TidBITS#161/01-Feb-93
=====================
 
 It's been an eventful week. The TidBITS Forum on CompuServe opened
   and Apple took HyperCard back from Claris and added it to the
   Developer Tools group. We have the scoop on why the Apple Color
   Printer is so lame, specs on new Macs due out in a few weeks,
   lower prices on older Macs, an article on executives shuffling
   all over the place, and news of an innovative marketing program
   for CE Software's QuicKeys.
 
 Copyright 1990-1993 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
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Topics:
    MailBITS/01-Feb-93
    TidBITS CompuServe Forum
    QuicKeys Test Drive
    HyperCard Folded Back Into Apple
    Why The Lame Apple Color Printer?
    Executive Turnovers
    Macintosh Price Drops
    Pumping The New Macs Out
    Reviews/01-Feb-93
 
[Archived as /info-mac/digest/tb/tidbits-161.etx; 29K]
 
 
MailBITS/01-Feb-93
------------------
  This week I'll make like a toggle switch and flip-flop. First I
  said the AppleCD 300 was impossible to find, then I heard from a
  bunch of people who had seen them and my local dealer had some,
  but this past week I've received agonized requests asking what
  strings I pulled to buy one. Sorry folks, I didn't pull any
  strings other than lining up early. The drives are shipping,
  though clearly many dealers don't have them. If it's any
  consolation for those of you waiting, I like my AppleCD 300 a lot.
 
 
Adam as information server
  I like providing useful and timely information to people - that's
  why I write TidBITS. However, recently I've been hammered by email
  from readers searching for information that may exist in back
  issues of TidBITS. I normally try to help and search in Easy View
  on the my TidBITS archive. Now that I'm having trouble keeping up
  with my email, I ask that you try to do those searches on your
  own. It's not difficult to get back issues and Easy View from
  sumex or another archive site, and if you are on the Internet, you
  don't even have to do that since Ephraim Vishniac added TidBITS to
  the WAIS (see TidBITS#160). Information on obtaining back issues
  and searching the WAIS is in the automatic reply file you get if
  you send email to <info@tidbits.com>, and please, use that
  automated information. It will give me more time to work on
  TidBITS and less stress for my wrists, both of which will ensure
  that TidBITS continues to improve. Remember, the address for
  automatic information is:
 
    info@tidbits.com
 
  Thanks for helping remove an unnecessary load, and as always,
  don't hesitate to send information, comments, or suggestions. I'll
  reply eventually.
 
 
TidBITS CompuServe Forum
------------------------
  Thanks to Neil Shapiro and MAUG, we now have our own message
  section and file library on CompuServe. The new section is #5 in
  the just-opened Macintosh D Vendors Forum (GO MACDVEN), and in a
  week or so you should be able to use GO TIDBITS. I've uploaded all
  the back issues there in chunks of ten, and new issues will appear
  in that file library as well as in the current places in MACCLUB
  #8, ZiffNet/Mac, and the Desktop Publishing Forum.
 
  Navigator users will have to add a new tile to visit MACDVEN in an
  automated session, but that's easy to do. Open your database with
  Show Database under the Session menu, then go into the following
  nested areas: Macintosh Support -> Macintosh Support Forums ->
  Macintosh Vendor Forums. From your Arrange menu choose Add New
  Tile, make sure the Forum radio button is selected, in the Tile
  name box type "Mac D Vendor Forum," in the Comment box type
  "TidBITS & Company Product Support," and (this is the important
  one) type "MACDVEN" into the GO code box. Double-click on the new
  tile to open and activate it, and then close all the windows you
  just opened.
 
  As I said, we have a TidBITS message section as well as a library
  section in MACDVEN. I encourage those of you on CompuServe to stop
  by to discuss  TidBITS articles (that would have been fun with the
  massive discussion prompted by the pornography articles), suggest
  ideas for future articles, or just schmooze. I'll try to post some
  rough drafts and article ideas up there so you can preview what
  might be in the next issue (and so I can do reality checks on if
  I'm saying something dumb).
 
  Once again, thanks to the kind folks on CompuServe for setting
  this up for us!
 
  Information from:
    Neil Shapiro, Chief Sysop -- 76703.401@compuserve.com
 
 
QuicKeys Test Drive
-------------------
  by Mark H. Anbinder, Contributing Editor -- mha@baka.ithaca.ny.us
 
  In the ever-increasing competition for just a little bit more
  market share, third-party manufacturers and publishers, and the
  dealers that handle it, have to come up with increasingly creative
  ways to peddle product lines. Some companies, such as Apple,
  irritate the traditional dealers by going through other channels,
  or even competing directly. Others, such as CE Software, find the
  best of both worlds.
 
