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- TidBITS#264/20-Feb-95
- =====================
-
- What would a week be without some corporate maneuvering? Inside we
- cover the latest news on Microsoft's antitrust proceedings,
- Apple's latest licensing of the Mac OS, plus some thoughts on
- the recent Apple/Voyager controversy. We round out the issue
- with news of a MacInTax fix, a brief summary of how you should
- attach files to mail messages using Eudora, and conclude with
- Part 2 of Nigel Perry's review of Nisus Writer.
-
- 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>
- * PowerCity Online -- <75361.532@compuserve.com> Email sales of
- 40,000+ items for Mac/PC. Send email with Subject: Order Info
- * Hayden Books, an imprint of Macmillan Computer Publishing
- Save 20% on all books via the Web -- http://www.mcp.com/
-
- Copyright 1990-1995 Adam & Tonya Engst. Details at end of issue.
- Information: <info@tidbits.com> Comments: <editors@tidbits.com>
- ---------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Topics:
- MailBITS/20-Feb-95
- Can't Buy Me Love - Microsoft Antitrust Ruling
- Eudora & Attachments
- An Unpleasant Voyage
- Nisus Writer 4.0.6, Part 2: Word and Document Processing
- Reviews/20-Feb-95
-
- ftp://ftp.tidbits.com/pub/tidbits/issues/1995/TidBITS#264_20-Feb-95.etx
-
-
- MailBITS/20-Feb-95
- ------------------
- Adam suggested that I let people know how I'm doing after my car
- accident last October. People take months (if not years) to
- recover from whiplash, and the medical people I'm seeing are
- pleased with my progress. Since late December, I've been well
- enough to go about life normally, but I am still noticeably
- healing. My neck hurts sometimes, usually late at night, and it
- feels wobbly if I bend it the wrong way. I'm under doctor's orders
- to exercise (so I'm getting back in shape after an eight-year
- lapse from my cross-country running days!), I'm doing a some
- physical therapy, and I'm enjoying weekly therapeutic massages.
-
- The most important breakthrough in the recovery, oddly enough, was
- realizing that if I made weird faces with my mouth open, I
- stretched jaw and neck muscles that desperately needed to stretch.
- After that, I could open my mouth normally and escaped the danger
- of having to wear extremely unpleasant-looking orthodontic
- devices. Thanks to everyone who wished me a speedy recovery! [TJE]
-
-
- **O Pioneer!** -- Japan-based Pioneer Electronics Corporation
- announced last week that it has reached an agreement with Apple to
- license the Mac OS for use in Pioneer's first entries into the
- personal computer market. Pioneer, well-known for its home
- electronics products, plans to produce multimedia computers
- directly for the home entertainment market, featuring a high
- degree of integration with new and existing Pioneer technologies.
- Pioneer certainly has a lot to build upon the home electronics
- arena, but one wonders if Pioneer is up to the sort of technical
- support, quality assurance, and evangelism necessary in the
- computer industry. Pricing information hasn't been announced and
- it's unclear if Pioneer intends to introduce these products
- outside of Japan.
-
- Pioneer plans units based on the 66 MHz PowerPC 601 and the 33 MHz
- 68LC040, each with 4.4x CD-ROM drives and multisync monitors.
- Pioneer promises to bundle original software with its units to
- "provide a new world of A/V computing" and provide easy capture
- and manipulation of audio and video data. Prototypes will be
- demonstrated this week at the Macworld Expo to held in Chiba,
- Japan. [GD]
-
-
- **Apprentice Phone Update** -- Due to recent changes to western
- Washington's area codes, some readers have been unable to contact
- Celestin Company, the makers of the Apprentice CD-ROM reviewed in
- TidBITS-263_. If you have trouble, Celestin Company suggests
- trying to contact them at their _old_ area code: 206/385-3767 and
- 206/385-3586 (fax). Their email address remains
- <celestin@olympus.net>. [GD]
-
-
- **MacInTax Update** -- Intuit, makers of the MacInTax tax software
- package, have written to update the situation on the MacInTax
- itemization bug reported in TidBITS-261_. To restate, the bug
- occurs when importing a TXF file into MacInTax from another source
- (most likely Quicken) and when that TXF file has 30 or more items
- within a single category. In this case, every 30th item in each
- category will not make it into MacInTax, although the MacInTax
- import log will report that all the items were imported
- successfully. (Intuit says Schedule D is a special case and is not
- affected by the bug). MacInTax users should contact Intuit to
- obtain a version of MacInTax with the itemization bug fixed.
