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- TidBITS#216/07-Mar-94
- =====================
-
- As the anticipation for PowerPC news builds, we bring the bad
- news of another virus sighting and the decimation of the
- community Info-Mac archive site. Craig O'Donnell dispenses
- more speaker wisdom; Tom Abbott reviews a PowerBook 160 upgrade;
- America Online, CompuServe, and NIFTY-Serve improve their
- Internet access; and finally, Mark Gavini relates his discussion
- with Intel about why he should switch to Pentium rather than buy
- a PowerPC Mac.
-
- 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 1990-1994 Adam & Tonya Engst. Details at end of issue.
- Automated info: <info@tidbits.com> Comments: <ace@tidbits.com>
- --------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Topics:
- MailBITS/07-Mar-94
- PowerPC Intro
- New Virus, Updates Announced
- Internet Access Improves, Sort Of
- Put a Little 'Magic' in Your PowerBook
- Speaker Notes
- A Conversation With Intel
- Reviews/07-Mar-94
-
- [Archived as /info-mac/per/tb/tidbits-216.etx; 30K]
-
-
- MailBITS/07-Mar-94
- ------------------
- The big news last week was the decimation of the Info-Mac archive
- site at <sumex-aim.stanford.edu> by an unknown cracker. This
- troglodyte seems to have gotten his jollies deleting hundreds of
- files at a public Internet resource and depositing kiddie-porn,
- along with an undoubtedly bogus email address. Needless to say,
- the Info-Mac archives will be down for a while as the moderators
- rebuild them from the mirror sites (yet another good reason for
- mirror sites!). Please use one of the mirror sites mentioned in
- TidBITS #213_ to retrieve old files. If you have any clues as to
- who might have been so offensively stupid as to have done this,
- feel free to tell me or to <info-mac-request@sumex-
- aim.stanford.edu> and we'll hopefully be able to put the
- information to good use. Jeff Sikkema <jsikkema@delphi.com> was
- connected when the cracker was deleting files and watched,
- frustrated and helpless, as files disappeared. Jeff sent me email
- immediately, but I unfortunately didn't receive it in time to do
- anything more than forward to the appropriate people, all of whom
- had already realized by that time. We'll find out the proper
- course of action should anyone see this sort of thing happen
- again, an Internet 911 number as Jeff put it, and publish that
- information here. The Internet was built on trust and cooperation,
- and it's unacceptable to allow this sort of vandalism to sully our
- community resources.
-
-
- **Jonathan Schultz** <schultz@iastate.edu> reminded us that
- Alarming Events is one of several former CE Software products that
- are now published and supported by PrairieSoft, not a current CE
- product as we implied in TidBITS #215_. PrairieSoft -- 515/225-
- 3720
-
-
- **Connectix** has announced plans to port RAM Doubler to the Power
- Macs sometime in the next few months. I don't believe the current
- version works on the Power Macs under emulation mode, which isn't
- too surprising given the low level at which it hooks into the
- operating system. Connectix -- 800/950-5880 -- 415/571-5100 --
- 415/571-5195 (fax) -- connectix@aol.com
-
-
- **Claris Resolve** has faded away entirely, with Claris announcing
- that it will no longer continue development work on the
- spreadsheet. Claris will continue to support Resolve until 31-Mar-
- 95 and will sell Resolve through 31-Mar-94. Resolve simply didn't
- sell enough copies to be worth the effort, and Claris is
- encouraging registered Resolve users to switch to ClarisWorks
- 2.1's spreadsheet module, sweetening the encouragement with a mere
- $29 upgrade fee until 30-Sep-94 (have your Resolve registration
- number ready and call the 800 number below). Although people with
- trivial spreadsheet needs will find ClarisWorks an acceptable
- substitute, serious Resolve users will probably switch to Excel,
- especially considering that Lotus 1-2-3 on the Macintosh hasn't
- exactly become the de facto standard. Claris -- 800/544-8554
-
-
- **Positive Experiences?** -- Craig Isaacs
- <craig.i@applelink.apple.com> wrote to suggest that we not only
- talk about negative (but constructive) experiences in our Caveat
- Emptor column, but also positive experiences. Upon reflection, I
- realized that Craig raises a good point. It doesn't make the world
- a better place to print "I called Apple and they were nice to me."
