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- TidBITS#323/08-Apr-96
- =====================
-
- If you're frustrated by trying to keep track of all the URLs in
- your life, we've got what you need as Adam begins a multi-part
- overview of Internet bookmark managers. Also this week, yet more
- news on getting your hands on System 7.5 Update 2.0, info on two
- events highlighting excellence in Mac development and human
- interface, plus the latest on the Power Mac math library from
- Motorola.
-
- 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>
- * Northwest Nexus -- 206/455-3505 -- <http://www.halcyon.com/>
- Providing access to the global Internet. <info@halcyon.com>
- * Power Computing -- 800/375-7693 -- <info@powercc.com>
- Now shipping... The Award-Winning First MacOS Compatible!
- Press comments! <http://www.powercc.com/News/quotes.html>
- * America Online -- 800/827-6364 -- <http://www.aol.com/>
- The world's largest provider of online services.
- Give Back to the Net -- <http://www.aol.com/give/>
- * EarthLink Network -- 800/395-8425 -- <sales@earthlink.net>
- Providers of direct Internet access for Macintosh users.
- For eWorld refugees: no setup fee! <http://www.earthlink.net/>
- * DealBITS: Don't squeeze the new Web page!
- <http://www.tidbits.com/dealbits/> -- <dealbits@tidbits.com>
-
- Copyright 1990-1996 Adam & Tonya Engst. Details at end of issue.
- Information: <info@tidbits.com> Comments: <editors@tidbits.com>
- ---------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Topics:
- MailBITS/08-Apr-96
- 7.5.3 Updater Update
- Just Rewards - UMPA and HIDE
- More Bookmarks than Books, Part I
- Reviews/08-Apr-96
-
- <ftp://ftp.tidbits.com/pub/tidbits/issues/1996/TidBITS#323_08-Apr-96.etx>
-
-
- MailBITS/08-Apr-96
- ------------------
-
- **Motorola Math Library Withdrawn** -- In TidBITS-322_ we
- indicated a version of Motorola's PowerPC math library was
- available on the Info-Mac archives. Motorola asked the library be
- withdrawn due to possible licensing concerns and because it is
- developing an "official" version, due out in May. [GD]
-
-
- **Symantec C++ 8.5** -- Symantec has announced version 8.5 of
- Symantec C++ for Power Macintosh, including support for Java,
- Pascal (via a Pascal compiler from Language Systems), and 68K
- development. The release features significant memory optimization,
- Apple Guides for users not familiar with Symantec's development
- tools, improved performance, and full support for OpenDoc 1.0
- development. The estimated retail price is $400, but the software
- is free to Symantec C++ subscribers, and costs $149 as trade-up
- from several other tools. [GD]
-
- <http://www.symantec.com/lit/dev/macnews.html>
-
-
- 7.5.3 Updater Update
- --------------------
- by Tonya Engst <tonya@tidbits.com>
-
- Last week, in TidBITS-322_, I wrote about purchasing System 7.5
- Update 2.0 from Apple, AMUG, or BMUG. Since then, a number of
- readers wrote in with more ways to get the update (which may be
- useful when obtaining future updates), and Apple has decided to
- give it away for free.
-
-
- **Most Creative** -- Lars <consp01@bingsuns.cc.binghamton.edu>
- commented "a lot of people are frustrated with the traffic at
- sites carrying the latest System Update. Although buying the CD is
- certainly an option, it turns out that those ten-free-hour offers
- from AOL are useful for something besides wall decorations. As a
- large commercial provider, AOL is seldom busy - the day after the
- update was released, I used one of those free offers to connect to
- AOL, download the update, and cancel my AOL subscription all in
- one fell swoop." Though some may disagree about AOL not being
- busy, it's certainly a creative use of an AOL disk.
