TidBITS#425/13-Apr-98
=====================

  So how does Word 98 rate? In the most detailed review you'll find
  anywhere, Matt Neuburg pushes the hype aside to examine how good a
  job Microsoft did with its flagship word processor. Also this
  week, we celebrate our eighth anniversary by releasing TidBITS Web
  badges, cover recent changes in Apple's developer and QuickTime
  licensing programs, and offer a tip for returning Eudora Pro 4.0
  to its old two-dimensional look.

Topics:
    MailBITS/13-Apr-98
    Furor Over Developer Programs & QuickTime Licensing
    A Word to the Wise - Word 98, That Is

<http://www.tidbits.com/tb-issues/TidBITS-425.html>
<ftp://ftp.tidbits.com/pub/tidbits/issues/1998/TidBITS#425_13-Apr-98.etx>

Copyright 1998 TidBITS Electronic Publishing. All rights reserved.
   Information: <info@tidbits.com> Comments: <editors@tidbits.com>
   ---------------------------------------------------------------

This issue of TidBITS sponsored in part by:
* APS Technologies -- 800/443-4199 -- <sales@apstech.com> -- How
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* Small Dog Electronics -- Special Deal for TidBITS Readers!
   MS Office 4.2.1 and Office 98 upgrade with Grolier's: $339!
   PowerBook 5300cs refurbished with new TDK modem: $799
   For Details: <http://www.smalldog.com/#tid> -- 802/496-7171

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   Home Page 3.0/Surf Express Bundle: $109.95 (regular $125.95).
   Order online or call 860/927-2050 x9228
   <http://www.tidbits.com/tbp/homepage-surf.html>

* OK, so PC users love Outlook Express email. But that doesn't <--- NEW!
   mean it's not a great Macintosh email program. Why not try it
   out? You'll see how it lets you fire off messages while you
   surf the Web. <http://www.microsoft.com/ie/mac/>

* Last year, software piracy cost more than 130,000 jobs in the <-- NEW!
   U.S. alone. By the year 2000, that number could reach 350,000.
   Find out how to protect your job and your company's future at:
   <http://www.nopiracy.com/>

* Microsoft Office 98 Macintosh Edition -- Office applications <--- NEW!
   so Mac-like, it's unbelievable. Learn more about how Office 98
   perfectly unites Microsoft and the Mac. It's all happening at:
   <http://www.microsoft-ads.com/cgi-msads/macoffice/macoffice.pl>
   ---------------------------------------------------------------

MailBITS/13-Apr-98
------------------

**Bring Your Own Badge** -- This week, TidBITS celebrates its
  eighth anniversary, making it one of the oldest and largest edited
  publications on the Internet. We've marked previous anniversaries
  by writing about TidBITS history (see "TidBITS 7.0" in
  TidBITS-375_), but this year we created TidBITS Web badges,
  which we hope loyal TidBITS readers will display on Web pages
  (or corporate memos, bumper stickers, forehead tattoos, etc.). If
  you've been reading TidBITS for years, check out the badges saying
  "TidBITS Reader Since 1904, 1990, 1991, 1992," and so on. Other
  badges sport slogans like, "The Best Bits are TidBITS" and
  "Powered By ASCII." Suggestions for new silly badges are welcome.
  Also, you'll find special badges for TidBITS authors and sponsors,
  and for linking to a software review in TidBITS. The TidBITS
  Badges Web page contains the badges plus sample HTML code. [TJE]

<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=00670>
<http://www.tidbits.com/about/badges.html>


**Return Eudora Pro 4.0 to the Old Look** -- Marc Bizer
  <mlbizer@mail.utexas.edu> (and others) wrote to address Matt
  Neuburg's complaint in "The Postman Rings Again" in TidBITS-424_.
  As with almost everything in the consummately flexible Eudora, you
  can revert to the old look that featured letters instead of icons
  in the status column of mailboxes. To do so, enter this one-line
  AppleScript into Script Editor and run it (you will be asked to
  find Eudora Pro). The script changes your Eudora Settings file; to
  reverse its action, rewrite the script to set setting 233 to "n"
  and run it again. [ACE]

    tell application "Eudora" to set setting 233 to "y"

<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=04810>


Furor Over Developer Programs & QuickTime Licensing
---------------------------------------------------
  by Geoff Duncan <geoff@tidbits.com>
 
  Last week Apple unveiled significant changes to its developer
  programs and QuickTime licensing policies. Although the details
  are complicated, Apple's new strategies have left many Macintosh
  software developers enraged, looking for alternatives to Apple
  technologies, or - in some cases - with no way to ship their
  products.

