home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- From: ace@tidbits.com (Adam C. Engst)
- Subject: TidBITS#249/24-Oct-94
- Date: Mon, 24 Oct 94 21:48:56 PDT
-
- TidBITS#249/24-Oct-94
- =====================
-
- Chuck Bartosch returns with more about the Power Mac versus the
- Pentium; we announce the second edition of Internet Starter Kit
- for Macintosh; and we take a quick look at a project to provide
- free Internet access to citizens in Italy. Mark Anbinder reports
- on numerous small software updates, and additional rumors and
- news talk about the latest version of AOL's software as well as
- a hybrid computer with a PowerPC 601 and a 486 on the
- motherboard.
-
- This issue of TidBITS sponsored in part by:
- * APS Technologies -- 800/443-4199 -- <71520.72@compuserve.com>
- Makers of hard drives, tape drives, and neat SCSI accessories.
- For APS price lists, email: <aps-prices@tidbits.com>
-
- Copyright 1990-1994 Adam & Tonya Engst. Details at end of issue.
- Automated info: <info@tidbits.com> Comments: <ace@tidbits.com>
- --------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Topics:
- MailBITS/24-Oct-94
- AOL 2.5.1 Ready
- PowerBook Modem Updates
- More Apple Updates
- Free Internet Access in Italy
- Pentium Redux
- Internet Starter Kit for Macintosh, Second Edition
- Reviews/24-Oct-94
-
- [Archived as /info-mac/per/tb/tidbits-249.etx; 30K]
-
-
- MailBITS/24-Oct-94
- ------------------
- It was a dark and stormy night that Thursday the 13th of October,
- and the pavement had broken out into an oily sheen of sweat. And
- then, to use the Reagan/Bush passive voice cop-out, mistakes were
- made, resulting in an automobile accident involving Tonya and our
- Honda Civic. The car can be repaired in a week or two, but the
- more subtle injuries to Tonya's neck took several days to manifest
- themselves and may take much longer to heal. With any luck, she'll
- be fine in a few weeks or months, but in the meantime, Tonya
- cannot handle much email. This, combined with some pre-arranged
- commitments I have for the next two weeks, means the less
- unnecessary email we receive, the better. Thanks for
- understanding. [ACE]
-
-
- **Internet Video** -- One of the things I'm doing in the next few
- weeks is working on a video about the Internet, and the producer
- is looking for images to use in it. If you have computer art or
- digitized photographs that you would like to submit for
- consideration and to which you have rights, please send them to
- Harry Wiland at <hhw@earthlink.net>. The act of submission
- constitutes permission to use, so please don't submit anything
- that's not your work since we're trying to stay well within the
- bounds of acceptable use. [ACE]
-
-
- **HDT and Stacker** could be a dangerous combination if you use a
- "Stacked" disk (a disk compressed with Stacker from Stac
- Electronics) that's been formatted with FWB's Hard Disk Toolkit on
- a computer running Apple's SCSI Manager 4.3. (SCSI Manager 4.3
- only works on Centris, Quadra, and Power Mac models, and if you
- use one of those Macs, note that System 7.5 includes the SCSI
- Manager 4.3 extension in its default installation.) FWB Technical
- Support confirmed a report from Stac Electronics that SCSI Manager
- 4.3-compatible versions of HDT can cause data loss when used with
- Stacker. (The HDT 1.6 Read Me file alerts users to an
- incompatibility.) One solution is to not install the SCSI Manager
- 4.3 extension when installing System 7.5. (After installing the
- System, restart with extensions disabled and remove the
- extension.) On Macintosh models with SCSI Manager 4.3 in ROM, such
- as the Quadra AV systems and Power Macs, don't use "Stacked" disks
- if you formatted them with HDT 1.5 or later. FWB says a fix is in
- the works but will probably not be available until the next major
- release. [MHA]
-
-
- **LaserWriter 8.2** was recently released by Apple, and they
- recommend using it instead of any previous 8.x driver. Fixes and
- changes mentioned include: improved printing of PICTs containing
- rotated objects, improved Chooser setup routine, and a change in
- the default output device - the 8.2 driver always defaults back to
- the printer as the print job destination. Evidently, previous
- versions defaulted to the most recently used destination and - as
- a result - too many print jobs were accidently faxed via printers
- that include fax cards.
