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- TidBITS#255/05-Dec-94
- =====================
-
- Tune into TidBITS this week to find numerous MailBITS - including
- news of MacTCP 2.0.6, a QuickMail update deal that includes
- QuicKeys, how to get Apple press releases via email, and more
- on Intel's Pentium problems. We have articles out about
- Internet Config, a new program that simplifies setting up
- MacTCP programs, and Kids World, a screen saver construction
- kit for kids. The issue finishes with holiday gift suggestions
- from readers.
-
- This issue of TidBITS sponsored in part by:
- * APS Technologies -- 800/443-4199 -- <sales@apstech.com>
- Makers of hard drives, tape drives, and neat SCSI accessories.
- For APS price lists, email: <aps-prices@tidbits.com> <---- new
- * Northwest Nexus -- 206/455-3505 -- http://www.halcyon.com
- Providing access to the global Internet. <info@halcyon.com>
-
- Copyright 1990-1994 Adam & Tonya Engst. Details at end of issue.
- Automated info: <info@tidbits.com> Comments: <ace@tidbits.com>
- --------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Topics:
- MailBITS/05-Dec-94
- Internet Config Ships
- Kids World
- Holiday Gift Suggestions
- Reviews/05-Dec-94
-
- [Archived as /info-mac/per/tb/tidbits-255.etx; 30K]
-
-
- MailBITS/05-Dec-94
- ------------------
- Last week I switched the way our email comes in from UUCP to SMTP,
- which provides for a little more speed in receiving incoming
- messages (and runs over the 56K Frame Relay connection rather than
- the modem). The transition may have produced a few bounces, but by
- the time you read this most everything should have been ironed
- out. However, please note that auto-replies (such as the <aps-
- prices@tidbits.com> address) won't be handled any more quickly,
- since nothing currently does auto-replies via SMTP.
-
- The technique I'm using may be of interest. Originally,
- <tidbits.com> pointed at my UUCP account. Now, <tidbits.com>
- points at <king.tidbits.com>, my SE/30 running MailShare. I set
- MailShare up to forward all the auto-reply addresses to
- <penguin.tidbits.com>, which is my 660AV running UUCP/Connect. So,
- when you send email to <info@tidbits.com>, it goes to my SE/30,
- then MailShare forwards it back to my provider's host to wait for
- the next UUCP connection, at which point your message comes into
- the 660AV, is processed, and awaits the next connection to go back
- out. In contrast, my personal mail waits on the SE/30 until I have
- Eudora check my POP account there.
-
- Also, since UUCP accepts email for all userids at the domain, mail
- to "aec" or other incorrect addresses used to get through to my
- machine and I'd find it weeks later. Now, incorrectly addressed
- email will bounce back to its sender. [ACE]
-
-
- **MacTCP 2.0.6** is out in the form of an updater application that
- takes a clean copy of MacTCP 2.0.4 and converts it into MacTCP
- 2.0.6. I cannot emphasize "clean" sufficiently - you _cannot_
- update a copy of MacTCP 2.0.4 that has ever been opened or loaded
- into memory; instead, you _must_ use a new copy from a master
- disk. That said, the update fixes some relatively technical bugs
- and offers performance enhancements primarily for SLIP and PPP
- dialup users. The update is definitely worthwhile, especially if
- you've experienced problems with 2.0.4. There's also an updater
- from 2.0.2 to 2.0.4 available, if all you have is a copy of 2.0.2.
- There are no updaters from MacTCP 1.x, though, so if that's all
- you have, you'll have to get a copy of MacTCP 2.0.x from the usual
- sources (System 7.5, many commercial Internet programs, my book,
- and so on). Check my Web site for instructions on updating if you
- have MacTCP 2.0.4 from the second edition of Internet Starter Kit
- for Macintosh.
