TidBITS#310/15-Jan-96
=====================

This week we bring you news from the Macworld Expo in San
   Francisco, including an extensive overview of Web-related 
   products at the show, plus our annual superlatives collection of
   the show's best and worst. Also, check out the latest on turmoil
   at Apple, a complete system update for 5300-series PowerBooks,
   and forthcoming Macintosh models. Finally, we sadly say goodbye
   to Robert Hess, one of the Macintosh industry's best known and
   most respected journalists.

This issue of TidBITS sponsored in part by:
* APS Technologies -- 800/443-4199 -- <sales@apstech.com>
   Makers of hard drives, tape drives, and neat SCSI accessories.
   For APS price lists, email: <aps-prices@tidbits.com>
* Northwest Nexus -- 206/455-3505 -- http://www.halcyon.com/
   Providing access to the global Internet. <info@halcyon.com>
* Hayden Books, an imprint of Macmillan Computer Publishing
   Internet Starter Kit for Macintosh, Third Edition online!
   Mac Tip of the Day & free books! -- http://www.mcp.com/hayden/
* Power Computing -- 800/375-7693 -- <info@powercc.com>
   Now shipping... The Award-Winning MacOS Compatibles!
   See what the press says! http://www.powercc.com/News/quotes.html
* America Online -- 800/827-6364 -- http://www.aol.com
   The world's largest provider of online services.
   Give Back to the Net -- http://www.aol.com/give/
* DealBITS: Short but sweet because of Macworld Expo <-------- NEW
   http://king.tidbits.com/dealbits/ -- <dealbits@tidbits.com>

Copyright 1990-1995 Adam & Tonya Engst. Details at end of issue.
   Information: <info@tidbits.com> Comments: <editors@tidbits.com>
   ---------------------------------------------------------------

Topics:
    MailBITS/15-Jan-96
    Goodbye Robert
    Macworld SF 96 Superlatives
    Light at the End of the Tunnel: Web and HTML at the Expo
    Reviews/15-Jan-96

ftp://ftp.tidbits.com/pub/tidbits/issues/1996/TidBITS#310_15-Jan-96.etx


MailBITS/15-Jan-96
------------------

**Turmoil at Apple** -- Apple announced last week it expects to
  report a $68 million loss for its first fiscal quarter this year,
  despite growing unit shipments and revenues. Apple claims price
  wars in the personal computer market (particularly in Japan)
  resulted in sales and margins below internal projections. As if
  this weren't enough, Apple bid farewell to no less than five vice
  presidents in an executive-level shake-up and reorganization,
  which added to rumors CEO Michael Spindler's days may be numbered.
  [GD]


**New and Rumored Machines** -- Power Computing was showing off
  the PowerCurve 601/120 at Macworld, a desktop Mac with three PCI
  slots and a 120 MHz 601 processor on a CPU daughter card. Expected
  to be shipping in a month or two, the PowerCurves will be
  available in desktop and low-profile cases, have options for NuBus
  slots (once Power Computing's Stargate technology is available),
  and offer a lot of horsepower for just a bit more than Apple's
  current prices for the Power Mac 7200 series. Rumors were also
  circulating about a Performa-branded new mini-tower design from
  Apple codenamed InstaTower to be priced around $2,000, and a
  forthcoming PowerBook, codenamed Epic, that sports a full-sized
  CD-ROM drive. [GD]


**Apple Drops PowerTalk Until Copland** -- According to MacWEEK,
  Apple has confirmed it will be moving away from PowerTalk as its
  core communications solution until the next major revision of the
  Mac OS is available, citing very low adoption by users and
  developers. PowerTalk 1.1 will ship this quarter, but won't re-
  appear until a wholly-rewritten version based on OpenDoc and
  Internet technologies (like Glenn Anderson's Apple Internet Mail
  Server) ships with Copland. [GD]


**PowerBook 5300 System Update** -- Apple has released a new set
  of system disks for the PowerBook 5300 series. Although this isn't
  the much-anticipated System 7.5 Update 2.0, it includes many
  components expected to be in that release; highlights include
  Finder 7.5.4, an improved emulator, more PowerPC native system
  components for better performance, and fixes to the PC Card modem
  extension and the application launching process (which
  particularly help Word and Excel).

