TidBITS#208/10-Jan-94
=====================
 
Macworld news abounds this issue, with brief looks at some of the
   more interesting new products from the show, along with a full
   review of the runaway hit, Connectix's fabulous RAM Doubler.
   Mark Anbinder looks at Second Sight 3.0, and just to make sure
   you're feeling sufficiently poor, we report just what Sculley
   received in his severance package from Apple. Ick.
 
This issue of TidBITS sponsored in part by:
* APS Technologies -- 800/443-4199 -- 71520.72@compuserve.com
   Makers of hard drives, tape drives, memory, and accessories.
   For APS price lists, email: aps-prices@tidbits.com  <---- New!
 
Copyright 1990-1994 Adam & Tonya Engst. Details at end of issue.
   Automated info: <info@tidbits.com> Comments: <ace@tidbits.com>
   --------------------------------------------------------------
 
Topics:
    MailBITS/10-Jan-94
    Do I Get This If I Resign?
    Macworld Comments
    Product Comments
    Second Sight, Take Three
    RAM Doubler
    Reviews/10-Jan-94
 
[Archived as /info-mac/per/tb/tidbits-208.etx; 30K]
 
 
MailBITS/10-Jan-94
------------------
  A number of people wrote to whack on me for claiming the Tab key
  was related to the metal tabs on a mechanical typewriter, saying
  instead that it is short for "tabulator," a device for making
  tables. In that sense the key name still makes sense on the
  computer keyboard, although I wonder if people would have thought
  that before Word came up with its table feature. On systems with
  monospaced fonts (and even on Macs with proportional fonts), many
  people still use the space bar to make tables.
 
 
**Almost-free Internet access** is available from the Washington
  DC-based non-profit International Internet Association. The group,
  funded primarily by private donations with some commercial input,
  hopes to give away up to 25,000 free Internet accounts and has
  given away over 9,000 as of several weeks ago at the rate of about
  150 per day. The underlying rationale is to provide an easy
  alternative to commercial service providers. The account is free,
  although you must pay long distance charges. They support modem
  speeds up to v.32bis, and once you're on, you're in a custom menu
  shell - no SLIP or PPP access. There is currently a three week
  turnaround on account creation, and for some reason, they require
  a credit card for access. International Internet Association --
  info@iia.org-- 202/387-5445 -- 202/387-5446 (fax)
 
 
Do I Get This If I Resign?
--------------------------
  Just in case you were concerned about how John Sculley was forced
  out of Apple in a takeover by Michael Spindler, I thought I'd pass
  on the description of Sculley's severance package. A number of
  Apple employees have asked wistfully if they can get the same deal
  if they resign.
 
  The basic severance payment was a cool million, or about the
  equivalent of a year's salary for Sculley. Sculley won't entirely
  disappear either, since Apple retained him as a consultant for a
  year, during which he earns $100,000 per month for the first three
  months and $50,000 per month for the remaining nine months. One
  presumes that he's using the time to impart his wisdom to Michael
  Spindler, who no doubt realizes that Sculley's wisdom got Apple
  into this mess in the first place. I doubt much work will happen
  for that $750,000. Wasn't that about the amount Apple received in
  the Williamson County tax rebate? Hmm....
 
  Don't worry, that's not all. Sculley didn't much like California,
  one gathers from his biography and other reports, and Apple agreed
  to buy Sculley's properties in Woodside, California, at fair
  market value. Some companies pay moving expenses only for incoming
  employes, but Apple picked up the tab for Sculley to move back to
  Greenwich, Connecticut, and since he won't need to commute back
  and forth any more, Apple also bought back his personal Lear 55
  jet plane. Finally, since moving always involves a few months of
  higher expenses, Apple graciously made exercisable Sculley's
  outstanding stock options. I doubt selling them will bring him
  into the same class as Bill Gates, but a couple of million extra
  dollars can come in handy on occasion.
 
  I suspect that some, if not all of these perks were specified in
  an employment contract so that Apple was legally required to fork
  over all that money, but I must admit that I'm a bit disgusted
  with it all.
 
  Information from:
    Pythaeus
 
 
Macworld Comments
-----------------
  I may be jaded, but Macworld doesn't sport the same attraction as
  it used to. Some of the lost luster is due no doubt to my
  increased knowledge of the industry, but that's not the entire
  story. In the process of figuring out why I was less than
  entranced, I realized something about TidBITS and the way I look
  at the Macintosh world. The show had too many me-too products, too
  many minor upgrades, and too many specialized high-end products
  that undoubtedly wowed the crowds as much with their price tags as
  with their features.
 
