TidBITS#389/21-Jul-97
=====================

  Apple can shine with pride this week as it releases Mac OS 8, and
  in this issue, Geoff covers its many new features. We also have
  news about juiced-up PowerBook 1400s, an Internet-based encryption
  challenge in which Macintosh users can participate, and Apple's
  lower-than-expected quarterly loss. Tonya rounds out the issue by
  exploring a new Frontier in Web publishing and site management.

Topics:
    MailBITS/21-Jul-97
    Apple Powers Up the PowerBook 1400
    Apple Double-Clicks Mac OS 8
    Spinning the Web Part 5: New Frontiers

<http://www.tidbits.com/tb-issues/TidBITS-389.html>
<ftp://ftp.tidbits.com/pub/tidbits/issues/1997/TidBITS#389_21-Jul-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 250 MHz - the fastest desktop system ever.
   Build Your Own Box online! <http://www.powercc.com/>

* Small Dog Electronics -- Special Deal for TidBITS Readers!
   PowerBook 1400c/117 - NEW with Global Village 28.8 modem: $2395
   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/21-Jul-97
------------------

**Apple Posts Lower-than-Expected Q3 Loss** -- After the drama
  surrounding the departures of Gil Amelio and Ellen Hancock (see
  TidBITS-388_), Apple's third fiscal quarter report came and went
  quietly. Apple reported a net loss of $56 million (44 cents per
  share), compared to last year's third quarter loss of $32 million
  (26 cents per share). $56 million is still a hefty chunk of money,
  but it fell conservatively amid speculations of a loss ranging
  from $70 million and $130 million. [JLC]

<http://product.info.apple.com/pr/press.releases/1997/q4/
970716.pr.rel.q397.html>


**Bovine RC5 Challenge** -- A group of Macintosh users is
  participating in the 56-bit key RC5 version of the RSA Data
  Security Secret-Key Contests, an effort to break 56-bit RC5
  encryption. Among other cracking efforts is the Bovine RC5
  Project, a volunteer effort that uses spare CPU cycles to test all
  possible keys. To participate, Mac users can download the free
  client program and leave it running on Internet-connected Power
  Macs (it's way too slow on 68K Macs); to join as part of Guy
  Kawasaki's EvangeList team, enter <evangelist@apple.com> as the
  required email address. The EvangeList team has hit the top spot
  for number of keys checked in the last few 24-hour periods, but
  with only six percent of the possible keys checked, there could be
  much more work to do.

<http://rc5.distributed.net/>
<ftp://ftp.distributed.net//pub/rc5/v2/rc5v2-macos.sit.hqx>

  The $10,000 prize money will be split between the Bovine
  organizers ($1,000), the team ($1,000), and Project Gutenberg
  ($8,000), the long-standing project to make literature freely
  available on the Internet. Without addressing the complexity
  surrounding the encryption issue, if a Mac ends up being the
  machine to find the secret key, and if Macs check more keys than
  any other type of computer, it can only result in positive press
  for Apple and the Macintosh. It's an easy and positive way to
  participate in the Macintosh community. [ACE]

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


Apple Powers Up the PowerBook 1400
----------------------------------
  by Tonya Engst <tonya@tidbits.com>

  Last week, Apple announced imminent updates to the PowerBook 1400
  series, which should interest anyone planning to buy a 1400 this
  month.

<http://product.info.apple.com/pr/press.releases/1997/q4/
970714.pr.rel.pb1400.html>


**Out with the Old** -- For those who don't memorize PowerBook
  specs, PowerBook 1400s have the BookCover feature for customizing
  their cases and the pop-out keyboard for easy access to the
  innards (see TidBITS-350_ and TidBITS-371_). They are based on the
  PowerPC 603e chip, come with built-in 6x CD-ROM drives and hard
  disks sized from 750 MB to 1 GB. The old line included four
  models, ranging from the 1400cs/117 with a dual-scan screen to the
  1400c/133 which offered an active-matrix screen and 128K of level
  2 cache. Estimated retail pricing ranged from $2,500 to $4,000.