  The update is available in two forms - as a net install or as 14
  floppy disk images - and weighs in at a whopping 20 MB. (That's
  over 90 minutes download time on a 28.8 Kbps modem.) See the
  ReadMe file before you begin downloading; if you saved the disk
  images that came with your PowerBook, you don't need the entire
  update. There have also been reports of corrupted downloads and
  users needing to remove or delete their Finder Preferences file
  after installing the update. The update can be used on PowerBook
  5300s and 190s, the Duo 2300, and PowerBooks and Duos with PowerPC
  Upgrades. Right now, rumor suggests that the update only works
  with U.S. systems, so users of international system versions
  should check newsgroups like <comp.sys.mac.portables> to see if
  there's any information on using the update with a particular
  system. [GD]

http://www.macos.apple.com/pbupdate.7.5.2/
ftp://ftp.support.apple.com/pub/apple_sw_updates/US/mac/PowerBook/
PB_5300_SW_Update/


Goodbye Robert
--------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>

  There is no good way to say this.

  On January 12th, 1996, at age 29, Robert Hess died from
  complications due to pneumonia.

  In lieu of flowers, Robert's family has requested that
  contributions in Robert's name be made to DQ, 584 Castro St.,
  #560, San Francisco, CA 94114. If you wish to make a personal
  remembrance of Robert, you can do so by sending email to his
  family at <memorial@macweek.com>.

  Robert was my editor at MacWEEK, a long-time correspondent, and in
  one of the many strange ways of the Internet, my friend. Despite
  numerous attempts to hook up at various Macworlds, we only met
  once, at a dark and smoky Mac the Knife party at Macworld Boston
  in 1995, and then only for several minutes. After that show, he
  sent me mail asking if he'd behaved strangely because his evil
  twin had been in control.

  I went back through my years of stored mail to see what Robert and
  I had talked about and found some interesting quotes. From May of
  1992, when I was struggling with carpal tunnel syndrome and before
  he joined MacWEEK, Robert closed a message with, "Get well. PS:
  I'd make some crass remark about hurt wrists and late nights 
  alone but we're not good enough friends for that sort of humor...
  yet. ;)." Ever brash and irreverent, Robert noted in regard to a
  comment I made about the pointing device used by IBM's ThinkPad
  notebooks that, "It always makes me feel like I'm manipulating
  someone's nipple." That note made it into TidBITS-261_, and the
  conversation, which also included Peter H. Lewis of the New York
  Times, continued in email. Robert wrote:

  "This is a creepy message. We have technogeeks from three major
  rags (well, my major rag and your couple of minor also-rans) in an
  email at once.

  "I'm surprised at what our editors are letting us get away with
  these days. Two weeks ago the Knife had an OJ joke that kicked a
  little sand over the libel line, then last week he said Clinton
  was "abandoning the liberal tie-dye for Republican drag." I guess
  we're feeding our editors well these days.

  "But I think a nipple line might get vetoed in print, though I'm
  welcome to spew elsewhere all I want."

  Along with breaking into the world of Macintosh journalism,
  something he had wanted to do rather badly, Robert was a decent
  programmer. His best known utility identified users who connected
  to a Mac running file sharing, and was initially called Shaman. In
  June of 1994, ZiffNet/Mac (ZMac) licensed it and renamed it
  ShareDevil. Unfortunately, although the ZMac/MacUser Utility of
  the month is now available on the Web each month, past utilities
  are still only available to ZMac subscribers on CompuServe (and I
  presume eWorld). Perhaps ZMac could re-release ShareDevil in
  Robert's memory.

