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- TidBITS#107/17-Feb-92
- =====================
-
- Return the survey, maybe win a button - it's your only chance!
- Back in the real world, there's a mean DOS virus that even Mac
- users should be aware of, a brand new TIDBITS LISTSERV mailing
- list, and a possible reason why that Quadra doesn't seem so
- fast. A review of Timeslips III and a gripe about unreasonable
- international upgrade fees help round out the issue, ably
- backed by a special deal for StuffIt Deluxe that is solely for
- online users.
-
- Copyright 1990-1992 Adam & Tonya Engst. Non-profit, non-commercial
- publications may reprint articles if full credit is given. Other
- publications please contact us. We do not guarantee the accuracy
- of articles. Publication, product, and company names may be
- registered trademarks of their companies. Disk subscriptions and
- back issues are available.
-
- For more information send electronic mail to info@tidbits.uucp or
- Internet: ace@tidbits.uucp -- CIS: 72511,306 -- AOL: Adam Engst
- TidBITS -- 9301 Avondale Rd. NE Q1096 -- Redmond, WA 98052 USA
- -----------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Topics:
- MailBITS/17-Feb-92
- TidBITS Survey II
- Yet More List Stuff
- DOS Michelangelo Virus Alert!
- Slip Slidin' Away
- Quadra Vampires
- International Upgrades, Ouch!
- Aladdin Deal
- Reviews/17-Feb-92
-
- [Archived as /info-mac/digest/tb/tidbits-107.etx; 29K]
-
-
- MailBITS/17-Feb-92
- ------------------
- Kent P. Miller writes, "I called Sterling Software today about the
- Usenet CD, and the only format available right now is for Sun
- workstations. At the end of March they will release a version in
- ISO 9660 format that Mac people can read. Around late April they
- plan to include a Mac program to browse the archived news."
-
- Information from:
- Kent P. Miller -- kpmiller@uokmax.ecn.uoknor.edu
-
-
- Train Power
- Lucius Chiaraviglio writes in regard to this quote from
- TidBITS#106 "But then, as someone recently said on the net, "there
- are few other media that can beat the bandwidth of a truck full of
- CD-ROMs.""
-
- "As a serious railway proponent I am obliged to point out the
- following: No media (on land, anyway) can beat the bandwidth of a
- train full of CD-ROMs." :-)
-
- Information from:
- Lucius Chiaraviglio -- chi9@midway.uchicago.edu
-
-
- TidBITS Survey II
- -----------------
- Welcome to our second annual TidBITS Survey! Unlike MacWEEK and
- the other "qualified" subscription magazines, all you have to do
- to receive TidBITS is be interested. This survey will _only_
- appear in this issue of TidBITS, so please fill it out and return
- it soon if you can. We realize that you're all busy people, as we
- are, and don't have lots of time to spare. So you have three
- options.
-
- 1) You can send in the entire survey below, at which point you may
- win a super-cool TidBITS button like those I gave to a few
- enthusiastic people at Macworld Expo. It was the only button at
- the show with a penguin on it. We've got 100 buttons to give out
- and will give them to every 20th response. If we get more than
- 2000 responses, we'll space them evenly, so if we get 2500
- responses, every 25th person will get a button. Of course, for me
- to send you a button, you'll have to include your snail mail
- address, but rest assured that those addresses will never go to a
- direct mail company.
-
- 2) You can just send in a survey response telling us how you get
- TidBITS, from Usenet, from sumex-aim, from our mailing list, from
- a BBS, or from another source. No buttons for the busy, sorry.
-
- 3) You can ignore this entirely, which will make us seriously
- depressed. <sniff>
-
- Please send survey responses to:
-
- survey@tidbits.halcyon.com
-
- if possible, but it's OK to send to my personal address if you
- have to (i.e. by replying to this note on the Internet). Those of
- you on CompuServe and America Online can use our addresses there
- instead, 70262,3152 and "Adam Engst" respectively. If you have no
- access to any of these electronic mail addresses, feel free to
- send snail mail to:
-
- TidBITS
- 9301 Avondale Rd. NE Q1096
- Redmond, WA 98052 USA
-
-
- The Short Form
- Remember, if you're short on time, please just send back this
- form, but we won't be able to send you a button unless you fill
- out the whole thing.
