TidBITS#622/25-Mar-02
=====================

  Missing Mac OS 9 functionality in Mac OS X? Check out Adam's
  roundup of Mac OS X utilities that replace that Mac OS 9 look-and-
  feel. Mark Anbinder covers Apple's Macworld Tokyo announcements of
  a 23" LCD display, a 10 GB iPod, Bluetooth support, and iMac price
  increases. Then Gideon Greenspan joins us with an overview of how
  computers are used in biology. Finally, two important Mac OS X
  releases fill out the issue: Retrospect 5.0 and Mailsmith 1.5.

Topics:
    MailBITS/25-Mar-02
    New Cinema Display, iPod, Bluetooth, iMac Price
    Top Mac OS X Utilities: Restoring Mac OS 9 Functionality
    Bioinformatics and the Mac

<http://www.tidbits.com/tb-issues/TidBITS-622.html>
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MailBITS/25-Mar-02
------------------

**Retrospect 5.0 Backs Up Mac OS X** -- Dantz Development is
  shipping Retrospect 5.0, which runs on either Mac OS 9 or Mac OS X
  and can back up and restore both operating systems. Although the
  Herculean task of supporting full backup and restore of Mac OS
  X-based Macs prevented Dantz from adding significant new features
  in Retrospect 5.0, it does include other welcome changes. File
  backup sets are no longer constrained by resource fork size
  limitations, so you can realistically use hard drives as backup
  media; files larger than 2 GB can now be backed up; and more
  backup devices are supported (including all currently shipping
  Apple optical drives). Retrospect ships in four different
  versions, each with different capabilities and prices. All
  versions are available immediately from Dantz; resellers should
  have them soon. French, German, and Japanese localized versions
  are scheduled for release in the second quarter of 2002, and
  international users can upgrade an English version purchased now
  to the corresponding localized product for free when it becomes
  available. [ACE]

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


**Mailsmith Joins Native Email Clients** -- Mac OS X users looking
  for a powerful email application to replace Apple's bundled Mail
  program can now add Bare Bones Software's Mailsmith 1.5 to the
  list of choices. New features in Mailsmith 1.5 include one-step
  filter creation, support for draft messages, approximate text
  translation of HTML messages, random signature support, the
  capability to display image and movie attachments within
  Mailsmith, a Glossary feature for inserting frequently used bits
  of boilerplate text, improved scripting and grep functionality,
  keyboard assignments for scripts and stationery, and more.
  Upgrades from previous versions of Mailsmith cost $40 (free for
  copies purchased in 2002); the program retails for $100, with a
  limited-time discount price of $70 until 31-May-02, after which it
  will be replaced with an $80 price for owners of BBEdit, Emailer,
  or Eudora. A free demo is available as an 8.2 MB download. [ACE]

<http://www.barebones.com/products/mailsmith.html>


**Palm Desktop 4.0 Released** -- Palm, Inc. today made Palm
  Desktop 4.0 for Macintosh available as a free download. The new
  version adds Mac OS X compatibility, support for records marked
  private, and the capability to import and export vCard and vCal
  files. (As a quick example of vCard use, you can drag a contact's
  title bar icon directly to the Contacts folder of a mounted iPod
  to add it to the rudimentary address book feature added in last
  week's iPod 1.1 software update.) Palm Desktop 4.0 is a 10 MB
  download. [JLC]

<http://www.palm.com/software/desktop/mac.html>


**TidBITS Moves Up in Best of Mac Web Survey** -- In the Low End
  Mac Web site's third Best of the Mac Web survey, TidBITS moved
  up from 5th to 3rd in user ratings. As with the last time, we
  came in behind VersionTracker and As the Apple Turns, but in this
  installment of the survey, we managed to move past MacSurfer's
  Headline News and MacFixIt, which fell to 10th place (Low End Mac
  speculated the drop may be due to MacFixIt's new subscription
  model). Other notable changes include the rise of the Mac Minute
  news site from 11th to 6th place, and the drop of The Mac Show
  from 15th to 50th after the loss of Shawn King, whose new Your
  Mac Life radio show ranked 18th. Although the Best of the Mac Web
  survey is an unabashed popularity contest, the more times it
  occurs, the more the changes from one survey to another prove
  interesting. Thanks to all of you who voted in this installment
  of the survey! [ACE]