-
- Rick Binger <rbinger@rbdesign.com> wrote in to say "in the San
- Francisco area, we can go to any ComputerWare store and copy the
- disk images (you need Disk Copy or ShrinkWrap) off one of their
- display computers in the store. I copied the images onto a SyQuest
- and it took me all of five minutes." Sounds like a good way for
- dealers to bring Mac users into the store.
-
- <ftp://mirrors.aol.com/pub/info-mac/disk/shrink-wrap-142.hqx>
-
- Several readers commented the update is now shipping in the Apple
- Internet Connection Kit, version 1.1. Also, Corvallis MUG is
- selling a $13 CD to members that contains a number of items,
- including the update. For more information, send email to
- <cmugpres@aol.com> or call 541/754-2684.
-
-
- **Outside the U.S.** -- Localized versions won't be available
- until the end of the second quarter, and my contact at Apple said
- Apple hasn't yet decided how to distribute them. Additionally, it
- appears people in Canada should call Claris in Toronto at 800/361-
- 6075. Lawrence <lawrence@csi1.enterprise.on.ca > wrote: "I called
- the 800 number to Claris in California from Canada, sat on hold
- for about 20 minutes, and was told to call Claris in Toronto. The
- price was about $28 and included our wonderful Government taxes.
- They expect to start shipping near the end of April."
-
-
- **Free from Apple** -- If you can get through to Apple/Claris at
- 800/293-6617, you can now order the update for free, though you
- still may have to wait several weeks to receive it. Shipping and
- handling is also free. I called the number on Wednesday of last
- week and opted not to wait for a representative to take my call. I
- also opted not to fax in my order, since we don't do faxes. I did
- choose the option of leaving my name and evening phone number, and
- someone called back at 10 AM on Saturday morning to take my order.
-
- An Apple press representative told me that Apple "wanted a most
- convenient process" for getting the update, and because the
- servers are so overloaded, Apple decided to waive the cost until
- the peak period ends. The representative said the peak period is
- likely to be declared over on 31-May-96, and that anyone who has
- already given his or her credit card number to purchase the CD
- will not be charged (I forgot to ask if that applied for people
- ordering in Canada).
-
- Remember, the System 7.5 Update 2.0 only works on Macs that
- already have System 7.5 installed. The currently shipping System
- 7.5 software package doesn't include the update; Apple hopes to
- add it to the package by the end of June.
-
- Finally, if you have the patience (or just good luck) you can also
- download the update from the Internet. Here are a few URLs to try:
-
- <ftp://ftp.support.apple.com/pub/apple_sw_updates/US/mac/system_sw/
- System_7.5_Update_2.0/>
- <ftp://ftp.info.apple.com/Apple.Support.Area/Apple.Software.Updates/US/
- Macintosh/System/System_7.5_Update_2.0/>
- <ftp://download.info.apple.com/Apple.Support.Area/Apple_SW_Updates/US/
- Macintosh/System/System_7.5_Update_2.0/>
-
-
- Just Rewards - UMPA and HIDE
- ----------------------------
- by Geoff Duncan <geoff@tidbits.com>
-
- Being a programmer is usually a thankless job - nine times out of
- ten, if a programmer hears from someone, it's because that person
- has a problem and wants it fixed. Since no news is good news,
- programmers are often quite happy if no one notices them.
-
- Nonetheless, programmers sometimes need to be dragged kicking and
- screaming into the light of day and thanked for their substantial
- efforts to make our lives (and our computers) more worthwhile. I'm
- happy to note two current efforts that acknowledge the hard work
- of Macintosh developers.
-
-
- **Usenet Macintosh Programming Awards** -- This is the second year
- of the Usenet Macintosh Programming Awards (UMPA) - we reported on
- last year's winners in TidBITS-278_. The basic idea is that the
- online Macintosh programmer community from the
- comp.sys.mac.programmer.* newsgroups nominates individuals (or
- teams) in categories for commercial, shareware, and freeware
- products, as well as for supporting the Mac programming community
- and being the most helpful net citizen. This year's nominations
- are almost over, and voting will commence shortly.
