TidBITS#312/29-Jan-96
=====================

Psst, did you hear Sun is trying to buy Apple? If not, catch up on
   the news below! Also, learn about price drops and promotions for
   Apple Performas, the latest news on WordBasic macro viruses, and
   info on an update to Quicken 6 and a fix for the PowerBook 2300c.
   Finally, we round out the issue with reviews of Voyager's
   Invisible Universe CD-ROM and a free version of Pictorius'
   Prograph programming environment.

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>
* 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
* America Online -- 800/827-6364 -- http://www.aol.com
   The world's largest provider of online services.
   Give Back to the Net -- http://www.aol.com/give/
* DealBITS: The first place to look for deals on cool Mac stuff!
   http://king.tidbits.com/dealbits/ -- <dealbits@tidbits.com>

Copyright 1990-1996 Adam & Tonya Engst. Details at end of issue.
   Information: <info@tidbits.com> Comments: <editors@tidbits.com>
   ---------------------------------------------------------------

Topics:
    MailBITS/29-Jan-96
    The TidBITS Server Move
    The Sun Also Hovers
    Price Drops Launch Performa Promotion
    Word Macro Viruses Still Out There
    Invisible Universe
    Get Your Hands on Prograph
    Reviews/29-Jan-96

ftp://ftp.tidbits.com/pub/tidbits/issues/1996/TidBITS#312_29-Jan-96.etx


MailBITS/29-Jan-96
------------------

**PowerBook 2300c Trackpad Fix** -- Last week Apple released the
  PowerBook 2300c Update which is supposed to ensure the PowerBook's
  trackpad works correctly. Your PowerBook 2300c may already have
  this extension installed, but if you don't have a file called
  PowerBook 2300c Update in your Extensions folder, you can download
  it from Apple. These URLs may change; Apple appears to be
  reshuffling their PowerBook software. [GD]

ftp://ftp.support.apple.com/pub/apple_sw_updates/US/Macintosh/PowerBook/
Other%20PB%20SW/PB_2300c_Update_1.0.hqx
http://www.info.apple.com/Apple.Support.Area/Apple.Software.Updates/US/
Macintosh/PowerBook/Other_PB_Software/PB_2300c_Update_1.0.sea.hqx


**Quicken Online Banking Updater** -- Last week, Intuit released
  the Online Banking Updater for Quicken 6.0, which updates Quicken
  6 from R2 to R5. The package includes an updater application plus
  new versions of some files that ship with Quicken. Intuit has made
  three versions of the updater available; the one you need depends
  on the version of Quicken you have installed (68K, PowerPC, or
  "Universal"). The updates range between about 2.5 MB and 3.5 MB;
  read the directions on using the update before downloading it.

http://www.intuit.com/quicken/technical-support/quicken/releases/qfm6-releases/

  In addition to online banking features, Intuit says the update
  fixes a "handful" of problems reported by customers, although it's
  not clear whether this includes issues reported in TidBITS-308_.
  [GD]


**WorldWrite 3.0 for the Mac ships** -- WorldWrite has been around
  outside the United States for two versions, but version 3.0 is now
  available for general worldwide consumption at a list price of $99
  or $149. (The price depends on your linguistic demands; the
  English-only version is $99.) The svelte program requires 2 MB of
  application RAM and works on any Mac running System 7.1 or higher.
  Once I've had a chance to sit down with the software, I'll review
  it. Key features include: WorldScript support, tables, columns,
  indexing and table of contents, and color separations. The program
  ships with a QuarkXPress filter and supports XTND. WorldSoft --
  800/225-9299 [TJE]

http://www.xmission.com/~worldsft/


**Going Where Someone has Gone Before** -- In my overview of the
  Mac version of Microsoft Internet Explorer in TidBITS-311_, I
  mentioned that Explorer was ahead of other browsers in handling a
  variety of audio formats and QuickTime movies without helper
  applications. Several readers have pointed out various browsers
  from InterCon - including NetShark, TCP/Connect II, and the
  browsers used by AOL and eWorld - have handled these formats
  without helper applications for some time. [GD]

http://www.intercon.com/


The TidBITS Server Move
-----------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>

  We moved our main Internet server on 25-Jan-96. It had been at our
  old house, connected to the Internet through the 56K frame relay
  line that we'd set up while we were living there. Even though we
  moved four months ago, US West has been incapable of providing us
  with a dedicated Internet connection via ISDN or frame relay, or
  even a second analog voice line. Among US West's many problems are
  a combination of utter incompetence, horrible customer service,
  and a legitimate lack of facilities.

