TidBITS#148/19-Oct-92
=====================
 
 Industry stories on hard drive prices and the PowerBook 100
   phenomenon anchor this issue, which starts off with some
   comments on our KeyFonts review, covers some new CD-ROMs of
   several major Internet archives, passes on the good news that
   AppleShare 3.0.1 will work with QuickMail Server 2.5.x, and
   finally, takes a look at the Internet gateway to America Online
   and the brand new TidBITS library there.
 
 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. Caveat lector. 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/19-Oct-92
    Internet CD-ROMs
    QuickMail/AppleShare Problem Fixed
    Gateways III/America Online
    Driving a Hard Bargain
    The 100 Phenomenon
    Reviews/19-Oct-92
 
[Archived as /info-mac/digest/tb/tidbits-148.etx; 29K]
 
 
MailBITS/19-Oct-92
------------------
  Several people commented on Mark Nutter's review of the KeyFonts
  package, casting additional light on the package and the problems
  Mark noted. A few people expressed the opinion that giving 100
  fonts, especially lower quality ones, to someone with no design
  sense was akin to handing a loaded machine gun to a monkey with
  fleas. Although elitist, such an opinion is understandable when we
  see some of the abysmal results of desktop publishing. The worst
  instances of that are behind us (remember when every newsletter
  used San Francisco?) but it's worth keeping in mind that lots of
  fonts will not make a well-designed publication.
 
  Gene Steinberg, a consultant for FontBank, writes:
 
  Mark Nutter made a valiant effort in printing out 100 fonts in
  both Postscript and TrueType format to check the quality of this
  low-cost font package. However, there are a few fundamentals that
  serious Mac font users should know that might help explain some of
  Mr. Nutter's comments.
 
  First, installing both Postscript and TrueType versions of the
  same font can cause a font conflict, resulting in, as Mr. Nutter
  reports, missing characters and erratic letterspacing. You have to
  use either PostScript or TrueType.
 
  Second, the missing optional characters should not be blamed on
  the need to make these fonts compatible with the DOS/Windows
  environment. In their text faces, Adobe provides more or less the
  same character set for both platforms, with the addition of a
  handful of fraction keys that seem accessible only by PC
  keyboards. For display faces, based in part on traditional
  typesetting "film" fonts, the lack of some optional characters is
  a given. For text faces, it is a serious drawback.
 
  Information from:
    Gene Steinberg -- afagenes@aol.com
 
 
Swanson Clarification
  Mark H. Anbinder writes, "As we reported in last week's issue of
  TidBITS, there was some confusion as to the details of Randall
  Swanson's sentence in connection with the MBDF virus case. His
  attorney contacted us after the issue was published, and he
  explained the situation. Swanson was not sentenced to serve forty-
  five weeks of community service; he was given a "conditional
  discharge." This means that no punitive sentence will be ordered
  provided that he obeys certain conditions for a period of one
  year. These conditions essentially amount to an order to "Stay out
  of trouble." However, Judge Friedlander did suggest that Swanson
  perform some community service on his own."
 
  Information from:
    Mark H. Anbinder, Contributing Editor
 
 
Internet CD-ROMs
----------------
  by Don Rittner -- afldonr@aol.com
    (c) 1992 MUG News Service
 
  Having just returned from the CD-ROM Expo, I want to share a
  valuable find with you. Everyone knows there are thousands of
  files strewn around the Internet. Trying to find them all could
  take a lifetime, but Pacific HiTech, Inc., a new company begun by
  a couple of computer science students from the University of Utah,
  and Walnut Creek CD-ROM have produced some goodies that will help
  ease the search. They have taken entire collections of several
  Internet archives, pressed them onto inexpensive CD-ROMs, and are
  offering them for sale. Four CD-ROMs of immediate interest are
  summarized here.
 
 
Info-Mac CD-ROM
  Although Walnut Creek markets this $39.95 disc, Pacific HiTech
  actually produced (and sells) it. Pacific HiTech downloaded the
  programs on this disc in August of 1992 from the Info-Mac archive
  on the Internet site <sumex-aim.stanford.edu>. The quarterly
  (Info-Mac is a moving target) disc contains 112 MB of software in
  HFS format, following the sumex directory structure. The disc
  includes thousands of freeware and shareware applications, desk
  accessories, games, virus-detection programs, and commercial
  demos. It is also packed with graphics, sounds, and HyperCard
  stacks, and everything is ready to run. No defunking here!
 
