TidBITS#349/14-Oct-96
=====================

Thinking about buying a Mac? Your options are about to expand as
   longtime Mac hardware vendor APS enters the clone arena. Also
   this week, details on using Netscape 3.0 with older Macs, an
   unsupported method for installing parts of System 7.5.3 under
   System 7.5.5, Maxum's TagBuilder HTML authoring add-on, and a
   follow-up on why products may not be mentioned in published
   articles. Finally, Adam offers a detailed look at Intermind
   Communicator, a product aiming to change the nature of online
   communication.

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.
   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.
   Win a PowerCenter 120! <http://www.powercc.com/>
* 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/>
* EarthLink Network -- 800/395-8425 -- <sales@earthlink.net>
   Providers of direct Internet access for Macintosh users.
   For eWorld refugees: no setup fee! <http://www.earthlink.net/>
* 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.

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

Topics:
    MailBITS/14-Oct-96
    Send In More Clones
    Tag - You're It! TagBuilder Plays Well With Others
    And You Still Forgot...
    Intermind Communicator - Let's Communicate

<ftp://ftp.tidbits.com/pub/tidbits/issues/1996/TidBITS#349_14-Oct-96.etx>


MailBITS/14-Oct-96
------------------

**System 7.5 Update 2.0 Custom Install** -- If you've upgraded to
  System 7.5.5 (see TidBITS-346_) and later found that you needed to
  re-install something from System 7.5 Update 2.0 (which upgrades
  System 7.5 to 7.5.3), you discovered that System 7.5 Update 2.0
  won't run under System 7.5.5! Apple routinely does this with
  system software installers to ensure users don't unwittingly
  mix-and-match system components that were never designed to work
  together. However, with the plethora of Mac clones, system
  revisions, and updates lately, not being able to install
  components of the System 7.5 Update 2.0 under 7.5.5 can be
  troublesome - users particularly need to get Open Transport 1.1,
  MacinTalk, or other components from System Update 2.0.

  Apple's supported solution is to do a clean install of 7.5.3 with
  whatever additional components you need, then upgrade to 7.5.5
  again. However, Apple is also providing an _unsupported_ updater
  installer script that you can use with System 7.5 Update 2.0 under
  System 7.5.5 by dragging the script to the 7.5 Update 2.0
  installer icon. Back up your system, turn off all non-7.5.5
  extensions, and read the instructions first! Although this script
  may be overshadowed by future component releases (such as Open
  Transport 1.1.1), reports that many computers may not ship with
  System 7.5.5 for some time may give this installer script a long
  lifetime. [GD]

<ftp://ftp.support.apple.com/pub/apple_sw_updates/US/mac/Unsupported/
Sys75_Upd2.0_Custom_Install.hqx>


**Netscape Navigator 3.0 and Older Macs** -- Netscape has
  discovered a problem with Navigator 3.0 on Macs with the so-called
  "dirty" ROMs and more than 8 MB of RAM installed. Machines
  possibly affected include the Mac II, SE/30, IIcx, and IIx. The
  problem isn't subtle - a system error on launch, but the solution
  is fairly simple. If you turn on Apple's Virtual Memory or install
  Connectix's RAM Doubler before launching, the problem won't
  appear. An alternate fix is to upgrade to the beta of the week
  from Netscape, 3.01.b1, which is either 3.7 MB or 5.1 MB in size.
  [ACE]

<ftp://ftp.netscape.com/pub/navigator/3.01/3.01b1/mac/netscape3.01b1.bin>
<ftp://ftp.netscape.com/pub/navigator/3.01/3.01b1/mac/netscape3.01b1.hqx>
<http://home.netscape.com/eng/mozilla/3.0/relnotes/mac-3.01b1.html>


Send In More Clones
-------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>

  Last week brought the interesting news that hard drive vendor (and
  TidBITS sponsor) APS plans to start selling a line of Macintosh
  clones, probably sometime in November. APS initially plans three
  machines in the M*Power line, two desktop machines based on 160
  MHz and 200 MHz PowerPC 603e chips, and a minitower based on a 200
  MHz PowerPC 604e chip. The motherboards come from Motorola, and
  APS plans to differentiate its clones by allowing customers to
  specify precise hardware configurations on top of the base
  configurations.