<http://lowendmac.com/botmw/020321.html>


New Cinema Display, iPod, Bluetooth, and iMac Prices
----------------------------------------------------
  by Mark H. Anbinder <mha@tidbits.com>

  Apple CEO Steve Jobs last week unveiled two new products in his
  keynote address at Macworld Expo in Tokyo. A new 23-inch Apple
  Cinema HD Display with 1920 x 1200 resolution joins the company's
  existing LCD flat-panel displays and will sell for $3,500 when it
  becomes available next month. (In contast, the 22-inch Apple
  Cinema Display, still available for $2,500, offers a mere 1600
  by 1024 resolution.) The company says the new display's resolution
  will allow editing of HDTV (high definition television) digital
  video "with room to spare." At the same time, Apple introduced
  a more capacious iPod, a $500 version of the portable MP3 player
  with a 10 GB internal hard drive, available immediately. The
  existing 5 GB model remains available for $400. For an extra $50,
  either model can be personalized at the Apple Store with laser
  engraving of two lines of text containing up to 27 characters
  each.

<http://www.apple.com/displays/acd23/>
<http://www.apple.com/displays/acd22/>
<http://www.apple.com/ipod/>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=06608>

  Jobs also previewed Apple's upcoming support for Bluetooth. The
  short-range wireless communication technology is intended to link
  personal electronic devices such as computers, cell phones, and
  personal digital assistants when they're in close proximity.
  Promising "a Bluetooth solution that actually works and is easy
  to use," Jobs said that, in early April 2002, Mac OS X users will
  be able to download free preview software from Apple's Web site
  for use with the D-Link USB Bluetooth adapter, itself to be
  offered at the Apple Store for $50. Apple's Bluetooth software
  will automatically recognize other Bluetooth devices that come
  into range and offer to connect to them.

<http://www.apple.com/bluetooth/>
<http://www.bluetooth.com/>

  At the same event, Jobs made the surprise announcement that,
  effective 21-Mar-02, current flat-panel iMac configurations have
  _increased_ in price by $100; orders placed prior to that date
  retain the price at the time of order. Citing rising component
  costs for memory and flat-panel screens, Jobs defended the price
  hikes as a better alternative to keeping the original pricing but
  reducing features. Given the demand for the new iMac, we don't see
  the price increase as a deal-killer: Apple says it has shipped
  125,000 new iMacs since the model's introduction in January and
  is now shipping 5,000 iMacs per day.

<http://www.apple.com/pr/library/2002/mar/20imac.html>


Top Mac OS X Utilities: Restoring Mac OS 9 Functionality
--------------------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>

  Everyone knows that the group that's by far the most important to
  Apple is composed of small utility developers. Several years back,
  Apple saw that the Mac market was stagnating because almost every
  conceivable utility had already been developed. Realizing drastic
  resuscitation measures were necessary, Apple moved quickly to
  replace the Mac OS with the NeXTstep-based Mac OS X, hoping to
  give Mac developers the opportunity to restore Mac OS 9
  functionality to Mac OS X and further extend Mac OS X's limited
  interface, to draw Unix hackers into the Mac camp, and to provide
  a market for all seven NeXT utility developers.

  Sarcasm aside, the number of utilities available for Mac OS X
  has indeed mushroomed of late. In preparing for this article, we
  turned to TidBITS Talk for recommendations, and the response was
  overwhelming - so much so that we've decided to publish a group
  of articles on the topic; this one will focus on utilities that
  restore Mac OS 9 functionality to Mac OS X. Read through the
  TidBITS Talk discussion for an unfiltered view of what's
  coming up.

<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tlkthrd=1497+1600>

  Without further ado, here are the top utilities for restoring Mac
  OS 9 functionality to Mac OS X, though please note that these are
  not intended to be full-fledged reviews - we simply don't have
  enough experience with each utility. If we've missed your favorite
  utility, bring it up on TidBITS Talk.


