TidBITS#133/13-Jul-92
=====================
 
 By popular request, this week brings you even more on neat
   Internet services, and the final word from Howard Hansen on 
   Excel 4.0, along with an important warning about saving from 
   Excel. For those of you with monstrous TIFF files, you might 
   consider the new Pinnacle Micro 650 MB magneto-optical drive, 
   but you also might read about what's wrong with Pinnacle's 
   ads. Check out next week's issue for exciting new stuff!
 
 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 information send email to info@tidbits.com or ace@tidbits.com
 CIS: 72511,306 -- AppleLink: ace@tidbits.com@internet#
 AOL: Adam Engst -- Delphi: Adam_Engst -- BIX: TidBITS
 TidBITS -- 9301 Avondale Rd. NE Q1096 -- Redmond, WA 98052 USA
 -----------------------------------------------------------------
 
Topics:
    MailBITS/13-Jul-92
    Gateways 1.5: More Internet
    Pinnacle Problems
    Excel 4.0 for the Mac III
    Excel 4.0 Comments
    Reviews/13-Jul-92
 
[Archived as /info-mac/digest/tb/tidbits-133.etx; 30K]
 
 
MailBITS/13-Jul-92
------------------
  Nigel Stanger writes: Here's Apple's original slogan. In fact,
  here's the relevant paragraph from West of Eden.
 
    They sold their product for the odd sum of $666.66 and
    identified themselves with a curiously romantic logo that
    showed Isaac Newton under an apple tree and sported a
    legend lifted from Wordsworth: "Newton... 'A Mind Forever
    Voyaging Through Strange Seas of Thought... Alone.'"
 
  The book itself is:
 
  Rose, Frank, "West of Eden: The End of Innocence at Apple
  Computer," Hutchinson 1989. ISBN 0-09-174118-1.
 
  Information from:
    Nigel Stanger -- STANGER@otago.ac.nz
 
 
Nisus/Word Comment
  Mel Martinez writes: Matt Neuburg (in TidBITS#131) ignores a
  feature of Nisus that I consider one of the strongest reasons to
  switch to Nisus after using Word for so long: scrolling speed.
 
  While not quite as fast as a plain text editor, for a WYSIWYG
  editor, Nisus blazes through a document while Word crawls. This is
  especially true when the document includes graphics. I would put
  this under Matt's category "Moving around the document" and give a
  big nod to Nisus. Scrolling speed also affects the "Editing"
  category since a click-and-drag that results in a scroll is nearly
  twice as fast in Nisus as in Word.
 
  Matt also glosses over Nisus's better options for placing a
  graphic (behind, in front of, or embedded in the text) than Word
  due to Nisus's separate graphics layer.
 
  Information from:
    Mel Martinez -- mem@jhufos.pha.jhu.edu
 
 
Gateways 1.5: More Internet
---------------------------
  It appears that I have hit a chord with my first article on the
  Internet. I don't wish to delve into the details, but several
  people have offered useful suggestions to that first article that I
  thought you would find interesting.
 
 
Zen
  Prentice-Hall will soon release the second edition of a $22 book
  called "Zen and the Art of the Internet." The first edition of
  this book exists all over the place on the Internet in Unix-
  compressed PostScript form. You may not want to check out this
  file since getting it will be complicated for a number of reasons,
  including the fact that you will be dealing with a 450K file.
  However, to get instructions on how to receive the first edition,
  send email to <archive-server@cs.widener.edu> with the command
  "send zen hints" in the body of your message. You're on your own.
 
 
FAQ
  You may see this abbreviation strewn around the Internet in
  various places, and unless someone has explained it to you, it may
  not make much sense. FAQ stands for Frequently Asked Questions,
  and since the Internet grows at a rate of about 20% each month,
  people come into a discussion group late and miss a long
  thread about a particular question. The late-comer promptly asks
  the question again, and the process repeats itself. Enter FAQ
  lists. They take the most common questions and provide answers so
  that late-comers don't interrupt the ongoing conversations to ask
  about subjects that have been covered already.
 
  A recently created Usenet group includes a FAQ posting about
  the Mac, and it has been made available via FTP at
  <sumex-aim.stanford.edu> as...
 
    /info-mac/report/cmsf-faq.txt
 
  (and remember what I said in Gateways 1 in TidBITS#130 about the
  mirror sites and mailservers). The file is 55K, unfortunately, so
  it won't fit through the AppleLink gateway and America Online will
  truncate it to 27K.
 