http://www.ziff.com/~macuser/downloadables.html

  In October of 1995, I became a contributing editor with MacWEEK,
  and Robert was assigned to be my editor, a move that pleased me
  because I'd known him for so long. I'd like to say that our
  working relationship had been a barrel of laughs as well, but
  after commiserating with one another about having to use Microsoft
  Word after I handed in the first column, communications broke
  down. I sent in the second column but didn't hear back, because he
  had been on vacation and then sick for a week and the column had
  been lost. I resent it, and a week later heard back from Carolyn
  Said at MacWEEK, who said Robert was sick again and that she was
  helping out. That column made it in, and when he came back to
  work, I asked Robert when he wanted the third column. He said the
  Sunday before Macworld, so I sent it early since we were leaving
  for San Francisco that Sunday. Then, when I checked email on
  Monday night, there was a note from Robert:

  "As you know, things change in this business. We had some
  advertising changes and now I can't run your column next Monday."

  Things do change in this business, but I wasn't expecting Robert
  to be one of them. Those were the last words I received from him.
  On Wednesday night at the APS party, Mark Hall, MacWEEK's editor-
  in-chief, told me that Robert had been admitted to the hospital
  with pneumonia. I knew it was serious, but not until the next
  night at the Netter's Dinner did I realize how bad. Avi Rappoport
  told me that people were planning to do something for Robert the
  next day at the Developer Central pavilion, and that Robert wasn't
  doing well. Then, just before noon on Friday, Raines Cohen came by
  in the middle of a signing I was doing and told me that Robert had
  died.

  Goodbye, Robert. I will miss you, MacWEEK will miss you, and the
  Internet will miss you.


Macworld SF 96 Superlatives
---------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>

  Every year we try to do some sort of a superlatives article - the
  people, booths, products, and events at Macworld that in some way
  struck us as especially good, bad, interesting, insipid, or
  somehow out-of-the-ordinary. Here then, is this year's
  installment.


**Biggest Button Bonanza** -- Iomega, makers of the popular Zip
  and Jaz removable hard drives, easily won the award for most
  creative button advertising. Iomega reps constantly handed out
  large yellow buttons with a variety of slogans on them, and some
  show-goers virtually armor-plated themselves with the buttons. The
  slogans were great, and I recorded most of them, along with some
  comments in parentheses.

I am creative (so why are you wearing an advertising button?)
I am easy (potentially dangerous for those of the female persuasion)
I am graphic (isn't that illegal in some states?)
I am loaded (downright stupid on the streets of San Francisco)
I am protected (from what?)
I am smart (sure, buddy)
I am the walrus (Paul is dead)
I do WYSIWYG (but not Windows)
I feel bitmapped (me too)
I give As (no wonder we have problems with education)
I got lucky at Macworld (hmm, multiple interpretations here)
I got Quarked (does that hurt much?)
I like Apples (now if only Wall Street did)
I like recess (you never fell from the monkey bars)
I surf (far out, dude!)
I was recovered from Mac HD (with only a little data corruption)


**Biggest No-Show** -- Where was WordPerfect? They've had one of
  the most well-attended booths at Macworld Expos for several years,
  but it appears that the company's fortunes have turned on them
  after being held up for sale by Novell (see TidBITS-302_). An
  article in Friday's Wall Street Journal talked about the corporate
  culture clash between WordPerfect and Novell and the damage done
  to WordPerfect. Apparently, Novell is still shopping WordPerfect's
  remnants around, but has yet to find a taker.

http://wp.novell.com/busapps/


**Best Teaser** -- This award goes to a product we can't name that
  acts as a bidirectional gateway between HyperCard and WebSTAR. In
  other words, it enables you to publish HyperCard stacks on the
  Web, displaying the contents in both text and graphical forms.
  Geoff and I were wowed by how cool this baby is, even given its
  extremely early status. We'll keep you posted when we can say more
  about it, but I think this product may go a long way toward
  differentiating the Mac as a Web server, given all the HyperCard
  stacks out there. It might even help revitalize HyperCard.