<http://developer.apple.com/programs/>
<http://gemma.apple.com/mkt/registering/swl/agreements.html>


**Pay More for Less** -- Apple's new developer programs are more
  expensive than previous offerings while offering fewer benefits,
  particularly for small developers. Formerly, Apple Developer
  Associates paid $250 a year for monthly developer CD-ROMs, pre-
  release software seeds, and discounts on Apple hardware used for
  development. Under Apple's new Select program, these same
  developers pay $500 per year for the same benefits, a $100 coupon
  from Metrowerks, and two support incidents, but they cannot
  purchase discount hardware. (Associates Plus members previously
  paid $500 for the same benefits plus five developer support
  "incidents;" they now pay the same price for two incidents and no
  access to discount hardware.)

  Similarly, Apple's high-end program has increased from $1,500 to
  $3,500 per year, and includes access to discount hardware, eight
  support incidents, a $300 Metrowerks coupon, and a pass to Apple's
  annual World Wide Developers Conference (WWDC). Apple has also
  re-instituted a monthly developer mailing for $200 per year (up
  from $150), which includes system software, but little else that
  isn't available for free via the Internet.

  These changes took effect immediately and follow yet another round
  of cutbacks and staff reductions in Apple's developer technical
  support group (which handles Mac OS and Rhapsody development
  issues) making it seem that Apple hopes to focus developer support
  efforts on large accounts by raising the threshold to enter its
  developer programs. These mid-subscription changes are
  particularly galling to small developers, who are losing benefits
  they already paid for and must now decide whether to pay more for
  fewer benefits or drop out of Apple's fee-based developer programs
  altogether.


**The Quick and the Dead** -- QuickTime is one of Apple's most
  ubiquitous technologies, used in everything from games like Myst
  and Riven to shareware programs like GraphicConverter and
  productivity applications like Web browsers, Photoshop, and Word
  98. Now, on the heels of releasing QuickTime 3.0, Apple has
  unveiled new licensing policies for shipping QuickTime 3.0 or
  QuickTime 3.0 Pro with Macintosh or Windows 95/NT products.
  Developers were able to ship QuickTime 2.x with products free of
  charge. However, to ship software with QuickTime 3.0, developers
  must pay Apple $1 for every copy of the product sold. Apple will
  waive this fee if programs play the "Get QuickTime Pro" movie when
  their product installs _and_ copy that movie to the desktop every
  time their product launches (unless it's already there or
  QuickTime Pro is installed). This policy has been dubbed "desktop
  spamming" and sets an alarming precedent, since it produces end-
  user animosity, opportunities for malicious Trojan Horses, and
  tech support burdens. To ship the spam-free QuickTime 3 Pro,
  developers must pay Apple $2 per copy.

<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=04782>

  At the same time - and also without warning - Apple discontinued
  licensing for QuickTime 2.x, the most recent version that
  functions with Windows 3.1. Developers planning to ship QuickTime
  products for Windows 3.1 - still an important market - are now
  rapidly looking for alternatives. Similarly, since there is no
  QuickTime 3-compatible Director Xtra for QuickTime VR, Apple's
  termination of QuickTime 2.x licensing hamstrings products using
  QuickTime VR with Macromedia Director. Under Apple's new policies,
  these developers can't make products that use QuickTime 3.0 and
  can't ship products built with QuickTime 2.x.

  Few developers dispute that Apple should be able to charge for
  licenses to QuickTime 3. However, many object to new, unheralded
  policies that introduce a high-priced business model and
  effectively forbid development of a wide variety of products for
  which QuickTime was once the clear choice. These developers now
  have little choice but to look for alternatives to QuickTime or
  terminate their product development.

  It's distressing to see Apple changing its policies in ways that
  hurt or even eliminate smaller developers who can't afford
  expensive developer programs or significant per-unit licensing
  fees. Although smaller developers can still get important
  information via the Internet or the monthly developer mailing,
  those same smaller developers protected the core of the Macintosh
  market while larger companies have gone cross-platform or ceased
  Macintosh development. Apple's new moves could boomerang by
  reducing the overall amount of development talent in the Macintosh
  community.


