- **Murdoch Buys Delphi** -- Speaking of the net community, it
- gained a new mogul recently. The News Corp., a company owned by
- publishing magnate Rupert Murdoch, has purchased Delphi, which now
- claims to be the fifth largest commercial online information
- provider behind CompuServe, Prodigy, GEnie, and America Online.
- Delphi is the only major information service fully on the
- Internet, and it seems likely that many of the newspapers and
- magazines under Murdoch's control will eventually appear on the
- Internet. Of course, such a possibility raises questions about the
- survival of current free electronic publications, although we have
- some ideas percolating.
-
-
- **DarkStar In hiding** -- We received word shortly after
- publication of TidBITS #191_ that the Info-Mac moderators removed
- the Monitor Energy Saver Control Panel from the FTP archives at
- <sumex-aim.stanford.edu>. Apparently licensing issues caused some
- difficulties. The software is available on AppleLink and from many
- dealers and user groups.
-
-
- **LaserWriter Pro Energy Star Caveat** -- Matthew Cravit
- <mbc@fractal.cl.msu.edu> writes: "I recently installed the
- LaserWriter Pro Energy Star software on a LaserWriter Pro 630,
- which puts the printer into a power saver mode after a certain
- amount of idle time, reducing power usage by 70 percent according
- to Apple. After calling Apple about an unrelated matter, I asked
- about this software, and the representative said that they do not
- specifically recommend installing it because some users have
- reported problems with bands of toner forming on the first few
- pages after the printer wakes up, apparently since the toner is
- not being rotated during the power saving cycle. This software, by
- the way, only works with the LaserWriter Pro 610 and 630." [When I
- called Apple to confirm this, the tech support guy could not find
- any specific problems in the database, but he had heard of some
- unresolved issues. If you experience streaking after your
- LaserWriter Pro has been asleep, stop using the Energy Star
- software. Otherwise, use it to save energy and money. -Adam]
-
-
- **SimCity 2000 Bummer** -- Joe Holmes <72241.731@compuserve.com>
- writes, "I checked out the SimCity 2000 prototype they had on
- display at Expo - until I asked if it could run in 16 colors.
- Nope. Black and white? Nope. I guess Tonya won't be able to play
- on the PowerBook 100. I won't be able to play on my Duo, even
- attached via MiniDock to my Apple Portrait Display. The same goes
- for PowerBook owners unless you have a 165c or 180c." [And then
- your battery won't last long enough to play much on the plane
- anyway. SimCity 2000 is destined to remain on the desktop. Perhaps
- the game needs all the colors to display all the neat new aspects
- of a city. Still, since we mainly play SimCity in airports and
- when we feel sick and want to be in bed, this seems a major trade-
- off -Adam & Tonya]
-
-
- User Expectations
- -----------------
- by Mark H. Anbinder, News Editor -- mha@baka.ithaca.ny.us
- Technical Support Coordinator, BAKA Computers
-
- In TidBITS #191_, I casually commented that readers asking local
- dealers to download DarkStar from AppleLink might consider making
- a purchase at the same time, to help defray the dealer's cost of
- accessing Apple's expensive online service. The resulting
- controversy amazes me.
-
- One reader sent a message expressing his fear that to defray the
- dealer's cost was tantamount to supporting and approving of
- Apple's "ridiculous charges for their own dealer support." He
- feels that retail Apple customers ("as opposed to drop-ins who buy
- mail-order") should expect support from any Apple dealer,
- regardless of where they bought their Apple products. This, he
- says, is an "elementary part of what 'dealer network' means."
-
- In fact, such an expectation could be considered a key difference
- between what a "dealer network" means, and what a "chain" of
- company-owned outlets means. When you're dealing with an
- authorized Apple dealer, you're dealing with an independent
- business, not with Apple. That business has salaries, rent, and
- other expenses to pay. In the current climate in which hardware
- sales carry much less profit than in the past, and in which
- software and peripheral sales often go to mail-order businesses
- whose volumes permit lower prices, many dealers have become more
- service and support oriented. Such a company cannot and should not
- be expected to devote time and other resources to non-paying
- customers.