  This week, CE Software is introducing its "QuicKeys Test Drive,"
  an experimental marketing program that, if it works, could
  revolutionize the way companies publish and market products. The
  test drive consists of the typical "crippleware" demo disk that
  gives potential customers just enough of a taste of what the
  product can do to get them hooked, then tells them to buy the real
  thing at a discount.
 
  What makes the QuicKeys Test Drive different from the ordinary
  demo disk, though, is that dealers who distribute the Test Drive
  disk receive a commission for every sale they generate. When the
  user calls CE's toll-free sales line, the operator asks for the
  serial number encoded on the disk. That number identifies the
  source of the disk and tells CE where to send the check.
 
  Dealers who are otherwise reluctant to give out demo disks,
  fearing that customers will bypass them when buying the product,
  will undoubtedly be pleased with this approach, which recognizes
  the dealer's role in recommending or promoting the product. CE
  Software obviously stands to gain as well, because people who have
  tried the product are more likely to buy it. The end user wins
  too, since this promotion carries with it a discount price that
  brings it in line with mail-order pricing.
 
  If you're interested in trying the latest QuicKeys, by all means
  give your friendly neighborhood CE Software dealer a call. You may
  like what you see, and if not, you may get a free blank disk out
  of the experience!
 
  [It appears that the QuicKeys Test Drive software will be
  available in various places online, but according to Jim Sheldon-
  Dean, product manager for QuicKeys, since the purpose of the
  marketing program is to compensate resellers for lost sales, not
  reward the promoter, archive sites won't be able to earn money
  from this promotion. However, Mark and I have planted the seeds of
  such a concept at CE, and in the future user groups and archive
  sites may be able to earn money based on the number of copies of a
  program they recommend. I'm sure abuses could happen (such as
  recommending WhizzyWriter over the WriteStuff because the user
  group earns money for each WhizzyWriter sold to a user group
  member), but on the whole, I applaud CE for coming up with an
  innovative idea that could possibly grow into an entirely
  different method of software distribution. CE's technique could
  result in lower prices and users would have a better chance to
  determine if a package would fit the bill. Interesting
  stuff. -Adam]
 
  Information from:
    CE propaganda
    Jim Sheldon-Dean, QuicKeys Product Manager
 
 
HyperCard Folded Back Into Apple
--------------------------------
  A month or so ago, a friend implored me to try and find the dirt
  on what was happening with HyperCard. I hadn't heard much of
  anything in a long time, which meant to me that the program was
  dying a slow and unnecessary death. Late last week Apple announced
  that HyperCard would have a new lease on life - on the Apple
  campus.
 
  Apple plans to merge future versions of HyperCard into the
  AppleScript environment, something which should go over well with
  potential AppleScript users. Heizer Software probably won't be
  pleased to hear that their forthcoming front end to AppleScript
  will compete with HyperCard instead of just an Apple event-based
  interface environment from UserLand for Frontier scripts.
 
  AppleScript will offer control and integration of the Macintosh
  environment via a scripting language that works with Apple events.
  Even though AppleScript has been talked about for years, and shown
  publicly for six months, it has yet to appear in a form that most
  people can use. Apple has scheduled AppleScript for release in the
  first half of 1993. By using HyperCard (or at least the ideas
  embodied in HyperCard) as the front end for AppleScript, Apple
  benefits both AppleScript and HyperCard. AppleScript needed a
  better scripting interface, and as Frontier proved, only wireheads
  can conceptualize the abstract Apple event links between programs.
  With HyperCard providing an interface for those links, the
  conceptualization should become much easier for the average user.
  As far as HyperCard goes, it will appreciate the relative freedom
  of being released from Claris's stable of productivity
  applications, where it never fit in. Although Apple made no noises
  about bundling a full HyperCard with new Macs again, and I doubt
  AppleScript will ship with all versions of System 7.1, there's
  still a sense that HyperCard is in some way back where it belongs.
  The world is safe for stacks again.
 
  On a related note, I've heard that Aldus is busy drafting a
  statement on the fate of SuperCard, the HyperCard-clone produced
  by Silicon Beach Software before Aldus purchased the company. No
  news on what the word will be, but something is definitely
  happening there. SuperCard has never quite fit with Aldus's
  product line, which is interesting given that Aldus portrays
  itself as a communication company, and perhaps the primary use of
  SuperCard, and HyperCard for that matter, is communicating
  information on screen, much as does Persuasion, Aldus's
  presentation package.
 