**WindowShade X** -- The windowshade functionality that's been in
  the Mac OS since System 7.5 actually dates back to an independent
  control panel for System 6 from Robert Johnson. Double-click a
  window's title bar or click the collapse box and the window "rolls
  up" into the title bar. You can still position the title bar
  anywhere on screen; it's an efficient way to reduce the space
  taken up by windows. Mac OS X eliminated this approach in favor
  of minimizing windows to Dock icons. Unfortunately, Mac OS X's
  approach fills up the Dock quickly, and it can often be difficult
  to distinguish between different minimized windows. But with
  Unsanity's WindowShade X, you get everything Mac OS 9 could do
  and more. There are four methods of invoking WindowShade X (the
  minimize button, double-clicking the title bar, Control-double-
  clicking the title bar, and pressing Command-M), and each method
  can cause a window to minimize to the Dock, roll up into the
  title bar, make the window transparent, or hide the application.
  Although you can control the opacity of windows made transparent,
  I find that option, like almost all other transparent interface
  features in Mac OS X, utterly annoying. WindowShade X is $7
  shareware, and it's a 374K download.

<http://www.unsanity.com/haxies.php>


**ASM & X-Assist** -- In Mac OS X, Apple tried to do too much with
  the Dock, making it serve as an application launcher, list of
  running applications, and more. Mac OS 9 broke those features out,
  and in particular, the list of running applications was always
  tucked away in the menu bar's application menu. In Mac OS X, the
  clock and other menu bar icons take over that space until you
  install ASM or X-Assist, both of which return the application menu
  to the upper right corner. In ASM's preferences panel, you choose
  whether it should show as an icon or a menu title, or both, and
  how much space the menu should take up. Other settings control how
  the contents of the ASM menu appear, what special commands (such
  as for hiding and showing applications) appear, and so on. Most
  important, it offers a return to Mac OS 9's window layering, which
  ties all of an application's windows together, so clicking one
  brings them all to the front (that happens in Mac OS X only if you
  click the application's Dock icon or switch applications using
  Command-Tab). ASM also offers a Single Application Mode that hides
  all applications other than the current one. X-Assist replicates
  most of ASM's feature set and offers two additional features: the
  capability to display a user-defined hierarchical menu of files,
  folders, and disks (much as you can do in Mac OS 9's Apple menu),
  and support for special plug-ins (the included samples can set
  the Mac's volume and play MP3 files). Though both appear to work,
  several people have said that they found ASM more stable. ASM
  author Frank Vercruesse asks for donations if you like ASM, which
  is a 354K download for version 2.0.2; X-Assist is free and is a
  291K download.

<http://asm.vercruesse.de/>
<http://members.ozemail.com.au/~pli/x-assist/>


**FruitMenu & Classic Menu** -- The Apple menu has been a fixture
  of the Mac OS for years, and although Apple wisely kept it in Mac
  OS X, it's a shadow of its former customizable self. Two
  utilities, Sig Software's Classic Menu and Unsanity's FruitMenu,
  recall the old days. Classic Menu is the simpler of the two; it
  merely displays the contents of the Classic Menu Items folder
  located in your Library folder's Preferences folder. Populate
  it with aliases to files, folders, and disks, and you'll have
  something that works much like the old Apple menu when you click
  on the Apple menu icon itself. Other helpful menu items add
  aliases of selected items to the Classic Menu Items folder, open
  that folder in the Finder, and let you select a different folder
  to use. Access the default Mac OS X Apple menu (which has useful
  commands like Log Out and Restart) by clicking right next to the
  Apple menu icon. Although FruitMenu provides the same
  functionality as Classic Menu, it more closely resembles Power
  On Software's Action Menus in providing a preference panel for
  arranging your Apple menu and offering custom items not normally
  available, such as one that displays your current IP address.
  Overall, FruitMenu feels a bit more powerful, and it's only $7
  shareware, compared to Classic Menu's $10, but both will do the
  job. FruitMenu 1.5.2 is a 481K download; Classic Menu is a mere
  43K download.

<http://www.unsanity.com/haxies.php>
<http://www.sigsoftware.com/classicmenu/>


**SharePoints** -- In Mac OS 9, you could share any particular
  folder you wanted, and you could create users and groups that
  would have access to different folders. That functionality, though
  present under the hood in Mac OS X, wasn't easily accessible until
  the release of SharePoints. Operating either as a stand-alone
  application or as a preferences panel, SharePoints lets you share
  any given folder and create users who can access specific shared
  folders but who cannot login via Telnet or SSH and who lack home
  directories. As a small bonus, SharePoints lets you specify a
  custom message to be displayed to users on connection. The author
  asks that for donations if you like SharePoints; SharePoints
  2.0.4 is an 824K download.