- However, if you've had a positive experience with a company that
- will be instructive to other users, perhaps in pursuing a line of
- inquiry or working to fix odd bugs, and which may serve as a
- positive example for other companies, then publishing that
- information may improve the world.
-
-
- **Floppy Concerns** -- There has been concern that people would
- have trouble replacing the floppy drive in an old SE/30 or Plus,
- since those machines cannot physically accept the new manual
- inject drives. This came up because an Apple rep speaking at a
- seminar for Apple support coordinators in higher education said
- all Macs sent in for floppy repairs would receive a new manual
- inject drive. Luckily, we have confirmed (from a contact within
- Apple) that Apple has several companies repairing the old
- SuperDrives and the even-older 800K drives. So, if your SE's drive
- goes, you can replace it with a comparable drive. It might be nice
- to get a fancy new floppy, but it would be pointless since you
- couldn't insert disks into it. Of course, whether or not it's
- worth it to replace the floppy drive is another story entirely,
- given the price of Macs like the Quadra 605.
-
-
- PowerPC Intro
- -------------
- by Mark H. Anbinder, News Editor -- mha@baka.ithaca.ny.us
- Technical Support Coordinator, BAKA Computers
-
- The 21st century is close at hand, and we're impressed that Apple
- is doing a better job of taking advantage of technology at its
- disposal. Rather than inviting just a select few to next Monday's
- gala introduction of the Power Mac line, Apple is "inviting" the
- whole world, or at least the northern hemisphere, by making the
- introduction available for satellite downlink.
-
- We're told that the live satellite telecast is scheduled for 10:00
- AM Eastern Standard Time (EST is GMT -5) on Monday 14-Mar-94 and
- should run approximately an hour and a half. A repeat telecast is
- scheduled for 1:00 PM EST the same day.
-
- The Ku band telecasts will be carried by the G-Star satellite on
- 2/7H, at a frequency of 12096.
-
- Information from:
- Apple propaganda
-
-
- New Virus, Updates Announced
- ----------------------------
- by Mark H. Anbinder, News Editor -- mha@baka.ithaca.ny.us
-
- According to a bulletin from Professor Gene Spafford of Purdue
- University, a new Macintosh virus was recently discovered by Mac
- users in Italy. This virus, dubbed "INIT-9403," has the potential
- to erase information on hard disks attached to infected computers.
-
- The virus apparently was initially spread through altered versions
- of pirated commercial software. Once installed by the software,
- the virus alters the Finder, and may insert copies of itself in
- various data compression and archive applications. From there, the
- virus can spread to other Macs. After a certain number of files
- have been infected by a given copy of the virus, it erases disks
- connected to the system.
-
- Although the virus has so far only been seen on Macs running the
- Italian version of the Macintosh operating system, it's important
- that all users upgrade their antiviral utilities to combat it and
- help prevent further spread. New versions of Central Point Anti-
- Virus, Rival, SAM, and Virex, the commercial entries in the Mac
- antiviral field, are already available and may be obtained from
- the vendors. Updates may also be available from company BBSs or
- the Internet. Antiviral updates are typically available in:
-
- ftp://rascal.ics.utexas.edu/mac/virus/
-
- Search strings for the new virus for use in Jeff Shulman's
- shareware Virus Detective will be sent to registered users. An
- update to Chris Johnson's free Gatekeeper package is anticipated
- by the end of this week.