-
- That I work for an authorized Apple dealer undoubtedly colors my
- opinion on the matter somewhat. It also gives me a clear
- perspective of how a dealer operates and stays in business. I can
- state that, when we have a piece of free software or shareware
- readily available, we give it happily to anyone who asks. When an
- Apple update is likely to be of wide interest and use, we download
- it, keep a copy at the store, and give it happily to anyone who
- asks. On the rare occasion when a customer requests something
- unusual that we don't have, we do our best to help the customer.
- It's hard to justify doing so without recouping some of the spent
- resources, though.
-
- Luckily, users have an alternative when it comes to obtaining
- Apple software updates. AppleLink accounts are available to
- everyone now, rather than just to dealers and developers. In fact,
- PowerBook owners may take advantage of a special offer for lower
- AppleLink costs by calling 800/877-8221. Apple also generally
- places updates and utilities on America Online and other
- commercial online services [and sometimes on <ftp.apple.com>
- -Adam], so users aren't stuck if they don't use AppleLink.
-
- In an ideal world, Apple would send all such updates, free of
- charge, to all dealers, or even to all customers. However, this is
- an industry whose market pressures have driven down margins, so
- Apple must share its distribution expenses with others. Given the
- choice, would I have preferred to pay more for my new computer,
- but expect more support free of charge down the road? I don't
- know, but it's not a decision I'll have to make. The market has
- made it for us all.
-
- My suggestion was intended not to bring Apple's software
- distribution policy, or AppleLink's astronomical charges, into
- question. It was intended to make our readers aware of the fact
- that dealers shoulder certain costs. If you can help with those
- costs by patronizing these establishments, you'll be justifying
- the dealers' willingness to help.
-
-
- MessagePad System Update
- ------------------------
- by Mark H. Anbinder, News Editor -- mha@baka.ithaca.ny.us
-
- Showing that old dogs can indeed learn new tricks, Apple last week
- began using several new distribution methods to help new
- MessagePad owners obtain system software updates for the newly-
- released version 1.04 of the Newton OS.
-
- If you have the Newton Connection Kit 0.9 you will receive an
- update disk when you receive version 1.0 of the Connection Kit.
- Or, you can obtain the update from dealers (some do and some do
- not have the resources to install it), from online services such
- as AppleLink, CompuServe, and America Online, or from local BBSs
- or user groups.
-
- Owners of a Newton Fax Modem will soon be able to instruct their
- MessagePads to dial a toll-free number and download the update
- directly into the MessagePad (users outside the U.S. will be able
- to use a separate number that will incur usual toll charges).
- We'll provide the phone numbers when this service is activated.
-
- Anyone in the U.S. without the above options may call 800/242-
- 3374, and Apple will send a PCMCIA card containing the update,
- along with a postage-paid envelope to return the card.
-
- According to Apple, version 1.04 addresses certain issues
- regarding memory and power management. Apple recommends that all
- MessagePad users take advantage of this free system update. Most
- MessagePads shipped to dealers earlier this month contain version
- 1.03, and many first-round purchasers have 1.02 or earlier. To
- check your version, tap the Extras button then Prefs, and look at
- the bottom of the screen. Users with questions about the update or
- the processes for obtaining it can call 800/SOS-APPL or contact
- <newton.qa@applelink.apple.com>.
-
-
- Developing for the MessagePad
- -----------------------------
- by Tom Thompson, BYTE Senior Tech Editor -- tomt@bytepb.byte.com
-
- If you want to develop Newton applications, you need the Newton
- Toolkit (NTK), which runs on a Mac. Minimally speaking, the Mac
- should be 68020-based Mac running System 7.0.1 with 3 MB RAM. You
- tether the MessagePad to the Mac via a null modem cable, and -
- after using the NTK to design the interface, write the code, and
- build the application - you download the resulting binary image
- into the MessagePad, where you can test it.
