TidBITS#351/28-Oct-96
=====================

  Have you always wanted a Newton? Apple will have two new models
  for you, including a notebook-like version with a built-in
  keyboard. Also in this issue, Adam takes a detailed look at the
  pros and cons of RAM Doubler 2.0, information on Apple's release
  of Open Transport 1.1.1, and Matt Neuburg contributes a thorough
  review of the new macro program on the block, Binary Software's
  KeyQuencer 2.0.

Topics:
    MailBITS/28-Oct-96
    Apple Releases Open Transport 1.1.1
    RAM Doubler 2
    KeyQuencer - QuicKeys Quencher?

<http://www.tidbits.com/tb-issues/TidBITS-351.html>
<ftp://ftp.tidbits.com/pub/tidbits/issues/1996/TidBITS#351_28-Oct-96.etx>

Copyright 1996 TidBITS Electronic Publishing. All rights reserved.
   Information: <info@tidbits.com> Comments: <editors@tidbits.com>
   ---------------------------------------------------------------

This issue of TidBITS sponsored in part by:
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* EarthLink Network -- 800/395-8425 -- <sales@earthlink.net>
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   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.
   ---------------------------------------------------------------


MailBITS/28-Oct-96
------------------

**Two New Newtons** -- Apple today announced two new Newtons: the
  MessagePad 2000 and the eMate 300. The MessagePad 2000 is a
  significantly enhanced "traditional" MessagePad with a 161.9 MHz
  StrongARM 110 processor, 5 MB of RAM, two PC Card slots, a 100 dpi
  screen with 16 levels of grey, plus word-processing, spreadsheet,
  email, and Web software - all for an expected retail price of less
  than $1,000. Conversely, the eMate 300 features a completely new
  notebook form factor with a built-in keyboard, a 480 by 320
  backlit screen (with 16 levels of grey), a 25 MHz ARM 710
  processor, and a new productivity suite with word processing and
  drawing programs, along with dictionary, calculator, address book,
  and calendar functions. Apple is aiming the eMate 300 at
  "distributed learning" environments, and it should be available
  for less than $800. Both the MessagePad 2000 and the eMate 300 run
  the Newton 2.1 operating system and should be available in the
  first quarter of 1997. [GD]

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


Apple Releases Open Transport 1.1.1
-----------------------------------
  by Geoff Duncan <geoff@tidbits.com>

  Last week, Apple released Open Transport 1.1.1, its low-level
  system software which handles all aspects of networking, including
  AppleTalk and the Internet's TCP/IP protocols. In addition to
  being the first release of Open Transport to function on Performa
  and Power Macintosh 52xx, 53xx, 62xx, and 63xx-series computers,
  Open Transport 1.1.1 includes significant bug fixes that benefit
  current users, especially webmasters and other server
  administrators.

<http://product.info.apple.com/pr/product.updates/1997/q1/
961024.prd.updt.opentrans.html>

  You can download Open Transport 1.1.1 for free directly from Apple
  as either a net install or a series of floppy disk images.

<ftp://ftp.support.apple.com/pub/apple_sw_updates/US/mac/
Networking-Communications/Open_Transport/>

  If you download the disk images, you'll need a program like Chad
  Magendanz's ShrinkWrap to mount the disks or copy them to a
  floppy, and you'll want the separate OT 1.1.1 Extras archive
  (which is included in the full net install). The download is about
  5.5 MB. In addition, the Open Transport 1.1.1 update is available
  on CD-ROM for $13 from Apple (800/293-6617; offer number 1407).

<ftp://mirror.aol.com/pub/info-mac/disk/shrink-wrap-201.hqx>


**Installing OT 1.1.1** -- Open Transport 1.1.1 requires a
  Macintosh with a 68030 processor or better (including any Power
  Mac). When installing any new system software component, _back_up_
  your Macintosh (or at least your System Folder) before installing.

  Installing OT 1.1.1 is fairly straightforward: just launch the
  installer and click the Install button. (If you switch into the
  Custom Install, you can select versions for 68K or any Macintosh.)
  For current Open Transport users, OT 1.1.1 must be installed over
  OT version 1.1, and ideally you should have version 1.1 available
  in case you have problems. Open Transport 1.1 is available as a
  retail product and (for free) as part of System 7.5 Update 2.0
  (see TidBITS-318_). If you're running System 7.5.5, you may need a
  custom install script to install OT 1.1 from System 7.5 Update 2.0
  (see TidBITS-349_).