A Word to the Wise - Word 98, That Is
-------------------------------------
  by Matt Neuburg <matt@tidbits.com>

  In 1994, when Microsoft released Word 6.0, it was widely condemned
  for poor performance on 68K machines, conflicts with popular
  extensions, and flouting Macintosh interface standards. But I
  liked it anyway, and wrote an essay praising especially its
  handling of "large, formal, or publishable" documents, and its
  macro automation. This cry in the wilderness went unheard; even
  TidBITS, unable to support my views, wouldn't publish them.

<http://www.tidbits.com/matt/MWMatt.html>

  Today, conspiracy theorists notwithstanding, Microsoft is being
  universally lauded as a returned prodigal, with Word 98 as its
  penitent offering. Reading the early reviews, I felt vindicated,
  but also curious as to whether Word 98 differed sufficiently from
  Word 6 to deserve a revised reception.

  Doubtless, part of what's changed isn't Word but the atmosphere.
  Hardware has evolved; our Macs now have plenty of gigs, megs, and
  megahertz, resulting in some attitude adjustment. Word 6 was
  reviled for preferring 3,000K of RAM; yet Word 98 prefers 9,000K
  and no one murmurs - because RAM is cheap, which it wasn't in
  1994. Word 6 was slow; Word 98 is faster, but, just as important,
  so is the computer. Word 98 is PowerPC only; it's a pity (I
  happily use Word 6 on two 68K machines), but evokes no charges of
  betrayal.

  Also, with the passage of time and the advent of Mac OS 8, certain
  aspects of the Windows aesthetic, unfamiliar in 1994, have become
  common coin (tabbed dialogs and contextual menus, for instance).
  And then there's Microsoft's proactive propaganda, in the Macworld
  Expo keynote, at its Macworld party, and especially in the
  overwhelming 150-page Reviewer's Guide accompanying the beta CD.

  Granted all this, the question remains: are those who excoriated
  Word 6 justified in praising Word 98? To bring you balanced,
  in-depth analysis, I've spent long, serious hours with Word 98.
  Before reading on, though, bear in mind that my use of Word may be
  atypical. Many people use Word as a smarter, more elaborate
  SimpleText, just as we are said to use our brains to only one-
  tenth of capacity. But Word is a big, industrial-strength program,
  and I feel that to ignore its full power is a waste; my notion of
  what's a frill and what's a major feature may not match yours.


**Sanity Check** -- Word 98 looks great. Every aspect of the
  interface has been rethought, from the look of icons and rulers to
  the way text scrolls. It's smart, too, checking grammar and
  spelling as you type. It's also fun, sporting cute sounds and the
  antics of an animated Classic-like Macintosh (Max, the Office
  Assistant) who answers English-like questions and makes
  suggestions about the way you work.

  Once past the initial "gee whiz" phase, though, the user finds, at
  the heart of Word 98, no conceptual revolution, no sudden advent
  of multiple text selection, multiple clipboards, or a Find dialog
  that can look for a given sequence of styles - powerful core
  facilities long familiar to Nisus Writer users.

  Nor is the new look completely new; it's largely inherited from
  Word 97 for Windows. Although Word no longer smacks of being a
  Windows port (it's an independent entity, with serious attention
  paid to the Macintosh Human Interface guidelines), many interface
  elements that troubled critics of Word 6 remain - the Font dialog,
  for instance, or the Customize Keyboard dialog. Still, a strong
  similarity between versions is essential to cross-platform users;
  breaking down platform distinctions can help save the Mac in
  office settings.

  Long lists of new features call for careful discernment. After
  all, many of Word 98's new features are really old features with
  additional, optional interfaces laid on top of them. This
  continues the Word 6 philosophy of interface redundancy, but that
  can be a good thing, providing easier, more prominent access to
  aspects of Word that may previously have been hidden.

  For example, you can query the Office Assistant using English
  phrases, or you can use the old Help search dialog. You can create
  a table by drawing it, or with the old grid pop-up. Interaction
  with the spelling checker and thesaurus can be through contextual
  menus, or through the old dialog. You can peek at footnotes, and
  at annotations (now called Comments), with pop-up ScreenTips
  boxes, or read them in the old separate pane. You can navigate
  with the old Go To dialog, or with the new browse buttons. And so
  on.

