TidBITS#387/07-Jul-97
=====================

  Wondering what it would be like to own a Twentieth Anniversary
  Macintosh? Tonya shares her one-day experience. Also in this
  issue, we note a new version of Disinfectant, a low price for
  LetterRip 2.0, explain why Power Computing plans to sell Intel-
  based computers, and highlight resources for those interested in
  Internet security. Reviews this week include Broderbund's Family
  Tree Maker and CyberStudio from GoLive Systems.

Topics:
    MailBITS/07-Jul-97
    The 20th Anniversary Mac Comes for Tea
    I Dream of Genealogy: Family Tree Maker
    Spinning the Web Part 4: CyberStudio

<http://www.tidbits.com/tb-issues/TidBITS-387.html>
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Copyright 1997 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>
   Makers of M*Power Mac OS compatibles & premium storage devices.
   APS price lists: <http://www.apstech.com/aps-products.html>

* Northwest Nexus -- 800/539-3505 -- <http://www.nwnexus.com/>
   Professional Internet Services. <info@nwnexus.com>

* Power Computing -- 800/375-7693 -- <info@powercc.com>
   PowerTower Pro 250 MHz - the fastest desktop system ever.
   Build Your Own Box online! <http://www.powercc.com/>

* Small Dog Electronics -- Special Deal for TidBITS Readers!
   Power Mac 8500/180 - Factory refurbished, FREE Keyboard: $1999
   For Details: <http://www.smalldoggy.com/#tid> -- 802/496-7171

* StarNine Technologies -- 800/525-2580 -- <info@starnine.com>
   Top Internet tools: WebSTAR, WebCollage, ListSTAR, and more.
   WebCatalog 2.0 free eval! <http://www.starnine.com/webcatalog/>
   ---------------------------------------------------------------

MailBITS/07-Jul-97
------------------

**Disinfectant 3.7** -- John Norstad has released version 3.7 of
  his venerable anti-virus utility Disinfectant, this time to combat
  a variation on the MBDF B virus that was detected correctly by the
  Disinfectant INIT, but not by the application itself. Disinfectant
  3.7 is also savvier about locked disks and network volumes, and
  now includes an up-front warning that Disinfectant does not
  recognize macro viruses (see TidBITS-385_). [GD]

<ftp://ftp.acns.nwu.edu/pub/disinfectant/disinfectant37.sea.hqx>


**LetterRip 2.0 Now $95** -- When we reported on the release of
  Fog City Software's LetterRip 2.0 last week in TidBITS-386_, Fog
  City hadn't announced its introductory pricing of $95 through
  15-Aug-97, a good bit less than the $295 list price. [ACE]

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


**Power to the Public** -- Last week, documents filed by Power
  Computing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission
  revealed that Power Computing plans to become a publicly held
  company with an initial offering of about three million shares of
  stock. The documents also reveal that Power Computing plans to
  make Intel-based computers in addition to its extensive line of
  Mac-compatible machines.

  In typical fashion, mainstream media interpreted the SEC filing to
  mean Power Computing was "switching" to Intel, ignoring the
  documents' emphasis on Power Computing's Macintosh business. The
  SEC filings also reveal the complete text of its previously
  confidential Mac OS licensing and certification deal with Apple,
  and also that Power has obtained a more limited Mac OS license
  from IBM, presumably in case negotiations with Apple break down.
  Power's plans to make Intel machines aren't too surprising -
  plenty of Mac shops use NT servers but do their work on Macs - and
  Power hopes to sell to both sides of that demand. The entire text
  of the filing (835K) can be downloaded from the SEC. [GD]

<ftp://ftp.sec.gov/edgar/data/1040478/0000950134-97-005019.txt>


**No Sense of Security?** Following my article on Macintosh
  security challenges in TidBITS-385_, I've learned about Dr. John
  D. Howard's Ph.D. dissertation, which analyzes trends in Internet
  security from 1989 to 1995 using about 4,300 incidents reported to
  the Computer Emergency Response Team Coordination Center. Chapters
  1 and 14 (the introduction, plus policy implications and
  recommendations) make for good general reading, and there's plenty
  of meat to back it up. The research as a whole finds that (with
  the exception of denial-of-service attacks), security incidents
  are declining relative to the size of the Internet.