-
- I read TidBITS on:
- [ ] Usenet
- [ ] The SFU mailing list
- [ ] The TIDBITS LISTSERV mailing list
- [ ] sumex-aim.stanford.edu
- [ ] Other anonymous FTP site _________________________________
- [ ] CompuServe
- [ ] America Online
- [ ] A local BBS (name) _________________ (phone#) ____________
- [ ] Other ____________________________________________________
-
-
- The Long Form
- I'm curious about the demographics of the TidBITS audience this
- year in part because we're thinking of setting up a sponsorship
- program like that used by Public Broadcasting (PBS) and the survey
- results will help us figure out if that's feasible. Nonetheless,
- check out question #17 - we ought to be able to do some good
- statistics on that one. :-)
-
- We've tried to give some examples of possible categories for the
- questions below, but keep in mind that they are only guidelines,
- and if your title is "Girl Friday" (don't laugh, that's a position
- at Delta Tao Software), then by all means write that down.
-
- 00) Your Name
- Your Company
- Your Address
- City, State, Zip, Country
-
- 01) I read TidBITS on the following online source:
- (i.e. Usenet, the SFU mailing list, the TIDBITS LISTSERV,
- sumex-aim.stanford.edu, CompuServe, America Online, local BBS,
- a local network, other - please be specific!)
-
- 02) Your organization's primary activity:
- (i.e. education, government, engineering, manufacturing,
- legal, communications, retail, consulting, thumb twiddling)
-
- 03) Your professional title:
- (i.e. president, owner, VP, network manager, engineer,
- programmer, scientist, educator, consultant, grand poohbah)
-
- 04) Your department's function:
- (i.e. education, communications, design, consulting, sales,
- MIS, R&D, finance, advanced thumb twiddling)
-
- 05) How many people are employed at your organization?
- (numbers please, spreadsheets don't understand technical terms
- like "gazillions")
-
- 06) How many Macs does your organization own?
-
- 07) How many Macs does your organization plan to buy this year?
-
- 08) How many DOS computers does your organization own?
-
- 09) How many DOS computers does your organization plan to buy this
- year?
-
- 10) How many Unix workstations does your organization own?
-
- 11) How many Unix workstations does your organization plan to buy
- this year?
-
- 12) Do you participate in the purchasing of hardware and software,
- both within your company or for others?
-
- 13) If so, for how many computers do you have this participation?
-
- 14) Has TidBITS influenced your purchasing decisions in any way?
-
- 15) If so, how many purchases have you made as a direct result of
- information in TidBITS?
-
- 16) Please indicate the communications capabilities that the
- computers in your organization have.
- [ ] Local Area Network
- [ ] Networked to workstations, minicomputers, or mainframes
- [ ] Communicate with remote computers via modem
-
- 17) What is your favorite integer? :-)
-
-
- Yet More List Stuff
- -------------------
- It's taken a little while to come up, but we now have a genuine
- LISTSERV running at Rice University. Many thanks to Mark R.
- Williamson and the other great people there for going to the
- effort of setting this list up. LISTSERVs work a little
- differently from the mailing list that we currently have at SFU
- now, so pay attention if you want to get TidBITS through the
- LISTSERV. The fact that Rice exists on both BITNET and the
- Internet means that it will probably work better for folks on
- BITNET, and we're planning on moving BITNET people from the SFU
- list to the LISTSERV for that reason.
-
-
- LISTSERV instructions
- To subscribe to the list, send email to LISTSERV@RICEVM1 if you're
- on BITNET and to LISTSERV@RICEVM1.RICE.EDU if you're on the
- Internet. In the _body_ of the mailfile, put the line:
-
- SUBSCRIBE TIDBITS (yourFirstName yourLastName)
-
- and you will be automatically added. You should also receive an
- acknowledgment from the LISTSERV so you know that you're on. If
- you wish to remove yourself from the list, you can send the
- LISTSERV a message with this line in the body of the mailfile:
-
- SIGNOFF TIDBITS
-
-
- SFU Remove Function
- Some of you may wish to switch yourselves from the SFU list to the
- LISTSERV, or perhaps you just want to shut off the list
- temporarily while you go on vacation. It's now possible to remove
- yourself from the SFU list by sending email to:
-
- tidbits-subscription@sfu.ca
-
- with the word "remove" (in lower case and without the quotes) in
- the Subject: line. Unlike the LISTSERV, the SFU mailer only cares
- about the Subject: line and doesn't care one whit about what's in
- the body of the message. I realize that this is a bit confusing,
- but there's no avoiding it since the two mailing lists are running
- with different software on different machines. I'm sure you can
- all figure it out.
