TidBITS#273/17-Apr-95
=====================
 
This issue marks our fifth year - where has the time gone? Apple 
   made some interesting announcements today of official next-day 
   support on eWorld (finally!) and price drops on the PowerBook
   150. Power Computing and Now Software announce a bundling deal,
   Tonya reviews ProPhone - a CD-ROM database that fails to
   replace a phone book but serves as a bad marketing tool - and
   finally, we have another installment of good and bad customer
   service stories.
 
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>
* Northwest Nexus -- 206/455-3505 -- http://www.halcyon.com/
   Providing access to the global Internet. <info@halcyon.com>
* Hayden Books, an imprint of Macmillan Computer Publishing
   Save 20% on all books via the Web -- http://www.mcp.com/
   Win free books! -- http://www.mcp.com/hayden/madness/
* InfoSeek -- the best way to search Web pages, computer magazines,
   Usenet news & more! FREE trial -- http://www.infoseek.com/TBITS/
 
Copyright 1990-1995 Adam & Tonya Engst. Details at end of issue.
   Information: <info@tidbits.com> Comments: <editors@tidbits.com>
   ---------------------------------------------------------------
 
Topics:
    MailBITS/17-Apr-95
    TidBITS 5.0
    Hits and Misses of Customer Service
    ProPhone: For When a ZIP Code is Not Enough
    Reviews/17-Apr-95
 
ftp://ftp.tidbits.com/pub/tidbits/issues/1995/TidBITS#273_17-Apr-95.etx
 
 
MailBITS/17-Apr-95
------------------
 
**Apple Announces Next-Day Support on eWorld** -- Ten months after 
  introducing eWorld as its own online service, Apple is finally 
  rolling out official forum-based online support. "Ask Apple" 
  promises official responses from Apple support professionals by 
  the next business day at no cost (other than normal eWorld 
  subscription fees), and is being rolled into Apple's existing 
  eWorld forum and support offerings. Online support is certainly 
  cheaper for Apple than telephone support and is in many ways a 
  more efficient means of dealing with customer support issues. We 
  applaud Apple for making this move but have only one question: why 
  did this take so long? [GD]
 
 
**The PowerBook 150** is the orphaned cousin of Apple's laptop 
  computer family, but with today's price drops, it becomes an 
  affordable alternative for those who don't need fancier 
  PowerBooks. The PowerBook 150 sports the original 100-series 
  PowerBook case design, with a 33 MHz 68030 processor and a 
  greyscale display, but weighs only 5.5 pounds. The new ApplePrice 
  in the U.S. for the original 4/120 configuration is $1,069, and a 
  new 4/250 configuration has been announced with an ApplePrice of 
  $1,229. If you don't need much more than word processing and 
  email, or don't need to run the latest and greatest top-heavy 
  applications, this machine is a great bargain. [MHA]
 
 
**The Third GVU World-Wide Web User Survey** has started, and we 
  encourage TidBITS readers to go and be counted. One of the 
  problems that has stymied people trying to figure out who uses the 
  Internet is that there isn't much hard research. I can't speak to 
  the validity of this study over others, but it appears to be 
  fairly complete. And (I'll come clean here) one of the questions 
  asks what computer you use, so we Macintosh users should make sure 
  we're counted. The complete survey takes about ten minutes to 
  complete. [ACE]
 
http://www-survey.cc.gatech.edu/cgi-bin/Entry
 
 
**Power Computing to Bundle Now Software** -- Now Software 
  announced last week that they plan to bundle Now Up-to-Date, Now 
  Contact, and Now Utilities with their upcoming Macintosh clones. 
  This deal should make Power Computing's machines more attractive 
  in business settings, where built-in calendar, scheduling, and 
  contact management are significant issues; however, Now Utilities 
  should be attractive to individual Mac users as well. Now Software 
  -- 503-274-2800 -- <support@nowsoft.com> [GD]
 