  The basic specifications for the two desktop machines, the M*Power
  603e160 and M*Power 603e200, include three PCI slots, 16 MB of
  RAM, 8x CD-ROM drives, 1 MB of VRAM (upgradable to 4 MB) and 1.2
  GB hard disks, with prices at $1,399 and $1,599. The 603e160 ships
  without a Level 2 cache, whereas the 603e200 comes with 256K of
  Level 2 cache, and both machine can take up 512K of Level 2 cache.

  The $2,599 M*Power 604e200, which comes in a minitower case,
  features five PCI slots, 24 MB of RAM, a 8x CD-ROM drive, and a
  2.5 GB hard disk standard. It has 2 MB of VRAM and a 512K Level 2
  cache.

  Although these prices include ADB keyboards and mice, they do not
  include monitors, and I expect most people will want more RAM as
  well, given the rapacious RAM requirements of many of today's
  popular programs.

<http://www.apstech.com/aps-mpower.html>

  When I asked APS vice-president Paul McGraw about the clone
  market, he explained the move, saying, "We're already supporting
  most of the system, and this is the natural leverage of the
  knowledge, inventory, and internal systems that we already have."
  In other words, APS has proven that they know how to assemble,
  sell, ship, and support a wide variety of storage devices - moving
  up to Macintosh clones is a logical extension of these skills.

  In addition, APS is probably looking to evolve its product line
  for the future. Hard disk capacities continue to increase as
  prices plummet (the smallest disk APS carries is now over 1 GB).
  The obvious result of those facts is that within a relatively
  short time, most normal users will have all the storage they need
  for some time. High-end users will always continue to purchase 10
  GB drive arrays and the like, but the market of people upgrading
  from 80 MB disks will continue to shrink.

  From an industry standpoint, I think it's great to see APS making
  Macintosh clones. Although I'm of course biased since I've long
  liked APS, I think it's important for Apple and the Macintosh
  market in general to have more clone vendors, especially those
  that are already well-known within the Macintosh hardware market.
  Also, it appears that APS's machines will come in on the lower end
  of the price scale, which can only help get them in the hands of
  more people.


Tag - You're It! TagBuilder Plays Well With Others
--------------------------------------------------
  by Tonya Engst <tonya@tidbits.com>

  One way to make a Macintosh Web server perform feats of what look
  like magic is to employ the help of products like Maxum's NetCloak
  and NetForms. NetCloak enables you to serve different pages to
  different browsers, and to include counters as well as date and
  time notations. It can also perform a number of special tricks,
  like only showing portions of a page based on the time of day, or
  randomly changing a page. NetForms helps with managing forms: it
  can automatically create Web pages that contain messages sent in
  from people surfing the Web, and it can flexibly send email
  containing the contents of filled-in forms. For instance, when you
  subscribe to the TidBITS mailing list via our Web site, that form
  is made possible via NetForms.

  Maxum was an early player in this field, and what I've reported
  above is hardly news, though it does explain how some Macintosh-
  based Web sites operate behind the scenes. What's new is a free
  add-on from Maxum, called TagBuilder 1.0. Realizing that a sizable
  number of Web authors are migrating to graphical HTML authoring
  tools like golive and PageMill, Maxum created TagBuilder to
  address the problem that people attracted to graphical HTML
  authoring tools won't be excited about typing lots of Maxum-
  specific HTML extensions (which are necessary to make NetCloak and
  NetForms work), especially since these HTML authoring tools
  typically offer pitiful automation options.

