TidBITS#374/07-Apr-97
=====================

  This week opened with a bang as Microsoft announced plans to
  purchase the Internet start-up WebTV, Connectix announced its
  Pentium-emulating Virtual PC, and Apple delivered the free Mac OS
  7.6.1 Update, which eliminates most Type 11 errors by decree.
  Also, Tonya reviews Akimbo's Globetrotter Web site creation tool,
  and we welcome StarNine as a new TidBITS sponsor.

Topics:
    MailBITS/07-Apr-97
    Apple Releases Mac OS 7.6.1
    Globetrotter: Brilliant Yet Bewildering

<http://www.tidbits.com/tb-issues/TidBITS-374.html>
<ftp://ftp.tidbits.com/pub/tidbits/issues/1997/TidBITS#374_07-Apr-97.etx>

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 225 MHz - the fastest desktop system ever.
   Build Your Own Box online! <http://www.powercc.com/>

* Aladdin Systems -- 408/761-6200 -- <http://www.aladdinsys.com/>
   Makers of StuffIt Deluxe 4.0, the Mac compression standard, and
   InstallerMaker 3.1.1, the leading installer for Mac developers.

* Small Dog Electronics -- Special deal for TidBITS#374! <--------- NEW!
   Performa 6200 8MB/1GB/CD 15" monitor, refurbished: $979
   More Info: <http://www.smalldoggy.com/#tid> -- 802/496-7171

* StarNine Technologies -- 800/525-2580 -- <info@starnine.com> <--- NEW!
   Top Internet tools: WebSTAR, WebCollage, ListSTAR, and more.
   Download your free demos now: <http://www.starnine.com/>
   ---------------------------------------------------------------

MailBITS/07-Apr-97
------------------

**StarNine Technologies Sponsoring TidBITS** -- We're extremely
  pleased to welcome our latest sponsor, StarNine Technologies. As
  many of you know, StarNine makes the popular Macintosh Web and
  mailing list servers, WebSTAR and ListSTAR, along with some mail
  gateways and Quarterdeck Mail (nee Microsoft Mail). The other
  products notwithstanding, WebSTAR and then ListSTAR really put
  StarNine on the map for us.

  WebSTAR began as the shareware MacHTTP, created by Chuck Shotton.
  When Chuck announced that StarNine had acquired MacHTTP and would
  be renaming it WebSTAR, we were concerned. Not all shareware makes
  the transition to the commercial world, but Chuck and StarNine did
  well, making WebSTAR the leading Mac Web server and continuing to
  push the feature and performance envelopes.

  As important as WebSTAR is (and TidBITS uses it for our Web
  server), ListSTAR saved our bacon in August of 1996, when Rice
  University shut down the aging IBM mainframe that had been hosting
  the TidBITS mailing list. We moved the entire list to a Power Mac
  7100 running ListSTAR, and it (along with a custom FileMaker
  database) has run smoothly since. Considering that there are over
  46,000 people on the TidBITS list, ListSTAR demonstrates the fact
  that Macintosh is a serious Internet server machine.

  In September of 1995, the now-beleaguered Quarterdeck Corporation
  acquired StarNine, which initially looked like a synergistic move.
  Little development came of it, but StarNine has remained a wholly-
  owned subsidiary and thrives on its own. We're happy to see
  StarNine supporting the Internet community via their sponsorship
  of TidBITS and other Macintosh resources like the Info-Mac Digest.
  [ACE]


**Microsoft Buying WebTV** -- On 06-Apr-97, Microsoft announced a
  surprising $425 million dollar stock and cash deal to buy WebTV
  Networks, Inc., makers of the WebTV set-top box that enables users
  to surf the Web via their television (see TidBITS-367_). Already a
  content provider with efforts like MSN and MSNBC, WebTV also gives
  Microsoft a strong foothold in an emerging online consumer
  electronics market and - perhaps more importantly - may let
  Microsoft control key patents relating to set-top box design and
  software technology. [GD]

<http://www.sjmercury.com/business/webtv.htm>


**PC in a Mac** -- No, it's not a late April Fools joke, though it
  does point the way to another method for keeping a Mac on your
  desk and running PC software when necessary. Connectix, makers of
  RAM Doubler, has announced Virtual PC, Macintosh software that
  emulates a Pentium-based PC. Because Virtual PC aims to emulate a
  processor, not an operating system, it reportedly will enable Mac
  users to run off-the-shelf versions of DOS, Windows 3.1, 95, and
  NT, plus NeXT OpenStep and OS/2, with support for key PC options
  including SoundBlaster Pro, Ethernet, printing, and modems.
  Virtual PC should ship in June and run on any Power Mac with
  System 7.5. Although there are emulation alternatives like
  Insignia's SoftWindows or plugging in a hardware card, I expect
  that Virtual PC will inject new blood into the emulation market.
  Connectix -- 800/950-5880 -- 415/571-5100 -- 415-571-5195 (fax)
  <info@connectix.com> [TJE]