 
**Kick Your Epson into Gear** -- If you have an Epson Color Stylus 
  printer (see TidBITS-266_), you might be interested in two handy 
  Photoshop utilities to improve the color accuracy and the quality 
  of high-resolution images. The first utility, KS Labs Epson Ink 
  2.52, comes from Guy Kuo <guykuo@u.washington.edu>, and it 
  improves color saturation and accuracy when printing from 
  Photoshop 3.0 by letting Photoshop separate colors using custom 
  ink settings for the Epson Color Stylus. The second utility, 
  called Better Epson, is a fat binary Photoshop plug-in from Thomas 
  Keller <100115.3313@compuserve.com>. Better Epson prints RGB, 
  bitmapped images with better speed and/or better print quality. 
  The Macintosh drivers Epson ships with the printer apparently 
  don't produce true 720-dpi output; Better Epson provides a better 
  dithering methods that can (theoretically) give true 720-dpi 
  output, though results vary depending on the type of image being 
  printed. [GD]
 
ftp://mirror.aol.com/pub/info-mac/grf/util/ks-labs-epson-ink-252-pshop.hqx
ftp://mirror.aol.com/pub/info-mac/prn/better-epson-pshop.hqx
 
 
TidBITS 5.0
-----------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
 
  This issue marks the fifth year of TidBITS, making it one of the 
  oldest edited electronic publications on the Internet. We have 
  survived 273 issues, a format change from HyperCard to setext at 
  TidBITS-100_, the rise of the World-Wide Web, and the inevitable 
  burnout that Tonya and Geoff have helped eliminate from what is no 
  longer a one-person job. If you're wondering about the history 
  behind TidBITS, check out the article I wrote about it for our 
  fourth anniversary in TidBITS-222_.
 
http://www.dartmouth.edu/pages/TidBITS/issues/TidBITS-222.html
 
  I think our five years and 273 issues, along with the estimated 
  150,000 people who read TidBITS, show that what we're doing is 
  valid (despite paper publication naysayers), valuable (to our 
  readers), and viable (Macs, modems, and managing editors don't 
  grow on trees, you know). Although we, unlike many publications, 
  refrain from publishing the self-serving congratulatory letters we 
  receive that compare TidBITS to sliced bread, every now and then 
  it feels good to revel in public for a moment.
 
  There's no telling how many people have read our first issue by 
  now (and it's suitably embarrassing whenever I go back and look 
  it), but I think it's safe to say that only a few hundred read it 
  that fateful week in 1990. Our circulation has grown with the 
  Internet, and the TidBITS mailing list ranks as the third largest 
  LISTSERV-based list with (as of today) 20,237 readers (thanks to 
  Rice University!). When you add the estimated 110,000 people who 
  read <comp.sys.mac.digest>, the several thousand who read TidBITS 
  on the Web at Dartmouth and the thousands who get TidBITS from 
  BBSs and the various commercial services (oddly enough, download 
  counts on the commercial services remain relatively constant), you 
  end up with a large group of people.
 
http://www.tile.net/tile/listserv/index.html
ftp://ftp.uu.net//usenet/news.lists/USENET_Readership_report_for_Jan_95.Z
 
  Along with our burgeoning readership, TidBITS has received 
  recognition in a number of more traditional ways, included 
  extremely nice mentions in recent issues of MacUser and Macworld, 
  thanks to Andy Ihnatko and David Pogue. TidBITS has also received 
  several BMUG Choice Product awards in the Online Magazine category 
  - awards that are very complimentary given BMUG's overall high 
  standards. We even made the mainstream press with a small mention 
  in Newsweek in August of 1994.
 
  Sometimes, imitation is the most sincere form of flattery, and 
  although numerous electronic publications have come and gone (it's 
  not as easy as it looks), a number of publications (see the URL 
  below) seem to have arrived for good. One such publication, 
  Mac*Chat, even comes out weekly and uses the setext format.
 
ftp://mirror.aol.com/pub/info-mac/per/
 
  All I can say is, thank you, everyone.
 
  What are our plans for the future? That's a good question, and not 
  one for which we have a ready answer. The overall idea is to make 
  TidBITS available to an ever-increasing number of people - we joke 
  that our goal is world domination by the year 2000, our tenth 
  anniversary. So, TidBITS will be appearing in an increasing number 
  of places both on and off the Web. Who knows, maybe we can get 
  Power Computing to bundle a free subscription to TidBITS with all 
  of their Macintosh clones.
 
  We also have plans to use what clout we have due to our large 
  readership to do cool things for readers. Nothing's official yet, 
  but we think we can continue to create situations, as with our 
  sponsorship program, where everyone wins. And, of course, in the 
  process we hope to promote some of our basic philosophies about 
  how customers should be treated no matter where they live, how 
  online support can improve service and cut costs, and how the 
  Internet can break down barriers between people. Everyone has an 
  agenda, and you should always keep that in mind. We hope that ours 
  is sufficiently out in the open that you can judge for yourself 
  whether or not you approve of our actions both in the past and in 
  the future.
 