**In with the New** -- The new series has three models with faster
  CPUs but similar screens: the 1400cs/133, 1400c/133, and
  1400c/166, and estimated pricing from $2,500 to $3,500. Each
  machine has an 8x CD-ROM drive, a 128K level 2 cache, and comes
  with either a 1.3 GB or a 2 GB hard disk. These PowerBooks will
  begin shipping with either Mac OS 7.6 or 7.6.1, not Mac OS 8. In
  related news, Apple has delayed shipment of the sub-compact
  PowerBook 2400c until August, ostensibly so that it can ship with
  Mac OS 8 installed.

<http://product.info.apple.com/pr/media.alerts/1997/q4/
970714.pr.alrt.pb2400.html>


Apple Double-Clicks Mac OS 8
----------------------------
  by Geoff Duncan <geoff@tidbits.com>

  This week, Apple will officially release Mac OS 8, a new version
  of the Macintosh operating system, billed as the most significant
  update since 1984 (expect ads with a flying saucer motif). Mac OS
  8 offers new features and interface changes, plus a surfeit of
  Internet software - all surrounding Mac OS 8's centerpiece: a
  PowerPC-native, multithreaded Finder.

  The changes in Mac OS 8 are difficult to sum up in a brief
  article, so we'll give Mac OS 8 additional "under the hood"
  coverage in upcoming issues.


**System Requirements & Ordering** -- Mac OS 8 has higher system
  requirements than any previous system, mandating a 68040 or
  PowerPC processor, at least 12 MB of physical RAM (with Virtual
  Memory to allow for 20 MB total), and a minimum of about 65 MB of
  disk space (a complete install takes about 130 MB). Just as Mac OS
  7.6 left 24-bit Macs and 68000- and 68020-based machines behind,
  Mac OS 8 does not support 68030-based Macs, including multitudes
  of Mac II series machines and numerous LC, Performa, and PowerBook
  models. In addition, Mac OS 8 does not support 68030 machines
  upgraded to 68040 or PowerPC processors via upgrade cards
  (although logic board upgrades are okay). For those machines, Mac
  OS 7.6.1 remains the last supported operating system.

  Mac OS 8 costs about $99 on CD-ROM; floppy disk versions cost
  about $25 more and lack some extras. Owners of Mac OS 7.6 can use
  a $30 rebate certificate that should be in the Mac OS 8 package,
  and if you purchased Mac OS 7.6 from 01-Jun-97 through 31-Jul-97,
  you can get Mac OS 8 for the cost of shipping; details should be
  in the 7.6 package.

  The update should be available by the end of this week from
  Claris, major mail order houses, and retailers. Many resellers
  (including Claris) have limited time offers and discounts on other
  products with Mac OS 8, so it might pay to look for a deal.

<http://www.claris.com/macos8/>

  Apple plans to release internationalized versions of Mac OS 8
  throughout the rest of 1997.


**A Whole New Finder** -- The most significant enhancement in Mac
  OS 8 is a new, multithreaded, PowerPC-native Finder.
  Multithreading means the Finder can now simultaneously perform
  many tasks - like copying files and emptying the Trash - that were
  previously done one at a time. Though third-party products have
  offered such features, multithreading provides plenty of other,
  subtler improvements. For instance, Finder windows now open while
  other things are happening (a handy feature when you work with
  large folders, CD-ROMs, or slow servers), and Finder windows now
  update more quickly. These changes make the Mac OS 8 Finder feel
  snappy, although it takes time to learn to take advantage of the
  multithreading. We've been taught for years that the Finder
  doesn't do these things; now we don't ~expect~ it to.

  You might not notice the multithreading right away, but you'll
  certainly notice the Finder's new "platinum appearance."
  Everything uses greyscale coloring and a new 3D look. You control
  the appearance via the Appearance control panel, where you set if
  the platinum appearance should be used everywhere instead of the
  old System 7 look, and if the system font should be the
  traditional Chicago or the new Charcoal. Using the platinum
  appearance for all applications generally works well (I found a
  few cosmetic glitches in some programs); the most common
  annoyances involve window placement, since the dimensions of some
  windows are now several pixels larger. Apple has posted
  screenshots showing off the new look:

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

  The new Appearance Manager (controlled via the Appearance control
  panel) does not enable you to switch your system's appearance to
  new, often outlandish themes publicized of late. However, Mac OS 8
  includes the groundwork for multiple appearances, and developers
  can write programs that use appearance themes: expect to see more
  along these lines. If you're desperate to play with your Mac's
  appearance, check out Kaleidoscope; version 1.7 is supposed to
  work with Mac OS 8.

