home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
Text File | 1995-03-28 | 29.0 KB | 589 lines | [TEXT/ttxt] |
- TidBITS#269/27-Mar-95
- =====================
-
- This week begins with a bevy of MailBITS, with news of Easy View
- 2.6.1, Word 6.0.1, S.314 passing the Senate Commerce Committee,
- and more. The issue continues with important information for
- some PowerBook 100-series owners, information about the
- recently released QuickDraw GX 1.1.1, LaserWriter 8.2.2, and
- Network Software Installer 1.5, and PowerTalk-related files.
- Last but not least, we finish with Tonya's review of three
- well-known Macintosh books.
-
- 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>
- * Nisus Software -- New Web site! http://www.nisus-soft.com/~nisus/
- Powerful Document Processing. <info@nisus-soft.com>
- * Hayden Books, an imprint of Macmillan Computer Publishing
- Save 20% on all books via the Web -- http://www.mcp.com/
- Win free books! -- http://www.mcp.com/hayden/madness/ <---- NEW
- * InfoSeek -- the best way to search Web pages, computer magazines,
- Usenet news & more! FREE trial -- http://www.infoseek.com/TBITS/
-
- Copyright 1990-1995 Adam & Tonya Engst. Details at end of issue.
- Information: <info@tidbits.com> Comments: <editors@tidbits.com>
- ---------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Topics:
- MailBITS/27-Mar-95
- Adapt or Die - PowerBook AC Adapters
- Yet More New Apple System Software
- Heavyweight Book Bout
- Reviews/27-Mar-95
-
- ftp://ftp.tidbits.com/pub/tidbits/issues/1995/TidBITS#269_27-Mar-95.etx
-
-
- MailBITS/27-Mar-95
- ------------------
- We'd like to welcome our latest sponsor, InfoSeek Corporation.
- InfoSeek is among the first companies to make commercial-quality
- information available on the Internet for searching via paid
- subscription (using authenticated Web browsers). Although the
- concept of paying to search databases is still uncommon on the
- Internet, it makes sense when the only way to bring that
- information to the Internet is by buying it from a commercial
- vendor - few companies wish to give away information that they can
- sell in other venues. InfoSeek has gone far in providing
- inexpensive access though, by charging $9.95 per month with 100
- free transactions.
-
- Among the standard collections are ComputerWorld; Usenet News
- (either the current week or the last four weeks); NewsBytes;
- Cineman Movie, Book, and Music Reviews; FrameMaker 4.0 Help Notes;
- Hoover's Masterlist of U.S. Companies; and information from
- various wire services. Also included are premium collections that
- charge extra for each search or retrieval such as InfoWorld,
- Hoover's Company Profiles, and the Computer Select full text
- database of 100 computer publications. Unfortunately, although
- InfoWorld and Hoover's Company Profiles have reasonable additional
- rates, Computer Select requires that InfoSeek charge a ludicrous
- amount - $5 for a four-week subscription with one free retrieval
- and $5 per retrieval after that. Needless to say, I've limited my
- searching to the standard and free collections and have yet to use
- up my 100 free transactions each month. If you do research online
- in the sort of databases InfoSeek currently has, check them out
- at: [ACE]
-
- http://www.infoseek.com/TBITS/
-
-
- **Easy View 2.6.1** -- Akif Eyler <eyler@bilkent.edu.tr> has
- released version 2.6.1 of his popular text viewing and cataloging
- application Easy View. In addition to being the pre-eminent
- application for viewing many digest and text file formats
- (including setext, the format in which TidBITS is distributed),
- Akif has added full AppleScript support and recordability,
- background searching, and command-click URLs (using Akif's Get URL
- BBEdit extension).
-
- ftp://mirror.aol.com/pub/info-mac/text/easy-view-261.hqx
-
- Using Easy View 2.6.1 with the Get URL extension, you can command-
- click URLs appearing in TidBITS or other files, including ftp,
- http, and gopher links, as well as the standardized file
- references appearing in the Info-Mac digest. Easy View
- automatically uses Anarchie and MacWeb to load URLs for you - note
- that although the Get URL extension is configurable, the
- applications it tries to use must have a concept of "bookmark
- files" for it to work correctly, which means it presently doesn't
- work well with Netscape. Congratulations and appreciative thanks
- to Akif for maintaining and enhancing this essential application!
