TidBITS#305/27-Nov-95
=====================

After a few days of holiday relaxation and a Thanksgiving dinner
   that couldn't be beat, we bring you another issue of TidBITS
   featuring Tonya's PageMill review and the second half of Adam's
   interview with Peter Lewis. Also check out the MailBITS this
   week, with news of Apple buying into AOL, Kaleida being closed
   down, yet another Netscape 2.0 beta, new versions of Fetch and
   NewsWatcher, and a suggestion for constructing a custom computer
   workstation.

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
   Free shipping on orders via the Web -- http://www.mcp.com/
   Mac Tip of the Day & free books! -- http://www.mcp.com/hayden/
* Power Computing -- 800/375-7693 -- <info@powercc.com>
   Now shipping... The Award-Winning First MacOS Compatible!
   See what the press says! http://www.powercc.com/News/quotes.html
* DealBITS: Approximately 2,332,800 holiday shopping seconds left!
   http://king.tidbits.com/dealbits/ -- <dealbits@tidbits.com>

Copyright 1990-1995 Adam & Tonya Engst. Details at end of issue.
   Information: <info@tidbits.com> Comments: <editors@tidbits.com>
   ---------------------------------------------------------------

Topics:
    MailBITS/27-Nov-95
    PageMill: Adventures in WYSIWYG Land
    InterviewBITS with Peter Lewis, Part 2

ftp://ftp.tidbits.com/pub/tidbits/issues/1995/TidBITS#305_27-Nov-95.etx


MailBITS/27-Nov-95
------------------

**Apple Buys a Piece of AOL** -- Last week, Apple announced it
  exercised existing warrants with America Online (acquired as part
  of a 1992 agreement) to purchase a 5.1 percent stake in AOL. The
  purchase totals two million shares and cost Apple about $12.5
  million, but has an estimated value of about $160 million.
  Although most analysts see this as a good investment decision, it
  does raise questions about Apple's future plans for eWorld. [GD]


**Kaleida Closed Down; Taligent to Follow?** On 17-Nov-95 Apple
  and IBM announced the closure of their joint venture Kaleida Labs,
  and plans to transfer the multimedia programming language ScriptX
  and other Kaleida technologies to Apple. Most Kaleida employees
  are being offered jobs with IBM or Apple, and both companies
  retain full licensing rights to Kaleida technologies. Apple is
  expected to roll ScriptX into tools for QuickTime and QuickDraw
  3D. Neither company cited reasons for closing the venture, but
  reports have hinted at financial difficulties and problems due to
  Apple's and IBM's different technology priorities and corporate
  cultures.

http://www.kaleida.com/news/nov17.html

  Additionally, there are reports Apple, IBM, and Hewlett-Packard
  may be considering closing down Taligent, another joint-venture
  formed to design object-oriented operating systems for future
  computing platforms. These reports follow the resignation of
  Taligent president Joe Guglielmi in September, and the unfortunate
  death of acting president Richard Guarino of a heart attack in
  late October. [GD]

http://www.taligent.com/


**Netscape 2.0b3 Sneaks Out** -- As of this writing, no official
  notice has appeared on Netscape's Web pages, but version 2.0b3 of
  Netscape Navigator appeared on Netscape's FTP sites in the middle
  of last week. This new beta expires 04-Feb-96 and is mostly a set
  of bug fixes and relatively minor changes, although Navigator's
  mail handling is improved and it (finally) loads text before
  displaying background images. The archive is about 2800K; if you
  plan to download this release, check out the release notes
  beforehand to see if you need it.

ftp://ftp.netscape.com/2.0b3/mac/
http://home.netscape.com/eng/mozilla/2.0/relnotes/mac-2.0b3.html

  Of possible interest to developers, Netscape has also posted a
  brief SDK for creating Netscape Navigator plug-ins, including
  design specs, sample code and include files, plus three simple
  example plug-ins. [GD]

ftp://ftp.netscape.com/2.0b3/sdk/mac/NetscapeSDK_sit.hqx


**Fetch Updated** -- Jim Matthews recently released Fetch 3.0, the
  latest version of the popular $25 shareware FTP client for the
  Mac. Fetch 3.0 retains the look of previous versions, but has
  changed to support multiple connections and bookmark lists. Other
  important new features include drag & drop, better AppleScript
  support, Internet Config support, better support for various
  firewall technologies and Open Transport, plus persistent
  directory list caching. Overall, it's an excellent and useful
  upgrade. [ACE]

http://www.dartmouth.edu/pages/softdev/fetch.html
ftp://ftp.dartmouth.edu/pub/mac/Fetch_3.0.hqx