  If you were using a beta of OT 1.1.1, remove it and re-install
  version 1.1 before upgrading to this final release of OT 1.1.1.

  Owners of Performa and Power Mac 52xx, 53xx, 62xx, and 63xx-series
  computers can install OT 1.1.1 directly. The installer performs a
  hardware check on these machines to see if the Cache/ROM DIMM
  should be replaced as part of Apple's repair extension program.
  The repair is free from your Apple dealer; however, Open Transport
  1.1.1 will not install until the problem is fixed. Affected owners
  can call Apple at 800/801-6024.

<http://prod01.apple.com/pr/product.updates/1996/q3/960606.pr.up.repair.html>

  Apple recommends Open Transport 1.1.1 for all users of System
  7.5.3 and higher; however, it's actually compatible with every
  System back to 7.1. Confusingly, the Network Software Selector - a
  utility that enables users to switch easily between Open Transport
  and "classic" networking - only works under System 7.5.3 and
  higher. If you're determined to use Open Transport with a System
  prior to 7.5.3, be sure to back up your current network settings
  and software before installation.


**Benefits of OT 1.1.1** -- Open Transport 1.1.1 contains numerous
  bug fixes and enhancements, most of which are purely under-the-
  hood:

* Fixed primary causes of memory fragmentation, along with several
  bugs that caused crashes or prevented Open Transport from
  accepting new connections.

* Optimized handling of accepting and closing connections. This is
  particularly useful for Internet servers or clients that accept or
  generate many brief connections - previously, Open Transport could
  take up to four minutes to close those connections.

* Better compatibility with the PowerBook sleep feature, Apple
  Remote Access, and DHCP configuration.

* Improved name resolution, memory allocation, and lookup
  functions, primarily useful for developers and Internet server
  administrators.

  In addition, the OT 1.1.1 ReadMe and Technical Info files contain
  detailed information on using OT 1.1.1 with specific applications,
  and list a number of known (but relatively rare) problems and
  incompatibilities. If you've experienced trouble with Open
  Transport, read over these documents _before_ installing this new
  release.


**What about PPP?** For dial-up Internet users, Open Transport
  1.1.1 is compatible with MacPPP and FreePPP version 2.5 or higher,
  as well as a number of commercial PPP implementations (check the
  ReadMe files for specifics). However, Apple's long-awaited Open
  Transport/PPP is _not_ included in Open Transport 1.1.1 - support
  for PPP is still only officially provided through these third-
  party programs, none of which are "OT-savvy."

  Apple expects to release its PPP implementation for Open Transport
  by the end of the year. In the meantime, a beta version of OT/PPP
  can be found in Apple's unsupported file areas.

<ftp://ftp.support.apple.com/pub/apple_sw_updates/US/mac/Unsupported/>


RAM Doubler 2
-------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>

  In January of 1994, Connectix introduced RAM Doubler, an
  innovative utility that transparently appeared to double the
  amount of memory in most Macs (it requires a 68030 processor or
  higher). I was impressed with it back then (see TidBITS-208_ for a
  review and more information on how it works), and now that
  Connectix has released a major update, RAM Doubler 2, I remain
  impressed.

  Over the years, Connectix has released a number of free updates to
  RAM Doubler 1.x, mostly to fix bugs or ensure compatibility with
  new Macs and new releases of the system software. Since RAM
  Doubler works at a very low level, hardware or system software
  changes can break it more easily than other programs. But, as I
  said, these updates were all free and available on the Internet,
  so downloading updates wasn't a problem for most people.


**New and Cool** -- In August of 1996, Connectix released RAM
  Doubler 2, which provided several major changes.

* Though there were some hacks that could change this capability,
  RAM Doubler 1.x could only double your memory. RAM Doubler 2, in
  contrast, has a control panel interface that enables you to set
  how much memory you want to end up with, ranging from nothing
  extra (more on why you might want to do that in a minute) to three
  times the amount of real RAM that you have installed. You can
  multiply your existing real RAM by 1, 1.5, 2, 2.5, or 3 times, and
  by intermediate values if you press Option while moving the slider
  bar.