- [GD]
-
-
- **DreamWorks Interactive** -- Film and media moguls David Geffen,
- Jeffrey Katzenberg, and Steven Spielberg - cover boys of this
- week's Time Magazine - went on stage March 22nd with Microsoft's
- Bill Gates to announce the formation of a new $30 million joint
- company, DreamWorks Interactive. In the rumor mill since December
- of 1994, this new company is expected to focus on highly
- interactive computer titles, including games and entertainment
- products. DreamWorks Interactive will be located in Seattle and
- Los Angeles and is expected to start hiring employees out of
- Microsoft as early as 01-Apr-95. Considering the net worths of
- everyone involved, $30 million isn't a lot of money to start with;
- however, Gates did note that financial constraints weren't
- expected be an operational problem. The company expects to have
- its first products on the street for the 1996 Christmas season.
- Taken in the context of Microsoft's purchase of SoftImage last
- year, DreamWorks Interactive is expected to be a front-runner in
- the multimedia industry's content-and-technology battle. [GD]
-
- http://pathfinder.com/time/magazine/domestic/1995/950327/950327.cover.html
-
-
- **Interior Decor** -- Several people chastised us for not
- mentioning the $10 shareware program Decor, which does much the
- same thing as DeskPicture (see TidBITS-268_). The two sport
- similar feature sets, although Decor fully supports JPEG files,
- but can't handle multiple monitors. In addition, Decor is
- scriptable and Power Mac-native. We hadn't intended to cover all
- the utilities that decorate your desktop, but if you want to check
- out Decor, it's at: [ACE]
-
- ftp://mirror.aol.com//pub/info-mac/gui/decor-26.hqx
-
-
- **Dressing for Decency** -- A modified version of the
- Communications Decency Act of 1995, popularly known as the Exon
- Amendment and S.314, recently passed the Senate Commerce Committee
- and is attached to the telecommunications reform bill scheduled to
- go before the Senate as early as this week - despite Committee
- phone banks being so overwhelmed with calls that outside help had
- to be brought in. Previously covered in TidBITS-263_ and TidBITS-
- 266_, this bill proposes to prohibit online distribution of
- materials deemed "obscene," "filthy," or "indecent." Though the
- bill has been revised to free some carriers from criminal
- liability, many groups feel new restrictions placed on the
- creators of online content are even more onerous than before,
- infringing on First Amendment rights and setting dangerous
- legislative precedents in electronic media. For current
- information and online initiatives (including an Internet petition
- drive that gathered over 100,000 signatures) regarding this
- proposed legislation, check out: [GD]
-
- http://www.phantom.com/~slowdog/
- gopher://gopher.panix.com/11/vtw/exon/
-
-
- **Word 6.0.1 Update** -- The latest news from the Word team at
- Microsoft has the U.S. version of Word 6.0.1 in manufacturing.
- Hoping to make up for the ill-will brought on by the many problems
- in Word 6.0, Microsoft is making 6.0.1 available at no charge to
- registered Word 6 owners. By no charge, I mean that registered
- owners can acquire the update by calling 800/315-5081 and asking
- for either Word 6.0.1 or Office 4.2.1. Microsoft then ships the
- software with no materials, shipping, or handling fees of any
- sort. U.S. owners who don't call should receive update information
- via snail mail.
-
- I asked Keith Armodt <keitha823@aol.com>, Macintosh Line Product
- Manager at Microsoft, about how people outside the U.S. can
- request the update, and he said the foreign subsidiaries would
- each handle updates for their regions. Apparently the other
- English-language versions are also in manufacturing, but other
- foreign versions do need to be localized and are "somewhat
- delayed." If you need contact information for a foreign
- subsidiary, look for it in the extensive contact information that
- begins around page xxii of the Word 6 User's Guide.