- MacInTax support can be reached at 602/295-3080 or at
- <76004.3107@compuserve.com>. [GD]
-
-
- **PowerBook Price Drop** -- When Apple lowers prices, it often
- heralds the upcoming release of new models. Even so, if you've had
- your eyes on a 500-series PowerBook, you might want to check out
- the new pricing. Effective since 13-Feb-95, Apple has reduced
- prices 14 to 17 percent for models sold in the U.S. (Sorry, we
- don't have information about outside the U.S.) To sweeten the
- deal, Apple also plans to give away a free carrying case with any
- PowerBook purchased from 15-Feb-95 through 31-Mar-95. The table
- below shows official "Apple Price" pricing information for the
- price reduction. [TJE]
-
- > Model Former Price New Price
- >
- > PowerBook 520 4/160 $2269 $1959
- > PowerBook 520c 4/160 $2899 $2499
- > PowerBook 520c 12/320/Modem $3949 $3269
- > PowerBook 540c 4/320 $4839 $4079
- > PowerBook 540c 12/500/Modem $5899 $4999
-
- ftp://ftp.info.apple.com/Apple.Support.Area/Apple.Press.Releases/13Feb95-
- PB.500.Series.Price.Red.txt
-
-
- Can't Buy Me Love - Microsoft Antitrust Ruling
- ----------------------------------------------
- by Geoff Duncan <geoff@tidbits.com>
-
- In an ironic Valentine's Day present, U.S. District Judge Stanley
- Sporkin on February 14th rejected an agreement made between
- Microsoft and the U.S. Justice Department regarding charges that
- Microsoft licensing practices stifle competition. The dispute
- primarily involves how Microsoft licenses operating systems to
- personal computer manufacturers, including restrictive
- arrangements that allegedly exclude other operating systems and
- that may require manufacturers to pay a per-unit fee to Microsoft
- even on computers that do not contain Microsoft software.
- Additionally, Microsoft's proposed licensing arrangements for
- Windows 95, due to be released later this year, have drawn sharp
- criticism from computer manufacturers, who admit they have little
- choice but to agree to terms Microsoft dictates.
-
- Microsoft had reached an agreement with the Justice Department to
- change the way it licenses its products to personal computer
- manufacturers. However, Judge Sporkin rejected the agreement on
- the grounds it did not constitute an effective antitrust remedy
- and that it failed to adequately address Microsoft's past and
- future monopolistic practices. In Judge Sporkin's words, "simply
- telling a defendant to go forth and sin no more does little or
- nothing to address the unfair advantage it has already gained." In
- strong language, Judge Sporkin also characterized the agreement as
- "too little, too late."
-
- The Justice Department has decided to appeal Judge Sporkin's
- ruling, and U.S. Attorney General Janet Reno defended the original
- agreement, saying that the judge is going beyond his legal
- authority by examining Microsoft business practices not alleged in
- the original complaint. Not surprisingly, within a few hours
- Microsoft announced it would join the Justice Department's appeal
- of the ruling.
-
- Although the proposed $1.5 billion Microsoft/Intuit merger (see
- TidBITS-248_) is a completely separate case being examined by the
- Justice Department, Intuit's stock price fell when Judge Sporkin's
- ruling was announced last week.
-
- The direct implications of this ruling on the Macintosh community
- are comparatively slight, since the case primarily concerns
- Microsoft's DOS and Windows licensing. However, as Apple licenses
- the Macintosh and its operating system to third parties, it might
- take care to notice where Microsoft is allocating its legal
- budget. Ironically, an argument could be made that a successful
- appeal of Judge Sporkin's decision could be financially
- advantageous for Apple in the future, particularly if the Mac
- clone market takes off. Since a successful Macintosh clone market
- will eat into Apple's hardware business, a legal precedent for
- restrictive OS licensing practices might allow Apple to earn back
- some of that money in the form of licensing fees if the clone
- market proves viable.