-
- <http://www.best.com/~mxmora/UMPA.html>
-
- Since the Usenet Mac Programming Awards represent recognition from
- peers, nominations and voting require a correct answer to a
- Macintosh programming question, but otherwise anyone may vote.
- Winners receive a plaque, T-shirt, APDA gift certificate, and
- other items; winners outside the commercial software category also
- receive copies of Symantec and Metrowerks development tools and
- utilities, BBEdit, Onyx Technology's QC, and Natural
- Intelligence's Roaster development environment for Java. Prizes
- have been donated by their respective vendors, and the awards as a
- whole are sponsored by Bare Bones Software and Metrowerks.
-
- The Usenet Mac Programming Awards represent the kind of grass-
- roots organization and recognition that characterize both the
- Macintosh and the Internet, and also provides much-deserved credit
- for hard-working developers.
-
-
- **1996 Human Interface Design Awards** -- Apple has just announced
- the 1996 Human Interface Design Excellence Awards (HIDE) a contest
- to honor the excellent human interfaces available on the
- Macintosh. Intended to promote commercial products and generate
- public recognition, Apple will give awards for the most elegant
- product, the most innovative product, the product with the best
- look and feel, and the product with the best overall interface.
- The awards will be presented at Apple's Worldwide Developer
- Conference (WWDC) in May, and there's no fee for entering the
- contest, though entries must be received by 19-Apr-96.
-
- <http://dev.info.apple.com/hideawards.html>
-
- Ironically, Apple's means of entering the contest could use some
- elegance: entrants must download, print, and _mail_ in a Acrobat
- PDF application form (that more closely resembles an insurance
- policy than a contest entry), along with two copies of the
- software to be entered. A panel of expert judges, under Apple's
- supervision, will select the winners, who will receive trophies or
- plaques, but also (and more importantly) the right to use stickers
- on product packaging indicating they won a human interface award
- from Apple. I'm pleased to see a contest that rewards design and
- elegance rather than raw sales figures or marketing muscle, but
- I'm depressed at Apple's failure to better use the Internet as a
- way to enter.
-
-
- More Bookmarks than Books, Part I
- ---------------------------------
- by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
-
- Let's face it: the bookmark or hotlist features of most Web
- browsers stink. They're utterly lousy. Most aren't even
- hierarchical, which makes it practically impossible to categorize
- your bookmarks, and the few (like Netscape Navigator's) that are
- hierarchical don't have the elegance of a well-written Macintosh
- application.
-
- When Web browsers first appeared, I yelled about how we needed a
- good independent bookmark program, partly because the existing
- ones were lousy, and partly because those of us who have to use
- and test multiple Web browsers find it difficult to switch back
- and forth if we lose our bookmarks each time. Also, since you
- collect URLs from multiple places (such as email, newsgroup
- postings, and Web pages), why should a bookmark manager be limited
- to a single program?
-
- It took a while, but now there are tons of independent bookmark
- managers, ranging from the truly simple to the overly complex. I
- look briefly at a number of them here, but thanks to the multitude
- of bookmark managers available, I'm splitting this article into
- two parts. The first part focuses on bookmark managers that use
- their own interface for organizing bookmarks, and next week the
- second part will look at programs that rely on the Finder for
- organization.
-
-
- **BookMark Manager 1.521** -- Shinjiro Nojimi's $20 shareware
- BookMark Manager is a limited-time demo application that sports a
- two-pane interface for hierarchical storage of bookmarks. You can
- go more than two levels deep, but the Find Parent command becomes
- necessary at that point - more panes would be useful. BookMark
- Manager has a Find View that lets you find text in the title
- (fast) or in the URL and text notes for that bookmark (slower). It
- seems BookMark Manager has all the basics covered in terms of
- importing, exporting, sorting, and launching URLs, but its
- interface needs serious work - the buttons are too small and
- needlessly trying for 3-D, the main window isn't resizable, many
- of the dialogs are unnecessarily complex, and there are confusing
- menu commands (such as Cancel). Although BookMark Manager can
- launch URLs once registered, it has no shortcut for grabbing URLs
- from other applications.