* The first version of RAM Doubler had no interface: you simply
  installed it and rebooted. RAM Doubler 2's control panel enables
  you to change the amount of memory you end up with and shows how
  much memory each active program has allocated to it, in a manner
  similar to the About This Macintosh window, but with far more
  information. RAM Doubler 2's interface can also break out the
  different things that chew up system memory (disk cache, MacsBug,
  invisible background applications, and the Finder, for instance).
  What's more, it tells you how much memory is in use and (more
  important) how much memory RAM Doubler 2 has reclaimed.

* If you use a Power Mac and have ever opened an application's Get
  Info window, you know that thanks to a technique called "file
  mapping," Power Mac-native applications require less RAM (an
  average of almost 2 MB less, according to Apple) if you use either
  Apple's Virtual Memory (VM) or RAM Doubler. Applications also load
  faster if you use VM or RAM Doubler. You can read more about why
  in Apple's Tech Info Library.

<http://cgi.info.apple.com/cgi-bin/read.wais.doc.pl?/wais/TIL/
Macintosh!Hardware/Pwr!Mac!Including!Perf/Power!Macintosh!Technology/
Virtual!Mem!!Diff.!on!Pwr!Mac>

  So, it's clear Power Macs should generally have VM or RAM Doubler
  on, even if they have plenty of real RAM. But here's the kicker:
  when you turn on VM in the Memory control panel, the minimum
  setting is for 1 MB larger than the amount of real RAM you have.
  VM creates an invisible VM Storage file on your hard disk that is
  the same size as the total amount of memory available _after_
  turning on VM. Assume that you have 80 MB of real RAM. Turn on VM
  and set it to the minimum of 81 MB. Poof, there's 81 MB of disk
  space gone.

  If you set RAM Doubler 2 so that it doesn't provide any more
  memory at all, it offers the advantages of VM or the previous
  version of RAM Doubler, but without the speed problems that
  normally accompany any scheme for faking more memory. This works
  because RAM Doubler 2 relies on disk swapping only as its final
  strategy to provide more memory (first it reclaims unused memory
  in application partitions, then compresses memory it can't
  reclaim). On my 660AV with 20 MB of real RAM, set to 60 MB, RAM
  Doubler 2's invisible VM Storage file is currently 390K. I can
  live with that.


**Reasons Against** -- Although I'm a definite proponent of RAM
  Doubler, there are a number of real reasons not to use RAM Doubler
  2.

* The main one is that RAM is cheap right now (although prices are
  rising again). There's no question that real RAM is better than
  RAM Doubler.

* Speed: Although RAM Doubler 2 is faster than its predecessor, as
  you use more of the memory it has conjured up, you will start to
  see speed hits. I can't offer any testing specifics, other than to
  say that I haven't noticed speed problems caused by RAM Doubler 2
  under normal usage. If you need the utmost in speed, avoid both
  RAM Doubler and VM.

* Lots of RAM and disk space: My argument above for why RAM
  Doubler 2 is more attractive than VM for Power Mac users with lots
  of RAM only applies if you are short on disk space too. If you
  have lots of both, VM is free and works fine. Moreover, the
  performance of Apple's VM has improved considerably in System
  7.5.5 (see TidBITS-346_).

* Single application users: RAM Doubler has never worked well for
  providing a single application more memory than the amount of real
  RAM available. Adobe Photoshop is among the worst in this regard,
  since it has its own internal memory-mapping scheme. RAM Doubler
  works best for running multiple applications simultaneously.

* Programmers: Although programmers should test their programs
  with RAM Doubler, the word from my programmer friends is that you
  can't much use RAM Doubler on a programming machine because of
  incompatibilities with debuggers and other development tools.

* Anyone without $50: RAM Doubler 2 isn't free, and for the cost
  of RAM Doubler 2, you can buy about 8 MB of real RAM. If you're a
  previous owner of RAM Doubler, there's a $25 rebate coupon in the
  box for you to mail in.


**Reasons For** -- Despite these important reasons to avoid RAM
  Doubler 2, I think there are plenty of reasons to investigate it
  more seriously.

* Minimal money: RAM Doubler 2 may cost about the same as 8 MB,
  but if you have say, 20 MB now, RAM Doubler 2 can double or triple
  that amount, which is a lot more than 8 MB.

* Older Macs: Frankly, I don't think it's worth buying RAM for
  older Macs that use SIMMs, like my 660AV. SIMMs won't be useful in
  any new Mac (which use DIMMs), so if you plan to upgrade soon, RAM
  Doubler 2 is a better investment. It will work on your new Mac
  (though you may have to download a minor update), but SIMMs
  definitely won't.