-
-
- Eudora & Attachments
- --------------------
- by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
-
- I've received some questions about how to best encode files
- attached to Eudora messages recently, so I thought I'd reiterate
- the information in Eudora itself about this topic (turn on balloon
- help and point at the options in the Attachments section of
- Eudora's Settings dialog box). The commercial version of Eudora
- offers four settings: AppleDouble, AppleSingle, BinHex, and
- Uuencode. The free version of Eudora lacks Uuencode support, and
- is available at:
-
- ftp://ftp.qualcomm.com/quest/mac/eudora/1.5/eudora151.hqx
- ftp://ftp.qualcomm.com/quest/mac/eudora/1.5/eudora151fat.hqx
-
- Use AppleDouble when sending files to other MIME-compatible
- mailers. AppleSingle seems to be unusual - Steve Dorner says that
- it's acceptable for Mac-specific files, but notes wryly in the
- balloon help that only "a few whackos need this." BinHex is the
- standard in the Mac world and is the safest for sending files to
- other Macs, particularly if the recipient uses an older mail
- program. Uuencode is best for communicating with archaic mail
- programs primarily on non-Mac platforms (Microsoft Mail, for
- instance, used, and may still use, uuencode for attachments). For
- more general information, check the Eudora 1.5.1 documentation and
- Q & A stack at:
-
- ftp://ftp.qualcomm.com/quest/mac/eudora/documentation/man151-word.sea.hqx
- ftp://ftp.qualcomm.com/quest/mac/eudora/documentation/Eudora_QA.hqx
-
- So in standard use, if you're sending mail to people who
- definitely use Eudora or other MIME-compatible mailers, even on a
- PC, use AppleDouble. If you're mailing Macintosh files, they're
- probably destined for Macintosh users, so if you're unsure about
- what the recipient might use to read email, BinHex is the safest.
- And finally, if you know the recipient uses DOS, Windows, or Unix
- and an old email program that doesn't support MIME, you should go
- out and ante up your $65 for the commercial version of Eudora so
- you can easily use Uuencode. You can read a bit more about MIME
- and these issues in the relevant Request for Comment (RFC), #1741.
-
- http://ds.internic.net/rfc/rfc1741.txt
-
- Frankly, if you seriously use Eudora and email, the commercial
- version's cleaner interface (like being able to sort a mailbox by
- clicking in the column title) and massively useful filtering
- capabilities make it worth a measly $65. Besides, I strongly
- approve of Qualcomm keeping a version of Eudora free for people
- who don't use email heavily or who want to try Eudora, and buying
- the commercial version is the best way to support Qualcomm's
- attitude toward the free version.
-
- Qualcomm recently set up a mailing list Eudora discussions. To
- subscribe, send email to <majordomo@qualcomm.com> with "subscribe
- mac-eudora-forum" in the body of the message (sans quotes, of
- course). Make sure that your return address is correct - it is the
- address that will be added to the mailing list.
-
- Qualcomm -- <eudora-info@qualcomm.com> -- 800/2-EUDORA
- 619/597-5113 -- 619/597-5058 (fax)
-
-
- An Unpleasant Voyage
- --------------------
- by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
-
- You may have seen mention recently about how Apple is riding
- roughshod on First Amendment freedoms by censoring a CD-ROM from
- Voyager that's bundled with Macs sold into the K-12 education
- channel. Although we've barely seen the CD, here's the deal as I
- currently understand it.
-
- Voyager, a well-respected CD-ROM developer, is charging Apple with
- censorship over Apple's complaints in regard to an award-winning
- history CD-ROM called "Who Built America?," based on a two-volume
- book of the same name. The text looks at the events of the turn of
- the century from the viewpoint of, and via the eyes and voices of,
- a number of ordinary people.
-
- In December of 1994, Apple started distributing the CD with Macs
- sold to the K-12 channel, and sent out over 12,000 copies. Apple
- started receiving complaints about the content of the CD-ROM and
- asked Voyager to make some changes to the CD-ROM to respond to the
- complaints. Voyager refused, and claims that Apple said it would
- cease to distribute the CD, whereas Apple says it has yet to make
- a final decision.
-
- Voyager claims that the complaints (which Apple, like other
- content distributors, may not pass on in original form as a matter
- of policy) related to the inclusion of discussion of
- homosexuality, abortion, and birth control. Voyager further says
- that Apple wanted all references to these subjects removed or
- "greyed out."