-
- Kudos to Microsoft for shipping the update when they claimed they
- would and making it freely available to customers. Unfortunately,
- according to the Microsoft representative who I spoke with when I
- ordered my update, the Power Mac-native version of Word is still
- not available on the Office CD. Let's hope that Word 6.0.1 lives
- up to the user-friendly standard set by the free distribution
- policy. [TJE]
-
-
- **Info-Mac Mirror Lists via Email** -- Info-Mac moderator Liam
- Breck writes: "Next week, the Info-Mac Network will publish a new
- Info-Mac Archive mirror list in both text and HTML formats. To
- assist Web sites in providing the HTML version to the Internet Mac
- community, we are creating an email distribution list. Sites on
- this list will receive updates to the HTML version by email
- automatically. We can only support a limited number of sites with
- this email list, so it is only open to reasonably popular Web
- sites. The public may obtain the mirror list from these sites and
- our mirrors. To get on the email distribution list, send email to
- <breck@external.umass.edu> briefly describing your Web site.
- Please include a URL to its home or main menu page."
-
-
- **Better to Rule in Hell than Serve in Heaven** -- In a story that
- hit everything from the New York Times to National Public Radio,
- SATAN creator Dan Farmer and Silicon Graphics, Inc., parted
- company last week, in no small part due to Dan's involvement with
- the SATAN network security analysis program (see TidBITS-268_).
- Reactions have been mixed - even among SGI employees - although
- Farmer himself doesn't seem to have been particularly disturbed by
- the turn of events. He notes SATAN is still scheduled to be
- released 05-Apr-95. [GD]
-
-
- Adapt or Die - PowerBook AC Adapters
- ------------------------------------
- by Mark H. Anbinder, News Editor <mha@baka.ithaca.ny.us>
- Director of Technical Services, Baka Industries Inc.
-
- The original 15-watt AC power adapters shipped with the first
- models of PowerBook computers have damaged a number of PowerBooks.
- When the tip of the plug's plastic insulation becomes chipped,
- inserting it into a PowerBook - even when it's not plugged into an
- electrical outlet - can short out the PowerBook's internal fuse.
- Later power adapter models have a reinforced tip that prevents
- this damage. Apple has announced a "customer satisfaction program"
- to replace these original power adapters and any PowerBook fuses
- or logic boards damaged by this problem.
-
- Only the original model M5140 power adapters, manufactured from
- August 1991 through September 1992, exhibit this problem, and only
- these will be replaced under the program. The affected adapters
- have "Model M5140" printed on their labels, and were shipped with
- the PowerBook 100, 140, 145, and 170 models. In PowerBook 100s,
- damaged fuses can simply be replaced. In the other models, the
- fuses are not replaceable and the logic boards must be exchanged.
- Apple will offer free out-of-warranty replacements of the fuse or
- logic board, as appropriate.
-
- Users with these power adapters but without logic board damage may
- obtain a free replacement power adapter. PowerBook 100 owners will
- receive a 17-watt adapter, and owners of the other affected
- PowerBook models will receive a 24-watt adapter. This offer is
- available only through 29-Sep-95. Apple assures us that the old
- power adapters are being disposed of in an environmentally sound
- manner.
-
- If you have one of these power adapters, or if your PowerBook has
- been damaged by one, bring both (make sure you bring the adapter)
- to your local Apple service provider. If there isn't one nearby,
- call Apple's service line at 800/SOS-APPL. If you believe a past
- repair may have been due to this problem, contact Apple customer
- assistance at 800/776-2333.
-
-
- Yet More New Apple System Software
- ----------------------------------
- by Geoff Duncan <geoff@tidbits.com>
-
- Among the system software components Apple released concurrently
- with the System 7.5 Update 1.0 were QuickDraw GX 1.1.1,
- LaserWriter version 8.2.2, the Network Software Installer "ZM"
- (multi-country) version 1.5, and some new PowerTalk gateways.