-
- ftp://ftp.tidbits.com/pub/tidbits/tisk/tcp/mactcp-204-to-206-updt.hqx
- ftp://ftp.tidbits.com/pub/tidbits/tisk/tcp/mactcp-20x-to-204-updt.hqx
- http://www.tidbits.com/tidbits/
-
-
- **QuickMail early birds** miss out on CE's latest offer. Hoping to
- entice more of their installed user base to upgrade to QuickMail
- 3.0 (see TidBITS-240_), CE Software is now offering a free copy of
- QuicKeys (the company's personal automation software) for each
- multi-user QuickMail package upgraded. (Upgrading costs $12 per
- user.) The offer is valid until the end of December, 1994. Mixed
- reviews and the absence of academic or quantity discounts for the
- upgrades have kept many sites from moving to QuickMail 3.0.
- SoftArc is even advertising "sidegrades" to FirstClass from
- earlier versions of QuickMail at a lower per-user price. CE
- Software -- 800/523-7638 -- 515/221-1801 -- 515/221-2258 (fax) --
- <cesoftware@aol.com> [MHA]
-
-
- **Tom Collins** <tcollins@emg.com> and others pointed out that
- there's a little checkbox in the MountCache Cache dialog that
- comes set to Disable Custom Icons (see my complaint in
- TidBITS-254_). I presume Casa Blanca included that option
- because it can slow down the disk to use it, but Tom said he
- hadn't noticed any speed differences. So now I can have my
- custom icons and my 100- plus percent speedup. My mistake is
- doubly embarrassing since, while visiting Casa Blanca's offices
- this spring, I suggested the name MountCache for Drive7's
- utility for mounting removables and providing driver level
- caching. [ACE]
-
-
- **Johnathon Suker** <jlsuker@uci.edu> commented that my technique
- of copying new System Folder files over the old ones and then
- moving them all back again could lead to trouble if some old and
- unnecessary System Update file or something similar was included
- by this process. I should have mentioned that I always go through
- the resulting folders and manually scan for files I know won't
- work with the new System. A slower method might involve opening
- both the old and the new folders and manually moving (from the old
- to the new) just non-Apple files that you know will work. [ACE]
-
-
- **Jason Polzin** <polzin@waisman.wisc.edu> writes:
- The AppleFax service mentioned in TidBITS-254_ is also available
- via anonymous FTP! All of the files are in Common Ground
- MiniViewer format. They include lots of great information such as
- 50 new features in System 7.5, and why you should use Virtual
- Memory if you have a Power Mac. Make sure to use the
- Color/Grayscale setting if you print to a PostScript laser printer
- or some of the text will not show up.
-
- ftp://ftp.info.apple.com/Apple.Support.Area/Apple.Fax.Documents/
-
- In addition SK Suh <sksuh@eworld.com> comments that the AppleFax
- 800 numbers do work in Canada.
-
-
- **Pentium Bugs, Part II** -- Following up on the Pentium division
- bug reported in TidBITS-253_, Intel has confirmed that the math
- error can occur in single, double, and extended precision divides
- and potentially impact the precision of results from the 4th to
- the 19th significant digit. Intel maintains that the bug will not
- affect most Pentium users, and that, statistically, the bug is not
- likely to occur in hundreds (or even thousands) of years of normal
- use. However, engineers, scientists, researchers, and other power
- users remain concerned about the bug, and reports have circulated
- in the mainstream media. Intel pledges to work with users of
- applications involving intensive floating point calculations and,
- if necessary, replace their chips. In the meantime, intensive
- discussion of the bug continues to take place in the newsgroup
- <comp.sys.intel> and a FAQ is available (in DOS ASCII format) at:
-
- ftp://www.isi.edu/pub/carlton/pentium/FAQ
-
- On a related note, a new bug has surfaced in write-back and write-
- through caches of the 100 MHz version of Intel's Pentium chip
- (P100). The bug prevents multithreading from functioning at all on
- operating systems capable of supporting it (Windows NT, OS/2, and
- Unix, among others). Although it's possible to disable those
- caches, this results in a 30 percent performance reduction. The
- bug does not occur on lower-clock speed versions of the Pentium.