 
Hits and Misses of Customer Service
-----------------------------------
  by Geoff Duncan <geoff@tidbits.com>
 
  Back in TidBITS-262_, we said that we don't make a habit of 
  passing along the many and varied tales of customer service 
  TidBITS readers send to us. However, lots of people wrote in to 
  say that they liked the article, and we can occasionally be 
  accused of playing to the masses. So, we're doing it again.
 
  When you read these notes, please bear a few things in mind. 
  First, even the best customer service department stumbles 
  occasionally. Maybe a representative is coming down with the flu, 
  or maybe the company's phone system has been hit by a power 
  failure - these things happen. Conversely, even the worst 
  department can sometimes do the right thing by their customers, 
  thanks perhaps to a lone dedicated individual. In short, these 
  comments should not be taken as representative of a company's 
  customer service in general; rather, they should be seen as what 
  they are, individual experiences of individual people.
 
 
**Kathryn Cramer** <kec@panix.com> writes:
  Computer Era advertised a PowerBook 520c 4/160 for under $2,000 in 
  the New York Times Science section (March 28th, 1995). Over the 
  phone, Computer Era assured me that they had five of the models in 
  stock. I met with their salesman the next morning. He spent 35 
  minutes trying to sell me a memory upgrade for the 520c at twice 
  the price listed in any of the major catalogs, with an 
  installation fee a full nine times the amount I paid to have the 
  same upgrade done on my current PowerBook. The total, with sales 
  tax would easily have come to in excess of $3,200 for a 520c with 
  12 MB of internal memory and a 160 MB hard drive!
 
  The salesman said many things that were not true, most interesting 
  among them his claim that RAM Doubler damages the logic board of 
  PowerBooks. When I told him it worked great on my 145B, he said 
  that this was a special problem for the 500 series and that they 
  had people coming in all the time to have their logic boards 
  replaced at a cost of $2,000, and that this repair was not covered 
  by the warranty. In the end, I left with my certified check still 
  in my purse and without a new PowerBook for the simple reason that 
  they did not actually have it in stock.
 
  I called Connectix tech support as soon as I got home. They 
  assured me that there was no such problem with RAM Doubler, but 
  said that they had heard this rumor once before but had not 
  previously been aware of its origins. They were most grateful to 
  be told.
 
 
**Nitya Nadesan** <nitya@aol.com> writes: 
  I recently called the 800 number for my Word 6.0.1 update. The 
  operator was courteous and took my information in about three 
  minutes. I was told to expect the update in four to six weeks. It 
  arrived in a little over a week by Airborne Express overnight 
  service. When I opened the box I was further pleasantly surprised 
  by a letter apologizing for any inconvenience plus a $25 coupon 
  good toward the purchase of any Microsoft product.
 
 
**Blair Barret** <blairb@gate.net> writes: 
  I have an antique Mac Plus (which I should replace, but I just 
  can't bring myself to buy that Power Mac) for which I ordered an 
  accelerator card (yes, they still make them) from Micro Mac 
  Technologies. It took three phone calls to finally get the card 
  (they lost the order twice). The board they sent was a basic 
  accelerator that clips to the 68000 chip in the machine. I thought 
  it was pretty nifty at the time, and was also under the impression 
  that there were no other accelerator cards available for the Plus.
 
  I also ordered Connectix's Compact Virtual from Micro Mac and 
  tried to install it on my system. I immediately had problems, as 
  it told me my system software (7.1.1 with the update) was 
  corrupted. Panic-stricken, I ran to my local computer emporium and 
  purchased System 7.5 (the version of System 7.0.1 I downloaded 
  from Apple wouldn't install properly for some strange reason) but 
  still no luck. I then called Connectix and was informed I would 
  just have to find 7.0.1 because the version of Compact Virtual 
  would not work with 7.5, and the upgrade version would not work 
  with my accelerator. After installing 7.0.1 on my hard drive (I 
  now had three versions of System software installed!), I tried to 
  boot the system only to get an "unimplemented trap" error which 
  corrected itself when I disabled the accelerator.
 
