The big news this week is Apple’s release of System 7.5.3, with better performance, the final version of Open Transport 1.1, and a host of new features. Also this week, Apple announces the end of eWorld, Adobe withdraws PageMill 1.0.1, and Macromedia finalizes Shockwave for Director. Finally, Adam follows up on his article on personal Web publishing, and we finally release the details on TidBITS translations – now five languages and counting!
Thanks to a number of enthusiastic volunteers, TidBITS is now available in French, Spanish, Chinese (Big-5) along with Japanese (Kanji) and German. We hope to add Dutch, Italian, and Portuguese as well
PageMistake -- In TidBITS-317 I reported Adobe had released an updater that upgrades PageMill from 1.0 to 1.0.1. I also reported some users of the update were experiencing color shifts in graphics edited through PageMill
Shockwave Released -- Macromedia has released final versions of Shockwave for Director 4.0 Plug-Ins, and says it's hard at work on Shockwave for Director 5.0
Fetch 3.0.1 -- Jim Matthews has released version 3.0.1 of Fetch, a popular FTP client, including expanded preferences and Internet Config support, improved AppleScript capabilities, and a number of fixes and feature enhancements
Gil Amelio wasted no time focusing Apple's attention on projects at the core of the company's business. As of 31-Mar-96, Apple will discontinue its online service eWorld and turn to America Online for help
A number of folks wrote in regard to my article about personal Web publishing in TidBITS-316, but Scott Dickson and John Kawakami offered a more realistic and generally better solution to some of the problems I outlined: a Web folder synchronization utility.
Most people use Internet through a local Internet provider (or even one of the commercial services like AOL and CompuServe) have access to some space on that provider's Web server
After months of rumor and speculation, Apple has finally released System 7.5.3 to the general public. System 7.5.3 is a universal system release that will run on any Mac from the Plus on up, which should be a welcome relief to anyone trying to keep up with a myriad of updates from Apple in recent months