  The Macintosh was once called the computer for the rest of us.
  Have we become the elite for whom that early Mac was _not_? I
  think not, and therein lies my dissatisfaction with the industry
  as reflected in the booths of Macworld. Frankly, the entire field
  is becoming niched out, if you'll excuse my verbification. Live
  Picture is extremely cool (or so I'm told - I have yet to have the
  patience to get close enough to a demo). But is any product that
  edits pictures and costs some number of thousands of dollars
  intended for the rest of us? Is a QMS color laser printer that
  costs more than my car made for the rest of us? The answer in both
  cases is no; the rest of us can get by just fine with an $8.37
  copy of Color It and a several hundred dollar DeskWriter C.
 
  I don't deny the validity or utility of these high-end, expensive,
  niche products, but at the same time I think the ever-increasing
  emphasis on them serves to divide the Macintosh world. Sure, that
  color laser printer produced nice pages, but when placed against a
  Honda Civic, I think most people would take the Civic. Drop the
  price on that color laser to the range of a DeskWriter C and we'll
  all have one. So that's the first dividing line - price. The
  prices of Macs may have dropped but that doesn't mean you can get
  away with spending less money on a complete system.
 
  The second dividing line is related to the realization people had
  about seven years ago. The Macintosh made desktop publishing a
  reality, and we've all seen our share of newsletters that use
  every font available on the designer's Mac with an emphasis on
  Venice and San Francisco. Time has finally installed in us the
  concept that the availability and simplification of the tools does
  not make a novice into an expert. As the market matures in
  different areas, this lesson comes home time and time again. I
  could spend thousands of dollars on video equipment and software
  for my 660AV, but the ability to create full-screen full-motion
  video doesn't mean that I or any other novice can create _good_
  full-screen, full-motion video.
 
 
Community
  These two lines serve to break up the Macintosh community into the
  haves and the have nots, the novices and the experts, and that
  bothers me. Although a community must preserve a range of
  knowledge and expertise, there must also be some common ground,
  some subjects in which most any Macintosh user will evince
  interest. That's where I see my role, and the role of TidBITS. I'm
  not an expert in any field, and the field in which I'm the most
  interested, the Internet, attracts me because of the wonderful
  people with whom I can interact, from whom I can learn, and who I
  can count among my friends. I want to create a common ground, a
  virtual meeting space in which we can all learn from one another
  and benefit from the process. TidBITS does this in its small way,
  and that's good. We can't solve the world's problems, and I doubt
  we even understand the world's problems, but if we can at least
  get to know one another and continue to exchange thoughts and
  ideas, the world cannot but improve.
 
  One of the causes of this pontificating was the annual netters'
  dinner at Macworld. Some 80-odd netters from all over showed up to
  share Chinese food and listen to our ever-enthusiastic organizer
  Jon "Will hack for food" Pugh. Once again, I was struck by how
  utterly comfortable I felt with the assembled net denizens. We may
  not be pretty and we may not be rich, but I think I can say that
  we're one hell of a nice group of people. Thanks to you all for a
  wonderful evening, and here's hoping that the net never loses its
  spirit.
 
 
Product Comments
----------------
  Even though I may not have been thoroughly impressed by the
  products at the show, there were plenty of products worth
  mentioning. These in no way relate to each other - I just found
  them interesting at the show or in press materials. I'll have more
  of these notes next week as well - there isn't room for
  everything.
 
 
**TaxPro** -- Although I don't own a Newton, I kept an eye out for
  interesting Newton applications at the show. Many of those present
  (and there weren't all that many) were distributed by Apple's
  StarCore publishing group, and among that set was TaxPro (about
  $50, I think, and I'd check Apple dealers first for availability)
  from Advanced Mobile, a truly Newton-esque application. As you
  might expect from the name, TaxPro helps you do U.S. income taxes,
  but unlike the multi-megabyte behemoth MacInTax, it doesn't
  attempt to include every possible form or calculation, and isn't
  designed to print IRS-acceptable forms. Instead, TaxPro is a tax
  planner that removes much of the confusion from attempting to fill
  out the IRS's, shall we say, comprehensive forms. And since TaxPro
  resides on your Newton in a 120K file, it's perfect for quickly
  checking the tax implications of a financial move on the spot. Of
  course, as a Newton application, TaxPro makes it easy to email or
  fax the tax projections to someone else. Although I haven't used
  TaxPro for my taxes, I did play with it at the show, and
  especially liked the way it allowed you to work in simple
  worksheets rather than complex forms. TaxPro contains tax rates
  for both 1992 and 1993, and I'm sure Advanced Mobile will have a
  free or cheap upgrade to the 1994 rates when possible. Although
  anyone who has to mess with their tax planning will appreciate
  TaxPro, I suspect that financial professionals will especially
  like the ability to quickly project tax returns and electronically
  bounce the information to clients with a minimum of fuss. Advanced
  Mobile -- meiercpa@aol.com -- TaxPro via NewtonMail -- 414/271-
  7711 -- 414/224-1525 (fax)
 