* Power Macs without much disk space: Whether or not you have much
  RAM, a Power Mac runs better with either VM or RAM Doubler on. If
  you lack disk space (and yes, I know hard disks are cheap too -
  but lots of people have little money to devote to computer
  purchases), RAM Doubler 2 uses fewer total resources than VM and
  provides more RAM, since Apple recommends you only set VM for 50
  percent more memory than you have real RAM.

* PowerBooks: Because RAM Doubler doesn't go to disk immediately
  to swap memory, RAM Doubler can be less draining for PowerBooks
  than VM, which can keep the hard disk spinning. In addition, most
  PowerBooks (and some desktop Macs) have only a single slot for
  adding more memory, and using RAM Doubler can be a lot easier than
  ordering and installing new RAM.


**In the End** -- Some utilities are easy to recommend because
  they offer features unavailable elsewhere. That's not true of RAM
  Doubler, since Apple's VM is free. However, the fact that RAM
  Doubler sold over a million copies and RAM Doubler 2 sold 50,000
  copies in its first month indicates its overall utility to the Mac
  community. I couldn't use my aging 660AV without RAM Doubler (I
  actually launch more applications at startup than I have real RAM
  for), and RAM Doubler 2 has been a pleasant upgrade, in part for
  the RAM-tripling and new interface, and in part for the file
  mapping capability for my PowerBook 5300, which has enough real
  RAM at 24 MB and prefers to keeps it hard disk spun down.


**A Deal** -- We've worked out a special deal for TidBITS readers
  with Cyberian Outpost. If you use the specific URL below, you can
  order RAM Doubler 2 online and receive a $4 discount (think of it
  as free shipping).

<http://www.tidbits.com/products/ram-doubler.html>


KeyQuencer - QuicKeys Quencher?
-------------------------------
  by Matt Neuburg <matt@tidbits.com>

  Those wishing to automate their Macs without spending the money or
  yielding the RAM required to run one of the big commercial macro
  programs may wish to consider KeyQuencer. Once a $10 shareware
  program, the product of the ingenuity and generosity of the well-
  known Alessandro Levi Montalcini, it has now been upgraded to
  version 2.0 and sells as a commercial macro utility from Binary
  Software for $40. It runs quickly and cleanly in a small RAM
  footprint (less than 200K) under System 7.x, and most features are
  said to run (though without official support) under System 6.0.4
  and later.

<http://www.binarysoft.com/keyquencer/keyquencer.html>


**What It's Like** -- KeyQuencer macros live in "suitcases." The
  default suitcase loads at startup, and its macros (the active
  macros) can be triggered by a keystroke combination. Macros in
  other suitcases can't be triggered by a keystroke, but are
  available through a small application, KeyQuencer Launcher, which
  displays any suitcase as a double-clickable list. Macro names can
  be up to 31 characters, so the lists can be informative. You might
  leave the Launcher running all the time, with multiple suitcase
  windows open; your commonly used macros can be triggered with
  keystrokes, and if you need a less-frequently used macro (or if
  you forget an active macro's keystroke), there it is in one of the
  Launcher's lists. (Remember, though, the Launcher is an
  application, not a dialog or palette, so if you double-click a
  macro that affects the frontmost window, it will be the Launcher's
  window.)

  This technique might help make up for the fact that in KeyQuencer,
  unlike QuicKeys or OneClick, there's no such thing as an
  application-specific macro. Once you've assigned a keystroke to a
  macro and made that macro active, that keystroke is unavailable
  for anything else, system-wide. It takes some planning to come up
  with keystrokes that have no meaning in any extension, control
  panel, or application. The danger is that you'll run out of
  possible keystrokes, or that you'll trigger a macro inadvertently.
  KeyQuencer installs itself with numerous macros already active, so
  before I knew it, I had accidentally stuffed a HyperCard stack
  while trying to read its stack script, and moved an important item
  into the Trash even though I wasn't in the Finder. A macro can
  check to see if a certain application is frontmost and either pass
  along the triggering keystroke or abort. Many of the pre-installed
  macros perform no such check, though, so be cautious.

  Macros are created, edited, named, assigned keystrokes, and copied
  between suitcases in another application, KeyQuencer Editor. It's
  a simple, pleasant place to work. You don't have to "open" a macro
  to edit it: when you click a macro's name in the list, its
  contents appear in a word-processing pane for viewing and editing.
  Every macro consists of one or more text commands. You can type
  these commands, or you can enter them by double-clicking their
  names in a floating Commands window, which lists all commands and
  (when a command is selected) possible parameters. An online Help
  window updates dynamically with a description of the command's
  function and parameters.