-
- John Norstad of Northwestern University quickly released version
- 3.4 of his popular freeware utility, Disinfectant, available at:
-
- ftp://ftp.acns.nwu.edu/pub/disinfectant/disinfectant34.sea.hqx
-
- Norstad has since announced that a bug in 3.4 causes error
- messages to appear when the user scans the System Folder on a Mac
- using System 7.1 and System Enablers 003 (for the LC III) or 040
- (for the Centris or Quadra 610, 650, and 800). He plans to release
- an update within the next several days, but assures users that the
- Disinfectant 3.4 application and protection INIT are effective
- against the virus. Users should ignore the error messages that
- appear when the Enabler file is scanned. The protection INIT has
- no known problems and can be used without fear of erroneous error
- messages coming up.
-
- Users who typically get their antiviral utilities from the Info-
- Mac archive at <sumex-aim.stanford.edu> should use another site
- this time due to the deletion of files by an as-yet-unknown
- infiltrator (see above for details).
-
- Information from:
- Gene Spafford -- spaf@cs.purdue.edu
- John Norstad -- j-norstad@nwu.edu
-
-
- Internet Access Improves, Sort Of
- ---------------------------------
- For those thousands of people trapped on America Online and
- yearning to escape onto the Internet, well, you still can't. But
- the gates were lowered slightly last week when AOL provided access
- to Usenet news via an interface that's somewhat similar to the one
- used for reading forums on AOL. In other words, as a newsreader,
- it stinks, but it's a start. I won't slam on it too much here
- except to note that if you plan on reading a lot of Usenet news,
- the cost may add up fast if you're near the point where you pay
- for additional hours each month anyway, especially at the sleep-
- inducing 2400 bps that still bogs down most Macintosh users. Use
- the keyword "Internet" to visit that area, and be warned that they
- don't even pretend that it's complete yet.
-
- In other news, Povl Pedersen <pope@imv.aau.dk> mentions that
- CompuServe is beta testing the ability to telnet into CompuServe
- machines via the Internet address <compuserve.com>. This could
- make CompuServe significantly more affordable for many non-U.S.
- readers without local CompuServe phone numbers. The only liability
- currently is that you must use the pokey 7-bit Kermit transfer
- protocol with small block sizes to transfer files. And to answer
- the question, "So why would you bother if you have Internet
- access?" the reason is that a number of companies provide tech
- support only on CompuServe and will not even respond to Internet
- email through the gateway. And, for the moment it's also a good
- way to get to ZiffNet/Mac, my favorite place for getting the
- MacWEEK top stories two days before the magazine arrives in my
- mailbox. It would be nice to see other services such as AOL,
- eWorld, and AppleLink offer such a Telnet connection as well since
- they either are or promise to be major Macintosh support areas.
-
- To continue the overseas bent in this article, Masato Ogawa
- <ogawa@ga.sony.co.jp>, who has helped us for years by
- redistributing TidBITS in Japan, tells us that Japan's largest
- online service, NIFTY-Serve, now provides enhanced Internet
- access. You can send email to anyone on NIFTY-Serve with the
- address format:
-
- NIFTY-ID@niftyserve.or.jp
-
- Those who have CompuServe or ZiffNet/Mac accounts can send email
- directly to NIFTY-Serve by prefixing the NIFTY-Serve userid with:
-
- >NIFTY:
-
- Finally, and this is the most interesting, you can telnet into
- NIFTY-Serve via the address <r2.niftyserve.or.jp>. Masato says,
- "At this time, NIFTY's surcharge is only 10 yen/minute
- (approximately 110 yen/dollar, currently). There is no additional
- fee from NIFTY for using Telnet. Of course, you need a NIFTY ID,
- which you can get by contacting a CompuServe representative
- (because NIFTY and CompuServe have a strong relationship). There
- is an English menu system called NIFTY-ES, but it's not a
- "translated" interface of the Japanese interface, but is instead
- separate forums. So you need Japanese literacy to join most of the
- NIFTY forums (and you may need a Japanese script for Macintosh
- such as the Japanese Language Kit. It really works, I used it)."