<http://www.connectix.com/connect/CVPC.PR.html>


**Microsoft says thanks** to the TidBITS and Evangelist readers
  who took part in the "Mac-likeness" survey mentioned in
  TidBITS-372_. Despite problems with their server, Microsoft
  collected more than ten times the data it was looking for in
  a week and a half, and says it received a strong message about
  what Macintosh users expect from software. Nice job, folks -
  we'll see if we can convince Microsoft to pass along the survey
  results. If you didn't get a chance to take the survey, Microsoft
  has a general feedback area where users can comment on any of
  their products. [GD]

<http://www.microsoft.com/regwiz/wiz6.asp>


Apple Releases Mac OS 7.6.1
---------------------------
  by Geoff Duncan <geoff@tidbits.com>

  Today, Apple released Mac OS 7.6.1 in three forms: four disk
  images for owners of Mac OS 7.6, five disk images for owners of
  PowerBook 3400s, and a full Mac OS CD-ROM. The disk images
  versions are freely available for downloading from Apple's
  Internet sites; getting physical copies is more complicated, but
  CD-ROM (for owners of the latest Macs) or floppy disk versions can
  be obtained through Apple's Mac OS Up-To-Date program (800/335-
  9258). For further information, see the files that accompany the
  online version of the update or URLs below.

<http://support.info.apple.com/ftp/7.6.1.html>
<http://www.macos.apple.com/macos/releases/fulfillment.html>

  Online, the Mac OS 7.6.1 Update is available as a net install or
  as disk images totalling about 6.5 MB. The 7.6.1 disk images use
  Apple's new NDIF format, so you must use the newly-revised
  DiskCopy 6.1.2 (itself a 1.1 MB download) to use the disk image
  (utilities like ShrinkWrap don't yet support Apple's new format).
  You don't need DiskCopy to use the net install version.

<ftp://ftp.info.apple.com//Apple_Support_Area/Apple_SW_Updates/US/
Macintosh/Utilities/Disk_Copy_6.1.2.sea.hqx>

  Currently, Mac OS 7.6.1 Update is only available for U.S. English
  system software. Apple says localized versions of the update
  should be available within 90 days.


**So What Is It?** Mac OS 7.6.1 is mostly an incremental OS update
  to support new Apple hardware, like the PowerBook 3400 and the
  Power Mac 4400, 5500, 6500, 7300, 8600 and 9600 models. It's not
  intended to offer new features or add items released since Mac OS
  7.6, like Open Transport 1.1.2 or Macintosh Runtime for Java.
  However, it also contains a handful of subtle fixes that can be
  useful for owners of Mac OS 7.6. (For a detailed overview of Mac
  OS 7.6, see TidBITS-363_). Remember: unless you buy the full
  CD-ROM version of 7.6.1, you must already own Mac OS 7.6 to
  upgrade to Mac OS 7.6.1.


**About Those Type 11 Errors...** The big talk about Mac OS 7.6.1
  is the elimination of nearly all Type 11 crashes on PowerPC-based
  Macintoshes, which at first glance seems like a spectacular thing.
  Unfortunately, this has been widely misinterpreted in discussion
  forums and some press reports as a giant leap in the stability of
  Mac OS 7.6.1 over previous releases.

  Here's the real story: before Mac OS 7.6.1, most crashes in Power-
  PC native code were mapped to the error number 11, which stands
  for a generic fatal error. Frequently, the Macintosh had another
  error code that accurately described the problem, but because the
  crash happened in PowerPC code the Mac couldn't do anything more
  precise, and users saw the number 11. The big change in Mac OS
  7.6.1 is that errors in PowerPC code now map to the _correct_
  error numbers. This doesn't mean the crashes have gone away, but
  rather that the system software can now report them accurately.