  We didn't want to move the server twice (once to a temporary
  location and then to our new house) because of the disruption in
  service, but after four months we decided we'd been strung along
  long enough. We'll figure out our setup again when US West finally
  gets us a dedicated Internet connection, but - for the moment -
  our server is sitting happily at the office of Point of Presence,
  a Web-presence company run by our good friend Glenn Fleishman.

http://www.popco.com/

  There are several advantages to siting the server at Glenn's
  offices. Glenn has a T-1 connection to the Internet, and T-1's
  1.544 Mbps speed is much faster than our 56 Kbps connection was.
  The speed will be nice, and an important side-effect is that we've
  finally been able to recover the www.tidbits.com name for the
  server. Long before we had the dedicated connection and our own
  server, we set up that name to point to a machine called
  oneworld.wa.com, which served files related to the second editions
  of Internet Starter Kit for Macintosh and Internet Starter Kit for
  Windows. I wasn't sure our 56K line could handle the load, even
  after setting up files to redirect folks to Hayden's Web site
  (which didn't exist when we first set up this scheme). But, now
  that our Apple Internet Server 6150 is behind Glenn's T-1 line,
  we're confident it can take the traffic. So, from now on, use the
  URL below to get to our Web site:

http://www.tidbits.com/

  The new IP number of the machine is 205.199.66.6, but it's
  conceivable your local domain name server hasn't yet realized
  this. If you do a domain name lookup with Peter Lewis's MacTCP
  Watcher on king.tidbits.com and get the old number
  (204.57.157.13), you won't be able to connect to our machine and
  email to us may not work. There are two possible solutions. First,
  if you're using a Mac and had connected to king.tidbits.com before
  last Thursday but haven't rebooted, MacTCP will have cached the IP
  number. Rebooting should clear the cache, but throwing out MacTCP
  DNR from the System Folder (it will be rebuilt on reboot) and
  rebooting should be the definitive method of clearing the cache.
  Second, if the problem lies with your provider's domain name
  servers, ask your provider to do a name daemon restart, which
  clears the cache of recently visited sites on your host machine.
  To judge from the traffic we're seeing, most people aren't having
  trouble, but this advice may be generically useful as well.

  We've been working on a mirroring project to increase access to
  TidBITS via the Web and to avoid problems when a site cannot
  update issues (as happened with Dartmouth Web site at the end of
  last year). Basically, we've set up a directory containing HTML
  versions of our issues (since TidBITS-274_ currently, but they'll
  all be converted eventually) along with graphics and a navigation
  page. That directory is available for anyone to mirror as long as
  the Web site in question is free for public use. If you're
  interested mirroring TidBITS issues, send me email at
  <ace@tidbits.com>.


The Sun Also Hovers
-------------------
  by Geoff Duncan <geoff@tidbits.com>

  Last Tuesday, the Mac world went into a tailspin when the Wall
  Street Journal reported on Sun Microsystems' efforts to buy Apple,
  saying that a deal was "imminent" between the two companies. Over
  the years, Apple has been approached by many buyers (including a
  serious offer from IBM two years ago), but this time the rumor
  mill revved into overdrive, aided in no small part by the Internet
  and any number of people saying they'd heard from "inside sources"
  that it was a done deal. Rumors were further bolstered by CEO
  Michael Spindler and Chairman A.C. Mike Markkula's performance at
  a crowded shareholder's meeting, which was long on generalizations
  and short on specifics of how Apple plans to return to
  profitability.

  As usual, reports of Apple's sale have been somewhat exaggerated.
  At this time, no deal has been struck between Sun and Apple, and
  talks are apparently breaking down. According to published
  reports, the main sticking point has been price, with Sun CEO
  Scott McNealy offering $23 a share for Apple in a stock swap deal,
  and Apple asking for $33 per share. Since Apple must keep
  shareholders in mind, Apple would have a hard time accepting less
  than market price for the stock, and Sun may now be playing a
  waiting game to see how low Apple's stock goes before revising its
  offer. Although buoyed last week by rumors of a Sun takeover,
  Apple's stock price has been declining and is around $29 a share
  as of this writing.