**Best Tchotchkes** -- StarNine, working on being called
  Quarterdeck, cops this prize for their foam brains inscribed with
  the StarNine URL and the phrase "Blow Your Mind." Apparently,
  David Thompson, StarNine's Director of Marketing, came up with the
  idea (undoubtedly affected at a subconscious level by the name of
  Chuck Shotton's company when WebSTAR was still MacHTTP - the name
  was BIAP Systems, and BIAP stands for Brain In A Pan). StarNine
  then called a company in Berkeley that provides all sorts of
  tchotchkes, and asked for a foam brain. That company didn't have
  any (who stocks foam brains, I'm asking?), but apparently there's
  a world wide database of tchotchke companies, and there's one
  company in Taiwan that made a foam brain, originally for a meeting
  of the America Neurological Association. The tangled webs we
  weave... .


**Softest Floor** -- We have to hand it to Microsoft - the company
  really knows how to rent thick carpet pads. After a hard day of
  moseying around Macworld, the next best thing to sitting was
  checking out the Microsoft Home CDs like Cinemania, Music Central,
  Wine Guide, and the more staid Bookshelf and Encarta. Let's face
  it, Word and Excel just don't set the heart aflutter any more, not
  that I personally have ever experienced much in the way of
  Microsoft palpitations.

http://www.microsoft.com/MSHome/


**Coolest Digital Camera** -- Kodak wins this award hands down for
  the Kodak DC 50, which takes the basic feature set of the DC 40
  (which in turn is an enhancement of Apple's QuickTake digital
  camera) and adds features like a 3x motorized zoom with a close-up
  mode for shots within 19 inches. Most important, based on comments
  during my digital camera articles this summer, the DC 50 can
  either download images via a serial cable or store them on a Type
  I or Type II PC Card that you can then insert into a PC Card
  reader attached to the Mac. The Kodak staff weren't particularly
  helpful, but other basic specs are 756 x 504 pixels of resolution,
  24-bit color, three levels of compression (7 pictures per MB, 11
  per MB, and 22 per MB), and a price around $1,000. I'm fond of my
  QuickTake, but I might consider moving up if the price was right.

http://www.kodak.com/digitalImaging/digitalImaging.shtml


**Monitor Lust** -- The coolest monitor (perhaps literally) that I
  saw at the show was a 20-inch color gas plasma display from
  Nishiden that was about two inches thick. It only ran at 640 x
  480, and I don't know what bit depth it was at, but for $6,000, I
  decided that my curiosity could be put on hold for a few more
  years.


**Most Geeks Per Square Foot** -- Jean-Louis Gassee's new company,
  Be, wins this award, which was especially interesting given that
  the BeBox isn't even Mac-compatible. Even still, I never managed
  to push through the crowds to check out the BeBox close up (I
  don't know if I'm quite enough of a geek to qualify, since I
  haven't the foggiest idea with what I'd do with the special 37-pin
  GeekPort. [I had no trouble pushing through - I think they were
  scared of my hair. -Geoff] Be was handing out "We be geeks" pocket
  protectors for their tchotchke, and a sign on the otherwise
  standard booth read: "Surgeon General's Warning: Unfit for
  consumption by human beings." And just in case you didn't get the
  message, it said (or I assume it said) the same thing in French.

http://www.be.com/


**Best Booth Furniture** -- Hayden Books and Metrowerks share this
  award for their use of extremely comfortable leather couches. It's
  bad enough that you have to spend most of the show standing and
  walking, but when you do get to a chair, they're often the
  uncomfortable industrial sorts. Nothing beats being able to sink
  down into a cozy couch and chat for a while, or in the case of the
  Hayden booth (which attempted to imitate a Borders bookstore) read
  a book for a while.