  So what? If the crash is still going to happen, what does it
  matter if a different error number is reported? The difference is
  in how the Mac can handle those errors. Without a low-level
  debugger like MacsBug installed, a Type 11 error forces the
  immediate restart of your computer: there's no opportunity to save
  work in other programs. Under Mac OS 7.6.1, most of these errors
  will simply cause the offending application to quit (resulting in
  a familiar "application has unexpectedly quit" dialog) rather than
  a complete restart of the machine. You _should_ still restart your
  Mac after such an error (there's no telling what the crashed
  application left in memory), but now you'll be able to save work
  in other applications, eject disks, or make a quick backup copy of
  an important file before you restart. Yes, it's still a crash, but
  in many cases it'll be a nicer crash.


**What Else Is There?** Mac OS 7.6.1 also includes CFM-68K 4.0
  (see TidBITS-369_), which lets 68K Macs run software (like
  Cyberdog, Microsoft Internet Explorer 3.0.1, AOL 3.0, and
  LaserWriter 8.4) that requires the Code Fragment Manager. Support
  for CFM-68K was explicitly removed from Mac OS 7.6 due to
  potential serious problems, giving 68K owners little incentive to
  upgrade. Including CFM-68K 4.0 in Mac OS 7.6.1 lets Apple have a
  single version of the System software that offers comparable
  features for all 32-bit clean Macs (from the Mac IIci onwards).
  Mac OS 7.6.1 also includes Apple CD-ROM 5.3.3 (which supports
  high-speed IDE CD-ROM drives), Apple System Profiler 1.1.4, Apple
  Video Player 1.6 (now scriptable!), and improved software for
  PowerBook PC Cards.

  Mac OS 7.6.1 also includes a library called ObjectSupportLib 1.2,
  which is important if you do any Macintosh scripting, or need to
  run scripts on your Mac. In recent months there has been a
  cacophony of versions, reversions, and regressions of
  ObjectSupportLib, which would be funny if all the shenanigans
  hadn't caused so much confusion. Complete, gory details are
  available in an Apple Tech Note, but the bottom line is that you
  should use ObjectSupportLib 1.2, which is also available with many
  third-party products like Eudora and Internet Explorer.

<http://www.devworld.apple.com/dev/technotes/tn/tn1095.html>


**Miscellaneous Changes** -- Mac OS 7.6.1 includes a few other
  changes and bug fixes, including updates (and a larger memory
  allocation) in the Process Manager, improved IDE driver support,
  serial communications improvements in some Performa models, a fix
  in the DR (68K) emulator from 7.5.5 that was accidently left out
  of Mac OS 7.6, and anyone who still has to use old 400K MFS floppy
  disks will find that they're read-only under Mac OS 7.6.1. Apple
  has made a complete list of updated components, changes, and known
  problems in Mac OS 7.6.1 available in a Tech Note, including
  workarounds for problems with LaserWriter 8.3.4 (use version 8.4)
  and using Virtual Memory with DayStar 040 Upgrade cards.

<http://www.devworld.apple.com/dev/technotes/tn/tn1096.html>

  If you have a PowerBook 3400 and want to use both Mac OS 7.6.1 and
  Open Transport 1.1.2, install Open Transport 1.1.2 over System
  7.6, _then_ install the 3400s version of the 7.6.1 update, or
  you'll wind up with the wrong versions of some network resources.


**Should You Install 7.6.1?** If you own Mac OS 7.6 or one of the
  new machines Mac OS 7.6.1 is explicitly designed to support, then
  getting Mac OS 7.6.1 is probably a good idea. If you use or
  support a range of Macintoshes (including older 68K machines along
  with newer models) and need to have one comprehensive system
  release that will work well on all those machines, then the 7.6.1
  Update is worth some thought if you've already upgraded to Mac OS
  7.6. Otherwise, if you're looking for new features, bells, and
  whistles, it's probably best to wait for Mac OS 8 (Tempo), due to
  ship in July.


Globetrotter: Brilliant Yet Bewildering
---------------------------------------
  by Tonya Engst <tonya@tidbits.com>

  Globetrotter Web Publisher 1.1.1, created by Akimbo Systems
  (publishers of the FullWrite word processor), blends word
  processing and HTML editing features to make a brilliant but
  bewildering Web authoring tool.

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


**Excuses, Excuses** -- Ideally, TidBITS would have published this
  review in late 1996, soon after Globetrotter 1.0 shipped.
  Unfortunately, I was slowed by my Macintosh's strange crashing
  problems with Modern Memory Manager turned off (more on that
  later), Globetrotter's documentation, and my false expectation
  that Globetrotter shipped as it was billed in pre-release versions
  - as software intended for people who want to print documents and
  publish them as Web sites.