- Taken together, the simultaneous release of this new software has
- helped block access to Apple's FTP servers, as Mac users all over
- the Internet rush to download new material. We would have told you
- about this stuff last week, except we couldn't get our hands on it
- in time either.
-
- There are numerous possible URLs for retrieving the software;
- unfortunately, many of them frequently refuse connections because
- of the heavy demand. Two useful locations for obtaining any of
- this software (and System 7.5 Update 1.0) are:
-
- ftp://temp.info.apple.com/pub/
- ftp://ftptoo.support.apple.com/pub/
-
-
- **QuickDraw GX 1.1.1** -- QuickDraw GX hasn't exactly taken the
- Macintosh world by storm, with weighty RAM requirements, a
- substantial overhead for software developers, and a lack of cross-
- platform support. (See TidBITS-243_, 244_ and 245_ for a detailed
- overview.) Many major application vendors - especially in the
- design and publishing markets - have taken a cautious approach to
- GX. In the meantime, a few major programs (such WordPerfect 3.1
- and Microsoft Word 6.0) have incorporated GX printing support, and
- GX-specific applications and utilities are starting to appear
- (LightningDraw GX and Pierce Print Tools, for example). With the
- 1.1.1 release, Apple is showing that it hasn't given up on
- QuickDraw GX.
-
- The large update completely replaces the previous version, and
- consists of four high-density floppy disk images. The update
- offers several performance improvements, including faster printing
- of large character sets on printers that don't have the fonts
- built in, plus faster display of print dialogs in non-GX
- applications. Also, GX no longer "locks users out" while
- downloading fonts to PostScript printers, and the desktop printer
- window now displays font downloading progress.
-
- New features in GX 1.1.1 include the N-Up Printing Extension,
- which allows you to print up to 16 pages on a single sheet of
- paper - a handy feature for creating custom thumbnails of complex
- documents. The N-Up Printing Extension works with both GX-aware
- and non-GX-aware applications. Also included (in the GX custom
- installation!) is the EPS Extension, which lets you save a file as
- an Encapsulated PostScript document (handy for importing into
- non-GX-aware publishing and design applications).
-
- I've read reports of problems using GX 1.1.1 with Word 6.0 on
- Power Macs; however, tests on Tonya's Power Mac 7100/66 failed to
- produce any unexpected results. I've also read reports that the
- version of ATM shipping with GX 1.1.1 may fail if used with
- Adobe's SuperATM. One possible workaround is to back up your
- existing ATM and SuperATM installation, then obtain the free
- Acrobat Reader 2.0.1 from Adobe. Version 2.0.1 of the Acrobat
- Reader includes a version of ATM 3.8.2 that appears to function
- correctly with both SuperATM and QuickDraw GX. If you installed
- this version of the Acrobat Reader before installing GX, you'll
- need to install it again for the ATM setup to be correct - see the
- ReadMe files for details.
-
- ftp://ftp.adobe.com/pub/adobe/Acrobat/Macintosh/2.0.1/
-
- You might wonder what happened to GX 1.1: it existed for a day or
- so, but Apple withdrew it due to a "version string error." Shortly
- thereafter, GX 1.1.1 appeared on Apple's FTP sites. If you have a
- copy of GX 1.1, you might want to hold onto it - it may not be as
- much a prize as original System 6.0.6 disks, but who knows? Maybe
- you'll be able to auction it off at Southeby's in 20 years.
-
-
- **LaserWriter 8.2.2** -- LaserWriter 8.2.2 contains two bug fixes
- not present in LaserWriter 8.2: one prevents inadvertent faxing as
- a result of some applications' manipulation of the print record,
- the other fixes a multi-zone network bug where users could not
- perform an "Auto Setup" on some printers located on the same
- network segment but in a different zone than themselves. The new
- version includes printer description files for all Apple
- LaserWriters, but not for third-party laser printers. Apple
- recommends that users of previous versions of LaserWriter 8
- upgrade to version 8.2.2.