**Most Ubiquitous Programmer's Toy** -- Nearly everywhere you
  looked, developers were using Troy Gaul's excellent Infinity
  Windoid to create palettes, toolbars, status windows, pop-up
  windows, online help, and more. Imitation may be the sincerest
  form of flattery, but I think seeing your name in the credits of
  dozens of new programs must be equally gratifying.
  Congratulations, Troy!

ftp://mirror.aol.com/pub/info-mac/dev/src/infinity-windoid-wdef-30-c.hqx


**Best New Solution for Old Problems** -- How many people do you
  know using overpowered spreadsheet programs to calculate loan
  payments, or merely average a column of numbers? A forthcoming
  program from Casady & Greene called C+G Solutions offers a visual,
  easy to use approach for flexibly integrating data and
  calculations. Operations are tied to data by dragging operators
  off toolbars and drawing relationships between them, and the data
  and relationships can be changed or added to at any time. Once an
  operation is set up the way you like, it can be "crunched" down
  and used as a single operator elsewhere in the program. C+G
  Solutions offers a new paradigm for performing both
  straightforward and sophisticated calculations, although it is
  (perhaps unfortunately) being billed as the first spreadsheet
  innovation in 10 years. C+G Solutions is expected to be available
  this spring.


Light at the End of the Tunnel: Web and HTML at the Expo
--------------------------------------------------------
  by Tonya Engst <tonya@tidbits.com>

  Desktop productivity applications have become background noise:
  the UltraWriters and MegaMaths of the world no longer make me
  wonder if I'll live long enough to experience enough of the great
  stuff computers can do, if only we can design and use them
  correctly. Recently, all my thrills and chills have come from the
  Internet, and my only concern was whether the Mac platform would
  transcend the weight of its current application suite and arrive
  as a mean lean Internet machine. Last week's Expo made me forget
  my worries - I can't wait to roll up my sleeves and start using
  all these great new products!


**Why Print?** Many companies attending Macworld Expo showed off
  products that don't assume your final output will be to paper.
  Many such products are not yet shipping, and many of them will
  ship with freely distributable Netscape plug-ins. Several help you
  manage bookmarks, and we'll be reviewing a number of them in
  future TidBITS issues. Some looked just horrible; some looked
  promising. Three that grabbed my attention were Acrobat,
  QuarkImmedia, and Virtus Voyager.

  Adobe's Acrobat lets you "print" to an Acrobat file, and then
  share and view that file online. Acrobat has been around for a few
  years, and Adobe is still tweaking it; upcoming improvements
  include a Netscape plug-in and the ability to link to a PDF file
  from a Web page. Acrobat's increasing integration with the Web
  makes me somewhat more interested in seriously checking out its
  next shipping version.

http://www.adobe.com/Acrobat/Acrobat0.html

  Quark showed off the not-yet-shipping QuarkImmedia, which you use
  along with QuarkXPress. QuarkImmedia's claim to fame is that
  people who know QuarkXPress can easily make multimedia
  presentations that can run in a viewer or a Netscape plug-in. Not
  knowing QuarkXPress, I found the product completely inscrutable; I
  gave up on the lengthy demo after about 20 minutes. Call 800/788-
  7835 or 303/894-8888 to request a "prototype demonstration" CD of
  QuarkImmedia.

http://www.quark.com/immedia.htm

  Virtus showed off Virtus Voyager, an alpha release VRML browser
  which currently (in the version I just downloaded) functions as a
  helper application for Netscape. VRML, Virtual Reality Modeling
  Language, is used to create three dimensional environments.
  Voyager enables you to view and navigate VRML documents with fluid
  links to and from normal Web pages or to and from other VRML
  documents. Voyager can import files from Virtus WalkThrough Pro
  2.5 or from any other 3-D program that can do VRML export (and I
  haven't the foggiest idea if any exist; I should have asked!). The
  alpha version of Voyager is available for download via the Virtus
  Web site.

http://www.virtus.com/


**Web Authoring** -- At last August's Boston Macworld Expo, HTML
  authors couldn't get enough of Ceneca's (now Adobe's) PageMill and
  SiteMill (see TidBITS-290_ and TidBITS-305_). Although SiteMill
  still isn't shipping, PageMill made a big splash at Macworld Expo
  - Adobe had a small computer classroom on the show floor and gave
  seminars that helped people learn to use PageMill.