  During troubleshooting, I found in the supplemental manual that my 
  accelerator was not compatible with 7.0.1. (The accelerator worked 
  great under 7.5, but had no memory left.) After spending about 30 
  minutes on the phone with the manager of the sales department at 
  Micro Mac, then another 15 minutes with tech support, I was told I 
  had the **wrong** accelerator for what I wanted to do (run 
  PageMaker). They said I needed to order a different one, which was 
  not offered to me in my initial order! Furthermore, I was told 
  they would "credit" me less than what I had paid for my original 
  accelerator to upgrade! I ordered the upgraded accelerator, but I 
  am not happy with the terms, since they did not give me enough 
  information on my initial order for me to make a proper buying 
  decision. I'm a customer service rep myself, would have lost my 
  job on the spot if I treated any of my customers the way I was 
  treated by Micro Mac.
 
 
**Rob Reiter** <robreiter@aol.com> writes:
  I bought a 2 GB hard disk from Spin Peripherals and thought they 
  sent the wrong mounting bracket for my Quadra 950. I called, 
  explained, and had a new bracket air freighted to me the next day 
  at no charge. However, the new bracket was the same as the old one 
  - the error had been mine. But then, when I hooked up the drive it 
  didn't work. Another call this time, on a Friday. From my 
  description, they agreed it sounded like a bad drive. I received a 
  new one the following Tuesday. When it didn't work either, I began 
  to suspect the trouble was, again, me. It was, but the drive's 
  manual (from DEC) wasn't too clear, so I felt halfway off the 
  hook. My second call to Spin Tech support cleared up the problem 
  and I got the drive working.
 
  All in all, I thought Spin's service and speediness was 
  outstanding and I wrote them to let them know (and to thank them 
  for not putting me through voice-mail hell to get that help!).
 
 
**Alun Severn** <alun@ukiah.demon.co.uk> writes:
  At Christmas 1994 I bought an Internet package through Demon 
  Internet, a U.K. service provider. Part of the package was the 
  Internet Starter Kit for Macintosh. After two weeks of use, the 
  spine split and pages started falling out. Having worked for 
  twenty years in the book trade, I handle books reasonably 
  carefully: I knew this was poor and told Hayden Books so via email 
  message to a U.S. address. I had a very apologetic reply the 
  following day and - less than seven working days later - a 
  replacement copy was delivered to my door.
 
 
**Jack Machiela** <machieja@mhs.dia.govt.nz> writes:
  I can confirm the user-friendliness at Hayden Books - recently I 
  received from a friend a copy of one of their books, the Mac-3D 
  Workshop, but unfortunately my dog got to the accompanying CD-ROM 
  before I did. I mailed them regarding purchasing another copy of 
  the CD, and instead received the latest version (a complete 
  revision) of the book including the new CD, with an email message 
  saying "No payment required, just tell all your friends how 
  wonderful we are." Needless to say, I have been doing nothing else 
  since...
 
  [We're including this note not just because Hayden did the right 
  thing in this case, but to point out an interesting problem with 
  book-and-disk products. Many book companies - Hayden included - 
  don't track their disks separately from their books due to 
  accounting problems with tracking not only a book, but also the 
  one or sometimes more disks that come with it. Thus, if someone 
  gets a bad disk and needs a replacement, the book companies often 
  send the customer an entire new book along with it. - Geoff]
 
 
**Rob Mincey** <spindj@aol.com> writes:
  As a Christmas gift in 1993, I received Symantec's Think C 6.0. A 
  good bit of time passed, and I began to see mentions of Think C 
  7.0 in the MACDEV echo on FidoNet. Out of curiosity, I looked on 
  America Online and discovered the 6.0 to 7.0 upgrade. I found it 
  strange that I had not received notice from Symantec about a major 
  version update. I downloaded the files and attempted to update the 
  software on my drive. Everything upgraded correctly except the 
  Project Manager. After several clean installs of Think C 6.0, I 
  called Symantec's support BBS. I received a message from tech 
  support to the effect of "we've already discussed how to fix your 
  problem." No solution, though. Luckily, someone on the FidoNet 
  MACDEV echo pointed me in the right direction.
 
  I received similar treatment concerning the release of Norton 
  Utilities for Macintosh 3.0. I did not receive an upgrade notice 
  until well after it had shipped. Had I not noticed it in mail 
  order catalogs, I never would have known about it.
 
  Enter Metrowerks. I received the Bronze edition of CodeWarrior 4.0 
  in December of 1994 as a Christmas gift. Two weeks later, I saw an 
  ad for 5.0 in a mail-order catalog. Curious, I sent an email 
  message to the Metrowerks support staff. They assured me I would 
  receive my upgrade soon. Within a week, the upgrade was at my 
  door. This was not an upgrade notice, but a full-fledged upgrade 
  CD-ROM. Metrowerks updates their software three times yearly, and 
  every customer is entitled to one year's worth of upgrades. 
  Additional upgrades may be purchased at a nominal fee. I find it a 
  joy to support companies who value their customers, and I refuse 
  to support those firms who ignore their greatest assets - their 
  customers.
 