 
**FlipBook** -- S.H. Pierce & Co. showed FlipBook, a clever little
  application that turns QuickTime movies, PICS animations, and
  frames from the Scrapbook into a paper flipbook, in which you flip
  the pages quickly to simulate the frames of a movie. FlipBook
  ships with special paper for making flipbooks and works with both
  QuickDraw and PostScript printers. It does require a 68020 or
  greater Mac. As is unfortunately common, they didn't put the price
  on their glossy propaganda. S.H. Pierce & Co. -- 617/338-2222 --
  617/338-2223 (fax)
 
 
**Sumo** -- MacSoft, a division of WizardWorks, showed Sumo, a new
  game based on the sport of sumo wrestling. The basic idea is to
  bounce the opponent's ball out of the ring, and you can either
  play against the computer, which learns your moves and adjusts, or
  against another person, although then one person must use the
  keyboard, which looked as though it might be more difficult than
  using a mouse. If you play with the mouse, you don't have to
  click. A dragging motion is all you need, making Sumo potentially
  more attractive to people flirting with RSI problems. MacSoft --
  800/229-2714
 
 
**White Knight 11** does not support the Communications Toolbox,
  according to the FreeSoft rep at their booth, but they plan CTB
  support for version 12. Once White Knight supports the CTB, those
  of us who work with MacTCP and the Internet will be able to use it
  with telnet tools and other Internet applications. The FreeSoft
  Company -- 412/846-2700
 
 
**Open Sesame** ($99 list) from Charles River Analytics should be
  a fascinating utility to test. The first learning agent for the
  Mac (or any other mass market platform), Open Sesame watches your
  actions and when it thinks it detects a pattern, it asks if you
  would like it to automate that task. It even keeps track of day
  and time, so if you always run a backup on Friday afternoon, or
  always switch into WordTris at 4:55 PM, Open Sesame will note
  that. I'm looking forward to it more than most utilities, because
  even though I already automate many tasks with QuicKeys and a few
  with AppleScript and Frontier, I always wonder what I'm missing.
  Charles River Analytics -- 800/913-35335 -- 617/491-3474 --
  617/868-0780 (fax) -- sesame@cra.com -- 72056.3606@compuserve.com
 
 
**Street Atlas USA 2.0** from DeLorme Mapping should prove to be a
  useful application of CD-ROM technology, since it's a complete
  road map of the entire United States, theoretically down to the
  tiniest back roads. I grew up on a dirt road that barely showed up
  on local maps, so I'd be curious if Street Atlas includes that
  road, but it claims to show more than 12 million street segments
  and over 1 million lakes, ponds, rivers, parks, railroads, and
  monuments. Since version 1.0 appeared first on Windows (think of
  Windows users as guinea pigs), this version is the same as the
  just-released version 2.0 for Windows. You can search on zip code,
  place name, or phone number, and view and print maps at a variety
  of scales. DeLorme Mapping -- 207/865-1234
 
 
**MacHandwriter** appeared in the U.S. market after being
  available in Japan for some time. From Communication Intelligence
  Corporation (CIC), MacHandwriter is a complete pen input system
  for the Macintosh, and includes the necessary software, a pen (you
  can get a pressure-sensitive pen from CIC if you use FreeHand or
  other pressure-sensitive program), and a thin graphics tablet.
  Although the press release claims MacHandwriter "is compatible
  with standard off-the-shelf applications including graphics and
  desktop publishing, word processing, spreadsheet, and databases"
  it doesn't anywhere claim complete compatibility, which is either
  honesty (is anything _completely_ compatible?) or a way of saying
  that it works with a lot of software but doesn't work with plenty
  as well. Either way, it sounds neat, and is affordable at $399.
  Until 28-Feb-94, the price is even lower at $199. CIC -- 800/888-
  9242 -- 415/802-7888 -- 415/802-7777 (fax)
 