-
- For those of you reading this on America Online and GEnie and
- other places that don't support connections to the Internet, my
- apologies for wasting your time. We strongly encourage all
- services to connect to the Internet, however, because we believe
- in freedom of communication, and limiting access is merely a way
- of discouraging free communications. The online community is huge
- and is growing rapidly, so it helps all of us when more people can
- share their knowledge and skills with the rest of the online
- world.
-
-
- DOS Michelangelo Virus Alert!
- -----------------------------
- This one's a nasty bugger. The Michelangelo virus is a variant of
- the Stoned virus that infects the boot sector of disks. Unlike
- Stoned, on a certain date , March 6th (of any year), Michelangelo
- destroys data on the startup disk. Why am I telling you about
- this? First of all, lots of you probably have to work with DOS
- machines in some form or fashion, and it will make your job a lot
- harder if you have to recover from a trashed hard disk after
- Michelangelo gets through with it. Second, any Mac user running
- Insignia's SoftPC or the Mac286 or Mac386 emulators cards from
- Orange Micro is at risk as well. It's not quite clear if the virus
- just overwrites the FAT (file allocation table) and the boot
- sector or if it actually erases all data on all volumes, but if
- your SoftPC hard disk is infected and you have the E: drive set to
- a Mac folder, it's possible that the virus could damage your
- Macintosh files as well.
-
- The Michelangelo virus is one of the most virulent in that it has
- spread incredibly quickly and has even been shipped with
- commercial software such as DaVinci eMail 2.0 and on preformatted
- PC hard disks such as those in Leading Edge PCs. The virus scare
- has died down a bit on the Mac side, but it's still worth noting
- that the networks are perhaps one of the safer places to get
- software since files on well-run servers are usually checked at
- least briefly before posting. In addition, the networks are the
- best places to get the latest versions of virus protection
- software. The upshot of all this is that if you're at all worried
- about possibly having infected your DOS machine or SoftPC hard
- disk with Michelangelo, do yourself a favor and check it. You've
- got plenty of time before the March 6th destruction date to get a
- virus detection and removal package from the nets.
-
- Several good packages that will find and remove the Michelangelo
- virus include Fridrik Skulason's F-PROT shareware package (2.02)
- or the SCAN85 and CLEAN85 shareware programs from McAfee
- Associates. These programs should be available from most good
- sites carrying DOS software. Internet folks might look on
- wuarchive.wustl.edu, but be prepared to search for a bit - there's
- a ton of software there.
-
- If you suspect your machine has this virus but do not have an
- updated version of a virus scanner, running the CHKDSK program
- will report a "total bytes memory" value 2048 bytes less than
- expected. For example, a PC with 640K of memory will normally
- return a value of 655,360 bytes, with Michelangelo that value
- would be 653,312. Unfortunately, having less "total bytes memory"
- does not necessarily mean your machine is infected, since some
- memory resident programs can affect this value as well.
-
- If your run out of time to check for Michelangelo, but do want to
- protect your data, you might try changing the date on your PC's
- clock. Set the date for March 7th, and then after March 6th,
- reset the date to make it correct. Do not just do this and ignore
- the fact that you may have a virus though, since Michelangelo
- spreads constantly, and you could infect many other people through
- your negligence.
-
- Contact a local DOS guru if you need help with this stuff, but
- don't just laugh it off unless you think losing all your data is
- generally funny.
-
- Information from:
- Mark H. Anbinder -- mha@baka.ithaca.ny.us
- Tom Young -- xmu@cornellc.cit.cornell.edu
-
-
- Slip Slidin' Away
- -----------------
- Do you know how many hours you work? Do you care? I do. I'm a
- statistic junkie and I like to know how much time I spend on
- certain tasks. After I find out how much, I often wish I hadn't
- checked, but that's life. The sort of people who are most in need
- of tracking their time are independent consultants and other
- professionals who bill by the hour or even by the minute. I used
- to do consulting before moving west, and I've had a few requests
- for information on this program, so I decided to check out
- Timeslips III 2.0 from Timeslips Corporation.