  [Metrowerks handles updates to its CodeWarrior development 
  environment as a subscription service: purchasing CodeWarrior also 
  buys you a one-year subscription to updates released in January, 
  May, and September of each year. Several readers have also written 
  to praise Metrowerks' responsiveness and support via the Internet 
  and Usenet newsgroups. -Geoff]
 
 
**James W. Gruener** <jw_gruener@acad.fandm.edu> writes:
  I purchased a SyQuest 270 MB drive from APS in mid-January. Though 
  it was their policy not to send drives without cartridges (they 
  didn't have any in stock), I twisted the salesman's arm and I 
  received my drive in two days via UPS ground. Two weeks later, 
  when I hadn't heard from APS and still didn't have the cartridge 
  that was promised to me, I called their customer service number. 
  "I'm sorry, but our records show that the drive was shipped with a 
  cartridge." I expected that. What I didn't expect was the friendly 
  offer to investigate the matter and return my call with the 
  result. By 10:00 A.M. the next day, a cartridge was delivered to 
  me by Airborne Express. Although APS failed to initially send me 
  the cartridge, the resolution was fast and complete.
 
  [The more cynical among you may have noticed that several of the 
  stories above relate to our sponsors - rest assured that we aren't 
  stacking the deck. We tend to hear more about the companies that 
  sponsor TidBITS for obvious reasons, and frankly, although we 
  never pretend that our sponsors are perfect, we do feel that they 
  are good companies who try to provide excellent customer service. 
  -Adam]
 
 
ProPhone: For When a ZIP Code is Not Enough
-------------------------------------------
  by Tonya Engst <tonya@tidbits.com>
 
  If searching for ZIP codes and the like is too general for your 
  needs (see my article about ZIP code programs in TidBITS-267_), 
  Pro CD's ProPhone might initially sound like an attractive 
  alternative. Once you install the base ProPhone software (which 
  comes with any ProPhone title) you can use any ProPhone title, 
  which include:
 
* CanadaPHONE - Canadian residential and business listings.
* EUROPAGES - European business listings.
* selectPHONE - U.S. residential and business listings on five 
  CDs, which can be retrieved by name, address (or part of an 
  address), city, state, ZIP code, telephone number, or business 
  type (based on a SIC code, and there are many).
* directPHONE - U.S. residential and business listings on two CDs, 
  which can be retrieved by name only.
* freePHONE - AT&T's 800 number listings, which AT&T also now has 
  on the Web.
 
http://att.net/dir800
 
  ProPhone has good uses, but to best understand what ProPhone 
  offers, think marketing slime. Have you ever received a one-time 
  offer - in the form of a form letter - inviting you to send no 
  money now, but to get ready to explore your family tree and learn 
  that you descend directly from King Weasel the Second? The people 
  who create such offers could have easily used a ProPhone product 
  to identify you as a potential customer.
 
  ProPhone titles work under DOS, Windows, or MacOS, and based on 
  the looks of the Mac program, ProPhone did not get its start on 
  the Mac side of the house. According to Pro CD's literature, a 
  major feature of ProPhone, called Jericho, lets ProPhone search 
  across multiple CDs. To use Jericho, you need more than one CD 
  drive; it only works on mounted CDs, which can be mounted locally 
  or over a network. The Macintosh version requires a color monitor, 
  System 7, and at least 8 MB RAM. The native version isn't out yet, 
  but Pro CD is working on it.
 
  I was excited to receive a review copy of selectPHONE. SelectPHONE 
  lists for  $299 and comes with a coupon for one free update. 
  Updates come out quarterly, and a year's subscription costs $399. 
  SelectPHONE enables you to use somewhat complex search criteria to 
  search a directory of U.S. business and residential listings. I 
  detest using paper phone books because I always look in the wrong 
  one, or forget that P comes before Q, or confuse the white page 
  business listings with the white page residential listings. I 
  hoped that selectPHONE would prove an enabling experience. I'm 
  sorry to report that it was not enabling, nor enlightening, since 
  although I did find God, it turns out God lives in L.A. Sigh.
 