<http://www.cert.org/research/JHThesis/>

  If you're looking for a Macintosh security challenge, Sweden's
  Infinit Information AB opened its second Crack-A-Mac contest on
  04-Jul-97. (See TidBITS-378_ for details on the first contest.)
  This time, instead of running a standard, out-of-the-box Mac Web
  server, they're exposing a cutting edge, real-world system to a
  real-world pummeling. The Crack-A-Mac server setup includes final
  candidate versions of WebSTAR and Mac OS 8, plus SiteEdit Pro,
  multiple domain service via ClearlyHome, and database access via
  Lasso and FileMaker Pro. To claim the prize money (100,000 Swedish
  crowns; about $13,000 U.S.), read the contest rules, then alter
  the contents of the server's home page. [GD]

<http://hacke.inifit.se/>


**Net Regulation in Germany** -- Chancellor Helmut Kohl's
  government in Germany has passed a law regulating the Internet
  that takes effect on 01-Aug-97. Although the law sets standards
  for electronic commerce and the use of digital signatures, it is
  also intended to combat pornography, Nazi propaganda, and other
  uses of the Internet that are illegal in Germany. Online providers
  knowingly carrying such illegal content face charges if it's
  "technically possible and reasonable" to prevent it, even if they
  have no direct control over provided content, and even if the
  content originates outside Germany. [MHA]

<http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/WAPO/19970704/V000749-070497-idx.html>


The 20th Anniversary Mac Comes for Tea
--------------------------------------
  by Tonya Engst <tonya@tidbits.com>

  Last week, Michael Koidahl, owner of Westwind Computing in
  Seattle, solved the problem of determining when Adam and I should
  have our big summer party. Noting that Westwind had a prototype
  model of Apple's 20th Anniversary Macintosh for the weekend, he
  suggested that we invite tons of people over for a barbecue and a
  chance to play with the Mac.

<http://www.westwind.com/>
<http://powermacintosh.apple.com/products/20thann_mac.html>
<http://20thanniversary.apple.com/>

  The barbecue was a success, even though I splattered salsa on my
  purple tie-dyed Apple t-shirt. TidBITS Managing Editor Jeff
  Carlson extended himself culinarily and made an Apple pie with the
  Mac OS logo cut into the surface.

  The 20th Anniversary Macintosh's heritage combines the initial
  style and friendliness of the 128K Mac with the engineering pizazz
  of the first PowerBooks. The case that contains the logic board is
  a scant three inches thick and sports a gorgeous,12.1-inch, color,
  active-matrix, backlit screen displaying 800 by 600 pixels. The
  new Mac has a floppy drive in its side; the front panel beneath
  the screen is taken up by a vertically mounted CD-ROM drive and a
  set of touch controls.

  The 20th Anniversary Mac mixes common Macintosh features (a 250
  MHz PowerPC 603e chip, 32 MB RAM, 256K Level 2 cache) with high-
  end consumer electronics options and an elegant, futuristic
  design. The system includes a custom Acoustimass Bose sound system
  that divides sound output between speakers contained in the case
  and a separate bass unit, which looks like a miniature space-age
  silo and also contains the entire computer's power supply.
  Although it didn't seem to be on the prototype unit that we had,
  software should come with the Mac to help you set the "listening
  angle" and balance sound levels.

<http://www.bose.com/new/new_apple.shtml>

  There are also built-in FM radio and television tuners, and an
  S-video port and composite video adapter cable can attach to the
  likes of laser discs (we had Blade Runner running much of the
  afternoon), VCRs, and DSS satellite dishes.

  Other features include a remote control, a 2 GB hard disk, an
  external 33.6 Kbps GeoPort modem, a communications slot for an
  Ethernet card, an AV slot, a 7-inch PCI slot, and a custom
  keyboard with leather palm wrests and a removable trackpad.
  Purchasing one of these beauties also includes delivery and setup,
  a three-year hardware warranty, and three years of free phone
  support.

  I'd already seen the 20th Anniversary Macintosh at a meeting of
  dBUG, Seattle's Macintosh Users Group, but it made more of an
  impression set up on my dining room table, where it fit in with
  the decor extremely nicely. The Bose system sounded fabulous, and
  the screen was obviously nicer (and had a wider viewing angle)
  than the one in the PowerBook 5300c that lives in our kitchen.