  For those seeking archives of electronic discussion groups and
  publications, you'll find TidBITS, Info-Mac Digest, and digests
  from comp.sys.mac.programmer for all of 1992 (so far) on the disc.
  Pacific HiTech initially intended to place the entire Info-Mac
  archive on the CD. However, they had to leave off some files due
  to copyright restrictions and the logistics of getting permission
  from all contributors. In the end, they managed to include roughly
  75% of Info-Mac's files, although a number of files have turned
  over since then due to the size of the currently (and soon to be
  replaced) 200 MB hard drive on sumex.
 
 
CICA Microsoft Windows CD-ROM
  This $24.95 CD-ROM contains the entire collection from Indiana
  University's Center for Innovative Computing Applications (CICA) -
  more than 140 MB of Windows goodies, including utilities, shells,
  games, and lots more. The entire disc is configured for OPUS,
  RBBS, and PCBOARD bulletin boards, similar to the Mac's BBS in a
  Box, so sysops can have a ready-made file library with little
  effort. Many demos of commercial programs, drivers for a large
  number of printers and monitors, icons and graphics, source code
  listings and programming tools for C, C++, ToolBook, Turbo Pascal
  and Visual Basic, round out the collection. This disc was made in
  July 1992.
 
 
Garbo MS-DOS/Mac CD-ROM
  This $24.95 disc contains more than 250 MB of DOS software and 125
  MB of Mac software from the Garbo archive at the University of
  Vaasa, Finland. The majority of the many programs from Europe and
  America are in English.
 
  For DOS users, the disc includes lots of animation, archive
  utilities, BBS programs, business programs, science programs, and
  education software, with special areas for astronomy, linguistics,
  and educational games. Also included are programming tools,
  tutorials and tech docs, and anti-virus software. On the Mac side,
  there are lots of graphics, fonts, commercial demos, HyperCard
  stacks, and programming tools and documentation. This disc was
  made in May 1992.
 
 
Simtel20 MS-DOS CD-ROM
  Over 9,000 files (640 MB) of DOS programs from the Simtel20
  archive are on this $24.95 disc. Many of the programs include
  source code and there is a great deal of technical documentation,
  utilities, and programming tools for APL, assembly, BASIC, C, and
  more. The disc includes several complete BBS programs and
  utilities, and like the Windows disc, it already has index files
  for RBBS, PCBOARD and OPUS so sysops can use it right away. This
  disc was made in September 1992.
 
 
Shareware note
  Many of the programs on these CD-ROMs are freeware or shareware,
  and may have restrictions and obligations regarding their use, and
  the producers duly note the user's obligations to pay a fee when
  requested. Any author of a program on one of these CD-ROMs is
  entitled to a free disc.
 
  Since most of the CD-ROMs have ready-to-use indexes for popular
  BBS programs they make a great collection for bulletin board
  operators who want to offer Internet material without the high
  cost of a direct Internet link or email gateway.
 
  The prices for these CD-ROM collections are extremely reasonable.
  All the discs are on ISO-9660 format and as such should work on
  all platforms. If you wish to order via email (be aware that email
  is not absolutely private), you can do so by sending Pacific
  HiTech your name, address, phone number, and VISA/MasterCard
  number and expiration date.
 
 
Contact the company at:
    Pacific HiTech, Inc.
    4760 Highland Drive, Suite 204
    Salt Lake City, Utah 84124
    800/765-8369 (orders only, please)
    801/278-2042
    801/278-2666 (fax)
    71175.3152@compuserve.com
 
    Walnut Creek CD-ROM
    1547 Palos Verdes Mall, Suite 260
    Walnut Creek, CA 94598
    800/786 9907
    510/947-5996
 
 
QuickMail/AppleShare Problem Fixed
----------------------------------
  by Mark H. Anbinder, Contributing Editor
 
  CE Software announced that one long-standing annoyance for server
  administrators, incompatibility between CE's QuickMail server
  software and Apple's AppleShare 3.0 file server software, is a
  thing of the past. Apple's upcoming AppleShare 3.0.1 release
  purports to fix the incompatibility, and intensive testing at CE
  has confirmed this. CE's Director of Technical Services, Christian
  F. Gurney, says that, "Based on the results of these tests,
  QuickMail 2.5.x and AppleShare 3.0.1 are compatible when used on
  the same Macintosh acting as a mail and file server."
 