-
-
- Put a Little 'Magic' in Your PowerBook
- --------------------------------------
- by Tom Abbott -- yoshiko@ccwf.cc.utexas.edu
-
- In days gone by, people worked to make their cars go faster. These
- days we work to make our computers go faster. We get under the
- hood to improve our machines by adding more RAM, a bigger hard
- drive, a faster modem, or a faster CPU. But what do you do if you
- want to juice up your PowerBook? The PowerBook offers precious
- little elbow room once you get inside.
-
- Technology and product innovation move so fast that the rate of
- new product introduction and consequent obsolescence can be a
- tough pill to swallow. PowerBooks are no exception; the PowerBook
- 160 I bought in late 1992 was superseded within 9 months by the
- PowerBook 165 - a 33 MHz factory hot rod!
-
- The pundits keep telling us that our old computers are still quite
- capable and we should be philosophical about progress, but still
- it is galling to see how much faster newer Macs can be. In
- computers, speed is one of those things like fresh fruit, you just
- can't get enough. My PowerBook 160 is a great box! It has
- virtually replaced my faithful SE/30, but that old 16 MHz SE/30
- seems faster. Maybe that is why Apple brought out the 160 Turbo
- (aka PowerBook 165) so quickly.
-
- Apple did not, however, offer an upgrade path for those of us who
- own PowerBooks 140s or 160s or the Duo 210s, but after-market
- vendors have come to the rescue. Several vendors offer upgrades
- that bring slower PowerBooks to the maximum speed for their
- PowerBook family. The PowerBook 140 or 145 can be brought up to
- the speed of a 170 at 25 MHz with an FPU; the PowerBook 160 can go
- up to 33 MHz with FPU giving the performance of a PowerBook 180;
- and the Duo 210 can go to 33 MHz, essentially becoming a Duo 230.
-
- MacProducts, located in Austin, Texas, offers PowerBook upgrades.
- They have sold Mac upgrades since the first 128K Mac and earned a
- reputation for good products and service. Their prices are about
- the same as other vendors, but they seemed an obvious choice for
- me since they're only a few minutes drive away.
-
- Upgrading is not a do-it-yourself operation; in all cases, you
- must send your PowerBook to the vendor for the transplant. That's
- good, because when they finish, they put a one year warranty on
- their work. When I told them that I wanted to write this article,
- they agreed to let me watch and ask questions. In the end the
- upgrade was performed during the week before Christmas, it was
- hectic there and I didn't observe the surgery, but I did talk with
- the technician who performed the operation and with the chief
- engineer who developed the process.
-
-
- Service
- All of the companies that do the PowerBook upgrades have you ship
- your machine to them by express courier, promise 24-hour
- turnaround, and ship it back to you the same way. [Note that this
- is no longer true - see below. -Adam] If you've lost your original
- packing, MacProducts sends a specially designed shipping box to
- protect your PowerBook. When you call them, they talk you through
- the whole process and fax an order form to help you get everything
- right. In my case, since I live in Austin, these considerations
- did not apply, but just to check them out, I called their 800 line
- and went through the whole process with one of their telephone
- consultants. I found him to be polite and knowledgeable.
-
- When I told him at the end that I was local, he said, "Come on in,
- we'll get it for you in half a day." That is exactly what
- happened. I hung around for a while and talked with the staff
- while my precious was in surgery then went out for coffee; when I
- came back two hours later the technician brought my revitalized
- PowerBook out and proudly demonstrated the fact that the "About
- This Mac" window believed it was living in a PowerBook 180. He
- said they usually like to burn-in the new upgrades overnight
- before shipping them out, but since I was coming back the next day
- to interview them, I could take it with me and check it out
- myself. So I did.