 
**El-Fish** from Maxis should satisfy aquarists who can't keep up
  with a large tank of cichlids or who don't get The Aquarium
  Channel on cable. El-Fish is an electronic aquarium in which you
  can breed or mutate exotic fish. The propaganda claims that El-
  Fish creates an "unlimited number of realistic, seemingly three-
  dimensional fish that look and swim like real fish." I certainly
  hope El-Fish isn't so realistic as to simulate the occasional tank
  leaks or nasty fungal epidemics my fish have experienced. Maxis --
  510/254-9700 -- 510/253-3736 (fax) -- maxis@aol.com
 
 
**Port Juggler** from Momentum may solve serial port headaches for
  those of you with more serial devices than ports. With it, you can
  connect a peripheral to up to four Macs, or you can connect up to
  four serial devices to one Mac. Either way, the interesting part
  is that Port Juggler switches between the devices automatically,
  so you don't have to do any of the switching work. It's a great
  idea, considering that once you enable AppleTalk on the printer
  port, you're down to a single serial port that's usually awkward
  to reach. Momentum -- 808/263-0088 -- 808/263-0099 (fax)
 
 
Second Sight, Take Three
------------------------
  by Mark H. Anbinder, News Editor -- mha@baka.ithaca.ny.us
 
  The FreeSoft Company recently shipped the long-awaited 3.0 release
  of their popular Second Sight bulletin board software. Second
  Sight 3.0 is the successor to Red Ryder Host and Second Sight
  version 2.1; the company also publishes White Knight, the popular
  terminal software formerly known as Red Ryder.
 
  Although graphical interface BBS software and mail packages such
  as FirstClass, TeleFinder, and NovaLink Pro have taken over much
  of the Mac-based BBS, service bureau, and email market, text-based
  BBS software such as Second Sight is still popular. The universal
  VT100-compatible interface that's presented to all users
  regardless of client platform carries a strong advantage; the
  graphical packages require specialized client software that is
  typically available for a limited range of platforms.
 
  Second Sight 3.0 incorporates into the main host application all
  of the administration features previously handled in a suite of
  separate utility applications. The authors clearly based many of
  the improvements in each module on features from the many free and
  shareware utilities that have been developed by Second Sight users
  over the years. The modeless multi-window host environment allows
  the sysop to perform most maintenance and administration tasks
  while the host system is active and in use.
 
  The host software supports serial DTE rates (between computer and
  modem) from 300 to 57,600 bps, and DCE rates (between modems) from
  300 to 14,400 bps, plus 16,800 bps and the yet-to-be-released
  28,800 bps speed. Hardware handshaking (RTS/CTS flow control) is
  fully supported on Macs equipped with a "Gpi" (general purpose
  input) pin in their serial ports; the Mac Plus, Classic, and LC
  family Macs are not so equipped. The software now offers "true
  multi-line support," including support for Creative Solutions's
  Hurdler and Applied Engineering's QuadraLink and QuadraLink DMA
  cards, all of which are multiple-serial-port NuBus cards.
 
  Second Sight 3.0 includes numerous enhancements from the outside
  user's point of view, as well. The software provides full ANSI
  color and graphics terminal extensions, permitting colorful menu
  displays, text file graphics, and color ANSI animations. A new
  Group Mail feature allows individual messages to be sent to groups
  of users. All file transfer protocols have been refined, and all
  now support both MacBinary and non-MacBinary uploads and
  downloads, enabling both Mac and non-Mac users to work with files
  comfortably.
 
  The fully customizable menus, displays, and command structure make
  Second Sight more attractive than most other text-based BBS
  software designed to run on a Macintosh host machine. (Most such
  packages are designed to operate just like corresponding text-
  based BBS software on DOS machines.) This factor puts Second Sight
  ahead of the less-expensive Hermes, and also gives it an advantage
  over the text-oriented command line interface in FirstClass.
  NovaLink Pro is also fully customizable, but Second Sight
  modification is easier on the administrator.
 