**NewsWatcher 2.1.1 Available** -- John Norstad has released
  version 2.1.1 of his widely-favored Usenet news client
  NewsWatcher, which offers a number of bug fixes and memory
  improvements. The update also removes the previous limit of 16,000
  groups in the full group list, and fixes a compiler bug that
  caused last week's version 2.1 to crash on 68000-based Macs (SE,
  Plus, etc.).

ftp://ftp.acns.nwu.edu/pub/newswatcher/newswatcher-211.sea.hqx

  Brian Clark has also released version 2.1.2 of his Yet Another
  NewsWatcher, based on John Norstad's NewsWatcher code. YA-
  NewsWatcher features binary and anonymous remailer posting,
  article filtering via kill files, and article sorting. Brian
  doesn't plan to make further public releases of YA-NewsWatcher,
  but it has proved to be a useful and reliable program for people
  who need its special features. [GD]

ftp://ftp.wwa.com/pub/mac/internet/USENET.TOOLS/ya-newswatcher/
ya-nw-212.sit.hqx


**James L. Ryan** <bosworth@waterw.com> writes:
  As an alternative to IKEA's Jerker desks, I'm looking into
  building the exact configuration I want by using the component
  system of shelving from InterMetro Industries. These finished
  metal components are of high quality and are exceedingly strong
  and easily put together. For slightly more than $300 (and about
  three hours work) I put together a professional-appearing 13' wide
  by 3' deep desk for my computer and related effluvia such as a
  printer and scanner. My setup includes six 3' wide and 1.5' deep
  shelves and six 4' wide by 1' deep shelves. The specs on the
  shelves say that they can support 300 pounds each. I am extremely
  happy with what I was able to put together with a minimum of time
  and effort. By the way, the only tool needed was a tubing cutter.
  InterMetro Industries -- 717/825-2741 -- 800/433-2232


PageMill: Adventures in WYSIWYG Land
------------------------------------
  by Tonya Engst <tonya@tidbits.com>

  PageMill 1.0, Adobe's much-anticipated WYSIWYG Web page creation
  tool, shipped a few weeks ago, and I wasted little time in trying
  it out. PageMill runs under any version of System 7, and Adobe
  recommends using it on a 68040- or PowerPC-based Mac with 6 MB of
  free application RAM, although you can scrape by with a minimum of
  3 MB of application RAM. PageMill requires at least a 4-bit (16-
  color) monitor, so it will not run on a monochrome display.

  PageMill works like an early version of PageMaker without
  paragraph styles. It also offers modern drag & drop features,
  provides plenty of optional keyboard shortcuts, and enables you to
  rapidly assemble a page from pre-existing parts. PageMill works
  well as a prototyping tool or as a way to quickly set up the
  overall look and feel of a new Web page or site.

  PageMill's interface is easy and elegant, with the exception of
  the toolbar, which should have bigger buttons with more blank
  space between them. The hardest thing to figure out from the
  interface is how to create links, but if you take the time to skim
  the short manual, you should easily master all that PageMill can
  do. The manual, though professional and understandable, is written
  somewhat breathlessly, as though the writer tried to explain
  everything in ten minutes or less.

  PageMill supports HTML 2.0 (basic options for a Web page that will
  reliably work in all Web browsers), and a smattering of Netscape
  extensions and proposed HTML 3.0 tags. PageMill shows high-ASCII
  characters as characters rather than named entities, making it
  usable for creating a Web page in European languages.

  PageMill does not support tables, and this has disappointed some
  people enormously, perhaps because tables are difficult and
  tedious to hand code. It supports colored and tiled backgrounds,
  and can create the onscreen front end to a form. It also has a Raw
  HTML style which you can use for unsupported tags; unfortunately
  it has no macro or glossary features to speed up entering
  unsupported tags.

  PageMill can directly use GIF and JPEG images or it can convert
  PICTs to GIFs. It can change a GIF's background color to
  transparent or add interlacing. PageMill offers a nice set of
  tools for making image maps, and makes it easy to associate
  different areas in a graphic with different URLs.