- Intel claims it has fixed the problem and is shipping correct
- versions of the P100. [GD]
-
- Intel Technical support -- 800/628-8686 (US)
- 916/365-3551 (International) -- 44 (0) 793 696776 (Europe)
-
- Information from:
- InfoWorld -- 28-Nov-94, Vol. 16, #48
-
-
- Internet Config Ships
- ---------------------
- by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
-
- A new program from Peter Lewis and Quinn "The Eskimo!" will
- continue to cement the Macintosh's position as the preeminent
- Internet client platform. Internet Config centralizes Internet
- preferences, simplifying the process of configuring MacTCP-based
- programs with information such as your preferred email address,
- FTP helper application, and program for opening JPEG images.
- Before Internet Config, configuring all the programs with the same
- information was almost as bad as going to multiple doctors to have
- health care committed on you, given that each doctor asks for
- approximately the same information, but on a different form.
-
- Internet Config provides an interface for setting these
- preferences once and makes a database of those preferences
- available to other applications. In other words, after you enter
- your email address into Internet Config, both Anarchie and
- NewsWatcher can read it from the Internet Config database, and do
- not force you to enter it again and again.
-
- Internet Config manages the following groups of preferences:
-
- * Personal -- such as your real name and your signature
- * Email -- email address and other mail related details
- * News -- news server and related details
- * File Transfer -- download folder and preferred archive sites
- * Other Services -- default hosts for other services, like Web & Gopher
- * Fonts -- preferred font settings for screen and printer
- * File Types -- for mapping extensions to Macintosh file types
- * Helpers -- for mapping URLs to their help applications
-
- Programs must support Internet Config - there's no way for them to
- know about the preferences database otherwise. Luckily, the
- Internet Config development mailing list included most of the
- Macintosh Internet developers, and many of them have committed to
- supporting Internet Config in future versions of their programs.
- In addition, Peter Lewis's Register 1.1 and John Norstad's
- NewsWatcher 2.0b21 (to be released very soon) support it now.
- Applications slated to support Internet Config in the future
- include InterCon's TCP/Connect II, Aladdin's StuffIt family,
- Peter's Anarchie, and Jim Browne's NCSA Telnet.
-
- Although Internet Config has broad-based support already, support
- in additional programs is critical to its success. I _strongly_
- encourage all Internet programmers to support Internet Config.
- It's a relatively minor programming task from initial reports.
- John Norstad said, "I figured this [Internet Config] would be
- reasonably easy to support, and it turned out to be even easier.
- There were no major problems or stumbling blocks - just a bunch of
- really easy code, and it worked with no major hassles."
-
- Peter and Quinn have placed Internet Config and its source code in
- the public domain, and encourage others to build on it to provide
- additional functionality. Internet Config can play a huge role in
- making the Mac an even better Internet client, since it can make
- coherent the often confusing process of configuring many different
- programs.
-
- The official support address for Internet Config is <internet-
- config@share.com>. If you find a bug in Internet Config, forward
- details to that address. To discuss Internet Config in general,
- the <comp.sys.mac.comm> newsgroup is the best place to do so,
- since it allows programmers to stay in touch with the discussions
- without being overwhelmed with email.
-
- Once again, kudos to Peter and Quinn for a job well done. You can
- retrieve Internet Config from all the main Internet FTP sites.
-
- ftp://ftp.tidbits.com/pub/tidbits/tisk/tcp/internet-config-10.hqx
-
-
- Kids World
- ----------
- by Tonya Engst <tonya@tidbits.com>
-
- About twenty years ago, I enjoyed playing with colorforms.