 
FAQ Table of Contents
 
 I.    Introduction
        1. What other information is available?
        2. Posting Etiquette
 II.   The Question of the Year:
        Why is my system using so much memory?
 III.  FTP
        1. Where can I FTP Macintosh software?
        2. Can I get shareware by E-mail?
        3. Where can I find Application X?
        4. Can someone mail me Application X?
        5. What is .bin? .hqx? .cpt? .image? .etc?
 IV.   Viruses
        1. Help! I have a virus!
        2. Reporting new viruses
 V.    Printing
        1. How do I make a PostScript file?
        2. How do I print a PostScript file?
        3. Why won't my PostScript file print on my mainframe's
           printer?
        4. Why are my PostScript files so big?
        5. How can I print PostScript on a non-PostScript printer?
        6. How do I make my ImageWriter II print in color?
        7. Why doesn't PrintMonitor work with the ImageWriter?
        8. Why did my document change when I printed it?
 VI.   System Software
        1. What is System 7 Tuneup? Do I need it?
        2. Do I need System 7.01?
        3. How can I get System 7.01 on 800K disks?
        4. Why do my DA's disappear when I turn on MultiFinder?
 VII.  DOS and the Mac
        1. How can I move files between a Mac and a PC?
        2. How can I translate files to a DOS format?
        3. Should I buy SoftPC or a real PC?
 VIII. Security
        1. How can I prevent users from changing the contents of a
           folder?
        2. How can I password protect my Mac?
 IX.   Hard Disks
        1. Help! My folder disappeared!
        2. Why can't I throw this folder away?
 X.    Floppy Disks
        1. Why can't my new Mac read my old Mac's floppy disks?
        2. Can I turn a double-density disk into a high density
           disk by punching an extra hole in it?
 XI.   Miscellaneous
        1. How can I preview a PostScript file?
        2. How do I edit a PostScript file?
        3. What does System Error xxx mean?
        4. How do I use a picture for my desktop?
        5. How do I make a startup screen?
        6. Can I replace the "Welcome to Macintosh" box with a
           picture?
        7. What is AutoDoubler? Is it safe?
        8. How does AutoDoubler compare to other compression
           products?
        9. What's a good text editor for the Mac?
        10. Where did my icons go?
 
 
FTP Tips
  Andy Shepard writes: Your interesting article on gateways in
  TidBITS#130 prompted me to write a short note with a couple of
  further useful tidbits:
 
* When you FTP to an archive site, you must enter a username and a
  password. _Almost exclusively_, the username is "anonymous" and
  the password is your email address, usually in the form
  mbasd@dlvh.daresbury.ac.uk (using my address as an example).
 
* For the large base of UK Mac Users (and indeed other European
  countries), a better all-round site than the Swedish one you
  mentioned is at host <src.doc.ic.ac.uk>, which can be FTP'ed for
  simple file transfer, or you can logon for limited interactive use
  using "telnet src.doc.ic.ac.uk" (login="sources", no password) -
  the directory /tmp is writable. This site has archives of Mac, PC,
  UNIX, X, and Vax software and news. The Mac archive mirrors the
  umich archive as well as the sumex archive (in directories
  /mac/umich and /mac/sumex respectively). In addition there is even
  a mail-server facility, though I've never had to try this. The
  best UK/Euro archie site is nearby at <archie.doc.ic.ac.uk>
  (login="archie").
 
* For people retrieving files from FTP-sites: you can save
  yourself a great deal of frustration if you remember that Unix
  (the operating system on most servers these days) is CaSe
  SeNsItIve!
 
* Be respectful when using FTP - confine your time to out-of-hours
  periods - bear in mind the time differences across the Atlantic
  and Pacific!
 
  Information from:
    Andy Sheppard -- mbasd@dlvh.daresbury.ac.uk
 
 
List o' Lists
  Jon Pugh writes to tell us about the List of Lists file: This file
  lists all the mailing lists you can subscribe to. Info-Mac is
  listed, and TidBITS should be. The file includes instructions on
  adding or updating your entry. The file is available via FTP from
  <ftp.nisc.sri.com> in the file
 
    netinfo/interest-groups.Z
 
  It is a compressed Unix text file. Use any Unix "uncompress"
  compatible command to expand it into a normal text file. For those
  of you not on Unix machines, make sure to download as binary and
  use MacCompress or Stuffit Deluxe to expand the file.
 
  Definitely a must-read file for anyone interested in electronic
  communications. It's 360K compressed and 879K uncompressed. Heavy,
  but worth it.
 