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

  The new Finder features spring-loaded folders - you double-click a
  folder without releasing the mouse after the second click (a
  "click and a half") - to drill down into your folder hierarchy and
  then put a document in a particular location or open a particular
  folder. When you release the mouse, all the intervening windows
  close, leaving an uncluttered desktop with just the items you
  want.

  Finder windows can be converted to pop-up windows (or "drawers")
  that live as tabs at the bottom of your screen. Drawers slide open
  when you drag items into them or click their tabs, but close as
  soon as you're done with them. Other new commands include keyboard
  shortcuts for revealing the original item an alias points to
  (Command-R) and moving an item to the Trash (Command-Delete). You
  can also set which columns appear in the Finder's list view on a
  window-by-window basis (but you can't change the columns' order or
  width).


**New System Features** -- Mac OS 8 sports several new
  productivity features. If you Control-click almost any item in the
  Finder (including the desktop), a contextual menu appears and
  offers commonly used commands. The menubar and pop-up menus
  feature sticky menus that stay down once you click them. I thought
  this feature would be most useful for RSI sufferers, but now I use
  it constantly, particularly to navigate large pop-up menus. Other
  new goodies include the built-in capability to use pictures as a
  desktop backdrop and an About box that better represents how much
  memory programs are using.

  There are, however, glaringly unimproved areas of Mac OS 8.
  Opening the Chooser is still like having a flashback to 1988
  (although it now works on a locked volume), and the standard Open
  and Save dialogs recall 1985: Many enhancements - pop-up windows,
  hierarchical Apple menus, and keyboard shortcuts - seem geared to
  work around these and other shortcomings, rather than fixing them.


**Installation** -- Mac OS 8 has the same sort of catch-all
  installer that Apple introduced with Mac OS 7.6, which drives a
  plethora of secondary installers. Although the installation
  process is a bit clunky, it's much better than manually running
  through the installers. Mac OS 8 includes two setup assistants -
  Mac OS Setup Assistant and Internet Setup Assistant - which step
  you through naming the machine, selecting a printer, and
  connecting to the Internet. The Internet Setup Assistant seems
  most useful if you know what you're doing; for instance, most
  people who connect to the Internet through a LAN won't know what
  subnet mask they should use. These Assistants pick up some
  information from previous systems, but a clean install of Mac OS 8
  gives the Internet Setup Assistant virtually no data to work with,
  and naive users may think they must sign up with an ISP (offers
  are built in).


**Internet Integration** -- Apple says Mac OS 8 offers a higher
  level of Internet integration than any other operating system - if
  that's true, it's a reflection of the sad state of Internet access
  today. With three exceptions, Mac OS 8's Internet integration is a
  cumbersome bundle of existing software (three Web browsers, three
  email clients, PointCast, Castanet, and more). I recently set up
  both my sister and my parents with Internet access, and I can't
  imagine pointing them to this cacophony of software and calling it
  superior Internet integration.

  So what are the three exceptions? The first is an AppleScript
  (really!) called Connect To... that lives in the Apple menu. From
  any application, choose "Connect To...", type or paste a URL, and
  you're on your way. It's minimal, but effective. The second is
  Apple's Personal Web Sharing, a tiny, hardy Web server that can be
  configured much like File Sharing. You need a stable IP address to
  use Web Sharing effectively with the Internet (which excludes most
  dial-up users), but it's great for testing CGI programs and
  sharing data on a local TCP network (aided by Personal NetFinder,
  which can give Finder-like list views to Web users). Don't be
  confused by Web Sharing's old ReadMe file: it implies that you
  must revert to Mac OS 7.6 to use Web Sharing with PCI-based
  machines, but in fact you need Mac OS 7.6 or later.