  After most people had left, we decided to hook it to the Internet
  via a Ricochet modem (see TidBITS-366_), which worked fine, even
  though we're well outside Metricom's local Seattle coverage. It
  turned out that the Ricochet modems can talk to transceivers over
  greater distances than previously thought. They're generally
  deployed in clusters from a half a mile to two miles apart, but we
  calculated the distance to our transceivers at between 15 and 20
  miles. The important variable is that our house is set into the
  side of a mountain, so we had line-of-sight to transceivers in
  Renton and Seattle.

<http://www.ricochet.net/>

  Of course, I want one of the 20th Anniversary Macs - who wouldn't?
  (I couldn't convince the Westwind people to leave without the
  prototype unit, despite a few pointed suggestions about how it was
  getting late.) I wish Apple would break out the pricing and the
  features so more people could afford one (the unit lists for
  $7,500; even at that price, Westwind has orders for seven
  already). I scraped and saved to afford my first academic-priced
  SE back in 1988, and - frankly - this Mac seems a bit too elitist,
  more like a computer that would come to high tea than a cookout.
  Still, it was fun having it come for a visit, and the salsa did
  wash out of my t-shirt.


I Dream of Genealogy: Family Tree Maker
---------------------------------------
  by Douglas Tallman <dtallman@crosslink.net>

  Even if you can't pick your relatives, you can pick your
  genealogical software.

  Earlier this year, Broderbund released a Macintosh version of
  Family Tree Maker (FTM), which is considered to be the best-
  selling genealogy-tracking software for DOS and Windows machines.
  The software manages information about your relatives and produces
  handsome reports, charts, and family trees. The software is
  bundled with CD-ROMs designed to jump-start genealogical research,
  and the company's Web site provides its customers a range of
  specialized services.

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


**Meeting the Family** -- The main screen in FTM is the Family
  page, which has fields for names, dates, and places of parents and
  their children. Tabs on the right side of the screen lead to each
  parent's family and to each child's marriage.

  Secondary screens store addresses, medical data, and notes.
  Another screen includes fields for describing a person's
  relationship with his parents - whether they are his birth or
  adoptive parents, for example. A Facts screen provides sixteen
  date and sixteen text fields, which users can label to suit their
  needs. I use mine for tracking cemetery locations, where people
  lived, what occupations they had, what religion they practiced,
  and when and where they were baptized.

  Most location and name fields use a feature called "fastfields,"
  which works like Quicken's QuickFill feature. You type in the
  first few characters until FTM has correctly selected what you
  want, based on previous entries. This can be a real blessing. It
  not only eliminates some typing, it also ensures consistent data
  entry.

  FTM offers plenty of ways to print all this data, including tree
  charts showing an individual's ancestors or descendants. The
  software provides plenty of control over how the charts will
  appear, letting you pick designs, fonts and point sizes, and which
  data to include.

  Several reports are hard-wired into the program, including a
  calendar for the birthdays and anniversaries of living relatives,
  and one that lists the relationships between an individual and
  everyone else in the database. Here you can find out whether
  Cousin Tilly is your second cousin once removed or your first
  cousin twice removed. It also produces two Family Group Sheets, a
  standard form that genealogists use to present family information.
  One is a "just-the-facts-ma'am" style with parents, children, and
  dates. The other adds selected information, including what you've
  entered on the Facts screen.

  If these reports don't suit, users have some flexibility in
  creating their own. It would be easy, for example, to create a
  report on the causes of death of your dearly departed. You can
  print the report or copy and paste it into a word processor.

  As your FTM file grows, its information becomes more valuable.
  Luckily, FTM automatically backs up each time you quit the
  program, and the Mac and Windows platforms share the same file
  format, so sharing data is a snap at family reunions.

  To get data into and out of FTM, the program uses GEDCOM
  (Genealogical Data Communications), an interchange protocol
  established to simplify this type of work. It handles these files
  with ease - even the information stored in Facts fields - though
  one element belies its PC heritage: a filename must end in ".ged"
  before FTM will try to import its data.

  A few other peculiarities seem to be artifacts of the switch
  between operating systems. If you double-click an FTM file in the
  Finder, FTM opens the file that was open when you last ran the
  software, not the file you clicked. The close box displayed on a
  file's window doesn't close the file but quits the whole program,
  and the program uses all the function keys at the top of the
  keyboard and mostly ignores command keys. Few Mac users would
  think of pressing F1 for help, rather than the Help key.