  The TagBuilder window provides a simple, outline-based interface
  that displays tags for use with NetCloak or NetForms. Once you see
  a tag that you wish to use, you simply drag it into the HTML
  editor of your choice (assuming that you can drop text into your
  HTML editor). Regrettably, Maxum has yet to implement copy and
  paste for those editors that don't support drag & drop. TagBuilder
  also provides a helpful description of each tag, but NetCloak and
  NetForms are deep products, so users need an understanding of when
  they'd want to use which tags.

  I'm pleased to see Maxum creating a simple product that helps
  people use Maxum software in conjunction with software from other
  companies. TagBuilder is a good example of how a company can
  provide useful functionality without locking users into a specific
  ancillary product.

  TagBuilder ships with NetCloak and NetForms and will ship with
  Adobe PageMill 2.0. Anyone interested in playing around with demos
  of Maxum products or with TagBuilder can find them at the Maxum
  Web site.

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

    Maxum Development -- 630/830-1113 -- 630/830-1262 (fax)


And You Still Forgot...
-----------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>

  My article in TidBITS-346_ about why products may not be mentioned
  in articles prompted some additional suggestions and a few queries
  worth addressing.


**Tom Negrino** <tom@negrino.com> writes with a reason that no one
  has accused me of yet:

  Surprisingly, you neglected the reason for ignoring a product that
  stuns me the most when I'm accused of it:

  "You're being bought off by Apple / Microsoft / Adobe / Joe's
  Software Company not to mention a product."

  As I said to my girlfriend last month when Apple was delivering
  the usual load of gold bullion onto the front porch, "I can't
  believe that some people question the journalistic integrity in
  the Mac business!"

  Oy. My checking account wishes it were so.


**Peter Rosenthal** <pr@imcinfo.com> writes:
  As a small Mac developer (Interactive Media Corporation) I really
  appreciated your article in TidBITS-346_, "But You Didn't
  Mention." It was refreshing to get a glimpse of the other side of
  the review process. One issue that is frequently on the minds of
  smaller developers that you didn't cover is the impact of large
  advertisers on the review process. Do they muscle their way into
  the editorial side, and impact the objectivity of reviews?

**Adam responds**: It can seem like there is a bit of collusion at
  times. However, in all the writing I've done for Macintosh
  publications, I've never had it suggested that I change what I've
  said because of an advertiser, and any editor will adamantly deny
  that there's any link between editorial and advertising. That's
  true, but only from the editorial standpoint. The advertising
  sales people know what products are being reviewed or written
  about in any given issue of a magazine, and they try to sell
  specifically placed ads to the companies mentioned. That's why you
  can read a review of Microsoft Word and see a full-page ad for
  Word on the next page. It's unlikely that the editor or writer
  knew about the ad beforehand, but the ad sales person definitely
  knew about the article beforehand. If there was any cross-over, it
  would likely be in smaller publications where there's less
  separation between editorial and advertising.

  The problem is that when you're accused of this as an editor or
  writer, all you can do is deny it - there's no way of proving
  anything. I can say (and it's true) that we've never avoided
  mentioning a product in TidBITS because a sponsor asked us not to,
  but if someone believes that I'm toe-sucking pond scum who's out
  to destroy some small company anyway, my denial won't carry much
  weight. That's why reputation is worth a lot in this world,
  especially on the Internet.


**Chris Harvey** <glenmiln@astral.magic.ca> writes:
  When reading reviews of hardware categories in industry magazines,
  occasionally a major product will be missed in the review. I find
  these omissions extremely frustrating because it becomes difficult
  decide on the best product. I can understand it if the review
  comes out at a time when models from a certain manufacturer were
  changing, but often reviews will miss products that have been
  available for months and aren't due to be replaced for many more.
  So what's the story? Is there a reason for this other than bad
  organization? Does this sort of thing frustrate people in the
  publishing industry?

**Adam responds**: Hardware is a royal pain, because unlike
  software, most hardware is merely loaned to the publication for
  review. So, along with the general difficulty of dealing with some
  companies, you have the problem of short supply (since hardware is
  expensive to produce in comparison to software, companies may only
  have a few review units available at any one time) and the problem
  of units that are damaged in shipping or are otherwise
  dysfunctional on arrival. It's also possible that a new model is
  planned, but ships later than expected, making the previous model
  stay in the market longer than anticipated. And yes, writers
  trying to do a complete round-up of some category of hardware find
  it extremely frustrating when they can't include one major
  contender.