-
- The version of 8.2 available on the nets does not come with an
- installer; instead you get the driver and a folder of Apple PPDs.
- The ReadMe suggests that you use an installer to install a
- previous version of the 8.x driver _before_ copying the 8.2 driver
- into your Extensions folder. The ReadMe also recommends trashing
- your LaserWriter Prefs folder and using the new PPDs. [TJE]
-
- ftp://ftp.apple.com/dts/mac/sys.soft/imaging/laserwriter-8-2.hqx
- ftp://ftp.apple.com/dts/mac/sys.soft/imaging/laserwriter-8-2-fax.hqx
-
-
- **QuickDraw GX** -- In preparing the three part series about
- QuickDraw GX (starting in TidBITS-243_), I found the Peirce Guide
- to QuickDraw GX Printing quite helpful. Michael Peirce has
- converted the document into a DocMaker document, and you can now
- retrieve it via FTP. [TJE}
-
- ftp://mrcnext.cso.uiuc.edu/pub/info-mac/info/sft/pierce-gx-guide.hqx
-
-
- **Pythaeus** writes, "One of our System Engineers just got back
- from Apple training and said Apple was showing a Mac that I've
- come to call the MacGinsu. It's a Mac with a 66 MHz PowerPC 601
- and a 66 MHz 486 on the motherboard with video in and out for
- under $2,000."
-
- [What's great about this report is how it compares to one of my
- 1991 April Fools articles (see TidBITS-52_). Compare this
- sentence: "Hybrid/3 includes a 16 MHz 68030 CPU (and its
- associated math coprocessor) from Motorola and a 33 MHz 80386 from
- Intel, along with a custom controller that allows either one to be
- used independently (one at a time)." Ah, the vagaries of fiction.
- -Adam]
-
-
- **The Macintosh Client/Server Database Development Summary**,
- Revision 1.1, by Liam Breck, has just been released. It summarizes
- client-builder tools, data access layers, and database servers
- applicable to Macintosh (and cross-platform) client/server
- database development. The summary includes explanations of the
- three categories and describes over 25 products. It is purely
- informational and contains no propaganda, as the author is a
- neutral party. To receive the document by email, request a copy
- from the author at <breck@external.umass.edu>. [LB]
-
-
- **Workgroup Server 95** owners have a little longer to obtain a
- performance-enhancing software upgrade. Last January, Apple
- introduced AppleShare Pro server software version 1.1 and A/UX
- 3.1. The new software can provide up to 40 percent better
- performance when used with high performance hard disks. Those who
- purchased an AWS 95 before 01-Dec-93 may order an upgrade for both
- programs for $199; owners of AWS 95 systems who purchased them on
- or after 01-Dec-93 but who have earlier versions of the software
- are entitled to a free upgrade. The upgrade offer has been
- extended until 02-Jan-95. Apple -- 800/769-2775 ext. 7822 --
- 408/862-3385. [MHA]
-
-
- AOL 2.5.1 Ready
- ---------------
- by Radical Liberation <radicallib@aol.com>
-
- The official release of version 2.5.1 of the AOL software is now
- available on the Internet right (as well as on AOL itself,
- undoubtedly) at:
-
- ftp://ftp.aol.com/mac/Install_America_Online_v2.5.1.bin
-
- Despite what the accompanying ReadMe says, the AOL 2.5.1 client
- software does not, in fact, require an Internet connection, but
- supports both regular modem connections and MacTCP-based Internet
- connections.