  Today, Apple took out full-page ads in a dozen U.S. newspapers,
  urging customers to "keep the faith" and emphasizing that the "top
  priority of Apple's board and management team is to take action to
  prepare Apple for its next chapter of growth and profitability."
  Meanwhile, rumors are circulating that Apple might be looking for
  another buyer, such as Motorola or Sony. Reportedly, former
  suitors Oracle and IBM are not interested.

  Historically, reports of Apple being sold to another company are
  almost predictable in their regularity - heck, with a good
  calendar program, you can probably pencil in when the next rumors
  are likely to start. Though some feel Apple and Sun would be a
  good match, others note the $6 billion Sun is smaller than the $11
  billion Apple and that buying Apple would dilute earnings for some
  time. It's also worth noting that though Apple posted a $69
  million loss last quarter and is expected to post a larger loss
  next quarter, PC clone maker AST Research, Inc. posted a net loss
  of $128.6 million for its second quarter, and Unisys Corporation
  reported a whopping $676.8 million loss for the final quarter of
  1995, which includes the cost of eliminating nearly 8,000
  employees. Both companies had net revenues in 1995 that were
  considerably smaller than Apple's, which serves to point out that
  Apple doesn't have a problem bringing in money but rather with
  turning a profit. It's unclear how a merger with Sun (or another
  company) would allow Apple to increase its profit margin without
  alienating its remarkably loyal customer base.

  BusinessWeek's latest issue did a cover article about Apple's
  problems, and Neil Ticktin <publisher@mactech.com>, publisher of
  the Macintosh developer magazine MacTech, weighed in with some
  interesting comments.

  "It never ceases to amaze me what happens when a media feeding
  frenzy starts. Your latest issue's cover broadcasts: "The Fall of
  an American Icon." This "Icon" had a profitable 1995, increased
  revenues/unit sales, an expanding developer base (the best future
  indicator), superior products, and many strategic moves about to
  come to fruition. Yes, this company had a quarterly loss and
  layoffs (in an industry fraught with similar reports and
  underwhelming profits). But, to paraphrase text deep within the
  article, the loss "won't put much of a dent in its balance sheet"
  and the layoffs "won't match the trauma of 1985."

  "Yes, this company is Apple Computer, Inc. - the company the press
  loves to hate. Compare this article to the same issue's positive
  comments on the "revolution" taking place at Daimler-Benz, which
  reported a $4.2 billion loss for 1995 and is hindering the German
  economy. Yes, Apple has problems to solve, but does this coverage
  seem even-handed?

  "By the way, most of the people I know appreciate the media's help
  in driving down Apple's stock price so we can buy more of it.
  After all, when the press focuses on another topic, we'll be
  laughing all the way to bank as Apple stock goes up."


Price Drops Launch Performa Promotion
-------------------------------------
  by Mark H. Anbinder, News Editor <mha@tidbits.com>

  As part of their Power Payback promotion, Apple has begun a
  "Performa + Printer = Payback" rebate offer that returns $150 to
  anyone in the U.S. purchasing any Performa along with one of
  several Apple printers, ranging from the low-end ImageWriter II
  and StyleWriter 1200 to the new Color LaserWriter 12/600 PS. At
  the same time, Apple announced price reductions on several
  Performa models.

  The Performa offer brings the Power Payback promotion to a wider
  variety of customers than the promotion's first phase, which
  offered $200 to $500 rebates for Power Macintosh 7200s when
  purchased with certain Apple displays or printers, and $150
  rebates for PowerBook laptops when purchased with certain Apple
  printers. These deals are still valid; all three components of the
  Power Payback run through 17-Mar-96.

http://www.apple.com/promo/powerpayback/

  Purchasers have until mid-April to submit their rebate requests,
  which must consist of a form available from dealers plus the
  original dated sales invoice or a legible photocopy.

  Apple meanwhile has reduced both dealer pricing and the "minimum
  advertised pricing," with which the company replaced its suggested
  retail pricing, on several models of the Performa 5200, 6100,
  6200, and 6300 families. End-user pricing should see reductions
  ranging from $75 to $300, not counting the rebates described
  above.