  Information from:
    Jon Pugh -- jpugh@apple.com
 
 
Pinnacle Problems
-----------------
  by Dave Platt -- dplatt@ntg.com
 
  Magneto-optical disks can be attractive storage devices for many
  applications. If you have massive amounts of data that you want to
  store, and if you tend to access large blocks of data sequentially
  (if you're reading or writing large files), they can be extremely
  cost-effective. However, due to its slower seek time, today's
  magneto-optical drive usually isn't seen as a suitable replacement
  for a Winchester-style (i.e. normal) magnetic disk.
 
  Most magneto-optical drives use a fairly massive read/write head,
  which contains both magnetic and optical components. The head
  assembly weighs more than the arm-and-head assembly on a
  Winchester drive, and it can't move across the disk as quickly. As
  a result, seek times for a typical magneto-optical drive are often
  several times slower than seeks on a Winchester drive of a similar
  capacity.
 
  In addition, most magneto-optical drives write data more slowly
  than they read it, because the laser must make two or more passes
  over the medium - one pass to erase the old bits, one pass to
  write the new ones, and (in some cases) one pass to verify the
  data. Once again, these drives are slower than Winchesters of
  similar capacity.
 
 
Something new?
  The Pinnacle Micro PMO-650 has a two-page ad in the 25-May-92
  issue of MacWEEK which claims that this mechanism is a bird of a
  different color because its speed compares to that of a reasonably
  fast hard disk. However, further reading of the ad suggested that
  there is a bit of fast talking and clever verbiage taking place,
  and that the ad is at best misleading in its claims.
 
  The ad cites a "19 millisecond effective access time." There's a
  footnote bullet which states:
 
    Test Results performed with a 1/3 stroke plus latency over a
    50 MB band width. A 1/3 stroke plus latency is the standard of
    measurement in the optical storage industry.
 
  Well, this may be true, but if you try to compare this "19
  millisecond" figure to the equivalent figure for a similarly-sized
  Winchester hard disk, you will be comparing apples and oranges and
  may be disappointed.
 
  The catch is the "50 MB band width" clause. This means that
  Pinnacle has benchmarked their drive by performing seeks over a 50
  MB band on the medium, which is only 50 MB out of the 325 MB on
  one side of the platter! In other words, Pinnacle Micro has based
  their "1/3 stroke" on the assumption that a "full stroke" covers
  less than a sixth of the data area on the platter!
 
  This is particularly significant, because this drive uses a split
  optic design. Drives of this sort can perform short seeks quite
  quickly (they usually move a tracking mirror using a light voice-
  coil mechanism) but slow down on long seeks (the entire laser
  assembly must be moved). By restricting their seek-time tests to a
  50 MB band, Pinnacle may have skewed the results of the test in
  their favor since a larger percentage of the seeks can be
  performed using the fast-seek mechanism than would be possible in
  a full-disk-surface seek test.
 
 
Checking out the facts
  I called Pinnacle's 800 number, asked for information about the
  drive, and spoke with a representative for about five minutes. I
  asked a number of questions and got the following responses
  (summarized, not quoted exactly):
 
* Am I correct in assuming that the seek tests are being performed
  across only one 50 MB band out of the 325 MB on the platter
  surface? [Yes]
 
* Most Winchester disks have their "effective access time" based
  on a typical mix of seeks over the full disk capacity, do they
  not? [Yes, I believe so.]
 
* Then I can't really make an apples-and-apples comparison between
  a Winchester disk and the PMO-650 based on your quoted access
  time, can I? [Well, you can't really compare the two technologies,
  because hard disks have multiple heads and optical drives have
  only one.]
 
* But that's the kind of comparison your ad tries to make, isn't
  it? [Yes]
 
* The ad notes that "A 1/3 stroke plus latency is the standard of
  measurement in the optical storage industry," and I understand
  that this sort of measurement is fairly typical in the Winchester
  disk industry as well. [Yes, I believe that's correct]
 
* Do you know of any other vendors of optical disks who quote an
  average seek time based on a test which limits the full stroke to
  only a small fraction of the platter capacity? [Offhand, no, I
  can't think of any.]
 
 
Another opinion
  A couple of weeks after this, I spoke with a representative of a
  company which makes high-performance caching controllers for
  magneto-optical disks. I described the Pinnacle benchmark as it
  had been advertised, and asked him what he thought of it. His
  response was to the effect of "That's nonsense." (he used a much
  stronger word than "nonsense") He told me that he considered
  Pinnacle's claim to be harmful to the magneto-optical disk
  industry, because it created false expectations about the
  performance of that sort of drive. He hadn't heard of any other
  vendor which printed benchmarks based on a 50 MB band of the disk
  and was skeptical about the whole concept of trying to compare
  Winchester and magneto-optical disks through any sort of
  standardized benchmark.
 