-
- New features include the capability to connect over the Internet,
- and the client software looks and works just the same. AOL seems
- to have fixed earlier problems with downloading files while
- connected over the Internet. There are some security concerns
- regarding this type of connection because the software sends your
- username and password in clear text over the Internet, making it
- possible for someone to steal them and run up large bills. If this
- concerns you, don't use the Internet connection method.
-
- The client software sports a new 3-D marbled look and many of the
- top-level screens have been rearranged, making them easier and
- more enjoyable to navigate. Unfortunately, once you navigate into
- your favorite small forum, the look returns to the old style.
-
- Image hounds will appreciate the new capability to view images
- while downloading, depending on the file format. The partial view
- allows you to cancel downloads of images that aren't looking
- promising. Also, if the image has a thumbnail preview (many
- Photoshop and JPEGView images do), AOL now makes it available as
- part of the file's description. For formats that don't lend
- themselves to partial views, (like JPEG-compressed images), AOL
- displays the image when you are done downloading, if you use the
- Download Now button.
-
- [AOL just started testing anonymous FTP access (keyword: FTP), and
- although it seemed to work, a 1.3 MB StuffIt file I downloaded was
- somehow corrupted. -Adam]
-
-
- PowerBook Modem Updates
- -----------------------
- by Mark H. Anbinder, News Editor <mha@baka.ithaca.ny.us>
- Director of Technical Services, Baka Industries Inc.
-
- Apple has announced the release of two software updates to address
- problems PowerBook owners have experienced with their modems. The
- new Express Modem 1.5.4 software is for users of the Apple Express
- Modem with System 7.5; the other is for PowerBook 150 owners.
-
- Version 1.5.4 of the Express Modem software eliminates the problem
- that caused a PowerBook running System 7.5 to crash on restart if
- there were faxes waiting to go out.
-
- The new PowerBook 150 Update 1.0 software corrects a problem with
- the original modem-handling abilities of the PowerBook 150 that
- caused any internal modem to continue to use battery power even
- when it was not in use. Global Village released a new version of
- their PowerPort software several weeks ago that prevented the
- problem from occurring, but it only supports the company's own
- PowerPort modems.
-
- Both updates are available on AppleLink, or on the Internet via
- FTP in:
-
- ftp://ftp.austin.apple.com/Apple.Support.Area/Apple.Software.Updates/
- Net.and.Comm.SW/
-
- Information from:
- Apple Copmuter
-
-
- More Apple Updates
- ------------------
- by Mark H. Anbinder, News Editor <mha@baka.ithaca.ny.us>
-
- Apple has introduced a number of software updates to fix problems
- or improve performance on a variety of Macintosh hardware.
-
- * The 040 VM Update 1.0 eliminates the tendency of certain 68040
- Macs (Quadra/LC/Performa 630 series and LC/Performa 570 series
- machines) to hang when the 68040 processor caches and virtual
- memory are both active.
-
- * The 630 SCSI Update 1.0 patches the SCSI Manager to improve
- large file transfers on the Quadra/LC/Performa 630 series
- machines' SCSI bus.
-
- * Express modem users on the Quadra/LC/Performa 630 series should
- install the EM Sound Update 1.0 to add sound support to the modem;
- sounds generated on the phone line such as dial tone and modem
- carrier tones can be heard through the Mac's speaker.
-
- * Mount IDE Drive 1.0 can be used to access the internal IDE hard
- drive on a PowerBook 150 or 630-series computer when the Mac has
- been booted from a device other than the internal drive.
-
- * Color Classic owners can finally use their Apple IIe cards with
- System 7.5 installed, thanks to Color Classic Update 1.0.
-
- * The Macintosh TV now supports TV mode under System 7.5 with TV
- Setup Control Panel 1.0.2 installed.
-
- All of these updates are available on AppleLink under "Apple
- Products -> Apple SW Updates -> Macintosh -> System Software ->
- Other System Software," and on the Internet via FTP at
- <ftp.austin.apple.com> and via Gopher at <info.hed.apple.com>.