  Bare Bones Software's BBEdit 3.5.2 now offers an extension called
  PageMill Cleaner, which fixes some problems that PageMill creates
  in HTML code. BBEdit 3.5.2 provides an integrated spelling checker
  that automatically skips HTML tags, a better interface for
  extensions, as well numerous other improvements. BBEdit 3.5.2 also
  comes with version 2.0 of Lindsay Davies's BBEdit HTML Tools, a
  set of popular BBEdit extensions (PageMill Cleaner is part of this
  set). Bare Bones Software has also released BBEdit Lite 3.5.1; the
  update fixes some problems in BBEdit Lite 3.5.

http://www.adobe.com/Apps/PageMill/
http://www.tiac.net/biz/bbsw/news.html

  Another possible option for cleaning up PageMill's HTML is a
  straightforward AppleScript application from Clint MacDonald
  <cbbccm2@tthsc6.lubb.ttuhsc.edu> called FixPageMill. It works with
  any version of BBEdit 3.5 to clean up HTML generated from
  PageMill.

ftp://ftp.scriptweb.com/pub/applescript/scripts/FixPageMill1.0.sit

  A company I hadn't heard of before, Vermeer Technologies, showed
  off the not-quite-shipping Front Page, a Web site management and
  HTML authoring tool that offers many of SiteMill's features, but
  with the addition of what Vermeer calls WebBots. A WebBot helps
  you use and customize a good sampling of CGIs through dialog
  boxes, instead of by scripting. Vermeer's WebBot CGIs work with a
  variety of Web servers including NCSA, CERN, and Netscape. Unlike
  PageMill, and according to Vermeer, Front Page will not alter
  existing HTML code if you import an HTML document.

  Front Page is currently available for Windows, and the company
  representative who gave me a demo had - apparently - never heard
  of PageMill before coming to the show. Front Page looks promising,
  so I hope the shipping Mac version works with Quarterdeck's
  WebSTAR. I also hope Vermeer is Mac-savvy enough to compete with
  Adobe.

http://www.vermeer.com/

  [Microsoft is expected to announce 16-Jan-96 it will purchase
  Vermeer Technologies. So instead of Vermeer versus Ceneca, we get
  Microsoft versus Adobe. -Geoff]


**CGIs** -- In the CGI department, several companies offered CGIs
  that you configure in dialog boxes, not through programming. A CGI
  (Common Gateway Interface) is an application or a script that
  extends a server's capabilities. A common example of a CGI is one
  that processes information returned from a form. A dialog-like
  interface for a CGI application makes setting up the CGI possible
  for people who don't do scripting.

  Foresight Technology featured CalendarSet/CGI, a set of CGIs that
  should ship in February and enable you to "create and manage" a
  calendar on a Web page; Web Broadcasting offered Web FM 2.0, a
  product that helps you link WebSTAR to FileMaker Pro 3.0
  databases; and Blue World Communications showed off MacSite
  Searcher, a product that works with WebSTAR, Frontier, and
  FileMaker Pro 3.0 to index a Web site, so people who view the site
  can search it.

http://www.fsti.com/
http://www.macweb.com/webfm/
http://www.blueworld.com/

  Maxum makes a variety of useful add-on products for WebSTAR, but
  their new product is RushHour, which is essentially a Web server
  dedicated to rapidly sending out graphics. I saw a demo where
  RushHour served a series of frames from a QuickTime movie; frames
  from the movie had been saved as JPEGs and were being served from
  a Duo 210 over Ethernet. Netscape, the client, was running on a
  different Mac and displayed the frames quickly enough that they
  looked like the original movie. Of course, that won't work over a
  modem, but it's still a great demo.

http://www.maxum.com/

  Teachers might check out WEST's WebSTAR add-on, also called WEST,
  which sets up an online classroom of sorts, with options for
  tutorials, work sheets, asking questions in a forum, and so on.
  WEST, hailing from Ireland, has plans to ship versions of WEST
  that work with other servers as well. In case you were wondering,
  WEST stands for Web Educational Support Tools.