**Still Raw in Places** -- PageMill 1.0 may have been pushed out
  too fast. For instance, its font for body text is too small. The
  font looks like Times 12-point, and there's no way to change it,
  making PageMill inexplicably difficult to write in (though you can
  paste or drop text in from another source). PageMill has no text
  editing tools, not even a Find/Replace feature or a spelling
  checker. I've also heard too many reports about problems with
  PageMill crashing, though these reports usually end with a comment
  to the nature of "but PageMill is still my favorite program ever."
  PageMill suffers from a number of technical problems that have
  disappointed many serious HTML coders, and I'll talk a little more
  about those problems in a bit.

  Mac users are sophisticated in their expectations of word
  processing and text editing programs, and we often transfer those
  expectations to HTML tools. These expectations are much of what
  brought on programs like Word 6, so I'm not too upset at PageMill
  for its lack of text formatting and manipulation tools. I am
  disappointed at PageMill's inability to act as an FTP client. It's
  easy to download, set up, and use an FTP client, but PageMill
  should hold new users' hands through this often traumatic step. At
  the very least, PageMill could interact with Anarchie or Fetch to
  ease the process.


**First Date** -- To find out if I could integrate PageMill into
  my HTML authoring tool set (I use Nisus Writer 4.1, which ships
  with excellent HTML macros), I tried using PageMill to make minor
  changes to the TidBITS home page, called default.html. The TidBITS
  site lives on King, a Power Macintosh 6150. The URL, in case you
  were wondering, is:

http://king.tidbits.com/

  Maddeningly, US West hasn't yet set up a direct Internet
  connection to TidBITS's new location (in fact, after eight weeks
  they haven't even hooked up a second phone line), so I work
  remotely and use Anarchie to upload completed Web pages to King. I
  have a complete copy of the TidBITS Web site on my hard disk, so
  when I change a file on the site, I first change it locally and
  then upload it to King. The TidBITS Web site currently has 100 or
  so files, perhaps 15 on the main level, with the rest nested more
  deeply.

  I worked on a copy of default.html, and I was glad I did because I
  set my PageMill Local Root Folder preference after opening
  default.html, and PageMill incorrectly changed all the relative
  link paths in the document. Apparently, I should have set that
  preference before opening default.html. After solving that
  problem, I revelled in what PageMill does well by quickly making a
  few wording changes, adding an item to the bulleted list, and
  adding a few links.

  No matter what the benefits of coding in HTML may be, HTML is an
  uptight, rigid system where every typo matters. PageMill is HTML
  in a t-shirt with her hair down. PageMill enables you quickly and
  visually play with ideas, and it helps you answer questions like:
  "what part of this paragraph should be emphasized?" and "should I
  stick a horizontal rule here?"

  I experienced one oddity where linking information disappeared
  after a save, but I put the link back, saved again, and the link
  stuck around.


**The Importance of MacWeb** -- I checked my PageMill page in
  MacWeb, and found two instances of a space missing between two
  words. PageMill showed spaces (as did Netscape), so I hadn't
  noticed the problem. One missing space came directly after a
  <STRONG> tag; the other before an Anchor tag. I used Nisus Writer
  to look directly at the HTML, and - sure enough - the spaces were
  missing. It's _always_ good to check Web pages in the less-error-
  tolerant MacWeb - you never know who might read your pages, or
  what browser they might use.


**The Double-<BR> Problem** -- Using PageMill was faster and more
  _fun_ than using any HTML authoring system I have tried - and I've
  tried a great number of them. Before merrily posting my revised
  page to King, I took a close look at the HTML created by PageMill.
  This seemed prudent, because the PageMill-Talk list has had a
  flurry of complaints about PageMill altering existing HTML code
  without asking.

  As I expected from paying attention to PageMill-Talk, PageMill
  removed all my <P> tags (tags for a new paragraph) and replaced
  each one with two <BR> tags (tags that start a new line).
  Apparently, the reasoning for this underhanded removal is that
  Netscape displays additional blank lines for each contiguous <BR>
  tag, but ignores extra contiguous <P> tags.