  Upgrades from Second Sight 2.1 are available for $25 to users who
  purchased the software on or after 01-Nov-93, for $35 if 2.1 was
  purchased between 01-Oct-93 and 31-Oct-93, or $45 between 01-Sep-
  93 and 30-Sep-93. Other 2.0 or 2.1 owners may upgrade for $50, and
  owners of pre-2.0 versions may upgrade for $75. (Registered users
  should receive instructions on their various options in the mail.)
  The suggested retail price of the new version is $199.
 
  New copies of Second Sight will be available from Macalot Software
  at 412/846-2177, and MacZone at 800/248-0800 or 206/883-3088. For
  instructions on upgrading from a previous version or for other
  authorized dealers, contact:
 
    The FreeSoft Company -- 412/846-2700 -- 412/847-4436 (fax)
 
  Information from:
    The FreeSoft Company propaganda
 
 
RAM Doubler
-----------
  The software hit of Macworld SF was definitely Connectix's RAM
  Doubler. Roy McDonald, Connectix's president, said that they sold
  about 3,000 copies at the show, and about another 3,000 through
  normal channels. Considering that RAM Doubler shipped the day of
  the show, that's not too shabby. But I digress.
 
  You can never have enough hard drive space or RAM. Hard drives
  aren't all that expensive per megabyte though, whereas RAM is way
  up there, due in large part to the DRAM hoax of last year. You
  probably remember, the Sumitomo resin factory blew up, so prices
  on RAM reacted like commodity prices and skyrocketed. Like
  commodities, the prices were based almost purely on speculation,
  and as it turned out, a survey of existing stocks of the resin
  showed that the industry had almost twice as much of the stuff
  stockpiled as it was going to need by last December, when the
  plant came back on line. In essence, then, there was no reason for
  those RAM prices to rise, but rise they did. In fact, the dealers
  we users buy from probably made no more money on RAM than they
  normally do, but being almost at the top of the RAM food chain,
  they had no choice but to raise consumer prices. But I digress
  again - now that we're all irritated at the RAM manufacturers, let
  me explain what RAM Doubler is and why you're likely to want a
  copy.
 
  RAM Doubler is a single small extension that literally doubles
  your RAM. It's not guessing at a 2:1 compression ratio, like
  Salient's AutoDoubler and DiskDoubler (now owned by Symantec) -
  you actually see your total memory being twice your built-in
  memory. Since RAM Doubler is an extension, there are no controls,
  no configuration. You just install it and it doubles the amount of
  application RAM you have available.
 
  A number of people have expressed disbelief that such a feat is
  possible, saying that they'd avoid anything like RAM Doubler
  because it's obviously doing strange things to memory, which isn't
  safe. The answer to these naysayers is that a program like RAM
  Doubler either works or it doesn't - it's a binary decision. Since
  Connectix offers a 30-day money-back guarantee, you have nothing
  to lose if it doesn't work, and since there's almost nothing you
  can do to prevent RAM Doubler from working (remember, there's no
  configuration), it's an easy test. Tonya and I have both installed
  RAM Doubler to test it in low and high memory situations since her
  Duo 230 has only 4 MB of real RAM whereas my 660AV sports 20 MB.
 
  Needless to say, since RAM Doubler has only been out for a few
  days, we haven't been testing for long, but I can honestly say
  that neither of us have noticed anything out of the ordinary
  during this time. In addition, Roy said that he has been watching
  the nets for complaints and has seen essentially none. This isn't
  to imply that RAM Doubler must be entirely bug free; in fact,
  there's a known conflict with 4D that will be fixed in 1.0.1, due
  out in a week or so. ACIUS has apparently released a patch for
  some other problem that also solves the incompatibility with RAM
  Doubler, but if you use 4D, I'd recommend waiting for a short
  while.
 
  On our machines, though, RAM Doubler has performed perfectly.
  Tonya runs a relatively slim system and only a few applications
  like Word 5.1a, the Random House Webster's dictionary, and Eudora,
  whereas I have over two rows of extensions on a 16" monitor and a
  slew of applications, fourteen of which start up at boot time. To
  stress the system a bit, I launched Retrospect (4 MB of RAM),
  FreeHand, PageMaker, and Elastic Reality (a high-end morphing
  program from ASDG that likes 12 MB of RAM), and I still had about
  6 MB free, so I started up speech recognition and switched to a
  larger uncompressed voice. Everything worked fine, although as I
  started to push the boundaries of my 40 MB, the Mac slowed down a
  bit.
 