  Some genuinely new features may be perceived by some as useless,
  inappropriate, or gratuitous bloat. You aren't forced to use them,
  but no doubt they contribute to the program's size.

  Take, for instance, Word 98's many ways of trying to be
  "intelligent." If you start successive paragraphs with asterisks,
  Word optionally converts them to bulleted style. Some will like
  this; others will see it as invasive, and turn it off. (I rather
  worry, though, about users who will just be confused by it.) Also,
  for a good laugh, test the AutoSummarize feature (in the Tools
  menu); I call it AutoTravesty.

  A full complement of drawing tools also swells the suite, now with
  dozens of pre-formed shapes (such as flowchart symbols), Bezier
  curves, gradients, 3D lighting, interior text that can flow from
  shape to shape, and more - impressive, but is it appropriate?
  There are additional toolbars, additional menus, additional icons
  around the edge of the window, and additional technologies -
  QuickTime VR in a word-processing document, forsooth! And animated
  text? Just what we always needed!


**Six Fix** -- Some of what's new about Word 98 serves merely to
  correct Word 6. But I should not say "merely." Word 6 badly needed
  some correcting, and Word 98, to its great credit, is a vastly
  more pleasant place to work. In dialogs, keystrokes such as Tab,
  Enter, and arrows work more as expected, and related concepts are
  brought together as panels of the same dialog. Multilevel
  numbering is less buggy, and more comprehensible and flexible.
  Speed of launching, and of opening and saving certain types of
  document, is significantly improved.

  Installation is easier, not so much because of the so-called
  "drag-and-drop installation" that has proven popular with network
  administrators (I prefer custom installation), but thanks to the
  "self-repairing applications" that restore missing libraries. In
  some ways, it's just as scary as ever, as these libraries still
  occupy several megabytes of your System Folder. Although they're
  generically described by balloon help and in extension managers,
  there's no simple list of what was installed where and why - which
  is all I really wanted. But at least there's no mysterious
  "Microsoft" folder, no "Setup Data" file to worry about! And,
  existing Word 6 templates are incorporated automatically.

  However, not everything is corrected. Telling the Find dialog to
  look for italic text is still a pain (you must go through the
  horrible Font dialog). Your hard disk is still sprinkled with Word
  Work Files while you work. Word still lacks keyboard shortcuts for
  navigating Help.

  Paragraph style inheritance (one style can be based on another, to
  provide uniformity) has always been one of Word's better features,
  but it still isn't true inheritance; if HeadA is bold, and HeadB
  is based on HeadA plus italic (bold italic), then if you change
  HeadA to be bold italic, HeadB automatically unitalicizes itself
  and alters its own definition: now, it's based on HeadA plus _not_
  italic! (It is impossible to tell HeadB that it should be italic
  no matter what you may do to HeadA.)

  Such disappointing failures to mend Word 6's ways are not many,
  but they do exist.


**Top Ten** -- Overshadowing everything else are some important,
  genuinely new features that undeniably improve the program. Here,
  in no particular order, is my personal list of the top ten real
  reasons to upgrade to Word 98.

* Handling of large documents is significantly better. As you drag
  the scrollbar thumb, a ScreenTips window shows what page and what
  heading you'll be in if you let go. The new Document Map lets you
  navigate by means of an outline of headings in the left pane of
  the window; it's brilliant. And, you can now identify any
  paragraph style with an outline level, so you can use other styles
  besides the internal Heading 1, Heading 2, and so forth to
  structure your document. Having just written a large book in Word
  6, let me tell you, I could have used these features.

* Hyperlinks! You can mark text such that clicking it causes
  another document to open, optionally at a particular bookmark.
  It's not the equal of Palimpsest or Storyspace, but it's a simple,
  obvious idea, and a great one. (I just wish clicking a link didn't
  also cause an extra toolbar to appear.) This feature helps with
  large documents, too: a Master Document can be shown "collapsed,"
  with hyperlinks to the subdocuments standing in for their content.