-
- Information from:
- Apple Computer
-
-
- Free Internet Access in Italy
- -----------------------------
- by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
-
- Mario Marinelli <mario@basker.sublink.org> tells us that, in what
- may be a first, the Italian city of Bologna now provides free
- Internet access to all its citizens.
-
- http://www.infn.it/pub/CNAF/Bologna.html
-
- CINECA, a semi-public organization owned in part by the City of
- Bologna, has leased a 128K high speed link to the Internet and
- provides Internet access in several ways, including basic Unix
- shell accounts, a BBS (probably SoftArc's FirstClass) that will
- provide news and email, and also, for a fee of $20 per month, SLIP
- or PPP accounts for more advanced users who want their own
- Internet nodes. The project, called NetTuno ("Nettuno" is the
- Italian name for the Roman god of the sea and the symbol of
- Bologna), has been joined by the cities of Rome and Turin as well.
- If other Italian cities follow suit, it could lead to a
- significant upswell in Internet use from Italy.
-
- The initiative apparently started as a result of the responses to
- a series of newspaper articles about global networking and its
- impact for growth in business opportunities, but perhaps more
- interesting, in response to articles discussing the development
- and implementation of a new model of participatory democracy. You
- can get more information about the project via email from
- <baskerville@cineca.it> or via the Web (assuming you read Italian)
- at:
-
- http://www.cineca.it/nettuno/nettuno.htm
-
- [Incidentally, I found the above information on Bologna via The
- Virtual Tourist, an especially interesting Web service located at
- the URL below. -Adam]
-
- http://wings.buffalo.edu/world/
-
-
- Pentium Redux
- -------------
- by Chuck Bartosch <chuck@baka.ithaca.ny.us>
-
- Last week's business article (TidBITS-248_) drew several questions
- and lots of great mail. This article responds to some of the issue
- raised.
-
- **Quantities** -- Last week I stated with undue confidence that
- there were about four times as many Power Macs in existence as
- Pentium-based systems. I based this statement in part on
- information that says Power Mac sales are still outrunning Pentium
- sales (at least through the dealer channel - direct sales are
- harder to verify), but that Pentium sales are ramping up quickly.
- Pentium sales are definitely slower than Intel expected, and
- weren't helped by the PCI glitch Intel suffered earlier this
- summer.
-
- Since last week, I've done considerable research to uncover
- trustworthy numbers on this topic. An Apple technical briefing in
- August first raised the idea with numbers similar to what I
- quoted. Unfortunately, my best information comes from Pythaeus,
- who saw specific research from market research firms like IDC and
- InfoCorp, who don't give data to non-paying customers. Hence, I
- can't provide many references that people can cite to show their
- PC friends.
-
- However, in the Oct-94 Macworld (pg. 41), Patrick McKenna writes,
- "analysts report Pentium sales lagging behind those of the Power
- Mac," and mentions the speculation of one analyst that many PC
- users recently switched to 66 MHz 486 systems, resulting in less
- need for another performance boost.
-
- The current problem is that no one believes Pentium sales will
- continue to lag behind Power Mac sales for long, and the companies
- who use the PowerPC chip don't want to have their promotion of the
- current situation thrown back at them later.
-
-
- **Native vs. Optimized** -- Another common comment concerned the
- issue of "native Pentium applications." First, at least three
- applications have been optimized for the Pentium to date. None of
- the current three are mainstream applications, but rumor has it
- that Adobe is rewriting Photoshop for Pentium-optimized
- compilation.
-
- Second, as Eric Schlegel of Microsoft mentioned in email, the term
- "native" isn't applicable, since the Pentium does include x86 code
- and is thus not "emulating" when running older applications. I
- think that this point clouds the real situation. I see little
- point in using a Pentium if you only end up running it as a faster
- clock speed 386. Still, it is more correct to ask "how many
- Pentium-optimized Win32 applications have you seen?"