  The third exception is more subtle: Internet Config. Apple slyly
  puts Internet Config 1.3 in an Internet Utilities folder, but
  Internet Config in fact serves as the backbone behind the Internet
  Setup Assistant, the Connect To... script, and more. Apple doesn't
  appear to discuss Internet Config anywhere in the Mac OS 8
  documentation, but it's good to see a freeware solution developed
  by the Mac Internet community being distributed with Mac OS 8 (see
  TidBITS-255_).


**Speed & Compatibility** -- I've used various versions of Mac OS
  8 for the last several weeks, and I've found it stable and
  responsive. A bad cable forced me to revert to 7.6.1 for a few
  days, and I was startled by how much the older OS got in my way.
  The new system lets applications share the CPU more efficiently,
  so background tasks run faster, and some programs see performance
  improvements of as much as 25 percent. However, though Mac OS 8
  lets me do more of what I want when I want, it's not necessarily
  faster: for instance, copying files can be slower than in Mac OS
  7.6.1, since the Finder allows more time for other things to
  happen. I don't mind, especially since the Finder is dramatically
  faster in the background under Mac OS 8.

  Almost without exception, my conservative set of third-party
  control panels, extensions, and utilities have worked on my Power
  Mac 7600. I've seen reports to the contrary, but on my machines (a
  Quadra 650, a Duo 2300c, and a Power Mac 7600) the Finder crashes
  immediately if I load any component of Now Utilities from versions
  5.0.3 or 6.7. Now Software is looking into reported problems with
  OS 8. Connectix says RAM Doubler works with Mac OS 8, although
  Speed Doubler is incompatible and should be avoided. Symantec has
  released updates to Norton Utilities and Suitcase. If you use
  MacsBug, you need version 6.5.4a3 with Mac OS 8.

<ftp://ftp.symantec.com/public/Updates/mac/>
<ftp://ftp.apple.com/devworld/Tool_Chest/Testing_-_Debugging/
Debuggers_-_dcmds/MacsBug_6.5.4a3.sit.hqx>


**Worth the Weight?** Most people will find Mac OS 8 a worthwhile
  upgrade, providing they have the CPU horsepower and memory to let
  it thrive. Apple expects OS 8 to drive sales of new hardware and
  upgrades, as long-time Mac owners bite the bullet and step up to
  the new system. I think some will criticize OS 8 for being more
  Windows-like than previous releases, and there's some basis to
  those complaints. However, OS 8 is elegant and powerful, and your
  machine will never be mistaken for anything but a Macintosh.


Spinning the Web Part 5: New Frontiers
--------------------------------------
  by Tonya Engst <tonya@tidbits.com>

  In recent TidBITS issues, I've been sharing my world view about
  software that makes Web pages. I started with text editors in
  TidBITS-384_ and continued with visual editors in TidBITS-386_. In
  TidBITS-387_, I looked at GoLive's CyberStudio from the page
  building angle, but CyberStudio also includes site management
  features, and I promised to cover them soon in tandem with other
  competitors. First, however, it's time to check out Frontier,
  which offers a unique environment for Web publishing.

<http://www.scripting.com/frontier/>


**Understanding Frontier** -- Frontier 4.2.3 is a free, smart
  database. The software is free because UserLand Software founder
  Dave Winer decided to release it that way (see TidBITS-279_); it's
  smart because it uses Apple events and a built-in scripting
  language (UserTalk) to control most anything; and it's a database
  because it stores information. Frontier is widely used in the
  Macintosh scripting community, and its users are often passionate
  about its merits, which include the ability to store components of
  a Web site and convert them into a complex, automated Web site.

<http://www.scripting.com/frontier/snippets/features.html>


**Exploring Frontier** -- You begin exploring Frontier by opening
  its main table (called the "root"). The root contains entries,
  each having a kind and a value. For example, one such entry, named
  "readme," is of the kind "wp text" (word processing text), and if
  you double-click it, a window opens showing the text and a WP menu
  appears offering a few word processing commands. Web publishers
  using Frontier may create and store HTML in wp text entries
  elsewhere in the database.

  Another category in the root, called "user", is of the kind
  "table" and double-clicking it opens another table filled with
  user-related items. For instance, one such entry, "organization,"
  took on the value "TidBITS" when I personalized Frontier. Similar
  entries in other locations let you set how Frontier will publish
  Web pages. You can navigate Frontier by working through a large
  hierarchy of tables, or through an outline that reveals and hides
  different portions of the database.