-
- Please note that version 8.2.2 of the LaserWriter driver is
- **not** included with the System 7.5. Update 1.0. Apple released
- LaserWriter 8.2.2 at virtually the same time as System 7.5. Update
- 1.0, and it's unclear why Apple chose to distribute LaserWriter
- 8.2 with the 7.5 Update if there were known problems with it.
-
-
- **Network Software Installer ZM 1.5** -- The "ZM" in the name of
- this release indicates it is "multi-country" - you can use it to
- install network software on Macs running international versions of
- the system software as well as the U.S. system. Network Software
- Installer (NSI) requires System 7 or later, but does not require
- System 7.5.
-
- NSI 1.5 contains new versions of AppleTalk, EtherTalk, and
- configuration files for Apple built-in Ethernet, NuBus, PDS, and
- Communications Slot Ethernet, plus updates to TokenTalk and Token
- Ring drivers. These versions fix known bugs with Virtual Memory
- (including RAM Doubler) and numerous model-specific fixes.
- Additionally, the Network Software Installer contains LaserWriter
- Bridge 2.0, a control panel that lets a Macintosh share a
- LaserWriter connected to the LocalTalk port with other Macs in the
- same network zone via Ethernet. Although it won't let every
- Ethernet configuration see any LaserWriter connected to a
- LocalTalk port (Apple's LocalTalk Bridge software offers a more
- comprehensive solution), LaserWriter Bridge provides a workable
- solution for sharing a printer on simple networks.
-
-
- **PowerTalk Gateways** -- Apple has posted a number of PowerTalk
- extras to its Internet file sites, including a Director-based
- guided tour; a "PowerTalk Solutions" document in Common Ground
- format, and - most interesting for actual PowerTalk users - real
- and trial versions of some third-party PowerTalk gateways. These
- include the STF PowerFax gateway (allowing faxes to be sent and
- received), the Ex Machina Notify! Pager gateway (enabling you to
- make other people around the world beep, buzz, and vibrate from
- your Macintosh - what fun!), and a CompuServe mail gateway,
- allowing easy email exchange with CompuServe. Also available are
- 60 day trial versions of StarNine's QuickMail, Internet/SMTP, and
- Microsoft Mail gateways. In addition, the University of Michigan
- has made an X.500 Catalog gateway available (although not from
- Apple sites) that uses the LDAP protocol to let PowerTalk uses
- look up names, addresses, servers, and more using X.500 services.
- If you don't know what X.500 is, you likely don't need to worry
- about it, but if your life involves X.500, check out the PowerTalk
- Gateways ReadMe file and the following URL:
-
- ftp://terminator.rs.itd.umich.edu/x500/aoce/LDAP_CSAM.SEA.hqx
-
-
- **In Conclusion** -- If you can get through to Apple's file sites,
- you'll probably find some useful goodies. Access to the servers
- should improve with time, so if you can't get through right away,
- try again during off hours or wait a day or two.
-
-
- Heavyweight Book Bout
- ---------------------
- by Tonya Engst <tonya@tidbits.com>
-
- About once every nine months, Adam and I buy a new bookshelf. This
- practice seemed reasonable at first, but as our wall space fills
- up, we have become more selective about the books we keep. When it
- comes to large reference works about the Macintosh, three books
- have not only made it onto the shelves, but also have made
- themselves useful on multiple occasions.
-
- I decided to write this review after Sharon Zardetto Aker's "The
- Mac Almanac" saved me a great deal of fuss and bother twice in one
- month. The other two books I'm going to talk about are David Pogue
- and Joseph Schorr's "Macworld Mac & Power Mac Secrets, 2nd
- Edition," and the venerable "Macintosh Bible, 5th Edition," by
- DiNucci and a team of known Macintosh writers. All three of these
- massive books cover the Macintosh operating system, Apple
- hardware, fonts, printing, trouble-shooting, and more.
-
- Just for fun, I tested each book to see how it answered eleven
- questions. I tried to pick questions that would bring out the
- strengths and weaknesses of each book.
-
- In this table, "MB" is the Mac Bible, "MS" is Mac Secrets, and
- "MA" is the Mac Almanac. The table shows whether each book answers
- a given question: "Y" means "yes," "S" means "sort of" (some
- information was provided, but was either not as good as that
- offered by the others, or incomplete), and "N" means "no."