  The Mac software also doesn't include the Scrapbook function in
  the Windows version, which stores pictures with the database. A
  company spokeswoman said the feature was pulled at the last minute
  - that might explain why it's listed on the packaging, and the
  online documentation has several references to it. However,
  because the Mac version can read Windows files, Mac FTM users will
  be able to see pictures in the files of their PC cousins, even if
  they can't store their own.


**Branching Out** -- The software comes with the Social Security
  Death Index on CD-ROM. This information supplies the name, birth
  date, Social Security number, and likely residence of anyone who
  died more than two years ago. Using this information, you can
  write to the federal government for a person's SS-5, the form
  required to get a Social Security card, which has the names and
  addresses of his or her parents.

  Also included are the first two CDs in Broderbund's World Family
  Tree project. This is an effort to encourage genealogy through
  Broderbund customers sharing their research. Here I was hoping to
  find some information about my great-great-great-grandfather
  Cornelison Tallman, a man who seems to have left his descendants
  with little record of his existence. Finding his parents, I
  believe, will extend my family tree back to the Netherlands.

  Had one of these CDs revealed any of Corny's footprints, I'd
  likely be a lot more positive about them. Unfortunately, he
  remains a mystery. The CDs, though, can be a big help. If you can
  find a link between yourself and a tree, you can save plenty of
  time and effort re-keying information - plus the research is done
  at home, not in a dreary library. Additional CDs sell for about
  $20 or more from Broderbund. A few World Family Tree critics have
  sprouted on genealogy newsgroups and mailing lists, claiming trees
  have been submitted without their researchers' consent and
  erroneous information has been distributed. In my family I found
  data that contradicted my own trustworthy information, so I
  recommend verifying any information you find on the CDs.

  A great many budding genealogists will benefit from Family Tree
  Maker's Web site, and much of the information is free. One
  valuable resource on the site is a collection of tips for
  researching in the National Archives and getting vital information
  out of county seats and state capitals. Broderbund has also just
  started offering an Internet FamilyFinder Agents service. You type
  in a name that you're looking for, and it searches its own index
  of Web sites looking for a match. The company claims the agents
  will periodically perform searches and send results to you via
  email.

  The Web site gives FTM customers extra benefits, such as a
  discussion board, free classified ads, and their own simple Web
  pages. Accessing these special services requires Netscape
  Navigator; no other browser is currently supported, although
  Broderbund has gotten requests to support other browsers.


**Tools to Help Your Trees Grow** -- The Mac has several
  alternatives to FTM, including the well-received Reunion from
  Leister Productions Inc., and the shareware gem Gene from Diana
  and David Eppstein.

<http://www.leisterpro.com/>
<http://www.ics.uci.edu/~eppstein/gene/>

  One thing that both of these programs do that FTM doesn't is
  prepare a book-style report of your genealogy. For that reason
  alone, it's worth downloading Gene, which easily imports the
  GEDCOMs that FTM creates. Broderbund, by the way, included that
  feature in its recently released update for its Windows software;
  there's no word on whether a Mac update is coming soon.

  There are almost as many Web sites and mailing lists devoted to
  genealogy as there are to Star Trek, plus Usenet newsgroups like
  <alt.genealogy>.

  RootsWeb maintains the ROOTS-L mailing list, which is a good
  starting point, plus operates a number of mailing lists tailored
  to specific surnames and locales, plus a list for research
  novices. Cyndi's List of Genealogy Sites on the Internet is a
  treasure, with more than 21,000 sites listed and indexed. The
  soc.genealogy.* newsgroup hierarchy encompasses 18 newsgroups;
  <soc.genealogy.computing> is devoted to software and Internet
  assistance.

<http://www.rootsweb.com/>
<http://www.oz.net/~cyndihow/sites.htm>

  Family Tree Maker comes on a CD-ROM and requires a PowerPC-based
  Mac with at least 16 MB of RAM (or 8 MB with virtual memory)
  running System 7.1.2 or later. It takes up a healthy amount of
  disk space, with 7 MB for the software and 4.5 MB for required
  Microsoft system extensions.