-
- The Toolkit provides tools for project management, application
- building, editing, object-template browsing, and View layout
- design. (Views are visible objects.) For Views layout, the NTK
- provides a set of customizable prototype templates for buttons,
- icons, sliders, and other user interface objects. The layout tools
- also let you preview results in a Mac window the same size as the
- MessagePad screen.
-
- The programming language for the MessagePad is the object-oriented
- NewtonScript. The NTK compiles a compressed bytecode
- representation of the source code, similar to p-code. This
- bytecode image is executed by a run-time interpreter in the
- MessagePad ROM. This design makes the code fully portable.
- Currently, there are two run-time interpreter implementations: an
- ARM610 version for the MessagePad, and a 680x0 version for
- debugging in the NTK environment.
-
- NewtonScript is a high-level language that lets you manipulate
- objects. Such objects could be a soup of contact numbers, or a
- View object that changes in response to a user action.
- NewtonScript's syntax is an amalgam of Pascal and C, and it
- supports messages and exception handling. The language is powerful
- enough to serve as real code, and in fact, the MessagePad's user
- interface was implemented with about 47,000 lines of NewtonScript.
-
- NewtonScript requires little memory, and importantly, does
- automatic memory management and garbage collection. There's no
- memory allocation calls and all references are to objects, not to
- handles or pointers. This makes the programmer's nightmare of
- memory leaks and dangling pointers a thing of the past. Also,
- objects have latent typing, and NewtonScript performs type
- checking on operations before they are performed. This nails
- argument errors as they occur, and not after the trashed stack
- causes problems dozens of instructions later. This simplifies
- debugging and makes the operating system more robust.
-
-
- Adjustable Keyboard Problem
- ---------------------------
- by Christian Smith -- csmith@blackplague.gmu.edu
-
- I've seen a bit of grumbling lately on comp.sys.mac.games and on
- various Mac BBSes about the way the new Adjustable Keyboard works
- with many games. The problem is caused by the fact that the system
- treats the two parts of the keyboard (referred to as Key Board and
- Key Pad for clarity) as independent parts (which they are), and
- the fix involves tricking the system into thinking they are a
- single device.
-
- For example, imagine you're playing Spectre, using the arrow keys
- on the Key Pad for movement and the spacebar to fire, a common key
- layout for games. Pressing the spacebar while moving causes the
- tank to stop moving. The arrows must be released and repressed in
- order to move the tank further. In short, any key pressed on the
- Key Board interrupts key repeats from the Key Pad, and vice versa.
-
- One solution, albeit a risky one, is to boot the Mac with only the
- Key Board attached, and - after the Mac boots - attach the Key
- Pad. Of course, this means attaching an ADB device with the Mac
- turned on, which can fry the ADB chip on the motherboard, possibly
- resulting in an expensive motherboard replacement. If you succeed
- with this ruse, the Mac will not recognize that the Key Pad is
- attached; yet it will respond to key presses on the Key Pad,
- presumably thinking these key presses come from the Key Board. In
- this case, key repeats will not be interrupted and you can play
- along happily.
-
- Another solution is to configure the game to use only keys from
- one device, but this is often inconvenient.
-
- I have talked to people at Apple, and they can "Neither confirm
- nor deny"[tm] that this is a bug, but they are looking into it.