<http://homepage.mac.com/mhorn/>


**Xounds** -- Although Apple has only dabbled in interface sounds,
  the sound effects for interface actions available from the
  Appearance control panel were effective at providing an additional
  dimension to using the Mac OS. Those disappeared in Mac OS X, but
  Unsanity's Xounds can bring many of them back again. Xounds offers
  to import existing sound sets (though importing a third-party
  set and switching between it and the sounds from Mac OS 9 caused
  Xounds to stop working until I reinstalled Xounds), and provides
  roughly the same level of control as you had in Mac OS 9. You can
  choose to play sound effects associated with menus, windows,
  controls, and the Finder, although dragging sounds aren't yet
  supported. Xounds 1.1.2 is a 384K download; it's $7 shareware
  and works for only an hour per login if left unregistered.

<http://www.unsanity.com/haxies.php>


**Next Up** -- Keep in mind that I chose these utilities based
  purely on the fact that they returned features to Mac OS X
  that existed in a stock installation of Mac OS 9. In future
  installments in this series, I'll look at utilities that extend
  Mac OS X's new features in useful and interesting ways, utilities
  that bring to Mac OS X features that independent developers had
  added to Mac OS 9, and utilities that bring Mac OS X's Unix
  underpinnings into the light of Aqua.


Bioinformatics and the Mac
--------------------------
  by Gideon Greenspan <gdg@sigsoftware.com>

  Those of us with even a passing interest in science are used to
  the idea that computers play a central role in understanding
  physics and chemistry, especially high-powered computation used
  in areas such as weather prediction and molecular visualization.
  However, over the past few years, a new target for that
  computation has emerged and begun to attract media attention.
  It's called computational biology (or more catchy, bioinformatics)
  and it refers to the digital storage, categorization, and
  analysis of biological data.

  If your most recent encounter with biology took place in high
  school, you may be surprised by any such crossover with computing.
  Although I always found it fascinating, I remember biology never
  quite having the rigor of its counterparts in the science
  curriculum. Some cells did this, other cells had that, and
  different organisms did all sorts of strange things, especially
  when dissected by over-enthusiastic schoolchildren. But there
  seemed to be few universal principles equivalent in scope to
  Newton's equations or the periodic table of elements.


**Digitizing Life** -- Thanks to the wonders of molecular biology,
  many such fundamentals are now known to exist. An overview of some
  of the basics should give an impression of what is involved - bear
  in mind that we're dealing with the natural world in all its
  complexity, so everything that follows has been vastly simplified.

  Life as we know it is encoded in a set of long molecules called
  DNA, identical copies of which are found in every cell in a living
  organism such as a human being. Everything that happens within an
  organism can be traced back to its DNA - just like the hard disk
  in a computer. In humans, each cell contains 46 separate DNA
  molecules called chromosomes, analogous perhaps to hard disk
  partitions. Your chromosomes contain a mixture of information
  duplicated from those of your parents, which is one reason why
  you inherited so many of their characteristics.

  Any one DNA molecule consists of a series of connected nucleotides
  forming a chain that can run to lengths of many millions. There
  are only four possible nucleotides, so any DNA molecule can be
  represented as a sequence using only four letters. This is where
  the digitization begins - the entire set of chromosomes for a
  human being can be stored in a few gigabytes of space (even less
  after compression) and you can even download a recent draft to
  your own computer.

<ftp://ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/genomes/H_sapiens/>

  According to present-day understanding, only a fraction of your
  DNA has a purpose - the other 98 percent or so is affectionately
  named "junk." The meaningful bits, known as genes, are short
  stretches scattered unevenly throughout the chromosomes (think of
  them as fragmented program files, if you like). They can be pretty
  hard to find - we currently have confirmed the existence of about
  15,000 human genes, but scientists are still bickering over the
  total number - most estimates lie around 30,000. There's even a
  sweepstakes where you can add your own guess.

<http://www.ensembl.org/Genesweep/>

  Genes are interesting because machinery in the cell translates
  them into another type of molecule called proteins. These proteins
  perform the organism's real metabolic work and can be thought of
  as currently running programs. A protein molecule contains a
  series of connected amino acids forming a chain, similar to how
  nucleotides make up DNA. However, in contrast to DNA, proteins
  are made from 20 different amino acids and are rarely more than
  a few thousand such elements in length. Sequences of proteins
  are another type of digital data that bioinformatics regularly
  deals with.