  Claris will continue to market, sell, and support the current
  version of HyperCard until Apple comes out with a new version
  sometime later this year. At that point, HyperCard will again
  become an Apple-labeled product, although I should note that in
  France and possibly other countries, Apple never stopped selling
  HyperCard. Response from users and others was extremely positive -
  Kevin Calhoun of the HyperCard team said only "Personally, I'm
  delighted." but declined to say more because he was so busy with
  the transition and catching up with email about the move, most of
  which, he said, was "very, very positive." Seeing Apple do things
  like this and the MODE32 deal restores one's faith in the company.
  We may not always like what Apple does, but it seems that they do
  listen, albeit with the speed of a corporate tortoise.
 
  Information from:
    Apple propaganda
 
 
Why The Lame Apple Color Printer?
---------------------------------
  Pythaeus recently explained why the new Apple Color Printer is so
  lame. Apple realized they lacked a color printer, but didn't have
  one ready internally. So, Apple went to Canon and said, "Hey,
  screen an Apple logo on that color printer over there and ship it
  in our boxes, OK?" Canon agreed, and that's why we have a SCSI-
  based color printer that doesn't have a color Apple logo on it.
  Apple never sets hands on the printer, which is really a Canon
  BJC-820 in sheep's clothing.
 
  Everyone makes mistakes, and Apple apparently plans to fix this
  one as quickly as possible, although that may take a year. Perhaps
  the worst part is that the $2,349 Apple Color Printer is
  (according to tests in the Mar-93 issue of Macworld) slower than
  the $2,995 Canon BJC-820 and because it uses different drivers,
  the quality suffers. Oh well, if you want a printer in this range,
  check out that Canon printer as well as the $3,495 HP PaintJet XL
  300.
 
  Keep in mind that if you buy this printer and call technical
  support because MegaChart won't print to it, the support person
  will offer to test it for you and call you back three weeks later
  because it took that long to find, configure, and test the
  printer. Three years from now when Apple has abandoned the printer
  the support person will snicker at you and tell you to call back
  after you've chanted a few hours of incantations to the SCSI
  daemon, reinstalled the printer driver, and performed the ritual
  tofu sacrifice. If you don't believe me, think back to the ill-
  fated Personal LaserWriter SC. What, you don't remember? It was
  introduced along with the Personal LaserWriter NT, and it lasted
  for about three months.
 
 
StyleWriter problems
  In related news, Patrick Warn writes, "To follow-up your story on
  the StyleWriter, I discovered that the grey scale printing option
  only works on Macs with Color QuickDraw [such as the SE/30,
  Classic II, Mac IIsi, and more]. I found this out after a call to
  Apple to find out why it would not work with my PowerBook 100.
  Also, although the new StyleWriter II driver works with the old
  StyleWriter, don't use the head cleaning option! It will damage
  the printer. I believe this is because the StyleWriter II driver
  tells the printhead to go to a place that does not exist on the
  original StyleWriter."
 
  [Lame, but it makes sense that grayscale printing would be related
  to internal Color QuickDraw. Perhaps more upsetting, Apple's
  StyleWriter II spec sheet specifically ignores this issue, setting
  some customers up for a disappointment. -Tonya & Adam.]
 
  Information from:
    Patrick Warn -- warn@emba.uvm.edu
 
 
Executive Turnovers
-------------------
  On January 4th, Roger Heinen, senior vice president and general
  manager of Apple's Macintosh Software Architecture Division,
  resigned to take a position at Microsoft as vice president of
  Database and Development Tools. Rumor has it that Mr. Bill made it
  worth Heinen's while to leave. I waited to say anything about this
  because I wanted to see if any juicy news came out of it.
  Unfortunately, there's not a lot to report.
 
  Apple's president and COO, Michael Spindler, offered the
  traditional platitudes (I'd rather he offered platypuses, but I
  suppose that's out of the question) about wishing Heinen well, but
  you have to suspect that the top Apple brass is worried about
  Heinen leaving. Projects that came from Heinen's team during his
  three years at Apple include System 7 and QuickTime, and even if
  Heinen is contractually limited from revealing Apple confidential
  secrets, you still have to wonder. Apple announced eight days
  later that David Nagel, previously senior vice president of
  Apple's Advanced Technology Group, will replace Heinen and serve
  as temporary head of ATG until Apple can find a successor.
 