-
- <http://www.walrus.com/~noyo/BMReadMe.htm>
-
-
- **ClipFiler 1.3 FKEY** -- Casey Fleser's <cfleser@infi.net> $10
- shareware ClipFiler FKEY, despite being the least full-featured of
- any of the bookmark managers, still gets a strong vote because of
- its simplicity. You drop a suitcase containing the appropriate
- FKEY in your Fonts folder, reboot, and from then on, all you have
- to do capture any text selection is hit that FKEY (Shift-Command
- and a number). ClipFiler saves the selection to a SimpleText
- document called Clippings on your desktop, and you can use Peter
- Lewis and Quinn's ICeTEe (bundled with Internet Config) to launch
- URLs by Command-clicking them. I like ClipFiler because I can
- easily snag more than just a URL, which makes it great for storing
- items to check out later. It makes a lousy bookmark manager, of
- course, but most bookmark managers are mediocre at storing much
- more than URLs and short descriptions.
-
- <ftp://mirror.aol.com/pub/info-mac/gui/clip-filer-13-fkey.hqx>
-
-
- **DragNet 1.0.2** -- OnBase Technology's $39.95 DragNet (with a
- limited demo) is perhaps the most ambitious bookmark managers. Its
- four windows provide most any feature you could want. The
- Addresses window lets you enter, name, and categorize new
- bookmarks manually (DragNet automatically adds fields for Date
- Added and Date Last Visited). You can search by typing words while
- no other text fields are selected - a handy, though confusing
- interface. The Directory window looks much like a Finder window in
- Name view with categories for folders and URLs for files. The
- Directory window simplifies the task of categorizing URLs and
- browsing among the categories. The Searcher window lets you find
- groups of URLs containing a text string (unlike the searching
- feature of the Addresses window, which finds the next matching
- URL). Finally, the Hot List window contains six configurable
- pop-up menus that hold URLs in a category. Below the six pop-up
- menus are ten buttons that, much like the buttons on a car radio,
- provide instant access to frequently visited sites.
-
- You can drag an item from any DragNet window to a browser to
- launch it, or click the omnipresent Go To button. Snagging URLs is
- generally a matter of drag & drop as well, but DragNet can also
- get the current URL from some browsers, and there's an extension
- included that intercepts Netscape Navigator 2.0's Add Bookmark
- menu item and redirects the URL to DragNet's database. DragNet's
- online help stands in for the lack of a manual, and my testing
- revealed only some cosmetic display problems in 16-bit or 24-bit
- color on my second monitor. Oddly, DragNet does not use Internet
- Config, nor does it differentiate between different types of URL
- schemes, although it accepts non-http URLs. Nonetheless, in terms
- of the commercial database-oriented bookmark managers, DragNet's
- currently the best.
-
- <http://www.onbasetech.com/DragNet.html>
-
-
- **GrabNet 2.0** -- GrabNet, from the ForeFront Group, is a full-
- featured commercial ($19.95 with a 30-day full demo) bookmark
- manager. You can drag & drop URLs into your GrabNet document (it
- also can grab the current URL in your browser) and double-clicking
- an item or dragging it to your browser launches its URL. GrabNet
- supports hierarchical lists in both name and icon views and lets
- you sort them by label (name), origin (URL), and last visited
- date. Most interesting about GrabNet, however, is that you can
- create not only a comment for each URL, but you can also paste in
- some text or a graphic that displays when you have that URL
- selected within GrabNet. I'm not sure how I'd use this feature,
- and it seems like more work than I'd go to while creating URLs. I
- wasn't thrilled with GrabNet; its interface confused me slightly,
- and I'm not fond of toolbars and cryptic buttons (especially when
- they appear in the menus). Other than the capability to find a
- text string within the database, GrabNet seems to have all the
- basic features, including HTML import and export.