  CE's test scenarios included exercising QuickMail, AppleShare's
  file server and AppleShare's print server by sending QuickMail
  messages, reading and writing files, and sending print jobs. The
  tests were conducted on 68030 and 68000 Macintosh systems running
  System 7.0.1.
 
  Gurney also reported that the QuickMail server software is still
  incompatible with the file sharing feature of System 7. CE fixed
  this problem in an upcoming release of QuickMail. Version 2.6 is
  planned for release later this year.
 
  An update to AppleShare 3.0.1 will be available to registered
  owners of version 3.0, though Apple has yet to announce the
  specific upgrade path. According to Apple's Customer Assistance
  Center, the new software is expected to be released this week, and
  TidBITS will pass on additional information when it arrives. In
  the meantime, please don't call Apple (and certainly not CE!) for
  a release date or upgrade information.
 
    CE Software Technical Support -- 515/224-1953
      CE_SUPPORT%cedsm@uunet.uu.net
    Apple Customer Assistance Center -- 800/776-2333
 
 
Gateways III/America Online
---------------------------
  Perhaps the most important new Internet gateway comes from the
  commercial service America Online. Although America Online took
  their time making the gateway available, it seems that they
  prompted two of the other commercial services, GEnie and Delphi,
  to open up Internet links as well. I'm sure it's not a specific
  cause-and-effect relationship, but that's the impression one gets
  from the outside.
 
 
America Online to Internet
  Sending email from America Online to the Internet (or any other
  service, like CompuServe or MCI, that also has an Internet
  gateway) is easy - you merely type the Internet address into the
  normal mail To: box. Otherwise mail works exactly the same as when
  you send it to another America Online member. Despite the ease of
  use, America Online has a few limitations on Internet mail that
  make it a less useful than it might be otherwise, but that's what
  you get for free use - there's no surcharge for Internet email.
 
  Like normal America Online email messages, you can't put more than
  32K in the text of the message. That usually poses no problem on
  America Online because you can attach files to circumvent that
  limit, but file attachments don't work to the Internet. You also
  can't forward mail from America Online to the Internet, but copy
  and paste into a new mailfile makes that a moot point. All fonts
  and styles disappear of course, but that shouldn't surprise
  anyone. For basic email to the Internet, America Online's gateway
  works fine.
 
  If you wish to find out more about America Online's Internet
  gateway from America Online itself, use the keyword INTERNET (type
  command-k to bring up the keyword dialog box), and America Online
  will transport you to the appropriate area.
 
 
Internet to America Online
  Creating the Internet version of an America Online address
  requires that you know the conversion rule. You ignore the case,
  remove the spaces, and add "@aol.com" to the end of the address.
  Thus, my America Online address <Adam Engst> becomes
  <adamengst@aol.com>. (For the punctuation-impaired, ignore the
  greater-than and less-than signs - they're merely showing where
  the address begins and ends and are not part of the address.)
 
  The gnomes at America Online made one decision that disturbs me.
  They decided to limit the size of incoming Internet mail to 27K.
  I'm not inherently opposed to internal limitations on incoming
  mail size, and they decided to truncate the mail rather than
  simply bouncing it back to the sender, but why couldn't they have
  used a 30K limit like AppleLink? This bothers me because I set 30K
  as my self-imposed length limit on TidBITS issues so they would
  pass through the AppleLink gateway, and here America Online lowers
  the smallest gateway size limitation to 27K. We'll look at a
  workaround for this limitation in a future issue of TidBITS.
 
  Those of you who subscribe to TidBITS on America Online through
  the Internet mailing list have experienced the truncation, and I'm
  sorry, but for the moment I'm not prepared to shrink future issues
  to 27K. I need that space each week. Because of this, I don't
  recommend that you subscribe to the TIDBITS LISTSERV via America
  Online - sometimes we save the best information for the last part
  of TidBITS.
 