  Instead, over time, I learned that Globetrotter is aimed at those
  who want to make Web pages using word processing tools.
  Globetrotter also works reasonably well for producing printed
  documents, but that's primarily a side-effect of the fact that
  Globetrotter has much in common with FullWrite.


**Don't Worry, Be Happy** -- Open a new Globetrotter document, and
  you'll see a rich set of menus. Some have a good set of keyboard
  shortcuts, but others - particularly menus for tables and forms -
  lack shortcuts.

  You'll also notice buttons for switching between Browser View and
  Page View. In Browser View, you cannot make changes, but you can
  see how your document might appear on the Web. In Page View, you
  can edit documents, and additional buttons (such as two-page view)
  appear and modify Page View. I spent most of my time in Page View
  because my Mac crashed four of the first five times I tried to
  switch into Browser view.

  To make a Web page in Globetrotter, just start typing. You can
  also paste in text or import files via XTND. You can apply formats
  like bold, small caps, or strikeout, change fonts and sizes, and
  even change text color. Globetrotter refers to formats using word
  processing terminology, with nary an <EM> or <STRONG> to be seen.

  There are few ways to control (or - in some cases - predict) how
  Globetrotter will convert formats to HTML. If you have no interest
  in HTML, you won't care, since the resulting Web pages tend to
  look fine. You can customize the occasional format; for instance,
  you can turn off <FONT FACE> so font choices don't end up in the
  HTML.

  Globetrotter feels like a word processor. Sometimes this is good,
  but other times it's weird, because Globetrotter operates on a
  printed page metaphor, not a screen metaphor. When you insert a
  page break after a few inches of text, you see a big blank area
  representing the rest of a sheet of paper. The blank area only
  shows in Globetrotter, not on the Web, and there's no way to set a
  custom page size that equates to a screen.

  The bulk of Globetrotter's Web publishing features are accessible
  through a regrettably modal, multi-tabbed Web Setup dialog box
  where you configure most Web-related details: whether recent
  changes should be color-coded or take on a "NEW!" graphic, the
  appearance of the default horizontal rule, settings for a
  navigation bar, and so on.


**Slip Between the Style Sheets** -- Globetrotter beats the
  PageMill-and-friends crowd with its ability to connect styles to
  how text appears on the Web. For example, to structure a site
  quickly, you could style main topics with a paragraph style called
  "Contents." Your site would consist of one Globetrotter file, but
  each topic would automatically appear at the top of a new Web
  page, tagged as an <H1> heading.

  Contents-styled topics could appear in a navigation bar on each
  page (a text-based bar or one based on Globetrotter's limited
  button set). Main topics could also appear in a bulleted list on a
  separate page or at the bottom of the first page. But, there's no
  way to customize this list, and no way to create list sub-heads.

  In Globetrotter, you can't see the list or the navigation bars,
  but they do appear when you preview or export to HTML. (Akimbo
  prefers the term "publish" instead of "export.") Styles strike me
  as the most important part of Globetrotter, and I can't understand
  why Akimbo demoted them to the bottom of a long menu, with no
  keyboard shortcuts. It would also be handy for Globetrotter to
  come with styles pre-set to match HTML tags. Styles like
  "Heading1" or "IndentedQuote" would easily map to HTML tags
  without confusing users, and they might push authors towards
  creating well-structured documents where tags indicate text's
  function in a document, not just its appearance.


**Links** -- Linking options are weak in Globetrotter. Linked text
  appears with a dotted underline, but you cannot wave the mouse
  over linked text to see the URL; instead, you must double-click
  the text to open a dialog containing the URL. Other problems
  include no single-step method for removing link information and no
  way to access frequently or recently used URLs.

  Although savvy Globetrotter users can handle intra-site links
  through styles, Globetrotter can also convert URLs in the text to
  links, or you can make links by hand. If you create a link by
  hand, you can choose a picture or button to represent the start of
  the link. The text that acts as the start of the link
  automatically appears in the button.

  Globetrotter has no link verification feature, but it can store
  URLs in its glossary. To use a stored URL, you type its name in
  angle brackets, like this: "<<URLname>>". On export, Globetrotter
  automatically swaps in the correct URL. If the URL changes, you
  simply change the glossary entry and export again.


**Graphics** -- Globetrotter has numerous graphics-related
  features and offers some uncommon ones. For instance, text
  formatted with fonts like Zapf Dingbats or Symbol converts to a
  graphic when you export to HTML. Additionally, horizontal rules
  can be individually customized or take on characteristics from the
  Web Setup dialog box, where you can even substitute a graphic for
  the standard horizontal rule.