-
- <http://www.ffg.com/grabnet.html>
-
-
- **Internet Memory 1.5** -- The $20 Internet Memory (distributed as
- a locked, five-item demo) provides a clean interface for adding
- URLs via drag & drop and launching them with a double-click. It
- supports URLs of a variety of types, but doesn't use Internet
- Config to match URL types to helper applications. A neat feature
- is that Internet Memory can minimize its window to just its icon
- when you launch a URL; single-clicking that window maximizes it
- again. Unfortunately, you can't drag URLs into the minimized
- window. Internet Memory supports multiple address books and
- multiple folders for organizing URLs hierarchically, which is
- good, but forces you to edit everything in a dialog, including
- folder names and URL titles. You can search your address books,
- and Internet Memory has a Record mode that records URLs you visit
- with Netscape Navigator. Other unusual features include the
- capability to write-protect or DES encrypt your address books
- (can't say that I particularly see the need for either), and the
- capability to store multiple email signatures or other bits of
- boilerplate text to copy and paste into other applications.
- Overall, Internet Memory works, but doesn't have much to recommend
- it over other choices unless you need one of its more unusual
- features.
-
- <http://www.circledream.com/inmn.html>
-
-
- **MailKeeper 1.0.2** -- Nisus Software's $35 MailKeeper (with a
- 75-record limited demo) does much more than just keep track of
- URLs. It stores and indexes text of any sort, and includes
- functionality to handle email addresses and URLs automatically.
- Storing text requires first copying the text, and then pressing a
- hotkey to move the selected text to your MailKeeper database. Drag
- & drop of URLs into MailKeeper also works, and you can drag URLs
- from MailKeeper to a drag-aware Web browser to launch them. As an
- added bonus, ICeTEe also works within MailKeeper if your Web
- browser doesn't support drag & drop. MailKeeper's most innovative
- feature is its method of helping you find items. Called Guided
- Information Access, it provides you with four user-defined columns
- of categories. Clicking on a category in a column narrows the list
- of items shown to those that match that category. Clicking another
- category in the same column or in a different one narrows the list
- to items that contain both categories. This process enables you to
- work easily through a large sets of data, and you can supplement
- it with date restrictions. You can define additional categories
- for MailKeeper to index automatically when an item is first saved
- to your database, although the method of getting MailKeeper to do
- that categorization after the fact is clumsy. MailKeeper suffers
- primarily from a confusing interface, and it's not really
- dedicated enough to URLs to be ideal for that purpose. I'd like to
- see MailKeeper add automatic recategorization when categories are
- added or deleted and the capability to index and then search an
- entire Eudora mailbox.
-
- <http://www.nisus-soft.com/mailkeeper.html>
-
-
- **SiteMarker** -- Rhythmic Sphere's $12.95 SiteMarker 1.0b5-3
- works only with Netscape Navigator. It provides an unusual
- vertical three-pane display, known as a collection. The top pane
- contains multiple catalogs; the middle pane contains multiple
- categories within a catalog; and the bottom pane contains markers
- - the actual URLs within the categories. A number of windoids
- complete the interface. The Notator windoid lets you add comments
- to a marker. The Searcher windoid provides an interface to
- searching many of the main Web search engines and catalogs. The
- Stylist windoid lets you change the look of your collection
- window, and - finally - the Button Bar provides quick access to
- your eight favorite markers. SiteMarker can import and export
- HTML, and it has a Browser menu that can control Netscape via
- Apple events. An unusual item on that menu is Extract Links, which
- you use to suck all the links out of the current Web page
- (especially handy for snagging the results of a Yahoo search, for
- instance). SiteMarker also features a record mode that creates a
- marker for every page you visit. You can launch URLs by double-
- clicking or dragging them to Netscape, but you can't drag from
- Netscape to SiteMarker. Instead, to snag the current URL, you
- click the Mark button in the SiteMarker collection window or use
- the Mark command in the Marker menu. Overall, I found SiteMarker
- full-featured (although it lacks a Find) but sluggish and somewhat
- clumsy. Still, its record mode and Searcher windoid make it a
- useful tool.