-
-
- Results
- Over the past two weeks, I've run just about every piece of
- software I own from Color It! to HyperCard to MacSLIP to Nisus to
- Z-Term. I have not found any compatibility problems. The machine
- is visibly faster, but higher processing speed does not affect
- disk operations, so my bloated system with its Japanese fonts
- still takes a while to come up.
-
- Using Scott Berfield's Speedometer 3.23, I ran the full gamut of
- Speedometer tests before and after the upgrade. Speedometer comes
- with standard results for most Macs compared with the Mac Classic
- which scores 1.0 on all tests. The numbers from Speedometer are
- more meaningful when compared to other Speedometer tests, so I've
- included Scott's Classic and stock PowerBook 180 readings for
- comparison with my "160+" along with the percent change from the
- 160 to the 160+.
-
- Speed Test: Classic 180 160 160+ % change
- -----------------------------------------------------------
- CPU 0.98 8.61 6.36 8.56 +34.59 %
- Math 0.98 28.27 8.98 30.36 +338.08 %
- K Whetstones 0.99 57.08 10.38 58.29 +561.56 %
- Fast Fourier 0.99 31.31 7.51 31.21 +415.58 %
-
- It is obvious that installing the 33 MHz 68882 and 68030 gives the
- PowerBook 160+ a lot more hustle in the mathematical operations
- department, but what does this amount to in real world, see it on
- my screen results? Subjectively, I can see that everything I do is
- smoother. At this point, I'm not doing much spreadsheet work on
- the PowerBook, mostly word processing, graphics, and
- telecommunications. There is no doubt that the accelerated
- PowerBook does everything more quickly. I timed scrolling a 5K
- Nisus file that contained mixed Japanese and English text, a
- typical task for me. Before the upgrade it took 5.49 seconds from
- top to bottom afterwards, it made the trip in 3.01 seconds - about
- 45 percent faster. That's impressive!
-
-
- Is it worth it?
- Magic upgrades cost from $129 to $399 depending on which upgrade
- you need. If you do number crunching or something that does a lot
- of calculating you will see a truly impressive gains. According to
- the tech-guys at MacProducts, the pick-up in speed is more
- impressive on the PowerBook 140. In my case I'm a writer and
- HyperCard developer. The gains are not so dramatic, but they are
- there. The PowerBook 160 - Turbo is faster at everything. Am I
- happy with it, Yes. Is it worth it? Yes, I think so.
-
- What other PowerBooks can be upgraded? At present, the following
- upgrades are being offered: 140 to 170, 145 to 170*, 160 to 180,
- for the PowerBooks, and a Duo 210 to 230 upgrade. You can give
- your PowerBook a new lease on life with one of these upgrades.
-
- Model Speed Upgrade to Price
- -------------------------------------------
- PB140 16 MHz 25 MHz +FPU $329.00
- PB145 25 MHz add FPU $129.00*
- PB160 25 MHz 33 MHz +FPU $399.00
- Duo 210 25 MHz 33 MHz $399.00
- * At this time they cannot add an FPU to the PowerBook 145B.
-
- Upgrading the current generation of PowerBooks has a finite
- limitation, because the new models are out and almost all of the
- candidates for this kind of upgrade are already out there in
- someone's hands. Eventually vendors who do only PowerBook upgrades
- will move on, but a well-rounded shop like MacProducts should be
- around for the duration, a comforting thought. The folks at
- MacProducts graciously took the time to talk with me in the midst
- of busily filling customer's orders three days before Christmas.
- From what I could observe, they try hard to please people. I'm
- pleased with my hot rod PowerBook 160, and if your PowerBook seems
- in need of a tonic, give them a call at 800/622-8721.