  We almost never review hardware in TidBITS because it's not worth
  the effort of receiving the device, unpacking it carefully so you
  don't lose anything, testing it within a relatively short time
  period (30 days is standard), and then packing it up and sending
  it back. Thus, we mainly publish reviews of hardware that someone
  has bought and wishes to review for us.

  In addition, proper hardware testing and comparison is an
  extremely expensive proposition, since you need a test lab, and an
  organization the size of TidBITS simply doesn't have the time,
  staff, or money to get into that business.


Intermind Communicator - Let's Communicate
------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>

  I've been working on and thinking about the Internet for many
  years now, and I've seen a lot of technologies come and go. Most
  don't stick around for long because, frankly, they have problems.
  Perhaps they weren't well thought-out to start with, or perhaps
  the implementation never comes together, or perhaps the company in
  question isn't sufficiently with it.

  I say this by way of introduction of a company and a technology
  that I believe bears serious watching in the future of the
  Internet. The company is Intermind, and their hot new technology
  is called Intermind Communicator. Intermind isn't a startup,
  having been the marketing force behind The Internet Adapter (TIA -
  a software SLIP server), but they don't have the baggage of old
  technology or old ideas about how the Internet works. That's
  refreshing. And their new product, Intermind Communicator,
  reflects the company's fresh ideas and realistic knowledge of the
  Internet.


**What Does It Do?** Intermind Communicator is, at its base, a new
  way of communicating on the Internet. It fits snugly between email
  and the Web, both of which have their pros and cons. Email is
  active, in that you directly send a message to someone else. But,
  it isn't an efficient way to communicate with lots of people
  (running mailing lists is work!), and it doesn't have the appeal
  of the Web's media flexibility. The Web, on the other hand, may be
  able to exploit fonts, graphics, and layout, not to mention
  hypertext linking, but it's passive - readers must actively seek
  you out, and you can't automatically draw someone back to your Web
  site every week.

  Intermind Communicator relies on the Web for transport and
  display, but builds in the active part of email, changing the
  dynamic of the communication process. Let me give an example of
  how this will work with TidBITS, since TidBITS is also being
  published via Intermind Communicator, using what Intermind calls a
  "hyperconnector," a small file that contains information about the
  item being published, including publication name, description,
  polling frequency, and so on.

  First off, you install Intermind Communicator, which runs on your
  computer and uses a Web browser as its interface. If you want to
  receive TidBITS via Intermind Communicator, you subscribe to our
  hyperconnector, which is a matter of following a Web link to
  download the hyperconnector file and automatically add it to your
  Intermind Communicator database. Once that's done, Intermind
  Communicator reads the contents of the TidBITS hyperconnector and
  checks our Web server for updates once each day. TidBITS only
  comes out once each week, but checking once a day helps spread the
  load, since not everyone's computer will check in for updates at
  exactly the same time. For instance, if you don't turn your
  computer on until Friday, Intermind Communicator checks our server
  then and picks up the current issue of TidBITS at that point.

  That's great, since there's no possibility of a bounce, as with
  our mailing list, but all our Intermind Communicator subscribers
  still get the issue promptly. Since Intermind Communicator is
  mediating the communication between us, more things are possible.
  We know how many people have used our hyperconnector (although we
  know _nothing_ about individual subscribers - not even email
  address, so Intermind Communicator protects privacy even more than
  a mailing list), and subscribers can personalize the parts of an
  issue of TidBITS they get.

  For example, perhaps you only like reading about Internet issues
  and articles that Tonya writes. If we have set up the appropriate
  topics (a relatively small number) and categorized articles within
  each issue - which we plan to do eventually - then Intermind
  Communicator would only retrieve those articles when it snagged a
  new issue of TidBITS. This isn't the same things as a keyword
  search: since we as the publishers do the categorization, you are
  far more likely to get what you want.