  I can't say for sure about the wide world of Web browsers at
  large, but MacWeb and NCSA Mosaic both _ignore_ extra contiguous
  <BR> tags. Besides the technical problems with PageMill's decision
  to replace <P> tags with <BR> tags, inexperienced Web authors my
  run afoul of this "feature" by unrealistically expecting that what
  they see in PageMill (white space created by pressing Return) will
  appear the same way in lots of different Web browsers.


**Tag Confusion** -- This leads to a problem that appears with
  increasing regularity on HTML-centric mailing lists. In their rush
  to learn HTML, many HTML authors haven't learned what tags go with
  HTML 2.0, and - as a result - have a murky understanding of how to
  make their pages look good everywhere. PageMill won't help Web
  authors sort out these issues; if anything, it makes them worse
  because knowing that a certain tag is a Netscape extension doesn't
  help you figure out how to implement (or avoid implementing) that
  tag in PageMill.


**Can HTML be WYSIWYG?** Although some people still prefer tags,
  the word processing industry made a fairly smooth transition to
  WYSIWYG word processors. PageMill, an early WYSIWYG HTML editor,
  makes an important step toward WYSIWYG, but HTML and the Web pose
  more complexities than the word processing transition to WYSIWYG
  did.

  By and large, if you create a layout onscreen in a word processor,
  your printout will match that layout. If a word processor doesn't
  have a format (like columns), there's little or nothing you can do
  about it, no matter what printer you use. An experienced word
  processor user knows all the formats the program offers; an
  experienced (or even capable) user of a WYSIWYG Web authoring tool
  must know how the formats offered by the program interact with the
  larger feature set made available by various flavors of HTML.

  This new wrinkle makes creating a useful and usable WYSIWYG Web
  authoring tool rather difficult. Some have suggested that
  PageMill's catering to Netscape users in its use of <BR> tags and
  certain supported extensions is fine, because Netscape is the most
  popular browser. I find this a tired argument, perhaps as tired as
  the argument that catering to Netscape users is a short-term
  effort to gain market share.

  Without several layers of additional sophistication, a WYSIWYG
  authoring tool cannot keep up with all the available HTML browsers
  and tags, nor can it make everyone happy. For example, by
  implementing the <BR> tags as it does, PageMill helps naive Web
  authors create white space. Of course, PageMill's big, still-
  untapped, market _is_ naive Web authors who have neither time nor
  interest in using anything but Netscape.

  In the long-term, it's possible that every double-<BR> put out by
  PageMill will have to be fixed (most likely with starting and
  ending <P> tags that surround each paragraph). Perhaps PageMill's
  designers figure they'll either ship PageMill 3.0 with an
  automatic converter or that future browsers will work okay when
  they encounter the incorrect but functional double-<BR> coding
  technique.


**Will I Use It?** I will use PageMill to prototype new pages and
  to experiment with design changes before implementing the HTML in
  Nisus Writer. Until PageMill leaves my <P> tags alone and give me
  more control over the underlying HTML, I cannot use it for final
  Web pages. What worries me is that SiteMill (due out soon), is
  based on PageMill but lets you manage the links and placement of
  files in a site. SiteMill's planned features sound wonderful, but
  if it forces me to put all my HTML documents into PageMill format,
  I won't use it. I don't want double-<BR> tags, and (based on
  comments written to PageMill-Talk) I'm concerned that PageMill
  will make other unwanted changes.

  Professional typesetters were driven up the wall by people who
  used early versions of MacWrite to print newsletters to PostScript
  printers using Geneva for body text and New York for headlines,
  without anything resembling ligatures or kerning; experienced HTML
  authors may now be driven equally crazy by enthusiastic PageMill
  users. PageMill's energy and simplicity stand to make it
  enormously popular and influential.


**PageMill-Talk** -- In case you were wondering, you can chat
  about PageMill on the PageMill-Talk mailing list, and you can
  search back postings to the list.

http://www.blueworld.com/lists/pagemill-talk/
http://www.blueworld.com/lists.pagemill-talk.search.fcgi

  You can also read about PageMill or order PageMill on Adobe's Web
  site:

http://www.adobe.com/Apps/PageMill/
http://www.adobe.com/Apps/PageMill/orderform.html

    Adobe --  800/411-8657 -- 206/628-2749


InterviewBITS with Peter Lewis, Part 2
--------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>

  This week we conclude our interview from TidBITS-304_ with Peter
  Lewis <peter@mail.peter.com.au>, one of the best-known Macintosh
  Internet programmers.