-
- [Note: Digital Eclipse has announced the F/25X, a PowerBook
- accelerator for the PowerBook 140 or 145 that replaces the
- original PowerBook daughtercard that holds a 16 MHz 68030 with a
- card containing a 25 MHz 68030 and an FPU, essentially converting
- a 140 or 145 into a 170 sans active matrix screen. The Digital
- Eclipse card does not require you to send in your PowerBook, but
- must be installed by a qualified technician, and you must return
- the old daughtercard to Digital Eclipse. The list price for the
- F/25X is $399, but through 11-Mar-94, you can purchase it for
- $299. Digital Eclipse -- 800/289-3374 -- 510/547-6101 -- 510/547-
- 6104 (fax) -- desipro@aol.com]
-
-
- Speaker Notes
- -------------
- by Craig O'Donnell -- dadadata@world.std.com
- Author of Cool Mac Sounds, Second Edition
-
- People complain that the low cost Sony speakers such as the SRS57
- and SRS58 models "cut off" beeps because they power down when
- there's no audio signal. This is true (it's sort of a sleep mode
- to save batteries if you're using your Sony speakers on the space
- shuttle or at the beach). Unlike a PowerBook, sleep happens even
- when you're using the AC wall wart with them. But if you leave
- your Sound control panel set to seven - all the way up - and
- adjust the volume from the little Sonys you won't have this
- problem. I bought SRS-57s back when they were just about the only
- thing available under $200 and they've worked great like this for
- me.
-
- Many people are wondering about the Yamaha YST-M10 speakers - they
- are powered and shielded and priced around $80 to $90 mail order.
- They are absolutely the best buy in this price class. They provide
- a respectable 10 watts, electronic bass enhancement that makes
- them sound nice and warm, and a presence control.
-
- Ignore the idiotic review in a recent Macworld (Apr-94). The
- speakers are not the same quality as a $6,000 set of Meyer powered
- HD1s; they are most certainly not recommended as stage monitors
- for a band; and the controls (Presence and Volume) are small,
- poorly shaped knobs that win my Don Norman "Duh" Prize for the
- month. The knobs aren't knurled, making them hard to grasp and
- there is no detent or "pointer" so you can check the setting by
- feel. As an ex-audio engineer I know exactly how important this
- is.
-
- This cavilling aside, these Yamaha's are a steal for anyone using
- an AV Mac or a desktop Mac with built-in CD-ROM. And remember that
- the Power Macs are coming - with stereo 16-bit sound input and
- output.
-
- You would only choose AppleDesign speakers over these Yamaha
- speakers if you need two inputs on the speakers themselves for
- your Mac's beeps and an external CD ROM drive. The YST-M10s have
- only one stereo input (like most powered speakers except the Apple
- and Altec models).
-
- Finally, Mark Anbinder and Martin Hying were wondering about why a
- CD-ROM drive in an AV Mac "skipped" when played through
- AppleDesign Powered Speakers. The problem is that the AppleDesign
- speakers have a "noise gate" inside for the 1/8-inch input only.
- This cuts out low level signals (hiss, for example) because the
- design assumption was that this would be plugged into the cheesy
- 8-bit output of your typical LC or Performa.
-
- On an AV Mac, all it succeeds in doing is cutting off very low
- level audio, as you've discovered, on CDs like classical music
- with very quiet passages. To confirm this, listen to the AV output
- on headphones, and you won't hear any skipping. There is no noise
- gate on the RCA input section of the AppleDesign speakers. Try it;
- you'll see.
-
-
- A Conversation With Intel
- -------------------------
- by Mark Gavini -- gavini@apple.com
-
- As you might have seen, Intel is running ads in MacWEEK and other
- Macintosh magazines touting their 80x86 chip architecture as an
- alternative to the PowerPC chip as developed by Apple, IBM, and
- Motorola.
-
- I called the number, received the literature and called the 800
- number they reference for technical questions (I encourage you and
- all your Macintosh friends to do the same. The number is 800/228-
- 4549).
-
- Here are the relevant points of our conversation:
-
- I spoke with a pleasant-sounding woman and mentioned that I had
- seen Intel's ad in MacWEEK and was confused. "Can I run my Mac
- software on an Intel chip?" I asked.