-
- > Question MB MS MA
- > -------------------------------------------------------- -- -- --
- > 1. How do PostScript printers decide what font to print? Y Y Y
- > 2. How do Chicago TrueType's special characters work? N N Y
- > 3. How do I allocate RAM under System 7.0 and 7.1? S Y Y
- > 4. How does the PowerPC's Modern Memory Manager work? N N N
- > 5. What is the Mac TV? Y Y S
- > 6. What monitor should I buy? Y S Y
- > 7. Does the Mac have any accounting software? Y N N
- > 8. How do I connect to the Internet? Y N N
- > 9. What's PlainTalk and how do I use it? S S N
- > 10. How do I type an em-dash? Y Y Y
- > 11. What's the name of the Chinese Mac OS? N Y N
-
- The test results provide data points, but they in no way replace
- reading each book, and since I've read portions of each book,
- here's what I think of them:
-
-
- **The Macintosh Bible** -- Thumbing through the Mac Bible reveals
- a boring layout, but the Mac Bible does sport a large type size,
- which should make it popular in some circles. The Mac Bible's
- strength lies in its broad coverage of the Macintosh world and its
- efforts to cover third-party products (both software and
- hardware), and it reads as though it were written for users, not
- for experienced computer consultants. The Mac Bible has an
- adequate discussion of the bare bones basics of using a Mac, which
- should be of use to many new users, though Robin Williams's "The
- Little Mac Book" (also from Peachpit Press) stands out as better
- choices for a new user looking to get up to speed with mousing and
- general Macintoshing.
-
- The Mac Bible has been around for years, and I expect it remains
- successful because it has good mass appeal and because it has
- established a reputation as a best-selling book. The Mac Bible
- still offers a coupon you can send in to receive an update (a cool
- feature), and it does come with disks, but you must fill out a
- coupon and pay $14 to get them. It's a fine book, but I'd like to
- see Peachpit work on a more exciting layout and re-instituting the
- personality and enthusiasm in earlier editions. The Mac Bible is
- especially appropriate for people who want a book that gives
- general guidance for hardware and software purchases, or for
- novice to intermediate level Mac users.
-
-
- **Mac Secrets** -- Opening Mac Secrets for the first time reveals
- an attractive layout, though I wonder if the people who did the
- witty key-and-lock motif throughout the book particularly
- communicated with the people who did the icon graphics in the
- margins. Based on the minimal size of the bottom margin and tight
- layout, I'm guessing that David and Joseph turned in a longer
- manuscript than anticipated.
-
- Mac Secrets has a great deal to offer in its exhaustive look at
- Macintosh CPUs and general coverage of most everything under the
- auspices of Apple, with a particular emphasis on subtle tricks and
- Easter eggs. In many ways, Mac Secrets is like the Mac Bible, but
- for a more technical audience. Mac Secrets doesn't try to help new
- users, a refreshing approach for people who wish more books would
- use the "simple overarching concept" that "under no circumstances"
- should the book define the term "scroll bar." If you work in a
- Macintosh consulting capacity and can only buy one book, you won't
- be sorry if you buy this one. If you want to learn tips, tricks,
- and Easter eggs - or if you are an intermediate level user who
- wants to be a power user - this book will take you where you want
- to go in a friendly, personable manner.
-
-
- **The Mac Almanac** -- Open the Mac Almanac, and right away you
- notice the slightly off-white pages, the unusual (though highly
- legible) fonts, the numerous fanciful graphics and sidebars, and
- the overall dreaminess of the design. The Mac Almanac rates as the
- most beautiful computer book I've ever seen.
-
- The Almanac reads as though it was written by a Mac-based desktop
- publisher who - back in 1990 - knew a tremendous amount about
- everything Macintosh (and, after all, in 1990, desktop publishing
- was a lot of what was cool about the Mac). Imagine that same
- person continuing to stay up-to-date on desktop publishing and
- System-related topics, but blocking out all that new-fangled AV
- and telecommunications stuff. The Mac Almanac's astonishingly
- excellent coverage of the System, fonts, printing, and the like
- make its merely above-average sections on hardware look weak. The
- coverage of topics such as audio, video, and telecommunications
- could use additional depth.