-
- <http://www.rsphere.com/sitemarker/>
-
-
- **The URL Manager 1.1** -- Alco Blom's $15 shareware application,
- The URL Manager, is fast, slick, and easy. Its documents open as
- Finder-like windows in Name view, but with a faster response time.
- You create bookmarks by dragging them in from a Web browser, or
- typing Command-N and editing the bookmark name and URL in place in
- the list (rather than in a clumsy dialog). You can search for text
- in names or URLs, and double-clicking a bookmark launches the URL
- in your Web browser. You can also open bookmarks in a specified
- (via Internet Config) helper application. A dedicated menu holds
- links to the main Web search engines. It's easy to get URLs into
- other applications, either by dragging or a simple copy and paste,
- which I find I do a lot in my writing and email. The URL Manager
- can import Netscape's bookmarks, bookmark files saved as HTML (it
- can even scan for URLs in normal text files), and Anarchie and
- Fetch bookmark files, and it can export an HTML page of bookmarks.
- You won't go wrong with The URL Manager, and Alco appears to be
- updating it frequently and with powerful new features.
-
- <http://www.xs4all.nl/~alco/urlm/>
-
-
- **WabbitDA 1.4.5** -- Mel Patrick's <mel@direct.ca> freeware
- WabbitDA has a lot going for it. It's quick, easy to use, fully
- supports drag & drop, and has flexible search capabilities. You
- create new bookmarks by either copying them and clicking the New
- button, or dragging them to WabbitDA's window from Netscape or
- another drag-aware application. WabbitDA can also import bookmarks
- from Anarchie, Netscape, or another WabbitDA file. You launch URLs
- by dragging them to a drag-aware application or Command-clicking
- them in the WabbitDA window. Unusual features in WabbitDA are the
- grouping of URLs by scheme, and the marking of the group by color,
- along with a stopwatch feature for tracking how much time you
- spend online. WabbitDA's main drawback is that it's not
- hierarchical, and although you can create multiple WabbitDA files,
- you can have only one open at a time. I prefer The URL Manager to
- WabbitDA, but WabbitDA is quite good, and the price is right.
-
- <ftp://ftp.tidbits.com/pub/tidbits/tisk/tcp/web/wabbit-145-da.hqx>
-
-
- **Web Squirrel 1.0.5** -- Eastgate Systems' WebSquirrel ($49 with
- a free demo, and for another week you can buy one, get one free
- via DealBITS) is the most innovative and unique of the bookmark
- managers. Drawing inspiration from Eastgate's hypertext editor
- Storyspace, Web Squirrel uses a graphical layout for storing
- bookmarks, simplifying navigation with a powerful Find feature and
- some easily accessed shortcuts. With support for pasting and drag
- & drop (from Web browsers or from other Web Squirrel documents),
- it's easy to get URLs into Web Squirrel, and a simple double-click
- launches the URL in the proper Internet Config-defined helper
- application. Web Squirrel suffers primarily from being somewhat
- unstable in my testing and from a plethora of unrelated
- metaphorical terms. This Web squirrel (since when do squirrels
- spin webs?) creates farms, which contain multiple items
- (bookmarks) that can be graphically grouped into neighborhoods or
- textually grouped into lists. You can walk or fly around your farm
- (what, no horse?). Agents (rather conspicuous on a farm in their
- dark suits) watch the contents of your farm for keywords and
- continually gather up matching sites. Web Squirrel's graphical
- display is screen hungry, but if it was more stable, I'd probably
- use it since its organizational schemes are actually fun to use.