- Colorforms came with shapes made of rubbery material, which could
- be placed on a smooth surface to create scenes. The smooth surface
- provided a theme (Spiderman, a tree ready to eat Charlie Brown's
- kite, and so on) and the shapes provided thematic characters and
- props. Bit Jugglers has taken the idea of colorforms, blended in
- sound and animation, and come out with a program called Kids
- World. Using Kids World, you set up a scene which can transmogrify
- into an animated screen saver module.
-
- You start off in Kids World by choosing between one of six
- background scenes (my favorites are haunted world, space world,
- and dinosaur world). You can also choose a plain white or black
- world, or import a PICT.
-
- After choosing a world, you then go to town with a wide selection
- of stamps - haunted world offers stamps for ghosts, witches, and
- the like; space world has space ships, rockets, and celestial
- objects. Although each world's stamps share an overall design, any
- stamp can go in any world. You want a buffalo in your backyard? No
- problem. Haunted windows in a farm house? The ghost happily
- obliges. If you tire of stamps, you can switch into painting mode
- and use a basic collection of painting tools to change the look of
- the world.
-
- Each stamp and painting tool has an associated sound - I
- especially like the Erase tool, which makes a vacuuming noise. All
- this play proved so absorbing that I spent a full hour on it,
- about 45 minutes longer than I had intended.
-
- When you tire of stamping and painting, you click the Go button to
- animate your creation. The scene and its stamps take over the
- entire screen and many of the stamps move about and make noises.
- Occasionally, the stamps interact with each other or the
- background - the ghostly door creaks open, rockets launch, witches
- cast spells, and the cowboy (if you wait a bit) lassos and is
- dragged off by the buffalo. Using an elegant interface, you have
- created an animated screen saver module. To edit your module, you
- click the Stop button, unobtrusively positioned in the upper
- left-hand corner. (The Stop button only shows in this Print
- Preview-like mode - it does not show when you use the module as a
- screen saver.)
-
- Bit Jugglers also sells UnderWare (see TidBITS-192_), a control
- panel that offers desktop patterns, background desktop animation,
- and screen saver functions. If you've seen UnderWare, you will
- recognize some of the stamps and animations.
-
- For more long-lasting entertainment, you can use the module with
- UnderWare or After Dark. A copy of UnderWare comes with Kids World
- (but only with a few modules). Bit Jugglers encourages users to
- share the Kids World modules they create with friends who have
- Kids World - unfortunately, it seems that Kids World modules saved
- in After Dark format require the 3.3 MB of Kids World shared code,
- making it impossible to share Kids World modules with those who
- have only After Dark.
-
- According to the manual, Kids World requires 4 MB RAM, System 7,
- and at least a 68020-based Macintosh. Kids World comes on two
- high-density disks, but Mac II owners can request 800K disks. The
- manual is short, clear, and accessible. Anyone trying to learn all
- there is to know about Kids World should read the ReadMe, which
- explains the Preferences dialog box.
-
- I played with Kids World on a Power Mac 7100, Apple 13-inch color
- monitor, 8 MB RAM (doubled to 16) and System 7.1.2. As one would
- hope, I found the speed to be excellent, with the only slow-downs
- (five to ten seconds) occurring after I pressed the Go button to
- see the module as an animated screen saver (the slow-down did get
- slower on Adam's 660AV, taking about twenty seconds for the same
- module). My main disappointment was that the interactions between
- the stamps and the worlds were not more numerous and varied.
- Perhaps, even now, imaginative people at Bit Jugglers are planning
- more interactions for version 2.0. In the meantime, Kids World
- lists for $59.95, but its street price should be around $30. The
- colorful and attractive interface works nicely; you won't find any
- Barbies, Power Rangers, or Barneys lurking within; the program has
- more bells and whistles than I mentioned in this review; and kids
- should have a blast with it.