-
- [This problem - it's actually a feature to make it harder for
- people suffering from RSI to play games - makes sense, since ADB
- devices send signals separately. For instance, I use a Curtis MVP
- Mouse trackball with foot switch (the foot switch attaches via a
- custom cable to the trackball) but I leave my mouse hooked up for
- others to use. I can move the mouse and click with the footswitch,
- since those are separate events, but I can't drag with the mouse
- and click with the footswitch. When the mouse signals that it is
- moving, those signals override the mouseDown signal from the
- footswitch. All in all, this is yet another reason to avoid the
- Apple Adjustable Keyboard, which gets good grades for basic design
- and marketing audacity, but fails miserably in essential
- execution., both for healthy folks who wish to play games and
- those of us who suffer from repetitive stress injuries. -Adam]
-
-
- InterNews 1.0
- -------------
- The following article comes from the text I wrote about InterNews
- in The Internet Starter Kit for Macintosh. I made a few minor
- changes to take out mentions of screen shots and to avoid the
- transition from the NewsWatcher discussion and to Nuntius
- discussion. InterNews is an excellent MacTCP-based newsreader
- released a week or so ago from Dartmouth College, the same folks
- who gave us the popular FTP client Fetch. Needless to say, I can't
- provide all the background a reader of the book would have by the
- time she hit this section, but suffice it to say that you need
- MacTCP, and either a network connection or a modem and an
- implementation of SLIP or PPP. If you currently use Eudora and
- Fetch, you can probably use InterNews with little trouble.
-
-
- InterNews
- Continuing with the excellent newsreaders, I come to a new program
- from Dartmouth College, InterNews. Programmed by Steve Maker and
- Roger Brown, InterNews is yet another take on an interface for
- reading news, presenting you with a three-paned window that
- displays a list of newsgroups at the top, a list of subjects in
- the selected group in the middle, and the articles in a selected
- thread at the bottom. In addition, InterNews works on the concept
- of the subscription, which is a personalized set of newsgroups.
- You can create any number of subscriptions, so I have, for
- instance, a subscription for the Mac groups, a subscription for
- the ClariNet groups I read, and so on. Subscriptions work well for
- organizing your reading, and can make starting up news less
- daunting than staring at a long list of all the groups you read.
-
-
- Installation and Setup
- Double-click on InterNews to launch it for the first time. A Site
- Configuration dialog box immediately opens. You must fill it in
- before you can read any news, since some of the settings are
- necessary to connect.
-
- The Authentication pop-up menu is the most confusing part of this
- configuration process because you must ask your system
- administrator what sort of authentication your host provides. You
- also must find out the name of your news server, of course, so you
- may as well ask the system administrator that question at the same
- time, along with the name of the mail server. If you don't use
- authentication, InterNews doesn't let you send replies via email,
- which is a bit of a pain. Forging email as a joke was once, and
- briefly, considered a neat trick. Now it's just considered stupid
- (although I hear that feature was added to combat what amounted to
- "electronic stalking" - anonymous harassing messages).
-
- After you finish setting up this dialog with the news server and
- mail server information (and you can always change it later by
- closing all windows and choosing Configure for Your Site from the
- Edit menu), InterNews connects to your news server and downloads
- the full list of groups and then sorts it before presenting you
- with the Subscriptions window. As you might expect, retrieving the
- full list of groups takes a long time, and sorting them is also
- slow (although faster machines probably sort faster than my
- SE/30). The first time that I connected my SLIP host got disgusted
- with the length of time it took to sort the newsgroups and timed
- out, hanging up the modem. Because I use Manual addressing in
- MacTCP, I was able to connect again without quitting the program;
- if you use Server addressing you must quit the MacTCP program
- before reconnecting! This could pose a major problem for InterNews
- if your connection times out before InterNews finishes sorting the
- groups, forcing you to quit InterNews without letting it finish
- its job.
-
- Once InterNews presents you with the Subscriptions window, the
- only remaining configuration work comes with your preferences.
- From the Edit menu, choose Preferences. InterNews displays a large
- preferences dialog with a pop-up menu to configure different
- aspects of the program.
-
- Although you want to go through each of these screens and fill
- them in with your preferences and personal information, the most
- interesting are the Subscriptions preferences that control
- automatic display and sorting of articles when you open windows.
- By clicking on any of the yes/no markers in the matrix, you can
- modify the behavior of any subscription. It's a clever interface
- and a good idea.