    Apple Computer -- 800/950-7521


Word Macro Viruses Still Out There
----------------------------------
  by Geoff Duncan <geoff@tidbits.com>

  In TidBITS-292_, we reported on cross-platform virus written in
  WordBasic that affected some users of Microsoft Word 6.0, mostly
  on non-Macintosh platforms. Since then, an additional WordBasic
  virus has appeared; although the WordBasic viruses discovered so
  far are not particularly destructive, they present a support
  headache for Macintosh managers, and - according to reports - the
  viruses are becoming more common on the Mac.

  I've found a good deal of information about the viruses online,
  and Microsoft has released a set of anti-virus tools to combat the
  problem.

http://www.research.ibm.com/xw-D953-wconc/
http://ciac.llnl.gov/ciac/notes/Notes12.shtml#WINWORD
ftp://ftp.microsoft.com/softlib/mslfiles/mw1222.hqx

  For the record, the viruses spread as WordBasic macros included in
  Word 6 documents, and - because WordBasic works across platforms -
  the viruses can infect any machine running Word 6, regardless of
  platform. On the Macintosh, the virus **only** affects Microsoft
  Word 6.0 and 6.0.1; earlier versions of Word do not include
  WordBasic and cannot be infected, even when using infected Word 6
  documents from another system. Commercial anti-virus utilities
  like Virex and SAM can detect the viruses, but the freeware
  Disinfectant does not, since it's designed only to pursue viruses
  in machine code form. If you use a commercial anti-virus package,
  contact your vendor if you have questions about detecting
  WordBasic viruses.

  Quick checks with some large corporate and educational Macintosh
  sites using Word 6 didn't reveal widespread concern, although
  incidence varied widely. One source at a large site estimated that
  80 to 90 percent of Macs in the company were infected; conversely,
  several sites reported they'd never seen the viruses on a Mac. An
  educational site reported detecting and removing the viruses "a
  few times a week," and a support manager at a large corporation
  noted the WordBasic viruses appear frequently on Macs in heavily
  cross-platform departments. Several sources noted that Mac users
  think the virus can't spread to the Mac, and thus take no
  preventative measures.

  I've seen no reports of significant damage caused by the viruses;
  the main cost seems to be the time support personnel spend dealing
  with it or purchasing and installing anti-virus software, a task
  apparently sometimes dictated by (in the words of one source)
  "overly paranoid" management. One site reported the virus had
  spread in an infected template file to nearly every employee via
  email. "No one got hurt, but we spent well over a week chasing it
  down, explaining everything, and re-assuring everybody. That
  certainly wasn't cheap." Interestingly, **all** these sources
  spoke to me only on the condition they remain anonymous.

  If you use or support Word 6 in an environment where documents are
  regularly exchanged with others (particularly outside your
  organization), it might be worth investigating how to detect the
  viruses and manage the situation, rather than waiting for a larger
  problem to develop. Microsoft's detection tool takes a while to
  scan a hard disk (especially on a Mac), but you only need to do it
  once. Better safe than sorry.

    Microsoft --  206/635-7200


Invisible Universe
------------------
  by Jon Pugh <jonpugh@netcom.com>

  "Amusing and educational" -  if you could sum up my life after I'm
  gone, I hope both of these words could be used, and it always
  delights me when others follow these precepts. I ran across a
  product recently that did so, and I thought highly enough about it
  to write about it here.

  The product in question is Invisible Universe by Dr. Fiorella
  Terenzi, a CD-ROM describing elements of the universe beyond human
  sight. It's a Voyager disk and lives up to Voyager's quality
  standards; it also has a sense of humor and a high level of
  technical content and accuracy. Considering that Dr. Terenzi is an
  Italian astrophysicist, the technical accuracy isn't too
  surprising, but when you realize that she's also the beautiful
  narrator appearing in all the QuickTime movies, it becomes
  delightful. Her accent charms as she describes the cosmos, ranging
  from a tour of our solar system to the vast reaches of galaxies
  surrounding ours.

http://www.fiorella.com/
http://www.voyagerco.com/CD/ph/p.invisible.html

  The often puckish presentation also amused me - Dr. Terenzi is
  frequently shown standing among the stars, gesturing toward items
  she is discussing. Other times she appears as a floating head
  describing the scene, and at one point she's lying on one of the
  galaxies, so the folks creating the CD-ROM were clearly having
  fun. The movie shoot must have been a blast for everyone involved.