-
- <http://www.eastgate.com/squirrel/Welcome.html>
- <http://www.tidbits.com/dealbits/>
-
-
- **WebArranger 2.0** -- CE Software's $99.95 WebArranger 2.0 (1.0
- was distributed free through 16-Feb-96, and version 2.0 is a $49
- upgrade and comes with a free demo), is astonishing in its scope,
- thanks in large part to its heritage as a personal information
- manager called Arrange from Common Knowledge. WebArranger can grab
- URLs with a hotkey thanks to an extension called Grabber and can
- launch URLs with a keystroke (ICeTEe's Command-click also works).
- You can import Netscape bookmarks, and - in an unusual feature -
- your Netscape History file. WebArranger can check URLs to see if
- they've changed, record your path through strands of the Web, and
- even keep trying to get into busy FTP sites. A variety of
- searching and sorting features are available. On the downside,
- although WebArranger uses drag & drop internally, it doesn't
- accept URLs dropped into its windows. Perhaps my main criticism is
- that WebArranger is overkill - if you're willing to devote plenty
- of time to learning its features and using it constantly, it won't
- disappoint, but more casual users or those wishing to starting
- using a program quickly will find WebArranger's myriad options and
- features confusing.
-
- <http://www.cesoft.com/webarranger/webarrangerpage.html>
-
-
- **What URL?! 1.0a4** -- Noah Mittman's free What URL is an
- extremely simple application that accepts URLs dragged into its
- windows (you can also create bookmarks manually, although not
- directly, as in The URL Manager). It's not hierarchical, but you
- can create multiple windows and drag bookmarks between them.
- Launching is a matter of a double-clicking the URL in question.
- There's no sorting or searching, and you can only select one
- bookmark at a time. One unusual feature is a little padlock icon
- in the lower left corner of each window, which, when clicked,
- locks that window against accepting more bookmarks. A second click
- opens it again. What URL doesn't match up to The URL Manager or
- WabbitDA at this time, but it's still an early release.
-
-
- <http://www.panix.com/~nam/whaturl/>
-
-
- **WWW-Freund 1.0** -- David Renelt's free <maction@tnet.de> WWW-
- Freund sports a clean interface, but has little power under the
- hood. It uses a two-pane window to create a hierarchical interface
- to your bookmarks, and it has a button to copy the URL to the
- clipboard and another to launch the URL specifically in Netscape.
- You cannot drag URLs into WWW-Freund, or snag them with a hotkey;
- instead, you must paste the URLs in manually. And, although you
- can add and edit a description of the URL if you like, if you make
- a mistake in either the name or the URL, you cannot edit them. You
- can't even move a URL from one group to another as far as I can
- see.
-
- <ftp://ftp.tidbits.com/pub/tidbits/tisk/tcp/web/www-freund.hqx>
-
-
- **Take Your Pick** -- After looking at all of these bookmark
- managers, I feel the best commercial utility is DragNet, with
- honorable mentions going to WebSquirrel for being the most
- interesting, and WebArranger, for taking too many steroids. In the
- shareware arena, my pick is The URL Manager, and for freeware, I
- currently prefer WabbitDA.
-
- Which do I use? None of the above (actually, I do use WebArranger,
- but not for its bookmark management capabilities). Tune in next
- week for the second part of this article, which looks at bookmark
- managers that rely on the Finder. My personal favorite falls into
- that category.
-
-
- Reviews/08-Apr-96
- -----------------
-
- * MacWEEK -- 01-Apr-96, Vol. 10, #13
- PCI Graphics Acceleration Cards -- pg. 41
- Imagine128
- MGA Millenium
- QuickDraw 3D -- pg. 41
- Stylus Pro XL -- pg. 48
- SoundEdit 16 2.0 -- pg. 50
-
-
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