* [Adam] As a developer primarily concerned with the Internet,
  what are your feelings about Netscape - the company or the
  program? Netscape has stirred some strong feelings with its non-
  standard HTML extensions, and the company's IPO in August was
  certainly astonishing.

  [Peter] I'm not particularly fond of either. They seem to announce
  new things they are going to roll into the browser every week. The
  last thing I want in a Web client is for it to be larger than a
  full Microsoft Office install! I'm also not sure who the target
  audience is for Web versions of VRML, Acrobat, etc. Most people I
  know are limited to modem speeds. I don't even let it download
  pictures; it's just too slow, and even text is too slow most of
  the time. Maybe in a decade or so we'll all have ISDN or a T-1 to
  our houses, but in the meantime?

  On top of that, I don't want to see any one company have too much
  control over the commercial use of the net, and Netscape would
  certainly love to control the whole game.

  Personally, I use MacWeb. It's the most Mac-like browser
  available. It's getting a bit old these days, but I've heard there
  is a new version that's very cool, so I'm looking forward to that.

* [Adam] I'm curious what your perspectives, being an Internet
  developer and an Australian, are about some of the things proposed
  by the dunderheads in the U.S. government regarding the Internet.
  For instance, what do you think about the issue of pornography on
  the Internet and the Communications Decency Act?

  [Peter] Do you think that's limited to the U.S.A.? We already have
  our state government rushing to enact legislation before the
  federal government does (our state and federal governments are
  involved in a bitter feud).

  For myself, I'm opposed to any form of censorship. On top of that,
  any legislation is obviously going to be unenforceable, and I'm
  very much against unenforceable legislation - it puts too much
  power in the police force to choose who they want to pick on.

* [Adam] How about the fuss surrounding PGP (Pretty Good Privacy)
  encryption, and the fact that it's illegal to export it from the
  U.S. Do you have a copy? What do folks from other countries think
  about the issue?

  [Peter] It's a joke. Of course I have a copy of MacPGP (I don't
  use it much, my communications are very rarely secret enough to
  require that kind of messing around). I saw a great signature the
  other day, it was a three line chunk of Perl code that did RSA
  encryption (although, naturally, the code looked like it had
  already been encrypted). The whole thing seems to be caused by
  amazing egotism on the part of the U.S. government - do they
  really think only U.S. mathematicians can write encryption
  algorithms? What's even more insane is the fact that it's legal to
  export the algorithm, just not the code, so they obviously think
  there are no programmers outside the U.S.A. Weird.

* [Adam] You and Quinn are known for being major Pascal supporters
  in a development world that has largely gone over to C and C++.
  You even had anti-C t-shirts at the last few World-Wide
  Developer's Conferences. Without getting too technical, why do you
  continue to stick with Pascal, and does that cause problems at
  times?

  [Peter] The normal C argument goes like this: "Everyone else is
  using C, so therefore it must be good." Every Mac user should
  recognize that statement in a slightly different form, "Everyone
  else is using PCs, so therefore they must be good."

  Basically, I continue to use Pascal because I'm more productive in
  it. I consider using Pascal to be a strategic advantage, doubly so
  when compared to C++. I've been reading a C++ book recently (know
  thy enemy), and every time I turn the page I see new ways to make
  tiny errors that are catastrophic and impossible to debug. I'm
  amazed that anyone can produce a working C++ program.

  However, programming in Pascal does cause occasional problems. The
  Apple interfaces tend to be quite broken. I wanted to try out
  QuickDraw GX, and it took a year of new versions before they
  finally got one that I could hack to work with Pascal. By then I'd
  given up on GX. In some ways this is actually a good thing for me:
  I have way too many projects and not enough time to do them all,
  so not being able to work with GX or OpenDoc is helpful for
  limiting my options.

* [Adam] Turning from programming to hardware, what's your
  favorite model of the Mac, and what would you like to see
  different in future models?

  [Peter] I've never really had a favorite model. I quite like my
  current 7100/66 (the best price/performance ever - Apple gave it
  to me for free). I have a theory that people become fond of the
  models they own. I don't pine for a new machine, I want more disk
  space more than anything else at the moment.