<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=00752>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=03319>

* The hyperlinks tie in with Word's new integrated HTML
  capabilities, which were available for Word 6 as an add-in that I
  could never make work. Now, you just open an HTML document in Word
  and it's displayed much as in a browser - except that it's a Word
  document, with tags interpreted as paragraph and character styles,
  so you can modify the details to get the look you want. It isn't
  perfect (the first document I opened obeyed <center> tags
  incorrectly) but it's not bad. You can even use Word over the
  Internet as a Web browser - a big, slow Web browser.

* Even more important, you can quickly generate an HTML document
  from a normal Word document. One simple way is to paste your
  document into a new one made from the Blank Web Page template, and
  then do a series of style replacements (H2 for Heading 2, for
  instance). Extensive help and special menus are provided; it's
  almost like being in a different application.

* There is now vertical alignment of text in table cells. I've
  been screaming for this since 1990. For example, it is finally
  possible to bottom-align a numerical value to a two-line
  description:

>   money spent
>       on food:    $37.30

* True Mac OS drag & drop of text is implemented at last. (Word
  6's drag & drop was bogus: it couldn't communicate with other
  applications.) Oddly, an annoyingly sized and positioned box at
  the cursor tip and the cursor itself make it hard to see where the
  dropped text will go; Microsoft should have studied SimpleText to
  learn the right relationship between these elements and the
  insertion point.

* The running spelling-and-grammar checker is a blast. Of course,
  it isn't intelligent enough to obviate human proofreading; for
  instance, it catches "The breathe of life is strong," but not "It
  is hard to chose between them." But to have typos flagged as you
  work is definitely helpful. If the spell checker doesn't know an
  unusual word, it appears with a squiggly red line beneath it. To
  correct the problem or add the word to the dictionary, Control-
  click the word and use the contextual menu that appears. If you
  have a bunch of text you don't want Word to check, select it, then
  from the Tools menu, use the Language hierarchical menu to choose
  Set Language. In the Language dialog box that appears, scroll to
  the top and choose "no proofing."

* The ruler at the top of the window can, as before, be hidden
  (via the View menu) to gain extra screen real estate; but now, you
  can temporarily show it by positioning the mouse below the title
  bar, or by performing an action that requires a ruler (such as
  resizing a table column).

* A new versioning feature works rather like Aladdin's FlashBack,
  saving a snapshot of the document each time you close it, or on
  demand. It's a "delta" so it doesn't swell the file size much if
  successive versions are fairly similar. You can thus retrieve
  earlier stages of the document; each delta can have a descriptive
  comment, and deltas can be deleted individually.

<http://www.aladdinsys.com/flashback/mac/>

* Finally, as every TidBITS reader knows, I'm fairly geeky, so to
  me, the absolute top reason to switch is that the internal
  scripting language is now Visual Basic for Applications (VBA), as
  clever and elegant a programming language as the old scripting
  language, WordBasic, was clumsy and obscure. I am now in
  programming heaven, converting clunky old ten-line WordBasic
  scripts into razor-sharp one-liners. Since much of Word's true
  power is best realized through customization, and since nearly all
  of Word's behavior can be customized by scripting, you need VBA
  even if you don't realize it yet.

  However, the milieu for writing and debugging VBA scripts lacks
  many important features familiar to Windows users; in fact, it
  lacks some features that Excel 5 for Mac used to have! Auto List
  Members and Auto Quick Info are missing (they cause helpful syntax
  information to pop up as you're typing a script); so are the Watch
  window, the Locals window, and Auto Data Tips (important debugging
  tools). This is disappointing, and deserves condemnation.


**Sense of Style** -- If you never use styles (uniform character
  and paragraph formats accessible by name), you may skip this
  section; it is somewhat technical. But I must discuss the matter,
  because styles are important to me, and I find that they are
  handled worse in Word 98 than in Word 6.

  The Styles pop-up menu in the Formatting toolbar can now display
  the name of each style in that style. This sounds like a good
  idea, but it's slow, and even worse, the non-standard menu is
  short, showing only about ten items at once. You can turn off the
  styling of the names, but the menu still never gets longer than 10
  or 11 items visible at once, no matter how large your screen may
  be! To make matters worse, the names aren't even listed
  alphabetically. It is thus very difficult to select a style from
  the menu.