http://west.ucd.ie/


**Java** -- For those who plan to write Java code, the Java
  product that got the biggest buzz at the show was Natural
  Intelligence's Roaster 1.0 (see TidBITS-309_). Roaster currently
  ships on a CD and only runs on a PowerPC; Natural Intelligence
  plans to ship a 68K version "soon." Symantec also announced it
  will bundle its Java tools (now called Symantec Cafe for Java,
  rather than Espresso, due to trademark issues) with subscriptions
  to Symantec C++ for Power Macintosh beginning in the first quarter
  of 1996. Metrowerks, meanwhile, has announced plans to support
  both Java and Netscape's JavaScript in CodeWarrior 9, due out this
  May.

http://www.natural.com/
http://www.symantec.com/lit/dev/javaindex.html
http://www.metrowerks.com/products/announce/java.html


**Serving up the Web** -- Quarterdeck was at the show, promoting
  their Web server, WebSTAR, and giving out squishy miniature
  brains. Originally sold by the now-bought-out StarNine, WebSTAR is
  no longer the only commercial Mac server in town. Whether other
  companies can compete remains to be seen, but three Web servers -
  Delphic's OneSite, MDG's Web Server 4D, and Spider Island
  Software's TeleFinder Internet BBS - have all entered the market,
  each offering a different feature set. And of course, Peter
  Lewis's $10 shareware FTPd can also act as a Web server, and for
  the truly broke, there's the free httpd4Mac.

http://www.starnine.com/
http://www.delphic.com/
http://www.mdg.com/
http://www.spiderisland.com/
ftp://mirror.aol.com/pub/info-mac/comm/tcp/ftpd-300.hqx
ftp://mirror.aol.com/pub/info-mac/comm/tcp/web/httpd-for-mac-13.hqx

  All in all, the show had a cartload of products that let Mac users
  create, manage, and experience the Web. After several shows where
  the high points involved comparing how many pounds the already
  obese desktop productivity applications had gained, this Expo gave
  a glimpse of light at the end of the tunnel.

    Adobe -- 800/411-8657 -- 206/628-2749 -- <info@adobe.com>
    Bare Bones Software -- 508/651-3561 -- 508/651-7584 (fax)
      <bbsw@netcom.com>
    Blue World Communications -- 206/313-1051 -- 206/313-1056 (fax)
      <blueworld@blueworld.com>
    Delphic Software -- 909/792-7932 -- <info@delphic.com>
    Foresite Technology -- 800/701-9393 -- 817/731-4444
      817/731-9304 (fax) -- <info@fsti.com>
    Quark -- 800-676-4575 -- 303/343-2086 (fax)
      <quarktech@aol.com >
    Quarterdeck (StarNine) -- 800/525-2580 -- 510/649-4949
      510/548-0393 (fax) -- <info@starnine.com>
    Maxum -- 847/830-1113 -- 847/830-1262 (fax) -- <info@maxum.com>
    MDG Computer Services -- 708/622-0220 -- 708/622-8893
      <sales@mdg.com>
    Natural Intelligence -- 800/999-4649 -- 617/876-4876
       617-492-7425 (fax) -- <info@natural.com>
    Vermeer Technologies -- 800/932-0075 -- 617/576-1780
      <info@vermeer.com>
    Virtus Corporation -- 800/847-8871 -- 919/460-4530 (fax)
      <info@virtus.com>
    Web Broadcasting -- 415/329-9676 -- <info@macweb.com>
    WEST -- +353-1-706-8766 -- +353-1-283-0669 (fax)
      <info@west.ie>


Reviews/15-Jan-96
-----------------

* MacWEEK -- 08-Jan-96, Vol. 10, #1
    After Effects 3.0 -- pg. 79
    MiniCad 6.0 -- pg. 79
    KPT Final Effects 3.0 -- pg. 82
    PageMill 1.0 -- pg. 88
    MacBench 3.0 -- pg. 90


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