-
- After you set your preferences, the time has come to subscribe to
- newsgroups. First, you must create your own subscription, so from
- the Subscriptions menu, choose New Subscription and then name the
- icon that InterNews creates. Double-click on it to open its
- window. Then double-click on the subscription labeled All
- Newsgroups. You must somehow figure out how to show both windows
- on the screen at once. You can click on and drag down the double
- lines under the top pane that lists the newsgroup names to make it
- larger, and I highly recommend doing so, because scrolling through
- that list is hard enough as is.
-
- When you see an interesting group, click on it and drag it over to
- your personal subscription window. Keep clicking and dragging
- until you've subscribed to all the groups you want to for that
- subscription, and repeat the process as necessary until you have
- all the subscriptions you want.
-
- Double-clicking on any subscription opens the window for that
- subscription, and you can size the window and its three panes so
- that you feel comfortable working with them. If you don't wish to
- see the contents of a group before subscribing, you can open a
- Subscription and then choose Add Newsgroup from the Reading menu
- to pick from the full list in a scrolling dialog.
-
-
- Basic Usage
- Double-clicking on any newsgroup in its top pane causes InterNews
- to retrieve the subjects for the articles in that newsgroup and
- place them in the middle pane. Then double-clicking on any subject
- retrieves all the articles in that thread and places them in the
- bottom pane. You scroll using either the scroll bars or the
- Spacebar shortcut, but unfortunately, you can't scroll while
- InterNews retrieves the articles, and particularly with a long
- thread, retrieving the articles can take a while.
-
- If you're reading a thread, each article that scrolls by in the
- bottom pane is selectable with the mouse. You need to select an
- article specifically if you want reply to or save that article,
- obviously, but because InterNews scrolls a bunch of articles
- through that bottom pane, the concept of selecting one is a little
- odd. With an article selected, though you can do all the standard
- replying in mail or to the newsgroup, but you can also forward an
- article to someone else via mail, which I approve of, because I
- always seem to want to do that.
-
- When replying, you can quote selected text and also insert a text
- file using commands in the Compose menu. On the whole, the message
- composition window is fairly standard looking, although it does
- have four radio buttons that enable you to change whether a
- message is a mail or news message, which might help take flames
- into email rather than clutter news with them.
-
-
- Special Features
- Like NewsWatcher, InterNews can import and export .newsrc files so
- that you can easily synchronize your news reading between
- InterNews and a Unix newsreader. InterNews also sports a Windows
- menu that lists all your subscriptions along with the open windows
- (and a useful Send to Back command). Selecting any of your
- subscriptions from the Windows menu opens it immediately, saving
- you the trouble of closing all the other windows to get back to
- your subscriptions window. Finally, a Help menu sits alongside the
- Windows menu and provides online help and tips for using
- InterNews, including the keyboard shortcuts that aren't otherwise
- documented.
-
-
- Overall Evaluation
- InterNews is a fine effort, and much of its interface looks slick
- and well-done. However, I personally always feel cramped by the
- three-pane approach to displaying the newsgroups because the top
- pane especially wastes a lot of space to the right of the rather
- short newsgroup names, and the separators take up space as well.
- If you have a monstrous 21-inch monitor, you won't even notice
- what I'm talking about, but on a 9-inch screen InterNews might
- drive you mad. I'd prefer to see the top pane instead live on the
- left or right of the others because it's inherently fairly thin.
-
- I also continually have trouble with the concept of selecting an
- article from the bottom reading pane, although I suppose I would
- get used to it given enough time. Although InterNews has keyboard
- shortcuts for moving around so that the left- and right-arrow keys
- move you to the previous and next newsgroup and the up- and down-
- arrow keys move you to the previous and next subject, enough
- different keys are involved that I found the capability somewhat
- clumsy. Perhaps it would help if you didn't have to press Return
- or Enter to open each newsgroup or subject after you select using
- the arrow keys.
-
- Finally, although InterNews is speedy enough, it doesn't feel
- quite as quick as NewsWatcher. I didn't have time to make real
- speed comparisons, so this objection may just be a feeling, but
- for most of us, perception is reality.