  In Word 6, a splendid and badly needed distinction was introduced
  between paragraph styles and character styles; Word 98 muddies
  that distinction in confusing ways. Let's say you've a paragraph
  style, ItalCenter, which centers the paragraph and makes it
  italic; and let's say an existing Normal-style paragraph reads,
  "The cat sat on the mat." Now, prepare to be bewildered:

* If you select "cat" and apply ItalCenter, "cat" becomes italic
  but nothing else happens. (That's weird, because this was supposed
  to be a paragraph style.) If you then select the whole paragraph
  and apply ItalCenter, the whole paragraph is centered and becomes
  italic - except "cat", which loses its italics.

* Start over. This time, apply to "cat" a built-in character
  style, Emphasis, which equates to the default font plus italic.
  Next, select the whole paragraph and apply ItalCenter; the
  paragraph is centered and becomes italic, _including_ "cat"! If
  you then select "cat" and apply Normal, "cat" loses its italics,
  but retains Emphasis style. And if you then select the whole
  paragraph and apply Normal, none of the paragraph is italic, but
  "cat" _still_ has Emphasis style!

  There's a new "Automatically update" checkbox that you can check
  when defining styles. It sounds harmless, but it could be an
  invitation to disaster: manual changes to one styled paragraph are
  incorporated into its definition and applied to all paragraphs in
  that style. This can provide buggy and surprising results,
  especially when combined with paragraph style inheritance
  (discussed above); stay away from it.


**Doc Worker** -- It appears, though I have not seen it, that the
  printed documentation included with Word 98 is no longer a
  complete manual, but instead a 245-page "Getting Results" book
  that focuses on performing common tasks, not on learning concepts
  or learning everything there is to know about a particular
  feature. In the previous generation of Office applications, I
  found Microsoft's printed manuals to be remarkably good for
  learning and reference, and it's a shame to see this standard
  lowered. [Our manuals arrived hours before this issue was
  finalized, and although they may work acceptably for intermediate
  users who upgrade, new users and power users alike will come away
  disappointed in the lack of detail. -Adam]

  In lieu of a reference manual, the user is apparently expected to
  resort to online help. But the online help is sometimes wrong,
  often omits useful information, and rarely gives a detailed,
  conceptual overview of a complex topic. To give a trivial example:
  I wanted to know how to show the Document Map pane; the Help pages
  told me about a Toolbar button, but it barely mentioned the
  Document Map item in the View menu.

  Also, online help is clumsy to navigate, including moving back and
  forth between the Office Assistant and MS Word Help. My wrist
  aches from all the mouse-clicking it entails. Help is broken up
  into many documents - MS Word Help, MS Word VBA Help, MS Office
  VBA Help, and so on; you must be in the right one before you can
  do an index search on it.


**Final Word** -- No program of Word 98's size and complexity can
  be without bugs and problems. But Microsoft has made it clear that
  these will be attended to as they are found. Here are some URLs
  that may help:

<http://www.microsoft.com/macoffice/productinfo/issues.htm>
<http://macfixit.com/reports/msoffice98.shtml>

  I've found Word 98 remarkably solid and crash-proof. It's also an
  amazingly good Mac citizen: the only extension conflict on my
  machine seems to be a relatively minor one with TypeTamer. This is
  a far cry from my experience with Word 6, which had bugs and
  conflicts that took ages to work out.

<http://www.impossible.com/>

  So, what's the bottom line? If you've been using Word 6 on a
  PowerPC-based Mac, don't even pause for reflection: upgrade to
  Word 98!

  If you've been using Word 5.1 you should at least look into the
  matter. Clearly, if your hardware forbids, that's an end to it.
  But if not, and if your objections to Word 6 were aesthetic or
  moral, then Word 98 deserves serious consideration. It's true that
  you'll have a major transition to make: Word 98 is big,
  complicated, and often confusing, and nothing can hide that fact.
  But you might find that it's also more powerful, more useful, and
  - dare I say it? - more fun.

  Upgrades cost $299 for the entire Microsoft Office 98 suite, or
  $149 for Word 98 alone. New users pay $499 for Office 98 or $399
  for Word 98 alone. Those are list prices - street prices run $50
  to $75 lower. For academic users, Microsoft Office 98 runs $199
  and Word 98 alone is $129. A Microsoft Office 98 Gold Edition
  costs about $100 more and includes FrontPage 1.0, Encarta 98
  Deluxe, and Bookshelf 98.

<http://www.microsoft.com/macoffice/productinfo/macprice.htm>



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