  In normal usage, Connectix estimates a two to four percent
  slowdown, although most people don't notice such a small speed
  hit, in large part because other extensions can easily reduce your
  Mac's performance that much as well. The speed hit will change
  slightly as you use more of the RAM that RAM Doubler provides
  since it must switch to more complex methods of providing the RAM
  it has promised to you.
 
  I'm no programmer, so I can't tell you exactly how RAM Doubler
  works its magic, but the basic idea is that it uses Connectix's
  virtual memory technology to divert memory not to a disk file, but
  to other locations in RAM. There are several techniques involved,
  depending on the current RAM situation. RAM Doubler starts out by
  using the "empty" space in the About this Macintosh memory bars,
  which is the memory that an application has reserved but not used.
  After that, it pokes around for holes in the "used" space in those
  memory bars, or memory that the application has used but won't
  again. Normally such memory is completely lost to other
  applications because applications generally require a contiguous
  block of RAM. If you keep launching programs, RAM Doubler will
  compress some of the contents of RAM using standard data
  compression techniques, and finally, if all else fails, it will
  swap some of the contents of memory out to disk, although I gather
  this primarily happens on Macs with less than 8 MB of real RAM.
 
  Because of these techniques, you can't run other memory management
  tools, such as Apple's VM or Connectix's Virtual. In addition, you
  should not use RAM Doubler to run a single RAM hog like Photoshop
  - the speed hit will be hard and instantaneous since most of RAM
  Doubler's tricks fail when using only a single application.
  However, if you have 20 MB and wish to run Photoshop in 20 MB, you
  should be able to effectively use the additional 20 MB that RAM
  Doubler provides for other, smaller applications.
 
  The more I think about RAM Doubler, the more I'm impressed by how
  simple and clever it is. The best analogy I can come up with is
  that of a hard disk. You don't need contiguous space on a hard
  disk to save a file - the Mac can track the different blocks that
  store various parts of a large file. Until RAM Doubler, RAM was
  the exact opposite, but with RAM Doubler, memory now works more
  like a hard disk so you can use every little bit that's free.
 
  Of course, such a feat isn't easy, and the only way RAM Doubler
  achieves it is to use the MMU, or memory management unit, that's
  built into the 68030 and 68040 processors and keeps track of the
  entire contents of RAM. Thus, if your Mac has a 68000 or 68020
  (with the exception of some 68030-accelerated Mac II's - ask
  Connectix for details), RAM Doubler won't work. Those of you on
  older Macs like the Plus and LC have another option, though,
  OptiMem from Jump Development Group. I'll talk more about it in a
  future issue.
 
  The best testament to RAM Doubler's simplicity is its nine-page
  manual, with three pages that introduce RAM Doubler and talk about
  installing and removing it, four pages that answer common
  questions, and two pages that discuss Connectix's other products.
 
  Overall then, RAM Doubler is a no-brainer. You buy it (it lists
  for $99, sold for $49 at the show, and I suspect that Connectix
  has lower than list prices for online users and for users of other
  Connectix products), install it, and poof, you have twice as much
  RAM available for applications.
 
  If we're lucky, RAM Doubler will prompt a lowering of RAM prices
  as well, since only people who need tons of real RAM (like
  Photoshop users) should pay for real RAM. It's an easy decision,
  since if you have 8 MB of real RAM now, RAM Doubler costs
  somewhere around $50 and an 8 MB SIMM costs around $300. For
  people like me, it's even more worthwhile since RAM Doubler still
  costs $50 to up my RAM from 20 MB to 40 MB, but another 20 MB of
  SIMMs would probably run $750 or so. In other words, if you're
  starting to feel the RAM crunch, get RAM Doubler. It doesn't
  prevent you from getting more RAM later - it will double that just
  as happily - but for the moment it's the best deal going.
 
    Connectix -- 800/950-5880 -- 415/571-5100 -- 415/571-5195 (fax)
      connectix@aol.com
 
 
Reviews/10-Jan-94
-----------------
 
* MacWEEK -- 03-Jan-94, Vol. 8, #1
    Now Contact 1.0 -- pg. 91
    Adobe Streamline 3.0 -- pg. 91
    PowerBook batteries -- pg. 94
      PowerPlate Mini 3, PowerPlate 3x, PowerPlate 5x
      VST ThinPack
    ScriptGenPro 1.0.1 -- pg. 95
    Fontographer 4.0.3 -- pg. 96


$$
 
 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 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 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
 ----------------------------------------------------------------