  Globetrotter accepts PICT, PNTG, JPEG, and GIF files. Graphics can
  be linked from a document or incorporated into the document file.
  The program has transparency and interlacing features, and it can
  add <ALT> tags to images. There's no way to resize graphics by
  dragging their edges, though you can type numbers to change the
  height or width, or resize by percentage. Globetrotter can align a
  graphic with respect to text in a paragraph, but these alignments
  don't display in Page View, and popular options for wrapping text
  left or right of a graphic are not available.

  Although the half-baked alignment feature is a disappointment,
  image maps work well, with full support for client- and server-
  side options. The image map editor does a good job with the usual
  suite of features (sans a zoom), plus the capability to set <ALT>
  tags for any image map section and optionally have them show up in
  a text-based navigation bar below the image.

  Globetrotter sidebars can contain either graphics or text
  callouts, and they float on a page, with text wrapping around
  them. When published to the Web, the contents of a Globetrotter
  sidebar can convert to a graphic, a good way to create jazzy
  looking headlines. Sidebars can also be ignored, or published as
  separate, linked-to pages. Linked-to pages are titled with the
  contents of their first paragraph, and there's no way to customize
  that. Sidebars are another example of where word processing
  concepts feel funny, because you'd never guess to employ a sidebar
  to accomplish these tasks. Instead, you might look in vain for a
  Text to Graphic or Link to Page command.


**Forms** -- Choose Insert Form Here and Globetrotter pops up a
  dialog box asking how the form will communicate with your Web
  server. You can enter a URL to any CGI, or set up extensive
  options for how results might be mailed to you or stored in a
  tab-delimited text file. Options include the subject of the email
  file and an acknowledgment page that people receive after filling
  out the form. Globetrotter creates Perl scripts for these options
  (Perl 4 or 5, or MacPerl), and such scripts should work on a wide
  variety of servers, though people using Macintosh Web servers must
  set up an AppleScript for the email feature.

  Form elements are inserted from a menu and as you insert most
  elements, a detailed configuration dialog box opens. For each
  element, you can indicate whether its value should appear on the
  optional acknowledgment page. Regrettably, there is no toolbar or
  keyboard shortcuts for inserting form elements; Globetrotter comes
  with a Form Toolbar folder (in the Extras folder) that contains
  clipping files of form elements, but it's not much faster to drag
  elements in than it is to choose them from the menu.


**General Web Publishing Features** -- In addition to features
  I've already mentioned, Globetrotter has a Get Info dialog box
  that estimates download times for each page. There are options for
  including Java applets and embedding plug-in-type objects, and
  it's even possible to create annoying running type in the bottom
  of a browser window. In another feature list checkmark,
  Globetrotter has a Post command for uploading to a remote server.


**Tables** -- HTML table support is present, and it's possible to
  set up many table options, like vertical alignments, colors, and
  cell padding. Formatting is easy, though the modal Table Format
  dialog box has no Apply button, so experimenting with different
  table formats takes a lot of mousing. Some cell formats, most
  notably vertical alignment, must be set by double-clicking a tab
  marker in the ruler above the table. You can select cells
  horizontally and then apply a format (such as bold), but you
  cannot select vertically in order to format an entire column in
  one step. Globetrotter exports tables nicely to HTML, and even
  inserts extra characters to accommodate browsers that don't
  understand table tags.

  I ran into a bothersome problem where table cells wouldn't select
  or deselect properly. Akimbo eventually identified the problem as
  a bug with using black as the selection color.


**Writing Tools** -- Globetrotter packs a pile of helpful writing
  tools. The spelling checker ignores URLs and email addresses and
  can be controlled almost completely from the keyboard. It has a
  Valid in Doc command for indicating that words are correct only in
  the context of a particular document. The thesaurus strikes me as
  useful and friendly. The glossary combines an "auto-correct"
  feature with the more traditional ability to store frequently used
  bits of text, and the bits can be lengthy (according to Akimbo,
  they can exceed the often-bothersome 32K limit inherent to many
  such features).

  The reasonably capable Find dialog box can find and replace based
  on formatting information, and it supports a limited set of wild
  cards, an important, though undocumented feature: few people will
  guess at Option-X to represent any word and Shift-Option-? to
  represent a character.

  In short, compared to most HTML editors, Globetrotter offers more
  mature writing tools. It can sort numerically or alphabetically,
  offers clipboard-related commands like Copy Append and Paste Swap,
  and has variables for inserting updating elements like change date
  (complete with what look like features for running a print merge,
  though the documentation is silent on this topic).