-
- Bit Jugglers -- 415/968-3908 -- 415/968-5358 (fax)
- <jugglertec@aol.com>
-
-
- Holiday Gift Suggestions
- ------------------------
- If you've been wondering what might make a good Macintosh-oriented
- present, here are some suggestions, primarily from other TidBITS
- readers. These products should all be readily available from your
- local dealer or one of the mail order vendors. Enjoy!
-
-
- **Jack Rosenzweig** <bvjack@aol.com> writes:
- The coolest game out there by far is Marathon by Bungie, the
- Pathways Into Darkness guys. Marathon is way better, has amazing
- graphics, and is very fast on a Power Mac and pretty fast on
- slower machines. Net play is amazing. Marathon has the best Mac
- net play game we've seen yet. And we've done Spectre, Hornet, etc.
- I'm sure others will second this idea, what with 1,500 downloads
- of the much-anticipated demo from America Online in only six days.
- And that takes 43 minutes at 14,000 bps.
-
- ftp://archive.orst.edu/pub/mirrors/archive.umich.edu/mac/game/demo
- /marathon0.0demo.cpt.hqx
-
- (note the broken URL)
-
-
- **Doc Kinne** <kinnerc@snymorva.cs.snymor.edu> enthuses:
- All right, I'll admit it; I'm a simulations geek. This Maxis title
- sets the standard for the rest of their work. Fondly known as
- SimCity 2K, SimCity 2000 allows the simulator in you to go nuts!
- You can zone areas to nearly any size and shape you want. You can
- now build your city on hilly, three dimensional terrain with
- highways, tunnels, schools, libraries, desalination plants and
- water pumps. Are you part mole? Now you can build your city's
- subway and waterworks system underground as well! The user
- interface has been improved with tear-off menus and multi-function
- buttons. Best of all, SimCity 2K has just been released in a
- PowerPC-native mode. If you liked the original SimCity game, or
- any of Maxis's other products, get this game! Excuse me, I have to
- go deal with an alien spacecraft turning my downtown into a
- forest.
-
-
- **Brad Andrews** <brad.andrews@cas.org> comments:
- I recently was involved with previewing SimTown (a town simulator)
- and SimTower (which simulates a skyscraper) for a game magazine
- and I would strongly recommend either of these if they make it out
- for Christmas. (I would guess that SimTown might, while SimTower
- is less likely.) Both games live up to the free-form "play" of
- SimCity and seem a lot better than the other sequels I have
- played. Even with an early version with quirks I found myself
- coming back to try something new and see what it did. That speaks
- well of the game system and I am certain the final versions will
- be well worth the cost.
-
-
- **Jim Niemann** <niemann@meridiantc.com> seconds the motion (in
- one of only two duplicate suggestions we received):
- SimTower is the latest electronic toy from Maxis (SimCity, SimCity
- 2000, SimEarth, SimAnt, SimLife, SimFarm, A-Train). This time, you
- are building a skyscraper starting from a bare piece of land. You
- need to balance your construction costs against the tenant's
- needs. As you move up levels, disasters such as terrorists and
- fires start appearing. Overall, this is an addictive simulator
- both for adults and kids (8 and up).
-
-
- **Hewett Bill** <hewett.bill@mail.ndhm.gtegsc.com> suggests:
- The only games I play on the Mac are flight simulators. Hands down
- the best of these is Graphic Simulation's F/A-18 Hornet (see the
- review in the Jan-95 Macworld, in which it was awarded Best of
- '94). The 20 frame-per-second, highly detailed graphics and
- realistic mission scenarios bring the computer pilot into the
- action. The networking feature (which supports ARA) adds an
- additional dimension. I broke a sweat the first time a human
- opponent launched a Sidewinder missile close in! The current GSC
- supported version is 1.1.2 but there are very stable betas
- available on America Online and the net, 1.1.3b1 and b2, which add
- a more realistic (but more difficult to control) roll rate.