-
- Few applications use the 486 as anything but a fast 386 either,
- though that's partly because the main advantage of the 486 is not
- new instructions (there aren't many), but instead reduced clock
- cycles for many instructions and the addition of an on-chip cache
- (this enabled the core CPU speed to increase with less concern
- about the external bus clocking).
-
- This is similar to the situation with the 286, since most DOS
- applications were written to work with the 8088 for years after
- the release of the 286. In other words, few programs took
- advantage of the extra capabilities of the 286, much less the
- incipient 386. Crudely speaking, each successive chip has had more
- instructions without those capabilities being used by application
- software (though other features, like caches, are used, of
- course). This predicament was one of the major motivations behind
- OS/2 - to force software into the new age of the 386.
-
- Fundamentally, these are the issues:
-
- * You can discount Intel's Pentium SPECmark ratings by 10 to 20
- percent to account for the fact that real software isn't optimized
- for the Pentium. I think this is significant.
-
- * Intel has lost control of the x86 standard. Now that AMD and
- Cyrix have come out with their own versions of "Pentium-like"
- chips (which aren't clones), the problem compounds. Do you
- recompile for each chip? Or none of them? So far the answer has
- generally been none. This has long term ramifications for the
- Intel world.
-
- * Intel can't move forward without recompiling. By that I mean
- that they can't take full advantage of new capabilities and full
- performance without recompilation for each generation of chip.
- That's not to say that recompilation won't be required for the
- PowerPC 604 or 620 to make best use of those chips, but Apple
- seems to have enough control over developers to ensure that
- recompilation takes place if necessary.
-
-
- **The Industry Says...** -- I'm not alone in thinking the
- optimized applications issue is a significant one for Intel.
- Consider the following quotes regarding the performance of the
- 486DX4 versus the Pentium. In 07-Sep-94 NewsBytes, Steve Gold
- wrote that the Apricot 486DX4 PC "is faster than more than half
- the Pentium-based PCs available from the likes of Compaq, Dell,
- Gateway, IBM, NEC, and AT&T." This information came from a "real
- world" test by BAPC (Business Applications Performance
- Corporation).
-
- Several Computer Shopper articles make much the same point, and
- the Sep-94 issue of PC World says, "NEC's DX4-100 outperforms six
- Pentium-60s and -66s. Ambra's 486DX2-66 outperforms two Pentium-
- 60s. At one time a PC's processor gave buyers a rough but accurate
- guide to a system's price/performance, but that simple indicator
- no longer works. Performance levels and prices, too, are all over
- the map."
-
- Finally, in the Sep-94 issue of Computer Shopper, microprocessor
- guru Michael Slater writes, "semiconductor economics and typical
- PC user needs favor the DX4. The DX4 is significantly cheaper to
- make than the Pentium, and on integer programs that have not been
- optimized for the Pentium - which includes the vast majority of
- software in use today - it provides comparable performance. The
- cost of building a system around the processor is also lower."
-
-
- Internet Starter Kit for Macintosh, Second Edition
- --------------------------------------------------
- by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
-
- The second edition of Internet Starter Kit for Macintosh ($29.95,
- ISBN 1-56830-111-1) should be readily available now. You can still
- order direct from Hayden with a 20 percent discount, just send
- email to <iskm@tidbits.com> for the information. Many people have
- asked me about the most significant changes.
-
- First of all, the book is a lot longer than the first edition,
- some 990 pages versus 640 pages. Despite this, it's not much
- thicker, since Hayden used relatively thin paper for the second
- edition, whereas they used bulky paper for the first edition.
- Never judge a book by its spine. To underscore the impact of all
- that writing, also consider the fact that the first edition has
- about 280 pages of appendices, but the second has less than 250.