 
TidBITS on America Online
  If I don't recommend subscribing to our mailing list, how can you
  find TidBITS on America Online? Well, I'm pleased to announce that
  America Online has just opened the official, new, improved,
  family-size TidBITS library. Dedicated to TidBITS issues, you can
  find it in the Macintosh Hardware forum (keyword: MHW). The
  library holds every issue of TidBITS in setext format, and all of
  the issues since TidBITS#100 in compressed format as well. For
  those of you wanting to collect 'em all, the library will soon
  hold ten-issue archives of the entire set for easier downloading.
 
  Even better, I have direct upload capabilities so issues will be
  available immediately upon uploading, usually late Monday night,
  Pacific time. All TidBITS issues will be available in the TidBITS
  library immediately, but not in the Macintosh Hardware New Files
  library as in the past.
 
  For those of you who have become accustomed to getting your weekly
  TidBITS fix from the Macintosh HyperCard forum, where I originally
  uploaded the HyperCard format issues before 1992 and where I have
  been uploading the setext issues as well, don't worry. The TidBITS
  library will soon appear in the Macintosh HyperCard forum as well.
 
  Many thanks to Chris Ferino, the forum poobah of the Macintosh
  Hardware forum, since he arranged for the TidBITS library and went
  to all the work of uploading all the back issues individually.
 
 
Driving a Hard Bargain
----------------------
  I hadn't checked up on hard drive prices seriously for some time
  because my storage needs, while continually outpacing my drive
  size, would do that to most any drive. So I stuck with my 105 MB
  drive and compressed everything in sight. When my hard drive
  seemingly died in a DWI-induced power surge, I ordered another 105
  MB drive so the Safeware insurance would cover the replacement
  cost. Then, of course, my old drive came back to life a week
  later, recovering from SCSI self-test errors to complete health,
  so I can't collect on the insurance since there's no damage.
 
  During all this I started watching prices a bit more, and although
  much lower than two years ago, prices seemed quite steady. I
  thought this was curious, but then Robert Brenstein sent me a note
  asking if I'd heard why all the mail order vendors had huge back
  order lists for the larger Quantum drives. Curiousity piqued, I
  called Paul McGraw, vice president of APS, a mail order drive
  vendor.
 
  Apparently APS has been operating most of the summer on a 400 to
  600 unit backlog on the Quantum 240 MB drives, and although Paul
  said that they actually had a few units in stock right now, most
  mail order vendors are in the same backlog boat. Paul recommended
  that people who want that specific drive call around to satisfy
  themselves that no company has them in stock, and then get on a
  waiting list somewhere because it may be a while before most
  vendors get those Quantums in any quantity. In other words, sign
  up now or be prepared to wait.
 
  It seems that the root of this backlog traces back to Quantum
  itself. Of all the drives Quantum produced this year, only 20% of
  them were SCSI drives, the rest being non-SCSI drives for PC
  clones. That limits the supply a lot right there, but there's
  more. Big companies like Apple and Sun that use internal SCSI
  drives have first dibs on the drives, further reducing the supply
  that can reach drive vendors like APS.
 
  Being good little capitalists, we all know what happens when
  supply is low and demand is high, right? Prices stay high. Demand
  seldom changes much once it's high, so the only way for prices to
  drop is for the supply to increase, and that's what Paul sees
  happening in the next few months, mostly thanks to Maxtor, another
  drive manufacturer.
 
  Maxtor was on the brink of Chapter 11 bankruptcy some time ago,
  but with a combination of salutary factors, has managed to
  revitalize itself and become a force in the drive market again.
  According to Paul, the Maxtor 7213 200 MB unit is as good as the
  Quantum 240 MB unit for anyone who doesn't have a Quadra since the
  Maxtor drive isn't quite as fast as the Quantum, but it's still
  faster than the SCSI bus on all non-Quadras. This Maxtor drive has
  proven quite popular, and along with Quantum's higher prices, has
  given Maxtor the breathing room it needed. Now Quantum is starting
  to notice that the Maxtor drive is cutting into Quantum's
  business, so as supply goes up, price comes down and we consumers
  win again.
 
