TidBITS#264/20-Feb-95
=====================
 
What would a week be without some corporate maneuvering? Inside we
   cover the latest news on Microsoft's antitrust proceedings,
   Apple's latest licensing of the Mac OS, plus some thoughts on
   the recent Apple/Voyager controversy. We round out the issue
   with news of a MacInTax fix, a brief summary of how you should
   attach files to mail messages using Eudora, and conclude with
   Part 2 of Nigel Perry's review of Nisus Writer.
 
This issue of TidBITS sponsored in part by:
* APS Technologies -- 800/443-4199 -- <sales@apstech.com>
   Makers of hard drives, tape drives, and neat SCSI accessories.
   For APS price lists, email: <aps-prices@tidbits.com> <---- New
* Northwest Nexus -- 206/455-3505 -- http://www.halcyon.com/
   Providing access to the global Internet. <info@halcyon.com>
* PowerCity Online -- <75361.532@compuserve.com> Email sales of
   40,000+ items for Mac/PC. Send email with Subject: Order Info
* Hayden Books, an imprint of Macmillan Computer Publishing
   Save 20% on all books via the Web -- http://www.mcp.com/
 
Copyright 1990-1995 Adam & Tonya Engst. Details at end of issue.
   Information: <info@tidbits.com> Comments: <editors@tidbits.com>
   ---------------------------------------------------------------
 
Topics:
    MailBITS/20-Feb-95
    Can't Buy Me Love - Microsoft Antitrust Ruling
    Eudora & Attachments
    An Unpleasant Voyage
    Nisus Writer 4.0.6, Part 2: Word and Document Processing
    Reviews/20-Feb-95
 
ftp://ftp.tidbits.com/pub/tidbits/issues/1995/TidBITS#264_20-Feb-95.etx
 
 
MailBITS/20-Feb-95
------------------
  Adam suggested that I let people know how I'm doing after my car
  accident last October. People take months (if not years) to
  recover from whiplash, and the medical people I'm seeing are
  pleased with my progress. Since late December, I've been well
  enough to go about life normally, but I am still noticeably
  healing. My neck hurts sometimes, usually late at night, and it
  feels wobbly if I bend it the wrong way. I'm under doctor's orders
  to exercise (so I'm getting back in shape after an eight-year
  lapse from my cross-country running days!), I'm doing a some
  physical therapy, and I'm enjoying weekly therapeutic massages.
 
  The most important breakthrough in the recovery, oddly enough, was
  realizing that if I made weird faces with my mouth open, I
  stretched jaw and neck muscles that desperately needed to stretch.
  After that, I could open my mouth normally and escaped the danger
  of having to wear extremely unpleasant-looking orthodontic
  devices. Thanks to everyone who wished me a speedy recovery! [TJE]
 
 
**O Pioneer!** -- Japan-based Pioneer Electronics Corporation
  announced last week that it has reached an agreement with Apple to
  license the Mac OS for use in Pioneer's first entries into the
  personal computer market. Pioneer, well-known for its home
  electronics products, plans to produce multimedia computers
  directly for the home entertainment market, featuring a high
  degree of integration with new and existing Pioneer technologies.
  Pioneer certainly has a lot to build upon the home electronics
  arena, but one wonders if Pioneer is up to the sort of technical
  support, quality assurance, and evangelism necessary in the
  computer industry. Pricing information hasn't been announced and
  it's unclear if Pioneer intends to introduce these products
  outside of Japan.
 
  Pioneer plans units based on the 66 MHz PowerPC 601 and the 33 MHz
  68LC040, each with 4.4x CD-ROM drives and multisync monitors.
  Pioneer promises to bundle original software with its units to
  "provide a new world of A/V computing" and provide easy capture
  and manipulation of audio and video data. Prototypes will be
  demonstrated this week at the Macworld Expo to held in Chiba,
  Japan. [GD]
 
 
**Apprentice Phone Update** -- Due to recent changes to western
  Washington's area codes, some readers have been unable to contact
  Celestin Company, the makers of the Apprentice CD-ROM reviewed in
  TidBITS-263_. If you have trouble, Celestin Company suggests
  trying to contact them at their _old_ area code: 206/385-3767 and
  206/385-3586 (fax). Their email address remains
  <celestin@olympus.net>. [GD]
 