    Broderbund Software -- 800/315-0672 -- 415/382-4419 (fax)


Spinning the Web Part 4: CyberStudio
------------------------------------
  by Tonya Engst <tonya@tidbits.com>

  If you read earlier sections of this series (which began in
  TidBITS-384_), you know the ins and outs of text-oriented Web
  publishing tools as well as low-end visual tools that work much
  like simple word processors. Both types work well for certain
  tasks, but neither type is the cat's pajamas for Web publishing.
  Today we'll look at CyberStudio 1.1 from GoLive Systems, a hot new
  release that draws its strengths from the text and the visual
  camps, plus adds high-end features.

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


**Puppy Love** -- Here at TidBITS, we sometimes use the phrase
  "demos well." That means a product sounds wonderful and looks
  great initially, but may have flaws that reveal themselves once we
  try it at home. With its elegant, attractive interface and
  multiplicity of key features, CyberStudio decidedly demos well.

  CyberStudio also makes a great first impression. The ReadMe file
  says where, exactly, all parts of CyberStudio will end up when
  installed. The printed manual is attractive and professional,
  unlike most cobbled-together manuals found in this hurry-up-and-
  ship era. The section that covers CyberStudio's color palettes
  (RGB, Apple, CMYK, 216-Web-safe, and more) is printed in color on
  glossy paper, and the shipping package includes a card noting
  major incompatibilities. (Irv at CyberStudio tech support said
  some people run RAM Doubler without problems, but others must turn
  it off to use CyberStudio. Running CyberStudio with Adobe Type
  Reunion results in CyberStudio pop-up menus appearing with many
  garbage characters.)

  Launching CyberStudio brings up a tabbed document window with the
  Layout tab active. In the lower right corner, there's a pop-up
  menu for matching the window size to a few common browser widths.
  Other tabs switch the window to other views. Above the document
  window sits a closable basic toolbar. A tabbed palette (called
  Palette) holds icons representing items you might want to add to a
  page or site, such as a table or META tag. There's also an
  Inspector palette, which is used to customize items dragged in
  from the Palette.

  Two problems with the interface may trouble you. CyberStudio has a
  profusion of windows and palettes, and I found that my two-monitor
  setup was none too large. The program would function more fluidly
  with palette and window management options. Second, CyberStudio
  takes drag & drop to an extreme that makes for extra dragging,
  something RSI-prone people will want to avoid. For example, items
  on the Palette cannot be clicked for insertion at the insertion
  point or added by way of a keyboard shortcut; they must be
  physically dragged onto the page.


**Viewing the HTML** -- There's nothing like real-world projects
  to reveal flaws in any product, and importing a page from the
  upcoming redesign of the TidBITS Web site brought out a big one:
  we've designed our site with paired paragraph tags; that is, each
  paragraph begins with a <P> tag and ends with a </P>. CyberStudio
  only uses the start <P> tag and modifies imported HTML documents
  accordingly, and thus slightly changes the vertical spacing in
  some instances.

  CyberStudio's Source tab most directly imitates the HTML views in
  software we looked at last week; it uses syntax coloring to
  distinguish tags from text, and the font and style is somewhat
  customizable. Previous visual editors that we've looked at require
  users to type almost every tag from scratch in HTML view.
  CyberStudio doesn't suffer from this limitation; anything it has a
  command for in the Layout tab also works in the Source tab. For
  example, to insert a Submit button in Source view, you just drag
  in the Submit Button item from the Palette. CyberStudio responds
  by inserting the appropriate HTML. Unfortunately, the Source
  display cannot wrap text, so long paragraphs expand well past the
  right edge of the window.

  If working in the Source tab isn't structured enough, you can also
  work in the Outline tab, which displays HTML in a collapsible
  outline, with tags displayed as tiles containing pop-up menus.
  These menus enable you to add attributes (like the size of a table
  border), which then also display in the tiles. The Outline tab
  works with a customizable database, and you can add tags to the
  database, plus customize attributes.

  CyberStudio also comes with a built-in JavaScript editor, complete
  with syntax coloring and a script library.