-
- The Mac Almanac won't turn off new users who are motivated and
- curious, though the depth of detail in some areas may overwhelm
- some. However, the book has much to offer to anyone who has jumped
- the initial hurdle and started turning into a confirmed Macintosh
- user. For example, the book begins with eight pages on how to turn
- on your Mac, covering power switches, power strips, startup
- devices, startup screens, and so on. No topic is too basic, and
- Sharon makes the complicated topics seem simple.
-
- The Almanac has personality, class, warmth, empathy, and technical
- depth. It's well-organized and practical, but it would also make a
- wonderful gift. Mac Secrets and the Mac Bible are books most any
- TidBITS reader would enjoy, use, and get a lot out of, but the
- Almanac stands out as one of the best books I've ever had the
- pleasure of owning.
-
-
- * "The Macintosh Bible, 5th Edition" DiNucci et al, Peachpit
- Press, 1-56609-140-3. 3.75 lbs. (1.7 kg), 2 inches (5 cm) thick,
- 1160 pages. Also sold with a CD of shareware and various
- utilities. The CD is also sold separately. (I haven't played with
- the CD, but I've seen it for sale.) $30 U.S., $42 Canadian.
-
- * "Macworld Mac & Power Mac Secrets, 2nd Edition," David Pogue and
- Joseph Schorr, IDG Books, 1-56884-175-2. With disks in back cover:
- 4.25 lbs. (1.85 kg), 2.25 inches (5.5 cm) thick, 1100 pages. 39.95
- U.S., $54.96 Canadian
-
- * "The Mac Almanac," Sharon Zardetto Aker, Ziff-Davis Press,
- 1-56276-143-9. 3.25 lbs. (1.5 kg), 1.5 inches (4 cm) thick, 943
- pages. 29.95 U.S., $41.95 Canadian.
-
- (Measurements are rounded, and, yes, book paper can be of
- different thicknesses!)
-
-
- Reviews/27-Mar-95
- -----------------
-
- * MacWEEK -- 20-Mar-95, Vol. 9, #12
- Digital Video Editing Systems -- pg. 1
- Avid Media Suite Pro 3.1
- Data Translation Media 100 2.0
- QMS magicolor LX -- pg. 31
- PaperPower 1.1.2b -- pg. 36
- FolderBolt Pro 1.03 -- pg. 36
- Infinite FX -- pg. 37
-
-
- $$
-
- Non-profit, non-commercial publications may reprint articles if
- full credit is given. Others please contact us. We don't guarantee
- accuracy of articles. Caveat lector. Publication, product, and
- company names may be registered trademarks of their companies.
-
- This file is formatted as setext. For more information send email
- to <setext@tidbits.com>. A file will be returned shortly.
-
- For an APS price list, send email to: <aps-prices@tidbits.com>
-
- For information on TidBITS: how to subscribe, where to find back
- issues, and other useful stuff, send email to: <info@tidbits.com>
- Otherwise, contact us at: ace@tidbits.com * CIS: 72511,306
- AppleLink & BIX: TidBITS * AOL: Adam Engst * Delphi: Adam_Engst
- Issues available at: ftp://ftp.tidbits.com/pub/tidbits/issues/
- And: http://www.dartmouth.edu/pages/TidBITS/TidBITS.html
- To search back issues with WAIS, use this URL via a Web browser:
- http://www.wais.com/wais-dbs/macintosh-tidbits.html
- -------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- --
- Adam C. Engst, TidBITS Editor -- ace@tidbits.com -- info@tidbits.com
- Author of Internet Starter Kit for Macintosh -- iskm@tidbits.com
- Internet Explorer Kit for Macintosh -- iek@tidbits.com
- Internet Starter Kit for Windows -- iskw@tidbits.com