 
**Searching** -- The ProPhone interface consists of a wide set of 
  columns that would do well on a Pivot monitor in a landscape 
  rotation. The top row of each column has a title (Name, Address, 
  Phone, and so on) and the second row has a data entry area where 
  you enter search criteria. For example, for State, you might enter 
  OH to find entries in Ohio. The remaining rows display search 
  results.
 
  A few of the data entry areas are also pop-up menus, and clicking 
  the down-pointing arrow for the menu brings up a dialog box of 
  options. The dialog box for the SIC (Standard Industrial Codes) 
  field offers codes for every business I'd ever heard of and some 
  new ones that must have sprung forth from the fevered imaginations 
  of high school guidance counselors (abdominal supports wholesale, 
  buttonhole & eyelet machine manufacturer, helicopter charter & 
  rental services, highway sign installation). The searching 
  capabilities include ANDs, ORs, NOTs, and wildcards, so you can do 
  fairly specific searching. The manual offers an example of 
  searching for everyone in an area who is a dentist or a doctor. If 
  you can figure out the SIC codes, you can do this with ease.
 
  To search, you enter the criteria and then press Return or click 
  the Retrieve button on the floating toolbar. As the manual puts 
  it, "Meet Max, our retriever. Type your search criteria, then 
  click on Max with your mouse. Max will retrieve all matching 
  listings. For those of you non-dog-lovers out there, you may press 
  the Return key instead." On my Power Mac 7100 ProPhone rapidly 
  responded to search queries while running in emulation mode. 
  Unfortunately, I'm unimpressed with the quality of the results.
 
 
**Results** -- Using the Pacific CD, I searched for Engst, and - 
  though I did find Adam's aunt and also an Engst in Bellingham, I 
  didn't find Adam or myself, despite the fact that we have lived in 
  the same place for well over a year and in the area for almost 
  four years. Further searching on seven close friends who have 
  lived in the same place for at least a year - and sometimes quite 
  a number of years - resulted in seven failures. 
 
  I switched to the North East CD and searched on my maiden name 
  (Byard) but failed to turn up my grandparents who have lived at 
  the same address for years. Less surprisingly, I failed to turn up 
  my sister who is a grad student at Yale - she moves about twice a 
  year. I did find Adam's uncle and grandparents who live in Queens, 
  and Adam's parents in Richford showed up. Moving along to the 
  Great Lakes CD, I tried to find my parents in Yellow Springs, Ohio 
  (they moved there about three years ago) but they were not listed.
 
  My CDs were labeled "3rd Quarter 1994," so this level of failure 
  seems inexcusable. [I originally wrote this review in late 1994.] 
  The manual claims that "our new data supplier, based in China, is 
  providing us with 100 percent of the listings contained in every 
  telephone directory published in North America." Clearly, the CDs 
  will not substitute for keeping a personal address book (or 
  database) nor for having a paper phone book. 
 
  If you do get results worth using for some sort of marketing 
  purpose (which, after all, is clearly what ProPhone intends you to 
  do), you can select any one found individual and then click the 
  Neighbors button to find neighbors (on the same street) of the 
  selected person. You can also search for phone numbers close to 
  the number of the selected person.
 
  You can double-click to tag an entry as worthy of being contacted. 
  Tagged items turn color and appear in the Global Tag Manager 
  window, which you can switch to in order to only view tagged 
  entries. Once you tag entries, you can print out mailing labels 
  (in a few different formats, and with first name first, last name 
  second or vice-versa), export them (in a variety of formats), or 
  have your modem dial them up for you.
 
 
**Nausea, or Sickness Unto Death** -- Frankly, I'm feeling 
  nauseous, because selectPHONE is just the sort of mediocre 
  marketing tool that has unleashed tons of unsolicited mail and 
  millions of unwanted phone calls. The problem with junk mail and 
  junk phone solicitations is that they are too poorly targeted to 
  reach the people who want the services offered. They waste my 
  time, your time, and the time of the people who have to sit in 
  cubicles making those awful calls in an attempt to eke out a 
  living. They tie up our phone lines and contribute to our land 
  fills. They are a blight.
 
http://www.procd.com/
 
    Pro CD, Inc. -- 800/99CDROM -- 617/631-0900
      <customer.service@procd.com>
 
 
Reviews/17-Apr-95
-----------------
 
* MacWEEK -- 10-Apr-95, Vol. 9, #15
    MicroStation V5 -- pg. 1
    SuperCard 2.0 -- pg. 27
    Fujitsu ScanPartner Jr. -- pg. 30
 
 
$$
 
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