* [Adam] I know the feeling - my 1 GB drive is now down to about
  80 MB available. Apple gave you that 7100 as part of the Apple
  Cool Tools awards back in October of 1994 (TidBITS-247_). Those
  awards were meant to honor programmers whose work had made the
  Internet easier to use from a Mac. Do you think Apple should
  continue such awards for people writing freely distributable
  software, or perhaps even expand them into other fields? I could
  see Apple creating five or ten different categories and
  recognizing an individual or two in each category each year.

  [Peter] Absolutely. It would be interesting to survey the eleven
  people who won last year's award and see how their Macs affected
  their development. My 7100 is now the center point of my home
  office - without it I would probably have to have stayed working
  for Curtin for several more months before I could set up my
  office. I'm sure that's exactly what Apple had in mind when they
  made those awards.

* [Adam] Great idea about that survey; I'll have to work on that
  next. What about future models of the Mac?

  [Peter] In future models I'd like to see more colours; grey and
  beige are so boring. Apple needs to sell computers the same way
  the car industry sells cars. Have you noticed how lots of Apple's
  new Macs have started looking like PCs (OK, not quite that bad).
  The Mac is just a silly box to hold the monitor. I like some of
  Apple's innovations in the CPUs with built-in monitors, but I
  prefer the monitor separate (since they're unlikely to build
  one-piece computers with large monitors). Apple should have more
  fun with their designs - Macs are fun to use, they should be fun
  to look at.

* [Adam] Macs are visually fairly boring these days, but what
  about the clone manufacturers? Perhaps they'd be better suited to
  pushing the envelope on industrial design more than Apple. Would
  you consider buying a Mac clone, especially now that Power
  Computing's Power Wave systems are the fastest Macs available?

  [Peter] From what I've seen, the clones are even more boring, most
  of them look like PCs. Maybe in a few years when (if?) Apple
  loosens up a bit on their clone deals we'll see some small
  companies producing designer Macs.

  I can't buy a clone Mac yet, since they haven't set up in
  Australia as far as I know. I'd also be concerned about their
  ability to support remote locations like Perth at this early
  stage. I think I'll wait and let them build up some infrastructure
  first. That said, I had the opportunity to visit the Power
  Computing folks in Austin earlier this year. They seem to be well
  in control of the situation, and very much into providing good
  service and value for money. I recently asked several smart people
  about their Power Computing machines, and they all said that the
  machines were as good as Apple's. So if you live a bit closer to
  the action than I do, I think you should definitely look in to it
  and compare the prices.

* [Adam] How fast is your Internet connection currently?

  [Peter] Well, my personal Internet connection is a 28.8 Kbps
  modem, permanently connected to the Western Australian hub. I have
  an Ethernet running around my house, and a 386 running Linux as my
  Ethernet-to-PPP gateway (another interesting project that might
  have been funded by higher shareware response is a Mac-based
  Ethernet-to-PPP router).

  Of course, it doesn't much help having a 28.8 Kbps link while
  Australia's international link is completely saturated. Right now
  it's running at 20 bytes/second, which is pretty painful.

* [Adam] That kind of speed almost makes you want to dial the U.S.
  directly. Australia charges on a per/byte basis for traffic that
  goes out of the country, right? How expensive does that get? I
  presume it's not quite so bad that you've actually dialed the U.S.
  directly, but it must be tempting at times.

  [Peter] The Australian backbone charges at a rate of about U.S.
  $0.70 per megabyte. I compared that against an international phone
  call at 28.8 Kbps, which comes out around $2 per megabyte. So it's
  about three times more expensive, but on the other hand, a 1 MB
  file might take six minutes instead of 14 hours. I've been
  thinking of going back to the bad old days of using an email-to-
  FTP gateway to retrieve files across the link. Fortunately most
  FTP sites are mirrored in Australia so it's not an impossible
  situation, and eventually Telstra will get around to improving the
  situation.

* [Adam] Thanks very much for taking the time for this interview,
  Peter, and I'm sure we'll all look forward to your next programs.
  Maybe a few more people will even support your shareware efforts
  than in the past.

  [Several people wrote in last week to point out the URL we
  published last week for Peter's Web site was broken (the FTP URL
  worked just fine). Problems with that server seem to have  been
  resolved and both links are currently working correctly. -Geoff]

ftp://ftp.share.com/pub/peterlewis/
http://www.share.com/peterlewis/


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