 
**MacInTax Update** -- Intuit, makers of the MacInTax tax software
  package, have written to update the situation on the MacInTax
  itemization bug reported in TidBITS-261_. To restate, the bug
  occurs when importing a TXF file into MacInTax from another source
  (most likely Quicken) and when that TXF file has 30 or more items
  within a single category. In this case, every 30th item in each
  category will not make it into MacInTax, although the MacInTax
  import log will report that all the items were imported
  successfully. (Intuit says Schedule D is a special case and is not
  affected by the bug). MacInTax users should contact Intuit to
  obtain a version of MacInTax with the itemization bug fixed.
  MacInTax support can be reached at 602/295-3080 or at
  <76004.3107@compuserve.com>. [GD]
 
 
**PowerBook Price Drop** -- When Apple lowers prices, it often
  heralds the upcoming release of new models. Even so, if you've had
  your eyes on a 500-series PowerBook, you might want to check out
  the new pricing. Effective since 13-Feb-95, Apple has reduced
  prices 14 to 17 percent for models sold in the U.S. (Sorry, we
  don't have information about outside the U.S.) To sweeten the
  deal, Apple also plans to give away a free carrying case with any
  PowerBook purchased from 15-Feb-95 through 31-Mar-95. The table
  below shows official "Apple Price" pricing information for the
  price reduction. [TJE]
 
>        Model                Former Price      New Price
>
> PowerBook 520  4/160           $2269            $1959
> PowerBook 520c 4/160           $2899            $2499
> PowerBook 520c 12/320/Modem    $3949            $3269
> PowerBook 540c 4/320           $4839            $4079
> PowerBook 540c 12/500/Modem    $5899            $4999
 
ftp://ftp.info.apple.com/Apple.Support.Area/Apple.Press.Releases/13Feb95-
PB.500.Series.Price.Red.txt
 
 
Can't Buy Me Love - Microsoft Antitrust Ruling
----------------------------------------------
  by Geoff Duncan <geoff@tidbits.com>
 
  In an ironic Valentine's Day present, U.S. District Judge Stanley
  Sporkin on February 14th rejected an agreement made between
  Microsoft and the U.S. Justice Department regarding charges that
  Microsoft licensing practices stifle competition. The dispute
  primarily involves how Microsoft licenses operating systems to
  personal computer manufacturers, including restrictive
  arrangements that allegedly exclude other operating systems and
  that may require manufacturers to pay a per-unit fee to Microsoft
  even on computers that do not contain Microsoft software.
  Additionally, Microsoft's proposed licensing arrangements for
  Windows 95, due to be released later this year, have drawn sharp
  criticism from computer manufacturers, who admit they have little
  choice but to agree to terms Microsoft dictates.
 
  Microsoft had reached an agreement with the Justice Department to
  change the way it licenses its products to personal computer
  manufacturers. However, Judge Sporkin rejected the agreement on
  the grounds it did not constitute an effective antitrust remedy
  and that it failed to adequately address Microsoft's past and
  future monopolistic practices. In Judge Sporkin's words, "simply
  telling a defendant to go forth and sin no more does little or
  nothing to address the unfair advantage it has already gained." In
  strong language, Judge Sporkin also characterized the agreement as
  "too little, too late."
 
  The Justice Department has decided to appeal Judge Sporkin's
  ruling, and U.S. Attorney General Janet Reno defended the original
  agreement, saying that the judge is going beyond his legal
  authority by examining Microsoft business practices not alleged in
  the original complaint. Not surprisingly, within a few hours
  Microsoft announced it would join the Justice Department's appeal
  of the ruling.
 
  Although the proposed $1.5 billion Microsoft/Intuit merger (see
  TidBITS-248_) is a completely separate case being examined by the
  Justice Department, Intuit's stock price fell when Judge Sporkin's
  ruling was announced last week.
 
  The direct implications of this ruling on the Macintosh community
  are comparatively slight, since the case primarily concerns
  Microsoft's DOS and Windows licensing. However, as Apple licenses
  the Macintosh and its operating system to third parties, it might
  take care to notice where Microsoft is allocating its legal
  budget. Ironically, an argument could be made that a successful
  appeal of Judge Sporkin's decision could be financially
  advantageous for Apple in the future, particularly if the Mac
  clone market takes off. Since a successful Macintosh clone market
  will eat into Apple's hardware business, a legal precedent for
  restrictive OS licensing practices might allow Apple to earn back
  some of that money in the form of licensing fees if the clone
  market proves viable.
 