-
- Sources inside Apple who evaluated the CD in response to the
- complaints disagree with Voyager's characterization, saying that
- the concern - and the part that Apple asked Voyager to remove -
- related primarily to a single section in which a woman relates how
- she received 12 abortions, some using potentially life-threatening
- procedures. However, other sources claim this material to be
- general, providing no specific information on how to perform an
- abortion.
-
- There's a difference between controversial subjects and dangerous
- information, and it's unclear exactly what was said between Apple
- and Voyager - or how what was said might have been mis-
- communicated or misunderstood. However, it is clear that Voyager
- is screaming censorship, which seems misplaced. Apple is making a
- business decision to provide a product that its customers want.
- Apple is not saying Voyager can't distribute the CD as-is (which
- they do for anyone who wants it). Apple is merely trying to
- respond to complaints from its customers in K-12 schools, and as
- we've all said at one time or another, the customer is always
- right. Even should Apple drop the CD, that in no way eliminates
- the wide availability of the information. Finally, Apple doesn't
- distribute many CDs, and some of those no doubt have even more
- controversial subject matter than this one. Omission of
- distribution is not censorship, and cessation of distribution in
- one of many ways seems qualitatively no different.
-
- What's most confusing is why Voyager is making such a public
- relations stink. No matter what the level of truth or falsehood in
- both Voyager's and Apple's statements, Voyager has little or
- nothing to gain from alienating Apple. So in my mind, this fuss is
- primarily interesting not from a censorship standpoint but from a
- _business_ standpoint.
-
- The story appeared quickly in a number of large newspapers,
- leading one to wonder how concerted a public relations campaign
- Voyager waged. The story certainly makes good copy - David versus
- Goliath, free speech versus censorship, and so on. Voyager's
- Braden Michaels says the move was not done to garner public
- exposure, but that ignores the fact that it _did_ garner
- considerable public exposure, in the process probably attracting
- more attention than any other Voyager CD ever has.
-
- It's fairly certain that Voyager stands to lose a significant
- amount of money should Apple drop the Voyager CD from the bundle.
- These K-12 bundles are reportedly AppleSoft's second largest
- money-maker (behind System 7.5) and will supposedly account for an
- estimated $1.4 million this year. Voyager's percentage is unknown,
- but it cannot help but be significant. By rousing the public in an
- attempt to force Apple to keep distributing the CD, Voyager may be
- attempting to protect a revenue stream. But even this line of
- thought has flaws since any such protection would only help in the
- short term due to the damage it could cause to Voyager's future
- relationship with Apple.
-
- Again, Braden Michaels says releasing the story to the press
- wasn't a business decision, and again, that doesn't eliminate the
- fact that the entire situation stems from a potentially important
- business deal gone awry.
-
- In the end, I can only conclude that Voyager is making a fuss over
- what is essentially a broken business deal. On the other hand,
- Apple is certainly to blame for at least a miscommunication with
- Voyager, and/or a clumsy mishandling of an obviously delicate
- situation. As always, it seems that we're talking about an
- increasingly large number of shades of grey. Life used to be more
- black and white.
-
- http://www.voyagerco.com/misc/ed/p.edit1.html
- http://www.info.apple.com/aboutapple/cd.html
-
- Information from:
- Voyager propaganda
- Braden Michaels, Voyager -- <michaels@voyagerco.com>
- Apple propaganda
- Pythaeus
-
-
- Nisus Writer 4.0.6, Part 2: Word and Document Processing
- --------------------------------------------------------
- by Nigel Perry <n.perry@massey.ac.nz>
-
- [If you read last week's TidBITS-263_, you recall that this review
- began with a look at Nisus Writer's text processing features. This
- week, we look at its word and document processing features, and
- finish next week with details on multimedia features. -Tonya]
-
-
- **Styles** -- Nisus supports character and paragraph user-defined
- styles, which you set up in the Define Styles dialog box.
- Character styles can include all the usual attributes: font,
- colour, size etc. Paragraph styles add a named ruler to control
- paragraph layout.
-
- Nisus follows the original MacWrite method of inserting rulers
- into a document to control layout. A ruler specifies attributes
- such as margins, line spacing, and space before paragraph (there
- is no space after paragraph). In Nisus Writer, you must define a
- ruler (though you need not set its attributes) in the main
- document window before you can include a ruler in a user-defined
- style. In earlier versions, you could name a new ruler in the
- Define Styles dialog box and Nisus Writer would automatically
- create the ruler on first use of the user style - I can't figure
- out why Nisus Software made the change.