- Version 2.0 (Power Mac-native) and the add-on Korean Crisis
- missions should be available by Christmas. Version 2.0 is a free
- upgrade; now _that's_ customer support! If you add a Thrustmaster
- Joystick/Throttle to your Mac there's less concern over the
- repetitive stress of typing, since you literally never touch the
- keyboard!
-
-
- **SK Suh** <SKSuh@eworld.com> suggests a shareware game:
- My current Macintosh game affliction (or addiction) is Tetris Max
- 2.3.1, which is shareware (and has been, of course, duly
- registered).
-
- ftp://mrcnext.cso.uiuc.edu/pub/info-mac/game/arc/tetris-max-231.hqx
-
-
- **Harvey Barnett** <hbarnet@eis.calstate.edu> also recommends
- shareware:
- My favorite gift this season is a piece of shareware called
- Solitaire Till Dawn, published by Semicolon Software (see
- TidBITS-246_). I can spend hours playing it.
-
- ftp://mrcnext.cso.uiuc.edu/pub/info-mac/game/crd/solitaire-till-dawn-201.hqx
-
-
- **Dan Bensky** <dfbensky@u.washington.edu> suggests, for kids:
- I have purchased a Sierra Online game called The Castle of Dr.
- Brain for more than one active and intelligent eleven-year old.
- The game is a series of puzzles. Some require pattern
- identification, some math, some word searches, some codes, some
- simple programming - you get the idea. It is fascinating and fun
- for the kids and gives their brains a workout. Since it has three
- levels of difficulty (same type of problems, just harder) it can
- be played for quite a while. On top of all that, it is under $20
- (probably because the graphics, though serviceable, are nothing to
- rave about and the game is a couple of years old).
-
-
- **Sam and David Gasster** <gasster@aerospace.aero.org> offer:
- David, my three and a half year-old son, loves playing and
- learning on my Quadra 650. I have been running two of the Random
- House/Broderbund CD-ROM-based Living Books. They are Mercer
- Mayer's Just Grandma and Me, featuring the Little Critter, and
- Marc Brown's Arthur's Teacher Trouble. David enjoys these stories
- and learned to use the mouse to point and click in a short time.
- Each story opens with a menu that enables the reader to choose
- between "read-only" mode, "play-in-the-story" mode, and to choose
- the language (some come in English, Spanish, and Japanese). My son
- loves the "play-in-the-story" mode, where each page is displayed
- with live action and a narrator reads the highlighted text. The
- game then pauses to allow the child to "play" using the mouse.
- This is the best part because the programmers who developed these
- games have a great sense of humor. For example, click on Grandma
- Critter's mailbox and one of three things might happen: the door
- opens and a frog and water pour out, a monster hand reaches out
- and closes the box, or a cat shows up and meows. Part of the fun
- is searching each frame for these goodies. I sit and play it with
- him, but he can also occupy himself quite well without trashing my
- Mac. One of the things we do together is try to find specific
- words or items. If I ask him to find the word "Grandma" he looks
- at the text, finds the word and clicks it with the mouse and the
- computer responds by saying the word. Arthur's Teacher Trouble is
- about a spelling bee, so at the end there is a spelling section
- that we also have fun with. All-in-all the sound, graphics, skill
- level, and humor make this one of our favorite father-son learning
- hacks, and I plan to ask Santa for more in the Living Books series
- (around $40).
-
-
- **Sumo**, from MacSoft, attempts to take the sport of sumo
- wrestling and turn it into an abstract computer game. You control
- a ball and attempt to knock a similarly sized ball off a circular
- platform. As you progress through the rounds, you cycle through
- different opponents, each of which with different tactics and
- increasing skills. Two-player play is available, but one person
- must use the keyboard, which proved rather difficult in
- maneuvering a round ball around a circular platform.