 
It's actually a pretty hot drive
  It may sound from all of this as if I'm entirely negative about
  the PMO-650 drive. Actually, I'm not. There are some other facts
  about the drive which may - and probably do - allow it to
  outperform similar mechanisms by a substantial margin.
 
  The drive controller has a large cache - 4 MB. According to
  Pinnacle representatives, the cache management firmware is quite
  sophisticated - it supports read-ahead, write-behind, and a number
  of different media-access algorithms. As a result, the drive can
  frequently "service" one request from the host computer while
  writing out the data from previous requests to the media in an
  orderly fashion. In addition, the drive has a respectable
  sustained transfer rate - 1.3 MB/second on a Mac IIfx, 1.5
  MB/second on a Quadra 900. That's quite a bit faster than either
  of the two Winchester disks I own.
 
 
My conclusions?
  On the positive side: for an optical mechanism, this drive is
  probably faster than most. If you're doing the sorts of jobs for
  which magneto-optical disks are often suggested - for example,
  working with big 24-bit TIFF files - you'd probably be quite happy
  with this drive.
 
  On the negative side: if you're expecting this drive to behave as
  well as a good Winchester, under a broad set of conditions, you
  may be disappointed. Test it yourself, if you're considering it
  for a performance-intensive application and don't trust Pinnacle's
  quoted performance figures unless you're satisfied that their test
  conditions match up with your intended usage of the disk.
 
  Caveat emptor, folks. There are lies, damned lies, and benchmarks.
  There is also advertising. In my opinion, Pinnacle did a bad
  thing. They chose to print an ad which makes a misleading
  comparison, and they made statements in the ad which are
  unsupported by the facts. Somebody in their organization, their
  advertising firm, or both, deserves to get sacked for trying to
  pull a scam like this.
 
  It's a shame, really. It looks as if Pinnacle Micro has developed
  a nice product, and has good reason to be proud of the PMO-650.
  I'm not sure I'd be willing to buy anything from Pinnacle Micro,
  though, as I'm not confident that I can trust them.
 
    Pinnacle Micro -- 800/553-7070 -- 714/727-3300
 
 
Excel 4.0 for the Mac III
-------------------------
  by Howard Hansen
 
  [Here we have the final part of Howard's review, folks. This time
  we'll look at some of the interface and output enhancements in
  Excel 4.0 and hear about Howard's few gripes and overall
  impressions. -Adam]
 
 
Custom Worksheet
  Geneva. Blecch! While I imagine I would enjoy the city, I don't
  like the font. Nor does my LaserWriter. So why does Excel still
  use Geneva as its default font? I don't know, but finally
  Microsoft has provided us with a semi-appropriate work around.
 
  In Excel 3.0, Microsoft introduced the Excel Startup Folder. Excel
  does something with everything you put in this folder. You put an
  add-in macro in, Excel loads that add-in. With worksheets or macro
  sheets, Excel opens them automatically. If you save a file as a
  template, that template will appear in the File New dialog box as
  an option. If you create a template and call it "Worksheet", Excel
  will replace the standard, stupid Geneva-font worksheet it creates
  by default with a copy of the template you specify. I have saved
  myself untold formatting hours simply by doing this.
 
 
Split & Freeze Panes
  Since spreadsheet users often want to look at tons of data, Excel
  has always had a way to split a worksheet window into multiple
  "panes," and then freeze those panes into place. This way, you can
  still see your column labels at the top of your screen as you
  scroll down a long list. In the old days, you had to carefully
  grab the "split box" next to each scroll bar, drag the split where
  you want it, then choose freeze panes. Frankly, most users found
  the whole procedure pretty confusing and easy to screw up. Excel
  4.0 comes to the rescue by changing the way the pane controls
  work.
 
  The pane controls have migrated from the Options menu to the
  Window menu - a more intuitive place, I think. To split and freeze
  the panes, you scroll the window so the column and row headings
  you want to stay put show at the top and left of the screen, then
  select the cell in the upper left corner of the range you want to
  scroll. Choose Freeze Panes and bang, Excel does everything for
  you.
 