-
- The split between user styles and rulers can cause much
- frustration. The problems are at first minor annoyances, but they
- can become significant. When applying a paragraph style, Nisus
- _attaches_ the style information to the text, but _inserts_ the
- ruler into the document - and then only if Nisus thinks the ruler
- is needed. [Word users might understand this better by thinking of
- style information as character formats and ruler information as
- paragraph formats. -Tonya]
-
- The example below shows problems this causes. Consider a document
- containing five paragraphs, the first three in style A, the last
- two in style B. The document looks something like:
-
- Ruler A Paragraph 1 in style A
- Paragraph 2 in style A
- Paragraph 3 in style A
- Ruler B Paragraph 4 in style B
- Paragraph 5 in style B
-
- If you move paragraph two below paragraph four you get:
-
- Ruler A Paragraph 1 in style A
- Paragraph 3 in style A
- Ruler B Paragraph 4 in style B
- Paragraph 2 in style A
- Paragraph 5 in style B
-
- Paragraph two ends up _styled_ according to A but _laid_out_
- according to B! The fix is not difficult, you just manually insert
- an A ruler into the text. However, that Nisus Software did not fix
- this in Nisus Writer is indefensible.
-
- Nisus Writer has a number of similar quirks, and as a result you
- must be careful while editing documents. Whenever you move text or
- change its style, you must make sure you end up with the ruler and
- style you expected. The fact that Nisus Software did not fix these
- quirks shows a misunderstanding on their part of what word
- processing rather than styled text editing is about.
-
- [A few days ago, I innocently asked Nigel to give some examples of
- the "similar quirks" referred to above, and Nigel helpfully
- replied with an assortment of examples, most of which I ended up
- not including. Unfortunately, to understand them, you need a
- deeper understanding of Nisus Writer than we have room for. -
- Tonya]
-
- You might ask why people (such as myself - Nisus Writer is my main
- text processing workhorse) use Nisus Writer if it has these
- quirks. The answer is simple: Nisus Writer's powerful _text_
- processing capabilities usually offset the annoyance of having to
- be careful with rulers, or the lack of hierarchical styles - a
- much-requested feature.
-
-
- **Numbering and Referencing** -- You can set up flexible numbering
- sequences for chapters, four levels of sub-topics, figures,
- equations, and tables. Nisus Writer also provides six custom
- numbering sequences for anything else you might need to number
- (maps, pie charts, whatever).
-
- Nisus Writer has added the ability to restart the page numbering
- within a document, something missing from earlier versions, but in
- an obscure manner which requires the selection of the page break
- character to access the settings.
-
- Nisus Writer provides powerful cross-references that automatically
- update. Sections of text (or most anything else, such as graphics
- or tables) can be marked with a label and then referenced. The
- reference may contain the contents of the marked item, and you can
- also reference the page number of the object, its line number, and
- so on. By making multiple trips to the Cross Reference dialog box,
- you can insert references like "See Cheese Preferences on page 68,
- paragraph 6."
-
- Unfortunately, you must individually mark anything that you want
- to cross-reference. Nisus Writer does not automatically mark
- figures, figure numbers, and the like. Further, though you can
- refer to the current chapter number in a header or footer, you
- cannot refer to the title of the chapter itself.
-
- Nisus Writer provides footnotes or endnotes (but not both in the
- same document). You cannot place a cross-reference in a footnote
- or a table. Nisus Writer works with Niles and Associates' End Note
- Plus, a popular utility for tracking lots of reference works and
- quickly formatting references.
-
-
- **Tables of Contents and Indices** -- Any text can be marked for
- inclusion in the table of contents or index - and the index
- marking can be done through the powerful Find and Replace feature
- (and thus through a macro if you like) or through a user style.
- For example, you can set the Table of Contents attribute to be
- part of the definition of the styles you use for section headers.
- The Create Contents and Create Index commands each accumulate all
- the appropriately marked text and produce a separate file
- containing a table of contents or index. You must then format the
- file and either print it separately or insert it into your
- document in the right place. If you recreate the table of contents
- or index, you must format it again: probably a good job for a
- macro.