  We can publish TidBITS in several ways via Intermind Communicator,
  and either way works fine with the topics. First, we could publish
  just headlines and URLs to the articles on our Web server. That
  works well for people whose machines are directly connected to the
  Internet. Second, we could send out the entire text of an article
  instead of the URL to it, which is better for people who want to
  read TidBITS offline. Although choosing between those two methods
  is up to the publisher, I expect that we will support both methods
  eventually; for the moment we actually use a third approach - more
  on why in a bit.


**How Does It Work?** I've been talking with Intermind for a
  number of months, and here's how I understand the inner workings
  of Intermind Communicator. At its base, it's a database combined
  with a Web server that only works for a Web browser on the same
  machine. The database has a query language that allows the
  interface (which Intermind does entirely in HTML so as to
  piggyback on Web browser development) to access the database
  through the kernel. And of course, the database can also access
  the Internet, making for a five-layer system that looks something
  like this:

                  User interface
                  Query language
                      Kernel
              Object-oriented database
    File and communications infrastructure

  Intermind designed the program to be highly modular, which
  improves portability between platforms (Macintosh, Windows 95,
  Windows NT, and Unix eventually) and makes it much easier, for
  instance, to rewrite the entire interface in Java, if Intermind
  chose to do that.

  In essence, I see the utility of Intermind Communicator being that
  it gives more control over communication to both parties.
  Publishers know that information is being delivered to readers in
  a timely fashion and with the advantages of HTML, and readers get
  to say what aspects of a publication interest them and control
  influx of data more completely.


**The Business Plan** -- So how does Intermind make money to
  justify the year of development time and support their 60 or so
  employees? Intermind Communicator comes in four flavors, all of
  which are available in one downloadable program.

* First, there's the free reader, which is available to everyone,
  and enables you to subscribe to hyperconnectors.

* Second, there's the free non-commercial publisher, which enables
  you to create and publish hyperconnectors.

* Third, Intermind plans to license Intermind Communicator to
  intranets on a per-seat basis, just like any other site license.

* Fourth and finally, there's the global publisher version, which
  is for people who use the program in their commercial ventures on
  the Internet. There's no set fee for the global publisher version,
  since Intermind recognizes (I talked with them a lot about this)
  that there are many different types of commercial ventures on the
  Internet, and no one license scheme would work for everyone. If
  you're interested in the global publisher, you can talk to
  Intermind about licensing details.

  In my mind, what's important about this system is that anyone can
  subscribe to hyperconnectors for free, and anyone who wants to
  publish non-commercial information via Intermind Communicator can
  do so for free.


**The Other Shoe** -- Now that I've talked up Intermind
  Communicator, it's time to drop the bombshell. The Macintosh
  version isn't yet shipping. I hope it says something that I
  consider Intermind Communicator sufficiently important to discuss
  at length in TidBITS when the Mac version won't be available for a
  few months, probably until Macworld San Francisco in early
  January.

  Here's why I'm not worried. Drummond Reed, one of the founders of
  Intermind, is a long-time TidBITS reader and has made a point of
  keeping me informed about Intermind Communicator over the last
  nine months or so. He's also worked hard to involve Guy Kawasaki,
  since Intermind feels extremely strongly about the importance of
  the Macintosh market, especially on the Internet. The goal from
  the beginning was to ship simultaneously on Macintosh, Windows 95,
  and Windows NT, but shortly before last week's long-planned
  official ship date, it became clear that the Mac version simply
  wasn't ready and the other two versions were. That sounds bad, but
  the reason why this happened is that the lead developer on
  Intermind Communicator is a Mac programmer, and when the core code
  took longer than predicted, he wasn't available to finish the Mac
  version in time. With one of the company's founders and the lead
  developer behind the Mac, I'm not worried about getting a Mac
  version soon.