  In other boardroom beatings, John Akers, chairman of IBM, will
  step down in the next few months. I believe the dollars behind
  that move number around $5.64 billion, with a negative sign
  somewhere in front. That's a lot of money to lose in a quarter,
  and about $4 billion more than IBM lost last year in the fourth
  quarter. Bean counters hate counting out that many beans and
  giving them to other people. The question, of course, is what form
  IBM will appear in after it recovers, which it will do at some
  point. IBM is too large to go away as we know it. Interestingly,
  it appears that one of the top names considered as a replacement
  is Apple CEO John Sculley, along with the Intel President Andrew
  Grove, Motorola Chairman George Fisher, GE Chairman Jack Welch,
  and even Ross Perot.
 
  One thing to note. As much as IBM bashing is a good time, keep in
  mind that IBM in the past has had enough money to devote a great
  deal to basic research, the sort of research that will never earn
  any money in our lifetimes. Over the past decade, IBM has spent
  $50 billion on R&D, and that's more than any other company ever.
  Writing IBM with individual xenon atoms is neat, but useless...
  today. Who knows what we may lose if IBM's research arms shut down
  entirely?
 
  Information from:
    Apple propaganda
 
  Related articles:
    MacWEEK -- 25-Jan-93, Vol. 7, #4, pg. 34
 
 
Macintosh Price Drops
---------------------
  by Mark H. Anbinder, Contributing Editor -- mha@baka.ithaca.ny.us
 
  Augury of upcoming Apple product introductions is often made
  easier by the company's tendency to dramatically lower prices
  shortly before they add new items to the hardware lineup. Last
  week, Apple allowed us to anticipate a group of new products
  (expected, according to rumor, to be introduced at Macworld Expo
  in Tokyo on 10-Feb-93) by dropping many of the prices (suggested
  retail and/or "real" end-purchaser prices) on the bottom half of
  its product line.
 
  As the below chart shows, Apple slashed prices on the lower end of
  its family: the Classic II, LC II, and IIsi. The reductions are
  most dramatic in the IIsi, which with the addition of an
  inexpensive math coprocessor (via one of the two Apple slot
  adapter cards, either of which can be had for under $200, or an
  assortment of third-party options) becomes a serious option for a
  respectable desktop computer. The IIsi rests high on the price
  performance curve with a monochrome monitor, math coprocessor,
  keyboard, 40 MB hard drive, and 3 MB of RAM coming in under $1500.
 
 
 SERIALIZED PRODUCT                           OLD SRP    NEW SRP
 
 Macintosh Classic II
    M1543LL/A  Classic II 4/40HD              $1,079  $1,079 *
    M1542LL/A  Classic II 4/80HD              $1,209  $1,079
 
 Macintosh LC II
    M1701LL/A  LC II 4/40HD w/System 7        $1,239  $1,239 *
    M1723LL/A  LC II 4/40HD w/System 6.0.8    $1,239  $1,239 * **
    M1707LL/A  LC II 4/80HD w/o keyboard      $1,349  $1,349 *
    M1387LL/A  LC II 4/160HD w/o keyboard     $1,489  $1,489 *
 
 Macintosh IIsi
    M0491LL/B  Mac IIsi 3/40HD                $1,729  $  969
    M0364LL/B  Mac IIsi 5/80HD                $1,999  $1,199
    M0954LL/A  Mac IIsi 5/160HD               $2,139  $1,429
 
 Macintosh Color Display (14")
    M1198LL/A  Macintosh 14" Color Display    $  589  $  539
 
 Higher Education Smart Solutions
    B1051LL/A  Mac IIsi 5/80 Business S/W     $2,198  $1,398 **
    B1057LL/A  Mac IIsi 5/80 General Faculty  $2,198  $1,398 **
 
  Products marked with * are those whose retail prices stay the
  same, but whose "channel" prices have dropped. Dealers now pay
  less for the products, which generally means the end user prices
  will drop as well. These "channel" price reductions often either
  precede or follow changes in the suggested retail price. It's
  important to realize, therefore, that a change in the SRP may NOT
  change the end user's final purchase price, since such a change
  may not have a corresponding "channel" price change. The items
  marked with ** are only available through Higher Education
  channels.
 
  The standard caveat applies here, of course. If you opt to take
  advantage of the new, lower prices on some of this equipment,
  which Apple obviously feels is heading for obsolescence, you may
  kick yourself when you see what arrives next week. Or, if you
  decide to wait, you may miss out on the chance entirely, since
  quantities are limited and are likely to be depleted quickly. No
  matter how you slice it, though, I can hardly think of those IIsi
  bargains as anything but win-win choices.
 