 
Eudora & Attachments
--------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
 
  I've received some questions about how to best encode files
  attached to Eudora messages recently, so I thought I'd reiterate
  the information in Eudora itself about this topic (turn on balloon
  help and point at the options in the Attachments section of
  Eudora's Settings dialog box). The commercial version of Eudora
  offers four settings: AppleDouble, AppleSingle, BinHex, and
  Uuencode. The free version of Eudora lacks Uuencode support, and
  is available at:
 
ftp://ftp.qualcomm.com/quest/mac/eudora/1.5/eudora151.hqx
ftp://ftp.qualcomm.com/quest/mac/eudora/1.5/eudora151fat.hqx
 
  Use AppleDouble when sending files to other MIME-compatible
  mailers. AppleSingle seems to be unusual - Steve Dorner says that
  it's acceptable for Mac-specific files, but notes wryly in the
  balloon help that only "a few whackos need this." BinHex is the
  standard in the Mac world and is the safest for sending files to
  other Macs, particularly if the recipient uses an older mail
  program. Uuencode is best for communicating with archaic mail
  programs primarily on non-Mac platforms (Microsoft Mail, for
  instance, used, and may still use, uuencode for attachments). For
  more general information, check the Eudora 1.5.1 documentation and
  Q & A stack at:
 
ftp://ftp.qualcomm.com/quest/mac/eudora/documentation/man151-word.sea.hqx
ftp://ftp.qualcomm.com/quest/mac/eudora/documentation/Eudora_QA.hqx
 
  So in standard use, if you're sending mail to people who
  definitely use Eudora or other MIME-compatible mailers, even on a
  PC, use AppleDouble. If you're mailing Macintosh files, they're
  probably destined for Macintosh users, so if you're unsure about
  what the recipient might use to read email, BinHex is the safest.
  And finally, if you know the recipient uses DOS, Windows, or Unix
  and an old email program that doesn't support MIME, you should go
  out and ante up your $65 for the commercial version of Eudora so
  you can easily use Uuencode. You can read a bit more about MIME
  and these issues in the relevant Request for Comment (RFC), #1741.
 
http://ds.internic.net/rfc/rfc1741.txt
 
  Frankly, if you seriously use Eudora and email, the commercial
  version's cleaner interface (like being able to sort a mailbox by
  clicking in the column title) and massively useful filtering
  capabilities make it worth a measly $65. Besides, I strongly
  approve of Qualcomm keeping a version of Eudora free for people
  who don't use email heavily or who want to try Eudora, and buying
  the commercial version is the best way to support Qualcomm's
  attitude toward the free version.
 
  Qualcomm recently set up a mailing list Eudora discussions. To
  subscribe, send email to <majordomo@qualcomm.com> with "subscribe
  mac-eudora-forum" in the body of the message (sans quotes, of
  course). Make sure that your return address is correct - it is the
  address that will be added to the mailing list.
 
    Qualcomm -- <eudora-info@qualcomm.com> -- 800/2-EUDORA
      619/597-5113 -- 619/597-5058 (fax)
 
 
An Unpleasant Voyage
--------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
 
  You may have seen mention recently about how Apple is riding
  roughshod on First Amendment freedoms by censoring a CD-ROM from
  Voyager that's bundled with Macs sold into the K-12 education
  channel. Although we've barely seen the CD, here's the deal as I
  currently understand it.
 
  Voyager, a well-respected CD-ROM developer, is charging Apple with
  censorship over Apple's complaints in regard to an award-winning
  history CD-ROM called "Who Built America?," based on a two-volume
  book of the same name. The text looks at the events of the turn of
  the century from the viewpoint of, and via the eyes and voices of,
  a number of ordinary people.
 
  In December of 1994, Apple started distributing the CD with Macs
  sold to the K-12 channel, and sent out over 12,000 copies. Apple
  started receiving complaints about the content of the CD-ROM and
  asked Voyager to make some changes to the CD-ROM to respond to the
  complaints. Voyager refused, and claims that Apple said it would
  cease to distribute the CD, whereas Apple says it has yet to make
  a final decision.
 
  Voyager claims that the complaints (which Apple, like other
  content distributors, may not pass on in original form as a matter
  of policy) related to the inclusion of discussion of
  homosexuality, abortion, and birth control. Voyager further says
  that Apple wanted all references to these subjects removed or
  "greyed out."
 