  Everything I've seen of Intermind Communicator, I've seen under
  Windows 95 on my Compaq Contura 400, which is a 486 laptop that I
  previously turned on about ten times a year. I can't say that I
  like using the machine, but a Web browser is a Web browser, so
  using Intermind Communicator has been pretty much trivial, even
  when I published last week's issue of TidBITS as a test of its
  publishing capabilities. I can't wait for the Mac version to
  appear.


**Looking to the Future** -- What I've described above is version
  1.0 of Intermind Communicator. As with any 1.0 release, it lacks
  lots of features that Intermind dearly wanted to include, but had
  to pull to get it to ship on time and be understandable to an
  audience unfamiliar with the communications shift Intermind
  Communicator offers. I've run into a few of those limitations
  while trying to publish TidBITS. For instance, I first tried to
  set up topics like "Reviews" and "by Tonya," but I soon discovered
  that version 1.0 doesn't allow multiple messages per topic. So, if
  Tonya wrote two articles in an issue, I couldn't put both into the
  "by Tonya" category.

  Then I decided to publish only two topics, "Announcement Only" and
  "Full Issue." That way, readers could get the top-of-issue blurb
  and live links to all the articles, or they could have the entire
  issue delivered as a single file. That ran afoul of two problems.
  Netscape Navigator Gold 3.0 under Windows 95 won't allow more than
  30K of text in a text field (remember that Intermind
  Communicator's entire interface is inside a Web browser). I worked
  around that one with minor editing, only to run into a 16K limit
  on a message for Intermind Communicator. Once these problems are
  fixed in a future release, we'll look at publishing individual
  articles in topics. Until then you can only get the announcement
  of a new issue of TidBITS, and you must read it on a Windows
  machine.

<http://www.tidbits.com/hyperconnectors/tidbits.con>

  You can also find TidBITS in the Global Directory of
  hyperconnectors that Intermind maintains as a way to simplify
  finding new hyperconnectors.

  Intermind has other big plans for the future. Right now, the only
  type of data that Intermind Communicator can transfer is HTML,
  which they chose to reduce testing time and to keep the product
  more understandable. There's no technical reason for that
  limitation, though, so imagine a future version that can transfer
  any type of data, perhaps including updates to programs you use
  (using a hyperconnector configured to check in once a month, for
  instance). Or, what about address information sent out via
  Intermind Communicator? Rather than try to get everyone to change
  their contact databases (we moved a year ago and still receive
  snail mail at our old address), you could just publish your
  information in a hyperconnector and have it checked every few
  months, ensuring that no one using Intermind Communicator would
  ever be out of date by more than a few months.

  I've also enjoyed talking with the folks at Intermind over the
  last nine months because they have the best grounding in hypertext
  theory that I've seen in an Internet company. They're fully aware
  of things like Ted Nelson's proposed Xanadu system and issues
  surrounding micropayments and the like. Although there's no
  telling if those ideas will ever appear in a version of Intermind
  Communicator, it's a good bet that they're being considered.
  Although I tend to be fairly cynical about new technologies,
  Drummond and the others at Intermind have never failed to come up
  with good answers to my questions. Add to that the fact that I
  don't philosophically disagree with anything I've seen or been
  told about how the product and business plan works, and you see
  why I'm being so positive.

  Will Intermind Communicator succeed? Will it be a paradigm shift
  in how we use the Internet to communicate? I can't answer those
  questions - no one can. I can say that I believe that Intermind is
  a smart company, and Intermind Communicator is a good product with
  great potential. Other smart companies with great products have
  fallen by the wayside for reasons that could not have been
  predicted, and the same could be true of Intermind. I sincerely
  hope that it isn't and that Intermind Communicator becomes the
  next "must-have" Internet product.

  You can read more about Intermind Communicator on Intermind's Web
  site at the URL below, and you can also download the Windows 95
  and Windows NT versions of the program. One neat touch - since
  everything Intermind Communicator does comes via HTML, Intermind
  has visual demos of how the program works online as well.

<http://www.intermind.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
 -------------------------------------------------------------------