-
- "Well, not exactly," she replied. "There are many Macintosh
- programs that have Intel-based equivalents, such as Microsoft Word
- and Excel."
-
- "Hmm," I said. "I use Claris MacWrite and Claris Resolve. But can
- I run my Mac operating system on Intel chips?"
-
- "Well, not exactly," she replied, "you would have to use DOS or
- Windows. Intel wanted to provide Mac users who are considering the
- technology change to PowerPC with an option, since to use PowerPC
- they will have to buy all new hardware."
-
- "But Apple tells me that I can run all my Mac software and the Mac
- operating system on the PowerPC, can I do that on the Intel chips,
- or will I have to learn a completely new operating system?" I
- asked innocently. I'm glad she couldn't see my grin.
-
- "No, you would have to learn a new operating system," she admitted
- reluctantly.
-
- "I don't think I want to do that. But what about the price? If
- your Intel chips will cost me less I might consider it. What is
- the cost of an entry level Pentium system?" I continued. This was
- going to be good...
-
- "Intel does not sell computers, we just sell the microprocessor,
- but you would probably see street prices of around $2,500 for a
- Pentium based system," she replied, finding herself on safer
- ground briefly.
-
- "Well, Apple says that their PowerPC systems will start around
- $2,000. Can I use all my peripherals and internal components like
- video cards on a Pentium system?" I queried.
-
- Her answer came back even more reluctantly. "Probably not since
- the internal architecture of Macintosh computers is different from
- Intel-based computers."
-
- "So let me get this straight," I said, driving in the final nail.
- "I can use neither my Macintosh operating system nor any of my Mac
- software programs, and if I want to use software that also exists
- on the Mac, I must buy new Windows versions of Macintosh programs
- that I don't even currently use. I must learn a new operating
- system, and buy all new hardware that may cost more than a PowerPC
- Mac. And all that, just to use Intel chips. It doesn't sound like
- much of a choice to me. Thank you for your time, I'm no longer
- confused."
-
- "You're welcome." Click.
-
-
- Reviews/07-Mar-94
- -----------------
-
- * MacWEEK -- 28-Feb-94, Vol. 8, #9
- SuperMac Thunder IIGX 1360 -- pg. 31
- Radius PrecisionColor Pro 24X and PhotoBooster -- pg. 31
-
- * InfoWorld -- 28-Feb-94, Vol. 16, #9
- PowerBook Duo 270c -- pg. 73
-
- * MacUser -- Feb-94
- HP LaserJet 4MP -- pg. 51
- WordPerfect 3.0 -- pg. 54
- Data Translation Media 100
- & Radius VideoVision Studio -- pg. 56
- 40 MHz 68040 Accelerators -- pg. 58
- QuicKeys 3.0 -- pg. 60
- HP Portable DeskWriter 310 -- pg. 61
- Fontographer 4.0 -- pg. 62
- Tribe TribeStar -- pg. 64
- HiQ 2.0 -- pg. 69
- QuickFLIX! -- pg. 70
- Strata StudioPro -- pg. 73
- DuoMates & PowerLink Presentor -- pg. 77
- Myst -- pg. 83
- LightningScan Portable -- pg. 83
- Hello! Music!, SC-7 Sound Module,
- & SoundEngine Music Module -- pg. 84
- Crystal Crazy -- pg. 84
- Final Draft -- pg. 84
- Paint Alchemy -- pg. 85
- JAG II -- pg. 85
- DeskTape -- pg. 86
- Now Fun! -- pg. 86
- Hell Cab -- pg. 86
- KaleidaGraph -- pg. 87
- Shoebox -- pg. 87
- Geocart -- pg. 88
- WizTools -- pg. 89
- 16" and 17" Color Monitors -- pg. 92
- Low Cost Color Scanners -- pg. 129
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