  How are these proteins able to do all the work set out for them:
  building cells, transporting materials, sending signals and
  carefully managing each cell's energy factory? When released into
  a cell's watery innards, proteins fold up upon themselves, forming
  a huge variety of shapes that make them connect to other proteins
  and molecules in specific ways, catalyzing any number of chemical
  reactions. Trying to work out which shape a particular protein
  sequence will fold into is an extremely difficult problem. A
  biannual contest called CASP (a shortened acronym for Critical
  Assessment of Techniques for Protein Structure Prediction) is
  held between different research groups around the world, and
  IBM is building its fastest ever supercomputer to work on it,
  at a hoped-for rate of no more than one protein per year.

<http://predictioncenter.llnl.gov/>
<http://www.research.ibm.com/bluegene/>

  Again, this is just a basic overview. If you're thirsting for more
  information on molecular genetics, the U.S. Human Genome Project
  has published a good online primer.

<http://www.ornl.gov/hgmis/publicat/primer/toc.html>


**Open-Sourcing the Human Being** -- With the basic biology lesson
  out of the way, let's talk about how bioinformatics applies to the
  real world. One bioinformatics application you've probably heard
  of is the Human Genome Project. Its seemingly simple goal is to
  read the roughly three billion nucleotides that make up the human
  set of chromosomes. This is made possible by the fact that, even
  though there are millions of points at which healthy human DNA
  sequences can differ from one another, every one of us is
  identical in the other 99.9 percent of points. If you find that
  scary (or perhaps inspiring), remember that your DNA is also
  about 99 percent identical to the chimp at your local zoo.

  Discussions on the genome project began in 1984, but it was not
  until 1995 that the work began in earnest via an international
  collaboration of publicly funded laboratories in the United
  States, United Kingdom, France, Japan, Germany, and China. The
  public project moved along slowly until 1999 when Celera Genomics,
  a private venture, joined the fray. Armed with an improved
  experimental method and gobs of computing power, Celera promised
  to complete a first draft of the genome within a year. After much
  politicized mud slinging, a deal was made and the two groups'
  results were published simultaneously in February 2001.

<http://www.ornl.gov/hgmis/>
<http://www.celera.com/>

  What does all this have to do with bioinformatics? For a start,
  computers were required to store and index the resulting sequences
  and make them available to researchers around the world over the
  Internet. But the real algorithmic problem stemmed from the way
  in which DNA molecules have to be read. In the biological world,
  there is no such thing as a debugger which lets you freeze a cell
  and poke around inside, observing and manipulating at will.
  Instead, a series of steps must be cleverly combined for a
  scientist to gain access to a desired item of information.

  For any DNA molecule, only about the first 1,000 nucleotides can
  be ascertained using available laboratory techniques. Longer
  sequences are scanned by making several copies of the molecule
  and breaking these up randomly into short fragments, each of which
  is read separately. The original order of these fragments is lost,
  so, after reading them, there remains the task of reconstructing
  the original sequence. It's not unlike trying to rebuild an
  encyclopedia using a few photocopies which have been run through
  an office shredder - the number of possibilities to be tried is
  vast. Forget about trying to do it by hand - Celera's draft build
  required about a week of running time on a 56-processor array
  with over 100 GB of memory.

  The Human Genome Project is a classic example of a bioinformatics
  problem, and scientists are hopeful that the results will have
  many practical effects. An immediate consequence is increased
  speed in the development of new medicines by enabling scientists
  to hone in quickly on potential drug target genes. It can also
  be expected to lead the way to personalized health care, as
  relationships are discovered between the genetic variations
  that exist between human beings and our susceptibility to
  certain diseases or treatment responses.

  In the distant future, it opens up the possibility of curing
  disease and even tweaking ourselves through direct manipulation
  of our DNA. Naturally, the ethical issues raised are daunting and
  could wreak havoc with our basic notion of what it is to be a
  human being. However, this is also an area where the field of
  bioinformatics will shine: the storage, categorization, and
  analysis of the data promises to better inform the people who
  will be dealing with these ethical issues.