 
Pumping The New Macs Out
------------------------
  Apple doesn't stop. They keep introducing new models of the
  Macintosh at an increasingly fast rate. If only they could ship
  those new models in quantity when they announce the fool things.
  Teasing your customers works, but only for a while, after which
  the only emotion the customers feel is pure unadulterated...
  frustration.
 
  We'd also like Apple to specify and name machines with thought to
  the people who must memorize and order new and old Macs in a
  comprehensible way. The average consumer who buys a Mac every five
  years won't care, but it's becoming increasingly difficult to keep
  the top ten facts about each Macintosh model in active brain cell
  memory, and the fact that the 165c is much like the 180 only with
  a color screen does not facilitate memorization. If it's that
  close to the 180, take a clue from Toshiba and call it the 180c.
 
  A number of people have passed on information about the new
  machines, and although I'm sure Apple will send me pounds of paper
  that tell me all about it in two weeks, I figured there was no
  reason to wait. I have to hold off on the specs on the new
  LaserWriter Select 300 and 310 for lack of space this week - wait
  for that next week.
 
 
New Macs
  The new Macs due in two weeks span the range of the Macintosh
  line, from the low-end Color Classic to the high-end Quadra 800.
  On the whole, the prices and features look excellent, and should
  make for some good deals on the older machines, as Mark says
  above.
 
  The RAM configurations struck us as interesting. The desktop
  machines offer at least one slot for additional RAM. These slots,
  however do not take the usual 60-pin SIMMs that Mac aficionados
  are used to. Instead they sport what Apple will tout as "industry
  standard" 72-pin SIMMs. We hope to have more details in a future
  issue, but one reason for the change is to eliminate the rules
  concerning banks of RAM and SIMM placement.
 
 
Color Classic
  The 4 MB Color Classic looks like a pudgy Classic II with a
  facade-style front. The exciting thing about this machine (one
  hopes) will be its built-in, 10-inch, 76 dpi, 512 x 384 pixel,
  Sony Trinitron color monitor that does 256 colors standard, and
  accepts 256K more VRAM for 32,768 colors.
 
  The Color Classic uses a slightly modified LC II motherboard. As
  such it accepts LC PDS cards, uses a 16 MHz 68030, suffers from a
  16-bit data bus, and only addresses up to 10 MB of RAM. Rumors
  imply that you will be able to upgrade this Mac to a PowerPC in
  the vaporous future. I'll believe it when I see it, but it does
  come with a socket for a math coprocessor should you need one. All
  this for a suggested retail price of $1,279 in the 4/40
  configuration.
 
 
LC III
  Apple has finally broken their ban on using the number three in a
  machine name, a ban reportedly started when the Apple III flopped.
  I predict that the LC III will not suffer the Apple III's fate -
  it's basically a IIci in an LC case with its 25 MHz 68030 and full
  32-bit data bus.
 
  The LC III's expansion slots make sense for a cross between the
  now outdated LC/LC II and IIci, with a single NuBus slot (although
  the internal size limits the NuBus card length to 6.5 inches), an
  LC-type processor-direct slot, and a socket for a math
  coprocessor.
 
  The LC III takes up to 36 MB via a new single 72-pin SIMM slot.
  Its internal video can do 256 colors, expandable to 32,768 with
  more VRAM. Interestingly, the LC III will include RAM disk
  software - presumably the same sort that comes with the
  PowerBooks. The price is pretty good at $1,379 for a 4/80
  configuration with no monitor. After a long life in the Apple
  product line, the IIci will no longer be sold, so look for some
  major price cuts in the near future.
 
 
Centris 610
  The Centris 610 introduces a new case design reminiscent of a fat
  LC, and sounds like a promising machine. It features a 68LC040 and
  can include an on-board Ethernet adapter and internal CD-ROM
  drive. The Centris 610 expands to 68 MB of RAM via two 72-pin SIMM
  slots, includes RAM disk software, and has the basic 256-color
  internal video. Apple claims the Centris 610 will check in at
  about twice the speed of a IIci, even without a math coprocessor.
  Like the IIsi, the Centris 610 takes an adapter card that lets you
  choose a single NuBus or PDS slot, but it apparently does not have
  a math coprocessor on that adapter card. Bummer. The 4/80
  configuration will run you $1,859, without a monitor, of course.
 