  All of the movies are set to music - it turns out that Dr.
  Terenzi's specialty is taking radio telescope data and setting it
  to music. Invisible Universe uses a full hour of her music
  throughout, and I truly enjoyed it in all the presentations, some
  of which are simply galaxies scrolling by while music plays.

  The Invisible Universe CD-ROM also contains a star map that shows
  the locations of many interesting phenomena. It includes my
  favorite, Eta Carinae, a nova which exploded about 150 years ago
  (see the JPEG image below), as well as a multitude of others I
  haven't managed to explore entirely. Also included are pictures of
  the planets and their moons, complete with descriptions and close-
  ups.

http://www.stsci.edu/pubinfo/jpeg/WFPCEtaCar.jpg

  Finally, Invisible Universe holds a plethora of famous poetry,
  read by famous people, including John Perry Barlow, Herbie
  Hancock, Thomas Dolby, and a poetry duet with Dr. Terenzi and
  Timothy Leary. Although not the most technical content, the poetry
  underscored the light-hearted attitude of the project.

  The $40 Invisible Universe CD-ROM was produced using Macromedia
  Director, and it runs on Macintosh and Windows (check the Voyager
  page listed above for details). If you are interested in astronomy
  or cosmology, I think you'll find it worth a look. Even if you're
  not a major star buff like me, Invisible Universe might give you a
  sense of the cosmos around you.


Get Your Hands on Prograph
--------------------------
  by Matt Neuburg <managing_ed@mactech.com>

  This past August, Pictorius, a company based in Halifax, Nova
  Scotia, announced plans to release a freeware version of its
  flagship product, Prograph. The version appeared in the Info-Mac
  archive in early November. Now it's a funny thing, but when a
  program lists for around $1,500 (as Prograph once did) or even
  $700 (as the current version does), no matter how much I read
  about it, the discussion somehow fails to make any great
  impression upon me. On the other hand, when something is free, I'm
  interested.

ftp://mirror.aol.com/pub/info-mac/dev/prograph-classic.hqx
ftp://mirror.aol.com/pub/info-mac/dev/prograph-reference-manual.hqx
ftp://mirror.aol.com/pub/info-mac/dev/prograph-tutorial-examples.hqx
ftp://mirror.aol.com/pub/info-mac/dev/prograph-tutorial-manual.hqx

[The whole package comes to about 4 MB. -Geoff]

  Prograph is an environment in which you develop computer programs
  graphically. Instead of learning a lot of verbal syntax, so that
  you can (presumably) say and read things like this:

 if (inModelID == SCPage::modelKind) {
   if ( mPagelist -> FetchAItemt(inPosition,&page) ) {
     PutInToken(page,outToken); return; }}

  ...you essentially just draw a diagram showing the flow of data
  from one operation to another. These diagrams are not somehow
  "translated" into a "real" programming language by Prograph; they
  **are** the language.

  I had always been skeptical about Prograph, chiefly because of an
  obvious drawback of its approach: your program can't be documented
  in a small space. What you could express as a few lines of text in
  Pascal or C might take up a whole screen in Prograph. However,
  since it was free I downloaded it, opened the tutorial, and
  plunged in.

  The tutorial is splendid. It's brilliantly written, with a keen
  eye to the thought processes of the reader. Every time I found
  myself thinking, "But what if I'd done it this other way
  instead?", or, "What was that funny-looking symbol you made me use
  there?", a discussion of that very question would follow.

  I soon found that I was having a great time and picking up the
  language with far greater ease than any programming language I had
  ever learned. After I completed the tutorial (which took a few
  days), I fixed on a project to test myself: an elementary card-
  playing program. I had no difficulty creating a "deck" object and
  supplying it with a few "methods," such as getting it to shuffle
  itself, deal a card off its top, and so on. As you may have
  guessed, Prograph is object-oriented, and it makes object-oriented
  programming supremely natural and easy. Each object class is an
  icon, and its methods and attributes seem literally to live inside
  it - double-click a class icon, and a window with its methods or
  attributes appears. This is vastly better than describing an
  object textually in C++; it's more like HyperCard, where the
  script of a button lives inside the button.