-
- I feel a little bad talking about InterNews in this negative
- fashion because it is a great program, just not one that happens
- to match with my preferred method of reading news. It may fit
- better with your style, and it's definitely worth a look if you
- currently use NewsWatcher or Nuntius.
-
-
- Administrative Details
- InterNews is distributed under the same system as Fetch, which
- means that educational and nonprofit users can use it for free,
- and for everyone else it's shareware. You can find it via
- anonymous FTP at <ftp.dartmouth.edu> as:
-
- /pub/mac/InterNews_1.0.sit.hqx
-
-
- Reviews/13-Sep-93
- -----------------
-
- * MacWEEK -- 06-Sep-93, Vol. 7, #35
- LANsurveyor 1.01 -- pg. 51
- Rae Assist 1.02 -- pg. 51
- MarcoPolo 2.0.3 -- pg. 56
-
- * MacUser -- Oct-93
- Astound -- pg. 46
- PowerBook Utilities -- pg. 48
- PBTools
- Power To Go
- CPU 2.0
- Ofoto 2.0 -- pg. 50
- Radius PrecisionColor Pivot -- pg. 51
- Apple LaserWriter Select 300 -- pg. 52
- PowerTeam -- pg. 53
- DateBook Pro and TouchBASE Pro -- pg. 54
- Freedom of Press Classic and T-Script -- pg. 58
- Local Expert and NavigaTour -- pg. 62
- powerbox -- pg. 71
- ColorUP -- pg. 71
- Lunicus -- pg. 71
- Eight Ball Deluxe -- pg. 72
- StrataType 3d -- pg. 73
- AV Macs & Technologies -- pg. 76
- Newton MessagePad -- pg. 101
- Double-speed CD-ROM Drives -- pg. 110
- AppleCD 300
- OAI CD/Turbo 6-Pak
- Toshiba TXM3401E1
- Texel DM-5024
- NEC MultiSpin 74
-
- * Macworld -- Oct-93
- Acrobat Exchange 1.0 and Acrobat Distiller 1.0 -- pg. 44
- CoSA After Effects 1.1 -- pg. 45
- OrangePC -- pg. 47
- Working Model 1.0 -- pg. 49
- Common Ground 1.0 -- pg. 51
- PowerTeam 1.0 -- pg. 51
- Kodak ColorSense 1.0 -- pg. 53
- Stacker for Macintosh 1.0.1 -- pg. 55
- BrushStrokes 1.0 -- pg. 55
- MarketMaster Manager 3.5 -- pg. 57
- CA-Cricket Draw III 2.0 -- pg. 59
- eDisk 1.0 -- pg. 59
- mira 35 -- pg. 61
- Sum Total 1.01 -- pg. 63
- Computer Crayon -- pg. 63
- Macintosh Common Lisp 2.0 -- pg. 65
- Calendar Maker 4.0 -- pg. 65
- PowerPacks 2.0 -- pg. 67
- Safe or Sorry 1.0 -- pg. 67
- Seven Days in August -- pg. 69
- Gulliver -- pg. 69
- Musicshop 1.0 -- pg. 71
- PaintBoard Turbo -- pg. 71
- Spelling Coach Professional 4.0 -- pg. 79
- V for Victory: Utah Beach -- pg. 79
- StatView 4.01 -- pg. 81
- Daily Sports Quiz 1.0 -- pg. 81
- CLImate 1.0 -- pg. 83
- Address Express -- pg. 83
- BlackJack Trainer -- pg. 85
- Indiana Jones and the Fate of Atlantis -- pg. 85
- The AV Macs -- pg. 88
- Quadra 840AV
- Centris 660AV
- 16" and 17" Monitors -- pg. 98
- (too many to list)
- High-speed Fax Modems -- pg. 106
- (too many to list)
- Statistical Programs -- pg. 116
- (too many to list)
-
-
- $$
-
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