**Apples are Growing** -- As interesting as all the above may be,
  you may be wondering what bioinformatics has to do with the
  Macintosh. Macs are already playing a large role in the
  bioinformatics domain and will probably continue to do so.
  Firstly, as with any other sector filled with independently
  thinking individuals, the scientific community has a high
  proportion of Mac users. This has been particularly true in
  biology, where until recently versatile graphics capabilities
  have been more important than raw computing power.

  Nonetheless, until recently the Macintosh had one critical
  limitation regarding its long-term suitability in the field:
  the natural preference of bioinformaticians for Unix-based
  platforms. This is firstly a result of the availability of
  free, reliable Unix tools such as perl and grep, which make
  it highly suitable for processing large quantities of text-
  oriented data. Furthermore, since the explosion of activity
  in computational biology began around 1995, exactly when the
  Internet was establishing itself as a mainstream platform
  for scientific collaboration, the vast majority of bioinformatics
  applications run over the Internet. Unix's stable and efficient
  implementation of TCP/IP, in conjunction with the free Apache
  Web server, make it ideal for providing these Web-based services.
  For some idea of what's available, take a look at the site of
  the American National Center for Biotechnology Information.

<http://www.bioperl.org/>
<http://www.apache.org/>
<http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/>

  It should be fairly obvious where this takes us: Mac OS X, soon to
  be the mainstream Macintosh operating system, is not only based on
  Unix but provides full support for all of its tools - perl, grep,
  and Apache included. On its own, this does not necessarily place
  it ahead of other Unix platforms. But if we add the fact that it
  contains a modern user interface and runs desktop applications
  such as Microsoft Office and modern Web browsers, it's not hard to
  see why Mac OS X is a natural choice for bioinformatics servers
  and desktops. This has been noted in several places, including an
  O'Reilly Network article and an Apple viewpoint article. It's also
  proven to be more than wishful thinking: Genentech, the company
  that ordered 1,000 new iMacs (and whose Chairman and CEO is one
  of Apple's board members), is one of the founders of the
  biotechnology industry.

<http://www.oreillynet.com/pub/a/mac/2001/12/14/macbio.html>
<http://www.apple.com/scitech/stories/osxporting/>
<http://www.genentech.com/>

  A further bonus for Macs is that the PowerPC G4 processor, with
  its Velocity Engine processing unit, is ideal for many types of
  biological computations. BLAST (short for Basic Local Alignment
  Search Tool) is probably the most popular bioinformatics tool
  available today. It takes the sequence of a DNA or protein
  molecule as input and searches for other known molecules which
  are likely to be connected in evolutionary origin or biological
  function. Apple's Advanced Computation Group, in collaboration
  with others, developed a high-throughput version of BLAST, which
  they claim makes a dual 1 GHz Power Mac G4 up to five times faster
  than a PC with a 2 GHz Pentium 4 processor. Fast BLAST searches
  are crucial to today's biologists.

<http://www.apple.com/pr/library/2002/feb/07blast.html>


**Try This at Home** -- There is at least one way in which all Mac
  users can get involved in computational biology. A project named
  Folding@Home, developed in the same style as U.C. Berkeley's
  alien-searching SETI@home, lets you contribute to a distributed
  effort to calculate the physical structure of protein sequences.
  Folding@Home's Mac OS X client, a screensaver and application,
  is now available and provides a real-time graphical view of the
  structures being tested.

<http://folding.stanford.edu/>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=05401>

  That aside, unless you happen to be involved in the academic
  or commercial computational biology world, the bioinformatics
  revolution will remain, for now, a distant blip on your daily
  horizon. But don't expect it to stay there forever - if the
  promise of the field is even partially fulfilled, you will
  start seeing its effects seeping into your daily life.

<http://www.ornl.gov/hgmis/education/education.html>
<http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/Education/>
<http://dmoz.org/Science/Biology/Bioinformatics/Education/>

  [In one life, Gideon Greenspan is the persona behind Sig Software,
  a Macintosh shareware company which develops products such as Drop
  Drawers, Classic Menu, Email Effects, and NameCleaner. In the
  other, he is a Ph.D. student of bioinformatics in the Computer
  Science department of Israel's Technion. He hopes one day to
  overcome this dichotomy!]

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



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