-
- Timeslips III comes in both Mac and PC versions, and I gather they
- can share data to a certain extent, although I've only worked with
- the Macintosh version. The program is split into two basic parts,
- TSTimer, a small timer that you turn on and off to track when
- you're working on a project, and TSReport, which brings all of the
- data together and turns it into a report or a bill. Timeslips
- works on the time slip concept in which you fill out a slip for
- every activity that you do. That slip carries with it information
- on the client (3400 maximum), the project (should you have
- multiple projects for the same client - up to 128), and the
- activity (up to 250). You can also have up to 250 users so your
- colleagues can work on the same projects and have their work
- merged in at the end. I doubt many people will ever run into these
- limitations.
-
-
- TSTimer
- TSTimer comes as a DA for UniFinder users and as an application
- for MultiFinder users. Both look the same though, and allow you to
- enter information specific to each slip like user, client,
- project, activity, date range (entered automatically from the
- clock) up to 32K of comments (which can be entered as
- abbreviations and which Timeslips will expand automatically, much
- like a glossary feature in a word processor), time estimates, and
- time spent. TSTimer will of course track the time spent
- automatically when it's turned on, but your activities may not be
- at the computer. If so, you can enter lots of timeslips in batch
- mode. You can even specify if a slip is billable, unbillable, or
- no charge, options that let you narrowly specify which actions
- generate income. Using TSTimer is simplicity in itself - just
- create a new slip (which can carry all the client and activity
- settings from the previous slip), select a user, client, and
- activity from their respective buttons and click the "Turn on"
- button. At that point you can switch TSTimer into its Mini View,
- which is a smaller window that shows you only the client, slip
- time, and slip value (based on the rate you charge for that
- activity or client). There are also two buttons, one for switching
- back to Full View and one for toggling the timer. You'll probably
- leave TSTimer in Mini View most of the time except when creating
- and editing slips.
-
-
- TSReport
- TSReport takes all of the information in the slips and helps you
- to sort through it and bring it together in a coherent way. It has
- four basic types of reports, each of which can be customized. If
- you wish to figure out how long you spend on all your projects and
- how those times compare to each other internally, the Timeslips
- reports and charts will help. If you wish to merely get a list of
- all your users, clients, activities, and projects, the System
- report will do that. If you want to see detailed information on
- each client, the Clients reports will provide that function.
- Finally, but perhaps most important is the Bills report, which
- allows you to select which clients and activities to bill and to
- print out a nicely formatted bill to send off. Of course, if you
- want to export everything to a file and manipulate it with a
- spreadsheet that is equally possible.
-
- TSReport also manages all the details of the client and project
- information, so you can enter detailed client and account
- information in TSReport and have that taken into account when
- billing. Once you've billed a client, you obviously cannot change
- the slips that correspond with that bill, and TSReport provides
- simple mechanisms for backing up all your slips and archiving old
- ones that you don't need to see any more but which might be useful
- on occasion.
-
- I think I can safely say that if you want to automate your time
- and billing procedures Timeslips can do it. There are far more
- options and settings than anyone is likely to want or need, but
- the end result is that you can get your bills and reports looking
- like you want with the information you want on them.
-
-
- Problems
- This is not to imply that the program is perfect. I find the
- overabundance of features somewhat confusing, and the terminology
- is definitely aimed at professionals who understand what to do
- with options like the ability to modify the next aging date and
- payments to client funds. I'm sure that these options are
- extremely necessary for many people, but I would have appreciated
- Timeslips explaining them in the manual or truly useful online
- help. I also found it rather difficult when I first started using
- it to transfer to using Timeslips from the simple billing system
- I'd set up in HyperCard. That was undoubtedly due to my lack of
- accounting knowledge, but I don't think you should have to know
- that much accounting to bill for your time. One place where the
- accounting detail would help is in conjunction with the Timeslips
- Accounting Link (TAL), a separate program that makes it easy to
- export Timeslips data into popular accounting programs and
- provides additional reporting features as well. I haven't used
- TAL, though, so I can't comment on it otherwise.
-
- There are a few minor quirks with the program as well. TSTimer is
- not smart about multiple monitors, so it will never open in the
- same place I leave it on my second monitor. TSReport allows you to
- create your own bill layouts in a mediocre MacDraw-style layout
- editor, but it can never find the layout I created when I start up
- the program, so I have to manually open that file every time I
- want to print a bill. You can preview all of the reports on the
- screen, which is nice, but it's a pain to move between multiple
- pages of any report - you have to repeatedly hit the Continue
- button. I wouldn't be surprised if some of these problems stem
- from the fact that Timeslips is trying to keep the program as
- close to the PC version as possible, and certain interfaces simply
- do not translate well. I gather that Timeslips has added to the
- program based on user requests, so features that are absolutely
- necessary for one profession may be completely useless for
- another.