  Sources inside Apple who evaluated the CD in response to the
  complaints disagree with Voyager's characterization, saying that
  the concern - and the part that Apple asked Voyager to remove -
  related primarily to a single section in which a woman relates how
  she received 12 abortions, some using potentially life-threatening
  procedures. However, other sources claim this material to be
  general, providing no specific information on how to perform an
  abortion.
 
  There's a difference between controversial subjects and dangerous
  information, and it's unclear exactly what was said between Apple
  and Voyager - or how what was said might have been mis-
  communicated or misunderstood. However, it is clear that Voyager
  is screaming censorship, which seems misplaced. Apple is making a
  business decision to provide a product that its customers want.
  Apple is not saying Voyager can't distribute the CD as-is (which
  they do for anyone who wants it). Apple is merely trying to
  respond to complaints from its customers in K-12 schools, and as
  we've all said at one time or another, the customer is always
  right. Even should Apple drop the CD, that in no way eliminates
  the wide availability of the information. Finally, Apple doesn't
  distribute many CDs, and some of those no doubt have even more
  controversial subject matter than this one. Omission of
  distribution is not censorship, and cessation of distribution in
  one of many ways seems qualitatively no different.
 
  What's most confusing is why Voyager is making such a public
  relations stink. No matter what the level of truth or falsehood in
  both Voyager's and Apple's statements, Voyager has little or
  nothing to gain from alienating Apple. So in my mind, this fuss is
  primarily interesting not from a censorship standpoint but from a
  _business_ standpoint.
 
  The story appeared quickly in a number of large newspapers,
  leading one to wonder how concerted a public relations campaign
  Voyager waged. The story certainly makes good copy - David versus
  Goliath, free speech versus censorship, and so on. Voyager's
  Braden Michaels says the move was not done to garner public
  exposure, but that ignores the fact that it _did_ garner
  considerable public exposure, in the process probably attracting
  more attention than any other Voyager CD ever has.
 
  It's fairly certain that Voyager stands to lose a significant
  amount of money should Apple drop the Voyager CD from the bundle.
  These K-12 bundles are reportedly AppleSoft's second largest
  money-maker (behind System 7.5) and will supposedly account for an
  estimated $1.4 million this year. Voyager's percentage is unknown,
  but it cannot help but be significant. By rousing the public in an
  attempt to force Apple to keep distributing the CD, Voyager may be
  attempting to protect a revenue stream. But even this line of
  thought has flaws since any such protection would only help in the
  short term due to the damage it could cause to Voyager's future
  relationship with Apple.
 
  Again, Braden Michaels says releasing the story to the press
  wasn't a business decision, and again, that doesn't eliminate the
  fact that the entire situation stems from a potentially important
  business deal gone awry.
 
  In the end, I can only conclude that Voyager is making a fuss over
  what is essentially a broken business deal. On the other hand,
  Apple is certainly to blame for at least a miscommunication with
  Voyager, and/or a clumsy mishandling of an obviously delicate
  situation. As always, it seems that we're talking about an
  increasingly large number of shades of grey. Life used to be more
  black and white.
 
http://www.voyagerco.com/misc/ed/p.edit1.html
http://www.info.apple.com/aboutapple/cd.html
 
  Information from:
    Voyager propaganda
    Braden Michaels, Voyager -- <michaels@voyagerco.com>
    Apple propaganda
    Pythaeus
 
 
Nisus Writer 4.0.6, Part 2: Word and Document Processing
--------------------------------------------------------
  by Nigel Perry <n.perry@massey.ac.nz>
 
  [If you read last week's TidBITS-263_, you recall that this review
  began with a look at Nisus Writer's text processing features. This
  week, we look at its word and document processing features, and
  finish next week with details on multimedia features. -Tonya]
 
 
**Styles** -- Nisus supports character and paragraph user-defined
  styles, which you set up in the Define Styles dialog box.
  Character styles can include all the usual attributes: font,
  colour, size etc. Paragraph styles add a named ruler to control
  paragraph layout.
 
  Nisus follows the original MacWrite method of inserting rulers
  into a document to control layout. A ruler specifies attributes
  such as margins, line spacing, and space before paragraph (there
  is no space after paragraph). In Nisus Writer, you must define a
  ruler (though you need not set its attributes) in the main
  document window before you can include a ruler in a user-defined
  style. In earlier versions, you could name a new ruler in the
  Define Styles dialog box and Nisus Writer would automatically
  create the ruler on first use of the user style - I can't figure
  out why Nisus Software made the change.
 