 
Centris 650
  The Centris 650, oddly enough, uses the same case as the IIvx and
  Performa 600. The 650 uses a 25 MHz 68040 and is slated to replace
  the Quadra 700. Unlike the 610, the 650 holds up to 132 MB of RAM
  via four 72-pin SIMM slots, has three NuBus slots, has an inline
  68040 processor-direct slot, includes a socket for a math
  coprocessor, and even has an 8K cache architecture. The two
  machines share similar video abilities, RAM disk software,
  optional on-board Ethernet, and an optional  internal CD-ROM
  drive. The price is still decent, at $2,699 for a 4/80 machine
  sans monitor.
 
 
Quadra 800
  The Quadra 800 is basically a Quadra 950 in an upright mini-tower
  case. It uses the same 33 MHz 68040 and comes with three NuBus
  slots, but because the Quadra 800 uses interleaved memory (when
  SIMMs are placed in adjacent banks, I hear) and has an 8K
  integrated cache, it is supposed to clock in 5-10% faster than the
  950. Like the Centris 650, the Quadra 800 has three NuBus slots
  and an inline 68040 processor-direct slot (which blocks one of the
  NuBus slots, unfortunately), and you can install an internal
  CD-ROM drive. Memory expands to 136 MB from the 8 MB on board. The
  price goes up fast at this level, a whopping $4,679 for a 8/230
  configuration.
 
 
PowerBook 165c
  As far as we can tell, the PowerBook 165c is a PowerBook 180 with
  a 9-inch, 256-color, passive-matrix screen. It uses a 33 MHz 68030
  and a 33 MHz 68882 math coprocessor, has 4 MB of RAM expandable to
  14 MB, and includes the same internal slots and external ports.
  Apple claims battery life will be between 1.5 and 2 hours, but
  early reports we've heard that suggest times more like 45 minutes.
  Ouch, but if you absolutely need that color screen... The
  PowerBook 165c is a bit heavier and thicker - about seven pounds
  in the end. Price? $3,599 with the 80 MB hard disk.
 
  Information from:
    Pythaeus
 
 
Reviews/01-Feb-93
-----------------
 
* MacWEEK -- 25-Jan-93, Vol. 7, #4
    Macintosh Duo 210 and 230 -- pg. 1
    Aldus Fetch 1.0 -- pg. 41
    Public Utilities 1.0 -- pg. 41
    Spiral 1.0.1 -- pg. 42
    PicturePress 2.5 -- pg. 44
    Macintosh Duo Dock -- pg. 45
 
* MacUser -- Feb-93
    Microsoft PowerPoint 3.0 -- pg. 50
    FileMaker Pro 2.0 -- pg. 52
    Now Utilities 4.0 -- pg. 54
    InTouch 2.0 -- pg. 55
    MacroModel 1.0 -- pg. 57
    GCC WriteMove II and Kodak Diconix 180si -- pg. 62
    MiniCad+ 4 -- pg. 67
    Adobe Premiere 2.0 -- pg. 71
    VideoVision -- pg. 75
    DocuComp II 1.0.1 and UpDiff 1.0 -- pg. 87
    CPU -- pg. 91
    Audioshop -- pg. 91
    Silver Cloud -- pg. 91
    Diamonds -- pg. 92
    Personal RecordKeeper -- pg. 92
    Kid Pix Companion -- pg. 92
    Magnet -- pg. 94
    Drive7 -- pg. 96
    Hard Disk Toolkit Personal Edition -- pg. 96
    AccessPC -- pg. 97
    Macintosh PC Exchange -- pg. 97
    Telecom Software -- pg. 100
      MacIntercomm 1.0
      MicroPhone II 4.0.2
      Smartcom II for the Macintosh 3.4
      White Knight 11.14
      ZTerm 0.90
    Reminder Programs -- pg. 112
      AgentDA 2.1
      Alarming Events 1.1
      DateBook 1.5
      DayMaker 1.01
      Easy Alarms 2.0.3
      First Things First 3.0
      Now Up-to-Date 1.0.1
    PowerBook and SCSI Display Adapters -- pg. 210
      Aura ScuzzyView
      Lapis PowerBase I
      LifeTime Video+ PB140/170
      Mirror PowerVision
      Mirror ViewPort
      Radius PowerView
    System 7 Utility Collections -- pg. 257
      7th Heaven 2.0
      Super 7 Utilities 1.0
      System 7 Pack 3.0.1
      Xtras for System 7 1.0
 
* BYTE -- Feb-93
    Macintosh Accelerators -- pg. 198
      (too many to list)
    Adobe Premiere 2.0 -- pg. 205
 
 
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