  However, Globetrotter lacks two important word processing
  features. The first is a multiple undo, which I increasingly
  consider a necessity. Second, Globetrotter's outliner occupies a
  prominent position in the interface but is only good for creating
  the Web equivalent of basic lists, not for outlining an entire
  document. The outliner would shine if outline levels could be
  linked to Globetrotter's styles, which can be easily linked to
  HTML tags.


**Weak Documentation** -- Anyone who doesn't already know Akimbo's
  FullWrite will have a tough time learning Globetrotter, and even
  FullWrite aficionados will have trouble divining some of
  Globetrotter's unique features. Learning the ins and outs of
  Globetrotter has felt like a frustrating dialog with a teacher who
  gives bad grades but rarely explains the topic at hand.

  The interface does not lend itself to exploration; there is no
  toolbar and thus no tool tips, and nothing like Balloon Help or
  helpful dialog box comments. The heart of the Web-based
  documentation, called the Answer Guide, has about ten pages: Using
  Tables, Creating Forms, Formatting, and so on, and each page has a
  long list of questions and answers. There's no detailed table of
  contents and no index. I've read the documentation completely, and
  some of it multiple times. Even so, on many occasions, I only
  found out how to do something by inferring from a reference in the
  documentation, through the printed FullWrite manual, or by asking
  Akimbo directly.


**Memory Madness** -- Try to use Globetrotter on a Power Mac
  running any version of the Mac OS before 7.5.5, and it won't
  launch with Modern Memory Manager turned on, a trait perhaps
  unique to Globetrotter amongst all currently shipping Macintosh
  programs. Akimbo does this to avoid crashing, and points the
  finger at Apple as the cause of the problems. I found it
  tremendously annoying until I upgraded to Mac OS 7.6, because my
  Mac crashed frequently without Modern Memory Manager turned on,
  and basic troubleshooting failed to solve the problem.


**Too Many Features, Too Little Documentation** -- Globetrotter
  has a perplexing mix of word processing and Web site tools, almost
  as though Akimbo included a ton of features from FullWrite and
  then didn't have the mettle to look at the octopus it had created
  and sever some of the nonsensical arms. This impression comes in
  large part from the interface, which highlights trivial options
  like two-page view and outlining at the expense of important Web
  options like styles and the features accessible only through the
  modal Web Setup dialog.

  I have no quarrel with creating Web pages in a word processing 
  environment, but I find it annoying to have irrelevant aspects of
  word processing thrust on me. If Globetrotter is for Web
  publishing, its documents don't look like it. Document windows
  should look more like a screen and less like a sheet of paper.
  Documents should be editable in a view that shows their
  approximate Web appearance, not a print preview. Sites should
  optionally display in a graphical or hierarchical overview so it's
  easy to understand the relationships between pages.

  If you use FullWrite and have little interest in learning HTML
  basics, Globetrotter may be a good choice for you. I think most
  people will find Globetrotter much better in its next release,
  when - hopefully - Akimbo will give the interface a makeover and
  supply more complete and better-organized documentation.

<http://www.akimbo.com/globetrotter/download.html>

  According to Akimbo, to run Globetrotter, you need at least a
  68020-based Mac running System 7.0, but they recommend a 68040- or
  PowerPC-based machine running System 7.5 or higher. You also need
  4 MB available application RAM and between 1 and 5 MB of disk
  space. Akimbo sells Globetrotter for $99 via a Web download. A 1.9
  MB demo is available from the Globetrotter Web site.

    Akimbo Systems -- 800/375-6515 -- 617/776-5500 -- <sales@akimbo.com>


$$

 Non-profit, non-commercial publications may reprint articles if
 full credit is given. Others please contact us. We don't guarantee
 accuracy of articles. Caveat lector. Publication, product, and
 company names may be registered trademarks of their companies.

 This file is formatted as setext. For more information send email
 to <setext@tidbits.com>. A file will be returned shortly.

 For information on TidBITS: how to subscribe, where to find back
 issues, and other useful stuff, send email to: <info@tidbits.com>
 Send comments and editorial submissions to: <editors@tidbits.com>
 Issues available at: ftp://ftp.tidbits.com/pub/tidbits/issues/
 And: http://www.tidbits.com/tb-issues/
 To search back issues with WAIS, use this URL via a Web browser:
 http://wais.sensei.com.au/macarc/tidbits/searchtidbits.html
 -------------------------------------------------------------------