-
-
- **Thermopad** -- For the latest in cool mousepads, check out the
- Thermopad. Between rubber padding and a textured lexan surface
- (like any other good mousepad) is a hidden pattern in heat-
- sensitive liquid crystal. On the right side, the heat of your hand
- reveals a Celtic pattern (it's invisible when cold). The left side
- of the mousepad sports an embedded liquid crystal thermometer that
- tells the room temperature in Fahrenheit and Celsius. It costs $16
- and is only available from Creative Edges Toy Company, which is
- offering to pay USPS shipping costs for TidBITS readers (so
- mention where you heard about it to save a couple of bucks).
- Creative Edges Toy Company -- 408/622-9854 --
- <schuyler@phantom.com>
-
-
- **Roger Weeks** <smegma@xmission.com> recommends a more esoteric
- program:
- For MIDI sequencing freaks and other musical types, I highly
- recommend Emagic's Notator Logic Audio as _the_ high end
- sequencing and notation program of choice. There's so much this
- program can do I'm still scratching the surface a month later.
- Bear in mind this was purchased with a $3,000 Digidesign Session
- 8, which enables me to record eight tracks of digital audio to my
- hard disk. However, this is the end-all and be-all of MIDI
- sequencers without all the nifty digital features. An environment
- window allows you to design your own MIDI delays, arpeggiators,
- and other effects. You can synchronize digital audio with MIDI
- data. A must have for any serious MIDI musician.
-
-
- **Neil E. Mickelson** <mickelsn@uiuc.edu> comments:
- Let's face it - Myst is the best game available for Mac
- adventurers right now, hands down. No violence (i.e. it meets
- parental approval), puzzles that make you use your head, and
- graphics and sound that draw you into the world like no other game
- I've ever played. This thing is a reason to buy a CD-ROM drive. I
- won't describe it more than that, since it would defeat the
- purpose of the game. This one's a keeper. Get it and lose yourself
- in the worlds of Myst today!!
-
-
- **Suman Chakrabarti** <scstr@leps5.phys.psu.edu> writes:
- I have a few gift recommendations.
-
- * LabelOnce labels from APS. These puppies are fantastic, and I
- love the ability to use only one label per disk, and just erase it
- whenever I need to. I use them on my floppies, 270 MB SyQuest
- cartridges, and VHS videotapes.
-
- * Dragon's Lair CD-ROM. This classic faithfully reproduces the old
- arcade game that was one of the first to cost 50 cents (instead of
- 25). It "only" goes to 8-bit color, but has good hints, and you
- can get the actual answers by calling ReadySoft at a 905-number
- and going through their menu. $39.95, I think, from Educorp.
-
- * Educorp is selling a CD-ROM bundle including Lunicus, Jump
- Raven, and Who Killed Sam Rupert for $79.95. I've only played
- Lunicus so far, and that's highly cool. The other two have had
- good reviews in various spots. I think Jump Raven might even have
- made Macworld's top games list this year.
-
- * No, I haven't gotten Myst, yet. I'm saving the best for last.
-
-
- **David Johnson** <dejohnso@asylum.cs.utah.edu> offers a custom
- suggestion:
- I recently found a great gift idea, made by Ultimate Software
- <ultim8soft@aol.com>. They make custom screensavers, and will scan
- your favorite photos into an After Dark module. I sent in pictures
- of my roommate's cats, and they sent back a module that displayed
- her kitties with cool zoom and melt effects, and had a little
- mouse running around with them. They have special modules for
- cats, dogs, and people.
-
- http://fly2.biology.uiowa.edu/ultimate.html
-
-
- Reviews/05-Dec-94
- -----------------
-
- * MacWEEK -- 28-Nov-94, Vol. 8, #46
- Adobe Acrobat 2.0 -- pg. 1
- QuickMail 3.0 -- pg. 33
- ClarisWorks 3.0 -- pg. 35
- NisusWriter 4.0 -- pg. 38
-
- * InfoWorld -- 28-Nov-94, Vol. 16, #48
- Fractal Design Painter 3.0 -- pg. 126
-
-
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