-
- I also found it disappointing that for all its power, Timeslips
- appears to be designed more for people like doctors and plumbers
- in that it has no provisions to automatically track what you are
- doing on the computer at the time. For people who work at non-
- computer tasks some of the time, Timeslips is great, since it
- allows you to track what you are doing whether or not you're doing
- it at the computer and easily enter timeslips for both types of
- tasks. However, for people who work almost exclusively at the
- computer, Timeslips won't figure out what you are doing
- automatically. It's certainly easy enough to turn TSTimer on and
- off, but quite frankly, it can be a little too easy to forget
- either way, and then you have to modify your time manually. A
- small program from ASD Software called WindoWatch claims to
- provide this sort of functionality, but from a quick look it has
- few of the powerful features in Timeslips.
-
-
- Details
- Timeslips has just released version 2.1, which supposedly has 73
- new features and 12 new reports. Some of the more interesting
- features include the ability to have Timeslips create a new slip
- and turn it on upon startup, find and replace information in slips
- more effectively, added flexibility in the report layouts, and
- numerous levels of security. The upgrade is $49.95 for single
- users and a new copy of Timeslips will run about $195 discount. If
- you bill for your time, though, the price is well worth it because
- Timeslips will help you track more of the time you work and let
- you bill for it. Recommended.
-
- Timeslips Corporation -- 508/768-6100
-
-
- Quadra Vampires
- ---------------
- by Mark H. Anbinder
-
- If you're lucky enough to have a Quadra but you've been wondering
- what the excitement was all about, because yours just isn't that
- fast... you may be responsible! Rumour has it that the popular,
- free menu-bar clock utility SuperClock, among other useful
- doodads, can cause significant performance hits on your Quadra. It
- seems that many shareware programs, including SuperClock, were
- compiled with a version of THINK C lower than 5.0 and are not
- fully compatible with the '040 processor. SuperClock in
- particular will flush the cache each time a second clicks by, so
- you get an incredible performance hit!
-
- [Adam: I asked Murph Sewall about this since he's working on a
- Quadra right now, and here are his impressions. In any event,
- things like this are a good reason to keep up with the latest
- version of your favorite shareware products since the most recent
- versions are the most likely to work without difficulty on the
- newest Macs.]
-
- Murph Sewall writes, "I've been using SuperClock since I got the
- Quadra. On rare occasions, I run with all extensions off, but I
- can't say that I've noticed a great speed up when I do. I'll have
- to run some specific tests and see if I can find a noticeable
- effect. SuperClock may indeed flush the caches every second, but a
- whole second is eons to a 25 MHz processor (whatever performance
- hit may exist, it's nothing like the whack that occurs when you
- turn the caches off)."
-
- Information from:
- Mark H. Anbinder -- mha@baka.ithaca.ny.us
- Murph Sewall -- sewall@uconnvm.uconn.edu
-
-
- International Upgrades, Ouch!
- -----------------------------
- by Jean-Philippe Nicaise
-
- I recently received an offer from Icom Simulations to upgrade my
- old OnCue to a brand new OnCue II. I don't intend to discuss the
- usefulness of OnCue II but instead the price of the upgrade. The
- price is just $34.95, which seems reasonable. So what's the point?
- Simply that shipping and handling is $6 for US orders and $45 for
- international users such as myself, since I live in France. Ouch!
- This adds up to $79.95, closing in on Microsoft's high upgrade
- prices. I think something is wrong here.
-
- OnCue II is available for around $55 from any of the mail order
- firms and with a $25 Federal Express or DHL delivery I'll receive
- it within five days, compared to the three to six weeks that most
- upgrades take to arrive. So it would only cost a mere five cents
- more to get OnCue II in a few days, which is not a bad trade-off
- of money for time.
-
- I recently ordered uAccess from ICE Engineering and my air mail
- packet cost was only $8.95. A few publishers like Symmetry are so
- nice that they send some non-major upgrades (Acta 7 v1.10 for
- instance) to international users free, a policy which garners an
- immeasurable amount of customer loyalty.