-
-
- **Graphics** -- You can paste graphics in-line or on a separate
- graphics layer, which supports basic drawing tools with colour and
- grid alignment. Items on the graphics layer can appear in front of
- or behind the text, or text can flow around them. Graphics can be
- attached to a particular page or flow with a paragraph. You
- cannot, however, flow a picture with a paragraph and keep it at
- the top or bottom of a page. The graphics support and flow-around
- would appear to make Nisus suitable for small newsletter-style
- documents, but only if their designers want to put up with having
- the same number of same-width columns on all pages.
-
-
- **Will OpenDoc be this bad?** Apple has seen the future, and the
- future is OpenDoc - or so we are told! With OpenDoc, the document,
- rather than the application, becomes the centre of things. A
- document acts as a container for objects produced by different
- applications, so your text object might be under the control of
- Nisus Writer, but your molecule picture might come from a
- chemistry program.
-
- How is this relevant to Nisus Writer? Tables and equations, two
- new features, are supplied by separate modules: Macreations's
- Tycho Table Maker and Design Science's MathType (a full version,
- not the crippled version that comes with Word - but it only
- launches from Nisus Writer). To insert an equation, you launch
- MathType by choosing Insert Equation from the Insert menu. After
- creating an equation in MathType, you close the MathType window,
- thus returning to Nisus Writer with your equation inserted.
- Inserting tables works the same way, but with Tycho Table Maker
- acting as the editor. All this magic works by means of an Apple
- event suite called EGO (Edit Graphic Object), and any program that
- supports EGO (such as Expressionist and DeltaGraph Pro) can
- provide services to Nisus Writer - though the initial insertion is
- more complicated as the program names do not appear on the Insert
- menu.
-
- [Late-breaking news flash! Nisus Writer owners can update to the
- most recent MathType version for the same price charged any
- MathType owner. The update launches with or without Nisus Writer.
- -Tonya]
-
- This _sounds_ wonderful, and very much like OpenDoc, but there are
- problems. Nisus Writer contains style sheets; Tycho Table Maker
- contains style sheets; MathType contains style sheets. Three sets
- of styles sheets are hard to keep in sync! You can spell check in
- Nisus Writer, but you can't spell check a table from Tycho Table
- Maker, or in Tycho Table Maker itself. We can hope that OpenDoc
- will do better at integrating tools while retaining power.
-
-
- **Interoperability** -- Nisus uses the Apple/Claris XTND system to
- support other file formats and comes with a handful of filters.
- Although the filters handle basic formatting information, they
- lose some important elements of the document's structure,
- including user styles. Nisus Writer also comes with a PageMaker
- import filter, and FrameMaker support is available thorough
- DataViz's MacLinkPlus.
-
- The latest version of the MacLinkPlus translator package from
- DataViz reportedly has added support for user styles; however,
- Nisus Software should address this problem more directly (even if
- that just means bundling MacLinkPlus) in order to better work in
- the real world of multiple file formats.
-
-
- **Word and Document Processing Conclusion** -- Nisus Writer offers
- a reasonably rich set of word and document processing features. It
- lacks some features that others have, and has others that they do
- not. However, Nisus Writer has a do-it-yourself feel to it, which
- programmers and fiddlers will love, but which lacks the polish to
- make it attractive as an everyday word, and particularly document,
- processor - _unless_ you want or need its editing and multilingual
- text processing.
-
- DataViz -- 800/733-0030 -- 203/268-0030
- Design Science -- 800/827-0685 -- 310/433-0685
- 310/433-6969 (fax)
- Niles and Associates -- 510/649-8176 -- <nilesinc@well.sf.ca.us>
- Nisus Software -- 800/890-3030 -- 619/481-1477
- 619/481-6154 (fax) -- <info@nisus-soft.com>
-
- [For more opinions and resources related to Nisus, check out the
- Nisus Writer page on World of Words. -Tonya]
-
- http://king.tidbits.com/tonya/WOW/NW/NWMain.html
-
-
- Reviews/20-Feb-95
- -----------------
-
- * MacWEEK -- 13-Feb-95, Vol. 9, #7
- Tektronix Phaser 540 -- pg. 25
- DaynaComm Serial Roamer -- pg. 25
- Strata StudioPro 1.5.1 -- pg. 27
- MacBench 2.0 -- pg. 28
-
- * InfoWorld -- 13-Feb-94, Vol. 17, #7
- Kodak DCS 420 -- pg. 116
- Citizen PN60 -- pg. 117
-
-
- $$
-
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