 
Views
  Many of us have worksheets with more than one reporting area. If
  you do, you know the difficulty of jumping from place to place on
  the worksheet. With the Views add-in, you can name different
  reports and jump to them quickly. Unfortunately, this add-in works
  so slowly, I can't stand to use it!
 
 
Zooming
  Although the Zoom command does not come from an add-in, it works
  too much like they just bolted it on. How about adding the Claris-
  standard zoom buttons to the scroll bars? Aesthetics aside, I do
  find it wonderful to zoom out and see the "map" of a worksheet, or
  zoom in to comfortably work with columns of seven point numbers.
 
 
Printing Changes
  When he showed Excel 4.0 to dBUG (Seattle's Mac user group),
  Excel's product manager admitted "Excel 3.0 had the Yugo of
  headers and footers." Well, Excel 4.0 has the Hyundai of headers
  and footers.
 
  With the new version, you don't have to remember the formatting
  codes (&p for page number, &f for file name, etc.) - you can
  choose them from pop-up menus in a sub-dialog within the Page
  Setup dialog box. When you select "Date" from the list, Excel
  inserts a WYSI_N_WYG code - &D! Although you can now have
  multi-line headers or footers, you still can't move the header
  or footer from a half an inch from the top or bottom of the page,
  nor can you have different headers and footers for the first page
  of a document.
 
  Other printing changes include an add-in macro called "Print
  Report" which allows you to set up different ranges to print on a
  worksheet (for instance your financial worksheet might have an
  income statement, a balance sheet, and a transaction report). With
  the Print Report command, you can print all or some of those
  reports at once.
 
  Microsoft has also added two new features to the Page Setup dialog
  box. The first allows you to change the order in which the pages
  print - either top to bottom or left to right. The second lets you
  tell Excel to reduce or enlarge the worksheet to fit onto any
  number of pages wide and tall. For instance, you can make a large
  report print on one page, or tell Excel to print it three pages
  wide by one tall.
 
  Microsoft has simplified specifying print titles (rows and/or
  columns which appear at the top and left of all pages when you
  print the worksheet). Rather than forcing you to select the entire
  rows and/or the entire columns you want for titles, the dialog now
  lets you simply click on the rows or columns you want for titles,
  which is much simpler. 
 
  Finally, the macro language will now control all page setup
  options, including page orientation!
 
 
Suggestions for Using Excel 4.0
  The standard toolbar has many which you may not use. Take them off
  and replace them with tools you need. Many tools do double duty;
  for instance, shift-clicking on the increase font size tool will
  decrease the font size. Other changes I've made to the standard
  toolbar include replacing the print tool with Print Preview,
  adding the zoom out tool (shift-click on it to zoom in), removing
  the left justification tool (Excel left-justifies by default), and
  adding outlining tools.
 
 
Documentation and Support
  I have mixed feelings about the documentation. The Mac and Windows
  versions work so similarly that Microsoft has merged the two sets
  of documentation. This works well for those who use both
  platforms, so they get a side-by-side explanation of the few
  differences. While Microsoft has included many figures, and the
  explanations stick much more to practical how and why topics than
  in the past, you will find few screen shots in the text. Not only
  do they not show you the dialog boxes, but they also don't list
  all of the options and what they mean. I find it comforting to see
  the dialog box next to the text - it allows me to orient myself
  better.
 
  That said, I have to admit that the new on-line help system makes
  up for and explains the choices they made with the documentation.
  You will find almost all of the detail you expect from the manual
  in the online help system. If get confused about just about any
  feature, Excel's help system will give you the information you
  need. First, almost every dialog box now has a help button. When
  you click it, Excel brings up help for that particular topic. If
  you want to know what each of the choices in the Display Options
  dialog do, you won't find the detail in the manual, but the help
  system patiently explains all.
 
  You can copy text from the help system onto the clipboard as well
  as printing it. You can add your own notes to all help topics, and
  set bookmarks for places you go on a regular basis.
 
  Under System 7, Microsoft supports balloon help, but only for
  windows, menus, and toolbars. I'd really like to see it work in
  individual dialog boxes so I could easily find out what this or
  that checkbox means.
 
 
Wish List
  Although I wholeheartedly endorse what Microsoft has done with
  Excel 4.0, they still need to fix some annoying, persistent
  problems with the program. I'd especially like to see:
 
* Better headers and footers. Let's move the headers and footers,
  make them WYSIWYG, and turn them off selectively.
 
* Embedded Macros. Let's create buttons and tools with macros
  embedded, so they don't have to rely on a separate macro sheet.
 