-
- [Adam: I realize that this may sound like another "Why is
- everything so expensive for international users?" gripe, but I
- think there's more to it than that. I know for a fact that it's
- not all that expensive to mail things overseas from the US - in
- fact I just mailed Jean-Philippe a one ounce package that cost me
- 95 cents and took only five days to arrive. I've never seen the
- OnCue package, but as a fairly small utility, I can't imagine that
- the whole thing, manual and all, weighs more than one pound. One
- pound would cost, at air mail letter rate according to the
- information I have from the Postal Service, a whopping $12.65. I'm
- sorry folks, but like it or not, this is a global economy and if
- you want to do well, you have to pay attention to the needs of
- international users. Especially as the networks break down the
- barriers of time and distance, intelligent companies will have to
- learn, as ICE and Symmetry have, that it's worth the customer
- loyalty to provide reasonably-priced international service.
-
- You may have noticed that the last issue had an article from Ian
- Feldman in Sweden, and TidBITS continues to spread around the
- world. TidBITS#82 was translated into Japanese and has been
- popular in Japan, and TidBITS#104 has been translated into French
- as well. I've recently heard from new readers in Brazil and
- Mexico, someone is working on an article on the state of the Mac
- in Germany, and even a few people in Russia read TidBITS and other
- network information. Representatives of US companies and the US
- government reading right now should take note of this - face it,
- we're all in this together.]
-
- Information from:
- Jean-Philippe Nicaise -- nicky@etca.fr
-
-
- Aladdin Deal
- ------------
- Here's a good deal for those of you who have been waiting for an
- excuse to pick up StuffIt Deluxe. Aladdin Systems and Raymond Lau
- have a special Valentine's Day offer _only_ for users of online
- services, including the Internet. You can get StuffIt Deluxe for
- half price - $50 - which is even less than mail order firms
- charge. If you're the t-shirt type, you can get the StuffIt World
- Tour T-Shirt at the same time for $8. If you already own StuffIt
- Deluxe or are a registered shareware user, the shirt is $11. For
- all of these items, Aladdin will pay the shipping charges in the
- US and charges $5 for Canadians and $15 for those outside the US -
- certainly better than some companies though not as nice as others.
- The rest of Aladdin's fine print says that all Aladdin software
- carries a 30-day money back guarantee (a thoroughly enlightened
- policy), and residents of California and New York must add sales
- tax. The deal ends on March 1st, 1992, so if you've been
- considering StuffIt, move fast.
-
- Aside from all that StuffIt Deluxe can normally do, if you take
- advantage of Aladdin's offer, you'll get a free upgrade to StuffIt
- Deluxe 3.0 when that comes out. 3.0 will also include StuffIt
- SpaceSaver, a transparent compression utility that works much like
- Salient's AutoDoubler. One main difference is that SpaceSaver can
- create and extract files from StuffIt archive merely by adding or
- removing the ".sit" extension from the filename. I haven't used
- either StuffIt Deluxe or StuffIt SpaceSaver seriously, but from
- what I saw at Macworld, they are both good programs.
-
- To order, just send Aladdin your name, address, phone number,
- online address, MasterCard or Visa number and credit card
- expiration date. You can use email, snail mail, call, or fax your
- order, but be sure to include the t-shirt size you need
- (M,L,XL,XXL) if you're ordering one of them.
-
- Aladdin Systems, Inc.
- 165 Westridge Drive
- Watsonville, CA 95076
- 408/761-6200 voice; 408/761-6206 fax
- AppleLink and America Online: ALADDIN
- CompuServe: 75300,1666; GEnie: ALADDINSYS
- Internet: aladdin@well.sf.ca.us
-
- Information from:
- Aladdin Systems propaganda
-
-
- Reviews/17-Feb-92
- -----------------
-
- * MacWEEK
- Animation Presentation Software -- pg. 39
- Cinemation
- Magic
- FreeHand 3.1 -- pg. 39
- Backup Programs -- pg. 44
- DiskFit Pro
- Redux
- Total Recall
- SurfGuard
- FastBack Plus
- Retrospect Remote
- NetStream
-
- * BYTE
- Spreadsheets -- pg. 222
- Lotus 1-2-3 for Macintosh
- Excel 3.0
- Claris Resolve 1.0v2
- Wingz 1.1a
- Macintosh PowerBooks -- pg. 253
- Telebit QBlazer -- pg. 259
- SoftNode -- pg. 259
-
- References:
- MacWEEK -- 10-Feb-92, Vol. 6, #6
- BYTE -- Mar-92
-
-
- ..
-
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