  Then I decided to get fancier and start putting up some menus and
  windows like a real Macintosh program. Prograph has an Application
  framework that takes care of the basic Mac interface for you: it
  comes with classes and methods (written in Prograph, of course)
  that handle the event loop (responding to mouse clicks and drags
  in menus and windows) and has an easy graphical menu and window
  editor so you can just draw the window you want your program to
  use (without having to resort to ResEdit). However, I soon
  realized that you don't get to throw away your multi-volume
  collection of Inside Macintosh. I wanted to put up a "thermometer"
  progress window, which the user could watch while my deck was
  shuffling. I got the window to come up when the shuffling started,
  and to vanish when it ended, but for some reason no drawing was
  getting done: the thermometer wasn't appearing. Finally, I
  discovered the problem: I had to put up the window and then stop,
  letting the event loop take over, and let the repeated Null events
  trigger Idle actions that would advance the thermometer, just as
  you might do if you were writing the same routine in C. Once I did
  this, the thermometer worked perfectly. So, if you want to write a
  Mac program with Prograph you still must learn to program the Mac;
  Prograph doesn't take care of everything for you the way HyperCard
  does. I can tell you from experience, though, having tried to
  write the same sort of program in C++ that Prograph is vastly
  easier.

  I found the writing process incredibly fun, because the Prograph
  milieu is totally dynamic. You don't have to get every single
  routine right in order to try out a program; there's no compiler
  that won't let you get started if you don't have everything just
  so. Instead, you start running your program, and if it makes an
  "error" Prograph pauses and lets you fix it. For instance, when I
  wrote my shuffle thermometer, I wrote the loop that advances the
  thermometer, but I didn't bother to say what was supposed to
  happen when the loop had iterated the total number of times. So I
  started my program, and after advancing the thermometer, Prograph
  stopped and put up a dialog saying, in effect, "You need a routine
  here that you haven't written. Would you like to write it?" I said
  "yes," wrote the routine (to close the thermometer window), and
  Prograph then picked up in my program exactly where it had left
  off, and proceeded to close the window! Even cooler, you can pause
  a running program and examine what data is being handled; thus,
  your "code" (the data-flow diagram you drew) becomes its own
  debugging tool. If you find an error, you can insert a corrected
  value, or back to some earlier routine that caused the problem and
  rewrite it (in which case Prograph rolls back to that earlier
  point and carries on from there).

  I can't say enough about how neat, easy, and satisfying I found
  Prograph, but I can't describe it adequately, either; in fact, no
  description I've read has done it justice. You have to experience
  it. Even if you've never done any programming -  perhaps
  **especially** if you've never done any programming - you'll pick
  it up right away.

  The freeware release, called Prograph Classic, isn't crippled; it
  was the current version once upon a time. The only hitch is that
  if you want to save a program as stand-alone (instead of running
  it at low speed inside the Prograph interpreter), you must buy a
  compiler for a mere $25, which Pictorius calls a shareware fee and
  has promised to donate to charity. Once you're familiar with
  Prograph Classic, if you're curious about newer versions, check
  out:

http://www.mactech.com/Articles/Vol.10/10.03/Prograph-Review.bhtml
http://www.mactech.com/Articles/Vol.10/10.11/Prograph-CPX-Tutorial.bhtml

  I'm not saying you'll rush out and spring for the current version,
  but I think you'll agree that Prograph is to programming as
  Macintosh is to computers. The Pictorius folks are to be strongly
  commended - and thanked - for this free release, a gift that lets
  Mac users have a wonderful experience they would otherwise be
  denied. More software companies should pursue this policy of
  releasing outdated versions as freeware.

http://www.pictorius.com/

  [Addendum: EveryDay Objects, Inc. has developed a set of Internet
  classes and primitives for Prograph that have been used to make a
  Web server that queries a database and returns Web pages generated
  on the fly - their demo at Macworld Expo was pretty neat. - Geoff]

http://www.pla-net.net/edo/


Reviews/29-Jan-96
-----------------

* MacWEEK -- 22-Jan-96, Vol. 10, #3
    Ray Dream Studio -- pg. 67
    Big Business 1.0.2 -- pg. 67
    Jabra for Macintosh -- pg. 68


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 http://wais.sensei.com.au/searchform.html
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