  Another factor to keep in mind is that Maxtor and other companies
  have some 1" high 500+ MB drives coming out early next year. Both
  Paul and Cliff Wildes, president of Microtech, find these large
  drives extremely interesting, because of the small form factor
  (you'll be able to use them as internal drives) and new
  manufacturing techniques. These drives and some new 1.5" high form
  factor (actually 1.62" high), 3.5" platter, 1 gigabyte (GB) drives
  (i.e., 1 GB internal drives) should help lower the prices on
  larger end of the market. That in turn should help shrink prices
  for the medium size drives as well. Cliff agreed with this,
  although he feels that the price cuts on medium size drives will
  not be as significant, but only in line with the lesser price
  reductions that have occurred over the last six months. Smaller
  drives aren't likely to become much cheaper, simply because
  they're close to rock bottom already. But hey, everyone needs a
  bigger disk anyway, right?
 
  Information from:
    Paul McGraw, APS vice president
    Cliff Wildes, Microtech president
 
 
The 100 Phenomenon
------------------
  Poking around in the Sunday Seattle Times, I can't find a single
  PC-clone laptop for under $1000. Those that range around $1000 are
  all slow machines that would probably die a miserable death
  running Windows. And yet we just adopted a cute little PowerBook
  100 named Sally for under $1000, and that includes a RAM upgrade
  to bring her up to 8 MB. I'm writing this article on the 100 while
  sitting calmly in a beanbag in the living room, ignoring the 15
  applications clamoring for attention on my SE/30. As the PowerBook
  100 supply diminishes and the buying frenzy wanes, I wanted to
  look back at the phenomenon.
 
  It started with Apple sending all the PowerBook 100 4/40s to Price
  Club superstores. Price Club generally priced the 100 under $1000,
  occasionally as low as $800, and suddenly the slowest-selling
  model of the PowerBook was in demand. Unfortunately, the only way
  to get a 100 from Price Club was to have a Price Club store near
  you and to become a member. Membership stopped no one, but there
  simply aren't enough Price Club stores around to satisfy everyone.
  Even still, as fast as the Price Clubs could put the 100s on the
  shelf, they sold. One Price Club employee said that she'd never
  seen anything sell so quickly. The short and sporadic supply
  contributed to the frenzy, and the waiting lists grew.
 
  The high-tension relationship between Apple and its dealer network
  threatened to snap (not that either can do without the other). One
  dealer said that they could sell the 100 as quickly as Price Club
  if they could charge the same price. Perhaps heeding this call,
  and perhaps because the Price Club deal was an experiment in
  dumping cheap hardware into the consumer channel, Apple sold the
  PowerBook 2/20 to dealers for either $550 or $650, depending on
  the inclusion of the external floppy drive. Suddenly dealers could
  compete with Price Club, and compete they did.
 
  Prices to the consumer ranged from $599 on up, and it was
  relatively easy to get a machine for under $800. Of course, as we
  decided before even getting ours, 2 MB of RAM is not sufficient
  unless you wish to run System 6 (which works fine on the 100
  although you have to find version 1.3 of the Portable Control
  Panel on <ftp.apple.com>. Apple also created, but did not
  distribute in the US, a special version of System 6 (6.0.8L)
  specifically for the 100, although it's unclear what
  differentiates it other than the inclusion of Portable 1.3). Even
  still, mail order prices on a 6 MB upgrade card ranged from $250
  to $325, making an 8 MB machine an easy reality and making System
  7 an easy install. (I can't use System 6 any more- it's way too
  clumsy, so it doesn't matter that windows open faster.)
 
  Dealers found that they couldn't keep the PowerBook 100s on the
  shelf at those prices either, but a third source quickly appeared
  for some people. Citibank offers a bonus called CitiDollars on
  selected merchandise to holders of its credit cards, and in the
  middle of all this they suddenly offered the PowerBook 100 (a
  2/20, I believe). I don't know how many they had, but they didn't
  last long as PowerBook 100-hungry credit card users snapped them
  within several weeks.
 