  The split between user styles and rulers can cause much
  frustration. The problems are at first minor annoyances, but they
  can become significant. When applying a paragraph style, Nisus
  _attaches_ the style information to the text, but _inserts_ the
  ruler into the document - and then only if Nisus thinks the ruler
  is needed. [Word users might understand this better by thinking of
  style information as character formats and ruler information as
  paragraph formats. -Tonya]
 
  The example below shows problems this causes. Consider a document
  containing five paragraphs, the first three in style A, the last
  two in style B. The document looks something like:
 
    Ruler A  Paragraph 1 in style A
             Paragraph 2 in style A
             Paragraph 3 in style A
    Ruler B  Paragraph 4 in style B
             Paragraph 5 in style B
 
  If you move paragraph two below paragraph four you get:
 
    Ruler A  Paragraph 1 in style A
             Paragraph 3 in style A
    Ruler B  Paragraph 4 in style B
             Paragraph 2 in style A
             Paragraph 5 in style B
 
  Paragraph two ends up _styled_ according to A but _laid_out_
  according to B! The fix is not difficult, you just manually insert
  an A ruler into the text. However, that Nisus Software did not fix
  this in Nisus Writer is indefensible.
 
  Nisus Writer has a number of similar quirks, and as a result you
  must be careful while editing documents. Whenever you move text or
  change its style, you must make sure you end up with the ruler and
  style you expected. The fact that Nisus Software did not fix these
  quirks shows a misunderstanding on their part of what word
  processing rather than styled text editing is about.
 
  [A few days ago, I innocently asked Nigel to give some examples of
  the "similar quirks" referred to above, and Nigel helpfully
  replied with an assortment of examples, most of which I ended up
  not including. Unfortunately, to understand them, you need a
  deeper understanding of Nisus Writer than we have room for. -
  Tonya]
 
  You might ask why people (such as myself - Nisus Writer is my main
  text processing workhorse) use Nisus Writer if it has these
  quirks. The answer is simple: Nisus Writer's powerful _text_
  processing capabilities usually offset the annoyance of having to
  be careful with rulers, or the lack of hierarchical styles - a
  much-requested feature.
 
 
**Numbering and Referencing** -- You can set up flexible numbering
  sequences for chapters, four levels of sub-topics, figures,
  equations, and tables. Nisus Writer also provides six custom
  numbering sequences for anything else you might need to number
  (maps, pie charts, whatever).
 
  Nisus Writer has added the ability to restart the page numbering
  within a document, something missing from earlier versions, but in
  an obscure manner which requires the selection of the page break
  character to access the settings.
 
  Nisus Writer provides powerful cross-references that automatically
  update. Sections of text (or most anything else, such as graphics
  or tables) can be marked with a label and then referenced. The
  reference may contain the contents of the marked item, and you can
  also reference the page number of the object, its line number, and
  so on. By making multiple trips to the Cross Reference dialog box,
  you can insert references like "See Cheese Preferences on page 68,
  paragraph 6."
 
  Unfortunately, you must individually mark anything that you want
  to cross-reference. Nisus Writer does not automatically mark
  figures, figure numbers, and the like. Further, though you can
  refer to the current chapter number in a header or footer, you
  cannot refer to the title of the chapter itself.
 
  Nisus Writer provides footnotes or endnotes (but not both in the
  same document). You cannot place a cross-reference in a footnote
  or a table. Nisus Writer works with Niles and Associates' End Note
  Plus, a popular utility for tracking lots of reference works and
  quickly formatting references.
 
 
**Tables of Contents and Indices** -- Any text can be marked for
  inclusion in the table of contents or index - and the index
  marking can be done through the powerful Find and Replace feature
  (and thus through a macro if you like) or through a user style.
  For example, you can set the Table of Contents attribute to be
  part of the definition of the styles you use for section headers.
  The Create Contents and Create Index commands each accumulate all
  the appropriately marked text and produce a separate file
  containing a table of contents or index. You must then format the
  file and either print it separately or insert it into your
  document in the right place. If you recreate the table of contents
  or index, you must format it again: probably a good job for a
  macro.
 