-
- So what is all that new text? A number of the chapters increased
- in length, as I figured out better ways of explaining how the
- Internet works and how it fits together. I also mentioned a few
- notable events that had happened in the previous year, such as
- Canter and Siegel spamming Usenet. The chapter about MacTCP and
- MacTCP software grew so large that I ended up splitting it into
- two. Chapter 12 focuses on MacTCP, PPP, and SLIP, and contains
- lots of technical and troubleshooting information that I learned
- since the first edition, and Chapter 13 covers just the MacTCP-
- based applications. Even with that split, Chapter 13 is huge,
- because so many new and updated applications appeared last year,
- and I wanted to discuss each one, at least briefly. Although some
- have no doubt changed already, I also included URLs for pretty
- much every program in the book.
-
- The expanded chapters were aided in the size increase by the book
- business's version of steroids - new chapters. I added Chapter 5,
- which excerpts some of Internet Explorer Kit for Macintosh, which
- I co-authored with Bill Dickson last spring. I decided to add the
- excerpt because one of the criticisms of the first edition was
- that it told you how to do lots of stuff, but it didn't tell you
- why you might want to do those things or what the Internet would
- be like, which the Explorer Kit did well. The other criticism of
- the first edition was that it didn't provide simple step-by-step
- instructions on how to use the main programs. I had avoided those
- instructions because they're difficult to write well for something
- that changes as quickly as the Internet. But, my editor prevailed,
- and thus was born Chapter 14, which covers MacTCP, MacPPP,
- InterSLIP, Eudora, Anarchie, Fetch, NewsWatcher, MacWAIS,
- TurboGopher, Mosaic, and MacWeb. You won't learn how to do much
- from those instructions, but they will get you started.
-
- Ken Stuart <kps1@cornell.edu> came through with an admirable job
- of updating the list of Internet resources in Appendix A,
- including numerous Web sites along with mailing lists, WAIS
- sources, FTP sites, and Gopher servers. We had to shrink the list
- of newsgroups in Appendix B to keep the book at a reasonable size
- (with over 9,000 newsgroups, you have to draw the line somewhere),
- and Appendix C and D still list Internet providers along with
- contact information.
-
- Perhaps the part of the book that I'm the most proud of is the
- disk. It's a high density disk this time, and includes the
- following software: MacTCP 2.0.4, MacPPP 2.0.1, InterSLIP 1.0.1,
- Eudora 1.4.3, Anarchie 1.2.0, MacWAIS 1.29, MacWeb 0.98a,
- TurboGopher 1.0.8b4, and a folder of Essential Internet Bookmarks
- that point at self-extracting versions (use Binary mode to
- retrieve them if you don't use the bookmarks) of the latest
- essential Internet applications in:
-
- ftp://ftp.tidbits.com/pub/tidbits/select/
-
- It's easy to throw programs on a disk, though, so this time we
- created an installer using Aladdin's excellent StuffIt
- InstallerMaker.
-
- ftp://ftp.netcom.com/pub/leonardr/Aladdin/InstallerMaker_2.0.hqx
-
- The installer puts everything in the proper places, and if you use
- Northwest Nexus, it even configures MacTCP for you. I've created a
- custom installer for another provider, LA-based EarthLink Network
- <info@earthlink.net> in exchange for them buying a quantity of
- books for their startup kits, and I can do the same for other
- interested providers - just send me email.
-
- Regardless of the provider you use, everyone gets a PPP
- Preferences file that contains a slew of modem strings - I've
- discovered that most of the problems people have in connecting to
- the Internet are related to their modem init strings. The entire
- list is also on the disk as a text file. The version of MacWeb on
- the disk connects to the Internet Starter Kit for Macintosh home
- page by default, and that page lists, chronologically, the latest
- versions of the programs that you can retrieve via the Essential
- Internet Bookmarks.
-
- http://www.tidbits.com/tidbits/index.html
-
- So, along with updating all the information that needed updating,
- those are the main changes in the book. I'm happy with the second
- edition because I've learned so much over the last year and I
- think the added knowledge helps the book, and thus the reader, a
- great deal. Reports from providers so far indicate that I
- succeeded.
-
- Should you buy the second edition if you already have the first?