* Cooler Wizards. How about a wizard which allows you to create
  financial reports - income statements, balance sheets, etc.?
 
 
Conclusions
  In this three-part review, I still haven't discussed all of the
  new features in Excel 4.0, but I think I've hit most of the
  important ones. If you own Excel, should you upgrade? If you have
  enough free space on your hard disk as well as at least 4 MB of
  RAM, I think you should. If you don't own Excel, should you buy
  it? I hate to foster monopolism, but I think any Mac user who
  doesn't have a significant reason to use some other spreadsheet
  should choose Excel.
 
  As I said in the first part, I feel like I work significantly more
  efficiently with Excel 4.0 than I did with Excel 3.0. As the
  feature lists get longer, I find myself wondering, "what more can
  they possibly put into a spreadsheet?" That question reminds me of
  a common sentiment from a few years back: "Why on earth would
  anyone need more than 64K of RAM?"
 
    Microsoft Customer Service -- 800/426-9400
 
  Information from:
    Howard Hansen, The Oasis Group -- HHansen@aol.com
      206/282-6255
 
 
Excel 4.0 Comments
------------------
  You would think that with three parts spread out over a month, we
  would have covered Excel 4.0 sufficiently. However, as a testament
  to the product's added complexity and flexibility, we've received
  two comments about it in the past few weeks, one good, one bad.
 
 
Object model
  First, the good news. Jon Pugh wrote to tell us to be sure to
  mention the fact that Excel 4.0 is perhaps the first major program
  to be fully Apple event and AppleScript aware. Excel 4.0 supports
  the object model, and for those of you using UserLand Frontier or
  pre-release versions of AppleScript, you can do essentially
  everything in the program via Apple events. This is, of course,
  wonderful news that also fits in the "so what?" category until
  enough other programs are similarly full-featured and AppleScript
  eventually ships. In the meantime, Frontier can do some pretty
  amazing things, and along with a hack from Steve Zellers of
  Berkeley Systems, you can even have a Scripts menu in your Finder
  that contains Frontier scripts. Frontier must be running as well,
  but with sufficient RAM to hold both apps at the same time you
  could control Excel (or any of the other Apple event-aware
  applications like PageMaker) from a Finder menu, which would be
  pretty neat.
 
 
Workbook bugs
  Now, the bad news. Andy J. Williams writes to tell us about a
  serious bug with workbooks in Excel 4.0:
 
  I just had a disaster that taught me a valuable lesson about Excel
  4.0's Workbook feature. File this under "Don't let this happen to
  you."
 
  The scenario: I have five spreadsheets and one macro sheet bound
  together in a workbook. At the bottom of the screen for each page
  of the workbook is a "control panel" of five buttons each leading
  to the other sheets (referencing macros on the macro sheet).
 
  I went to save the workbook. Just after saving the first of the
  six documents my machine crashed.
 
  After restarting the workbook was trashed. Only the first sheet
  was visible or usable. Using the standard forward/backward page
  buttons I can go between the index page and that one sheet. No
  others are visible. Clicking on my control panel of buttons
  produces a system crash.
 
  I spoke with someone at Microsoft Tech Support, and I surmise that
  Excel is completely rebuilding the workbook up from scratch rather
  than changing the existing workbook. Thus, any crash while saving
  will ensure that there is NO copy anywhere around except the one
  that was in memory, in the process of being written. This is a
  wonderfully unsafe way to do things.
 
  So, my advice is: always backup workbooks BEFORE starting work. [A
  clever macro programmer could probably whip something up to do
  this automatically, and it would be a piece of cake to do in
  Frontier. -Adam]
 
  Information from:
    Jon Pugh -- jpugh@apple.com
    Andy J. Williams -- AndyJW@dartmouth.edu
 
 
Reviews/13-Jul-92
-----------------
 
* MacUser -- Aug-92
    Magic -- pg. 52
    PowerPlay for the Macintosh -- pg. 54
    SwivelMan & ShowPlace/MacRenderMan -- pg. 58
    Think C 5 & CMaster -- pg. 60
    In Control -- pg. 61
    Ofoto -- pg. 72
    Video F/X -- pg. 74
    CA-Cricket Draw III -- pg. 76
    Persuasion 2.1 -- pg. 81
    Easy Alarms -- pg. 81
    Rise of the Dragon -- pg. 81
    Retriever II -- pg. 83
    4D Draw -- pg. 83
    Autosynchronous Monitors -- pg. 158
      (too many to list)
 
 
..
 
 This text is wrapped as a 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 promptly.