**To Pixel or Not To Pixel** -- At first glance, the Layout tab
  works much like the Edit views in the lower-end visual tools. You
  can type text and insert media elements like graphics and movies,
  but you can't drag items around freely. This makes for human-
  readable HTML, a concern I noted in the first article of this
  series. However, if pixel-perfect placement overwhelms concerns
  about comprehensible HTML, you can drag in a layout grid from the
  Palette. The grid can be all or only part of a page, and items can
  be dragged about freely on the grid, much as they would in a
  desktop publishing program. By giving users a choice about using
  or not using a desktop publishing metaphor, CyberStudio
  accommodates a wide range of users and tasks.

  Although the grid provides pixel-perfect placement, it doesn't
  replace tables for some pages - if you need a 5 by 5 table with
  specific cell dimensions, a table will be faster, since the grid
  doesn't easily give location information as you position objects
  (I would like the grid to work with a ruler or a status bar
  showing location coordinates). You can get around this to some
  degree by placing layout grids inside table cells - you use the
  table to set a skeleton of known dimension and then do visually
  oriented layouts within the skeleton.

  Given the grid's inability to show exactly where items are placed,
  it's disappointing that CyberStudio doesn't top some of its low-
  end competitors when it comes to regular table making. On the plus
  side, you can Option-drag cell borders to resize the table, and
  the tabling commands are not buried in a modal dialog box, so
  formatting goes reasonably quickly. On the minus side, for the
  most part, cells must be formatted individually, as must the text
  within each cell. For intense table work, Symantec Visual Page is
  a better product.

  CyberStudio's Frame tab is easy to use, and there's even a whole
  tab on the Palette for dragging in different frameset
  configurations. Visual Page and Adobe PageMill stand up well to
  CyberStudio in the framing arena; they both display frames within
  the frameset, a feature that CyberStudio lacks. That is, in
  CyberStudio (much as in Claris Home Page), you can see the
  skeleton of a frameset, but cannot see pages that should show in
  the frames. You can try a frameset by switching out to the browser
  preview, which has a default browser option or can switch to any
  browser installed on your computer.


**Live Media** -- You can include any plug-in file on a page
  created in CyberStudio, and you can preview it live if you place
  its plug-in application in CyberStudio's Plug-ins folder (though
  the release notes discourage use of the Shockwave plug-in). In
  this respect, CyberStudio resembles PageMill 2.0, and in a
  previous article in this series I overlooked this fact.
  CyberStudio can also play Java applets.


**Gobs of Features** -- I haven't nearly covered every CyberStudio
  feature. Two others of particular note are support for AppleScript
  (complete with printed documentation) and for WorldScript. One
  feature that's lacking is a spelling checker. In a feature
  checklist war, CyberStudio generally dominates the products I've
  highlighted in this series. However, CyberStudio isn't really in
  the same sandbox with these products. It doesn't work on 68K Macs
  and costs a few hundred dollars more. Plus, it has extensive
  visual site management features that move it into the arena of
  site-oriented software like Adobe SiteMill (which now ships with
  PageMill), NetObjects Fusion, and Microsoft FrontPage. Text-
  oriented site-focused tools also exist, most notably Userland
  Frontier. I'll look at all this software, plus the site management
  portion of CyberStudio starting in the next installment of this
  series.

<http://www.adobe.com/prodindex/pagemill/siteben.html>
<http://www.netobjects.com/html/macprod.html>
<http://www.microsoft.com/frontpage/>
<http://www.scripting.com/frontier/>


**More on the Cost** -- CyberStudio Pro has a suggested retail
  price of $349, and the street price appears to be just under $300.
  (Academic pricing is set at $149.) Those who purchase between
  17-Jun-97 and 30-Jul-97 will receive a coupon for a $100 cross-
  grade rebate, available to owners of Adobe PageMill or SiteMill,
  NetObjects Fusion, Symantec Visual Page, Claris Home Page, and
  Microsoft Front Page. If you registered a copy of golive Pro 1.x,
  you can also take advantage of a $20 "loyalty" rebate.

  Overall, despite the weaknesses I've noted, CyberStudio does a
  fabulous job of combining many oft-requested features in a
  pleasant working environment. You can give it a test run by
  downloading a 3.7 MB 30-day trial version from the GoLive Web
  site.

  CyberStudio requires a PowerPC-based Macintosh running System
  7.5.5 or later and 8 MB free application RAM, with 12 MB or 16 MB
  recommended, depending on which GoLive documentation you happen to
  be reading.

    GoLive Systems -- 800/554-6638 -- 415/463-1580
      <info@golive.com>


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