**The Key to the Treasure** -- Table entries can also be "verbs,"
  commands that are "called" in Frontier scripts. Using Frontier
  scripts, a capable scripter can automate most anything on a
  Macintosh, including other applications. Scripts can be run in
  different ways: from menus, by opening them in Frontier and
  clicking the Run button, or by typing their names into Frontier's
  Quick Script window. Or - to jump ahead of myself slightly - you
  can call them as you "render" a Web page.

  Matt Neuburg, TidBITS Contributing Editor and experienced Frontier
  user, has commented that "Frontier is the command line to your
  Macintosh." The following four points are from his comments:

* Frontier can drive the System and Finder. It can create, read,
  copy and delete files, set their types and creators, find out what
  time it is on your clock, read the clipboard, and more.

* Frontier's functionality is available everywhere. It can put
  menus into other programs, and it can even make double-clickable
  pseudo-programs.

* Frontier talks Apple events much faster than AppleScript does.
  If an application is scriptable, Frontier can drive it and ask it
  questions.

* Frontier can receive Apple events, which means you can drive
  Frontier from other applications. Webmasters can use Frontier to
  process form requests sent in from people browsing Web sites. For
  instance, one of the top entries in the TidBITS search engine
  contest (see TidBITS-380_) worked this way: Someone searching the
  TidBITS Web site clicks the search button, WebSTAR (the server
  software) talks to Frontier, Frontier consults a FileMaker
  database containing TidBITS issues, and - based what it finds in
  FileMaker - constructs a new Web page, which it gives to WebSTAR.
  WebSTAR then sends the page back to the browser.

  Frontier's ability to automate most everything, combined with the
  hierarchical nature of its database, makes it a unique tool for
  Web publishing. If you use Frontier as a site management tool, you
  can work from the inside or the outside.


**Working from the Outside** -- Working from the outside is
  easier, because you don't have learn to become a competent
  Frontier user. To work from the outside, you use BBEdit (from Bare
  Bones Software) to create pages, but you employ the Frontier-
  created Sites menu in BBEdit to "render" the final site from the
  raw HTML created in BBEdit.

<http://www.barebones.com/bbedit.html>

  It won't take long to learn the basics of rendering. When Frontier
  renders a raw HTML page (or group of pages) into a site, it
  employs a complex series of processes and filters that make
  (optional) changes such as:

* Uniform top and bottom matter appears on each page.

* Entities replace upper-ASCII characters in the raw HTML (a
  useful feature especially for people who write in languages like
  French).

* Macros that call Frontier scripts are replaced by their results.
  (For instance {clock.now()} returns the current date as a result,
  and there's a script that inserts image tags with automatically
  generated height and width attributes.)

* Email addresses and URLs convert to links.

* Quoted text is replaced by an item in a Frontier glossary (yet
  another Frontier table). For instance, I might want "TidBITS" to
  be replaced by a link to the TidBITS home page.

  If you work in BBEdit, you need not ever explore Frontier, and
  these features are readily available. If you choose to work inside
  Frontier, after you get set up, you probably could mostly work
  from BBEdit as well.


**Working from the Inside** -- You can use any software you like
  to create the raw HTML pages stored in Frontier, and then switch
  to Frontier to take advantage of Frontier's hierarchical approach.
  Frontier stores each HTML page as a table entry. When you render a
  site, those entries become separate Web pages, organized in a
  folder structure that mirrors the structure used in Frontier.

  (I've simplified a lot in the paragraph above- rendered pages can
  be constructed from scripts, or from "outlines." Scripts can
  assemble pages from most anything you've created or scripted, and
  outlines have many uses, but I'm not going to delve into them in
  this article.)

  However, using Frontier's hierarchy goes much deeper. For
  instance, you can have more than one Frontier glossary, and
  Frontier replaces quoted text based on the glossary located
  closest to the raw HTML file. (If the glossary isn't in the same
  table as the raw file, Frontier looks up one level, and keeps
  looking up one level until it finds a glossary.)