  At this point I doubt many US dealers or Price Club stores have
  any model of the PowerBook 100 left because Apple has emptied
  their warehouses. Stories abound of people who bought one and
  promptly lost it to their spouses. (I'm lucky Tonya's got a 20 MB
  SE/30 with 80 MB hard disk and a nasty Compaq DOS box at work or
  she'd have ours all the time.) Such tales were met with little
  sympathy, given the price, and the complainers were advised to go
  buy another one and suffer with a mate who at least appreciated
  the Mac sufficiently to snag a PowerBook 100 when given the
  chance. [It all depends on to whom you talk. I thought we bought
  the PowerBook to replace my home Mac, a sluggish Classic, and that
  I would be nice enough to share it with Adam when he went out of
  town. And now he can't keep his hands off it. -Tonya]
 
  It's not at all hard to peg the reason for this buying frenzy. At
  the lowest range, the 100 was a bit cheaper even than the floppy-
  only Classic, and the 100 destroys the Classic in almost every
  category. Its screen is bigger, it's twice as fast, it can take up
  to 8 MB of RAM, it has an internal 20 or 40 MB hard disk (and
  let's face, there's no real difference between the two; they're
  both too small for indiscriminate storage), it can boot from RAM
  disk, it can use an internal modem, it weighs a bit over five
  pounds, and it can run from battery for a few hours. If, like us,
  you intend to mainly write on a PowerBook, there's absolutely no
  reason to buy a faster 140 or 145. In some respects, primarily
  power usage and weight, the 100 even outclasses its more powerful
  siblings.
 
  Most people forget when looking at these fire-sale prices that the
  price cuts must affect someone. The dealers and Price Clubs did
  fine on their profit margins, which leaves Apple holding the empty
  money bag. An unconfirmed report put the cost of a PowerBook 100
  to Apple at $1000. That includes design and testing along with
  manufacturing and shipping costs, I'm sure, but even still, that
  means Apple lost lots of money. Had Apple kept the 100 around
  longer, that cost per machine would have dropped as profit erased
  some of the one-time costs associated with a new machine.
 
  We don't know how many PowerBook 100s Apple sold (although we're
  guessing around 175,000) and we don't know how many they sold at
  what price. Thus, we can't accurately check the number a source
  provided, namely that Apple lost $15 million on the PowerBook 100.
  Of course, reports claim Apple made $1 billion on the PowerBook
  line overall.
 
  You can view that $15 million in several ways. First, if you own
  stock in Apple, it's not good. Second, if you're a user who
  snapped up one of those machines cheap, you don't really care
  because you got a great deal. Third, if you are an Apple manager
  in need of a way to justify the money, consider the incredible
  public relations coup those cheap prices provided. All of a
  sudden, normal people without gobs of money could buy one of
  Apple's coolest machines and they did, in droves, and they told
  all their friends about it. That looks really good and provides
  wonderful word-of-mouth advertising. In addition, the low prices
  provided extra free press coverage and megabytes of discussion
  online. Even still, people swap information about which dealers
  have machines left. Finally, in that same justification mode, I'm
  sure Apple gathered plenty of data on dumping obsolete machines
  cheaply via both existing and different channels.
 
  It may be justification, but I think the dumping policy was
  beneficial to Apple. The question now is what happens to the
  PowerBook 100. "It just goes away," you say, "because Apple
  dropped it from the price list." Not so fast. Remember that Sony
  actually designed and manufactured the PowerBook 100, and we've
  heard rumors that with Apple dropping the 100, Sony obtains rights
  to continue manufacturing it and selling it, at least outside of
  the US. We have no idea how this might work - a Sony-labeled
  PowerBook 100, perhaps, or even a new name. It's even conceivable
  that Sony could import the machine back into the US and continue
  selling it, at which point it would be the first true non-Apple
  Macintosh. Interesting stuff, and given the demand for cheap
  PowerBook 100s, Sony might well be considering it, assuming of
  course that these rumors, like all rumors, are utterly true and
  grounded in fact.
 
  Information from:
    Mark H. Anbinder, Contributing Editor
    Pythaeus
 
 
Reviews/19-Oct-92
-----------------
 
* MacWEEK -- 12-Oct-92, Vol. 6, #36
    Distributed Rendering Programs -- pg. 46
      BackBurner 1.0
      DreamNet 1.0.2
      RenderPro 1.0
    YARC NuSprint -- pg. 48
    Pixar RenderMan -- pg. 50
    Caravelle Networks 2.0 -- pg. 54
    Spectator -- pg. 54
    Magnet 1.0 -- pg. 55
    Likewise -- pg. 56
    Hello -- pg. 57
 
 
..
 
 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.