 
**Graphics** -- You can paste graphics in-line or on a separate
  graphics layer, which supports basic drawing tools with colour and
  grid alignment. Items on the graphics layer can appear in front of
  or behind the text, or text can flow around them. Graphics can be
  attached to a particular page or flow with a paragraph. You
  cannot, however, flow a picture with a paragraph and keep it at
  the top or bottom of a page. The graphics support and flow-around
  would appear to make Nisus suitable for small newsletter-style
  documents, but only if their designers want to put up with having
  the same number of same-width columns on all pages.
 
 
**Will OpenDoc be this bad?** Apple has seen the future, and the
  future is OpenDoc - or so we are told! With OpenDoc, the document,
  rather than the application, becomes the centre of things. A
  document acts as a container for objects produced by different
  applications, so your text object might be under the control of
  Nisus Writer, but your molecule picture might come from a
  chemistry program.
 
  How is this relevant to Nisus Writer? Tables and equations, two
  new features, are supplied by separate modules: Macreations's
  Tycho Table Maker and Design Science's MathType (a full version,
  not the crippled version that comes with Word - but it only
  launches from Nisus Writer). To insert an equation, you launch
  MathType by choosing Insert Equation from the Insert menu. After
  creating an equation in MathType, you close the MathType window,
  thus returning to Nisus Writer with your equation inserted.
  Inserting tables works the same way, but with Tycho Table Maker
  acting as the editor. All this magic works by means of an Apple
  event suite called EGO (Edit Graphic Object), and any program that
  supports EGO (such as Expressionist and DeltaGraph Pro) can
  provide services to Nisus Writer - though the initial insertion is
  more complicated as the program names do not appear on the Insert
  menu.
 
  [Late-breaking news flash! Nisus Writer owners can update to the
  most recent MathType version for the same price charged any
  MathType owner. The update launches with or without Nisus Writer.
  -Tonya]
 
  This _sounds_ wonderful, and very much like OpenDoc, but there are
  problems. Nisus Writer contains style sheets; Tycho Table Maker
  contains style sheets; MathType contains style sheets. Three sets
  of styles sheets are hard to keep in sync! You can spell check in
  Nisus Writer, but you can't spell check a table from Tycho Table
  Maker, or in Tycho Table Maker itself. We can hope that OpenDoc
  will do better at integrating tools while retaining power.
 
 
**Interoperability** -- Nisus uses the Apple/Claris XTND system to
  support other file formats and comes with a handful of filters.
  Although the filters handle basic formatting information, they
  lose some important elements of the document's structure,
  including user styles. Nisus Writer also comes with a PageMaker
  import filter, and FrameMaker support is available thorough
  DataViz's MacLinkPlus.
 
  The latest version of the MacLinkPlus translator package from
  DataViz reportedly has added support for user styles; however,
  Nisus Software should address this problem more directly (even if
  that just means bundling MacLinkPlus) in order to better work in
  the real world of multiple file formats.
 
 
**Word and Document Processing Conclusion** -- Nisus Writer offers
  a reasonably rich set of word and document processing features. It
  lacks some features that others have, and has others that they do
  not. However, Nisus Writer has a do-it-yourself feel to it, which
  programmers and fiddlers will love, but which lacks the polish to
  make it attractive as an everyday word, and particularly document,
  processor - _unless_ you want or need its editing and multilingual
  text processing.
 
    DataViz -- 800/733-0030 -- 203/268-0030
    Design Science -- 800/827-0685 -- 310/433-0685
      310/433-6969 (fax)
    Niles and Associates -- 510/649-8176 -- <nilesinc@well.sf.ca.us>
    Nisus Software -- 800/890-3030 -- 619/481-1477
      619/481-6154 (fax) -- <info@nisus-soft.com>
 
  [For more opinions and resources related to Nisus, check out the
  Nisus Writer page on World of Words. -Tonya]
 
http://king.tidbits.com/tonya/WOW/NW/NWMain.html
 
 
Reviews/20-Feb-95
-----------------
 
* MacWEEK -- 13-Feb-95, Vol. 9, #7
    Tektronix Phaser 540 -- pg. 25
    DaynaComm Serial Roamer -- pg. 25
    Strata StudioPro 1.5.1 -- pg. 27
    MacBench 2.0 -- pg. 28
 
* InfoWorld -- 13-Feb-94, Vol. 17, #7
    Kodak DCS 420 -- pg. 116
    Citizen PN60 -- pg. 117
 
 
$$
 
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