  Hierarchies also play a big roll when you use "directives." A
  directive is a table entry that notes how you want to handle a
  general aspect of a group of Web pages, such as the background
  color. A directive can also be placed directly in a raw HTML file.
  When a raw HTML page renders, directives defined inside it always
  take precedence. But, if a directive is not defined, the page
  looks in and up the hierarchy for a definition. Using directives,
  it's easy to give one branch of a site an orange background and
  another a green one.

  My brain starts to hurt at this point, so rest assured that I've
  but rippled the surface here. I haven't mentioned templates, the
  ability to include one file inside another, or the ability to
  create an HTML-ized site outline. Templates are an especially key
  feature, and I leave them as an exercise to interested readers.


**Rendering** -- When a page renders, several filters and
  processes take place, including running any macros that you've
  stuck inside it (or its template). This has millions of uses.

  As an example, take the new TidBITS home page, which regenerates
  every hour. Each time the page regenerates, it gets a new,
  automatically assembled graphic. The new graphic has one of
  several slogans and a callout to an especially interesting article
  (or group of articles) that you might want to read. The graphic
  uses a client-side image map, so new HTML must be created for each
  new version of the page. Although Geoff Duncan did the work in
  AppleScript and HyperCard, Frontier could also do the job.

  As another example, consider this note from Pam McAllister
  <pmcallister@pugetsound.org>:

  I started using Frontier a few months ago. It took several days to
  learn the system and import my sites, but now I can handle updates
  and additions in a fraction of the time it took before. I've added
  many features, such as indexes of parts of the site, that I would
  never have time to do manually. I also wrote a Frontier script
  that puts all the pages into a FileMaker database, which is then
  searchable on the Web site (using Lasso). Even as a novice
  scripter, that project took only a few hours. [Check out the
  SoundWeb site for an example of what Pam has been working on.]

<http://www.pugetsound.org/>
<http://www.blueworld.com/lasso/>


**Complexity** -- Learning Frontier reminded me of the Far Side
  cartoon where a student asks to be excused from class, saying that
  his "brain is full." My ascent up the learning curve was
  facilitated by an online tutorial created by Matt Neuburg.

<http://www.scripting.com/matt/webtutorial/>

  (Matt is currently under contract with O'Reilly Associates to
  write the first book about Frontier. The book should come out in
  tandem with the upcoming release of Frontier 5.)


**Is It for You?** To summarize, Frontier's structure makes it
  easy to organize HTML pages created in other programs (or in
  Frontier, though the tools are limited). Once your site lives in
  Frontier - if you set things up correctly - it's easy to move
  pages or other resources within the database and to change
  elements that appear on multiple pages. It's also possible to
  create Next and Previous links throughout a collection of pages
  that will be navigated serially. Sites can be rendered to a local
  folder or via FTP to a remote site. You can render by page, by
  table, or by what's changed since you last rendered. Frontier is a
  natural at page rendering that requires automation, especially if
  multiple applications must work together.

  Frontier is pleasant enough to work in, but whether it's worth the
  time investment to learn depends on the nature of the site. About
  halfway through my research for this article, I thought Frontier's
  seemingly boggling array of tables needed an nice user interface
  badly. A day later, though, it seems accessible and useful.
  However, if I hadn't already had a good understanding of
  hierarchies, HTML, macros, and general scripting terms, I would
  have given up. Further, it's difficult to remember how to use
  Frontier for running a Web site because the commands aren't
  obvious on the menus and in the dialog boxes.

  You can import a existing site into Frontier, but you must
  recreate a lot of work by hand to take advantage of Frontier
  features. Frontier also lacks a few features that you might
  require. There's no visual view that shows how pages and resources
  relate to one another, using a spider's web or organizational
  chart analogy. There's no tracking mechanism for noting which
  pages are done or who's working on them. Creating unbreakable
  relative links in Frontier requires working with macros, whereas
  in other programs, you just drag a picture representing the link
  destination to the link source. Frontier also lacks a site-wide
  Find-and-Replace command and spelling checker, as well as a link
  checker and an HTML checker/validator, though I'm confident that
  knowledgeable Frontier users can work around those limitations by
  integrating Frontier with other applications.

  Next time, I'll return to the site management features in
  CyberStudio and also look at other site management software.


$$

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