- That's of course up to you, and I'd say that it depends on how
- you've used the Internet. If you dove right in and always have the
- latest of everything, no, the second edition won't tell you all
- that much that's new. One local Internet user recommended on a
- local newsgroup getting the second edition and giving the first
- edition to a friend. I don't know if that's true for everyone, but
- little of the information in the first edition is wrong; it's just
- out of date. If, on the other hand, you haven't explored the
- Internet all that much, but you want to get more into it now, the
- second edition may be extremely worthwhile.
-
- Oh, and to answer the question about upgrades, no, there is no
- upgrade path. Despite the addition of the disk, this is a book,
- and books don't have upgrades. Materials cost is about a third of
- what the book sells to stores for, so the margins are extremely
- low. In comparison, a software product is often cheaper to produce
- in terms of materials, and usually sells for quite a bit more
- money. And yes, I know O'Reilly offers 25 percent discounts on
- second editions if you send them the cover from your first
- edition. All I can say to that is that you can get 20 percent off
- both the first edition and the second edition by ordering direct
- from Hayden, and you don't have to rip the cover from the first
- edition.
-
- Actually, why the heck are you asking me if you should buy the
- second edition? I obviously think you should buy three, or maybe
- ten, and give them to your friends and relatives as gifts. They
- stack well, and make great furniture, and if it's another cold
- winter in the eastern U.S., I bet there are quite a number of BTUs
- stored in those pages.
-
- For a second opinion (and, I think, a well done review), check out
- Elliotte Rusty Harold's <elharo@shock.njit.edu> review at:
-
- http://rever.nmsu.edu/~elharo/faq/reviews/tisk.html
-
- For those of you who like buying things in computer stores rather
- than bookstores, Hayden is releasing another version of the book
- into the software channel. The "software version" as I've been
- calling it for lack of a better title, is _exactly_ the same as
- the book version, with four differences. First, it comes in a box.
- Second, it costs a little more. Third, it has another disk, for a
- total of two. (The second disk includes DropStuff with Expander
- Enhancer 3.5.1, Finger 1.3.7, MacTCP Watcher 1.1.1, MacWeather
- 2.0.3, NCSA Telnet 2.6, NewsWatcher 2.0b9, StuffIt Expander 3.5.1,
- and Talk 1.1.1.) Fourth, and most importantly in my opinion, I
- managed to get Hayden to license all of the shareware on the two
- disks other than MacWAIS and DropStuff. That means if you buy the
- software version, you get not only a licensed version of MacTCP,
- but you are already registered for Anarchie, Finger, Talk, MacTCP
- Watcher, MacWeather, and TurboGopher (and yes, I know some of
- those are free - we licensed them anyway to support the
- programmers). I was especially pleased to be able to negotiate
- these licenses, since financially recognizing the programmers
- helps to legitimize the excellent shareware available.
-
-
- Reviews/24-Oct-94
- -----------------
-
- * MacWEEK -- 17-Oct-94, Vol. 8, #41
- Norton Utilities 3.1 -- pg. 33
- Now Utilities 5.0 -- pg. 33
- SAM 4.0 -- pg. 34
-
- * InfoWorld -- 17-Oct-94, Vol. 16, #42
- Illustration Programs -- pg. 96
- Adobe Illustrator 5.5 Deluxe Edition
- Aldus FreeHand 4.0
- Canvas 3.5
-
-
- $$
-
- 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
- with the single word "setext" (no quotes) in the Subject: line to
- <fileserver@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 to our mailing list,
- where to find back issues, how to search issues on the Internet's
- WAIS, 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
- TidBITS * 1106 North 31st Street * Renton, WA 98056 USA
- Back issues available at ftp://ftp.tidbits.com/pub/tidbits/issues/
- To search back issues with WAIS, use macintosh-tidbits.src
- With MacWeb, use 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 -- tisk@tidbits.com
- Internet Explorer Kit for Macintosh -- iek@tidbits.com
- Internet Starter Kit for Windows -- iskw@tidbits.com
-
-