  The contrast between the whole milieu and that of QuicKeys
  couldn't be greater. QuicKeys has short macro names and
  confusingly arranged menus for selecting macro types, and editing
  happens in cascades of modal dialogs that must be completely
  dismissed before you can test a macro, discover that it doesn't
  work properly, and open everything up again. In KeyQuencer, both
  Launcher and Editor are applications, with normal windows - which,
  if you have about 700K of RAM to spare, you could leave open all
  the time. Editing is textual, and you can save the macro you're
  currently editing and test it without closing anything.


**Communication** -- There is no special KeyQuencer menu trigger,
  comparable to the QuicKeys menu; but James Walker's shareware
  OtherMenu, which is included, can trigger a KeyQuencer macro.
  Similarly, KeyQuencer has no time trigger, but if all you need is
  absolute time (as opposed to time since an application has
  started) you can use Chris Johnson's shareware Cron, which is also
  included. You can install a Control Strip module or NowTabs plug-
  in, from which you can choose and launch an active macro. You can
  talk to KeyQuencer from AppleScript or Frontier, including passing
  variables back and forth. Macros can even be incorporated into the
  CodeWarrior build process.

<ftp://mirror.aol.com/pub/info-mac/gui/other-menu-183.hqx>
<ftp://mirror.aol.com/pub/info-mac/cfg/chris-cron-10a7.hqx>

  KeyQuencer can perform any of its functions on a remote networked
  computer that is also running KeyQuencer; you may, but do not have
  to, set up the desired functionality as a KeyQuencer macro on the
  remote computer. (I have not tested this.)


**The Language** -- KeyQuencer comes with about 260 pre-written
  macros; if you want to modify one or write a new one, you must use
  the KeyQuencer language, a rigid, hard-to-remember, command-plus-
  parameters idiom, where you just know you'll never wean yourself
  off online help and the reference manual.

  In fact, it's not a language so much as a collection of commands.
  There are no subroutines: the only way to invoke one macro from
  another is to tell the first macro to type the second's keystroke.
  There are no looping, branching, or conditional constructs, but
  there's a Repeat command (that takes as its parameter a quoted
  string consisting of one or more macro commands) and commands that
  abort a macro if a certain application is frontmost or if two
  strings match. There are no arithmetic operators, but there's an
  Evaluate command which stores arithmetic expressions in the
  clipboard and a Counter command that maintains a temporary
  increment-decrement counter. There are no string-processing
  functions, but there's a clipboard-munging command that can do
  some. There are variables, but the syntax for passing them around
  is hair-raising.

  To set A to 1 and B to 2 and then add them and put the result into
  C, you say:

> SetVariable A "1"
> SetVariable B "2"
> Evaluate "\[a]+\[b]" copy -- this puts the result in the clipboard
> SetVariable C clipboard -- this gets it out again

  To type the numbers 1 through 10, each followed by a tab and a
  return, you say:

> Repeat 10 "Counter increment save\rType $counter \q\\t\\r\q"


**What It Can Do** -- Every KeyQuencer command corresponds to a
  small file living in a folder (in your System Folder) called
  KeyQuencer Extensions. Removing one of these files from the
  KeyQuencer Extensions folder and restarting disables that command;
  adding a new one, if a new one is written, expands the repertoire
  of commands. (If there are commands you aren't using, disabling
  them lets you save still more memory; if you've just a few macros
  using just a few commands you can run KeyQuencer in less than
  80K!)

  There are the usual macro behaviors such as pressing a key, typing
  a string, choosing from a menu, clicking the mouse, waiting for
  various types of events. There are also extras similar to those in
  QuicKeys - and some rather more capable, such as changing
  applications or windows, setting speaker volume and monitor depth,
  choosing a printer, and mounting a server. There is a powerful
  Batcher application: for each copy you make, you preconfigure what
  macro it should run, then drag & drop files or folders onto it for
  processing.

  KeyQuencer also has an eclectic miscellany of commands, such as:
  force a window or screen refresh; take a screen shot of a window
  or region; launch or close your PPP connection; get file info;
  dramatically show the cursor's position; relocate the frontmost
  window; drive an audio CD; alter the contents of the clipboard;
  manipulate ten clipboards; and read and write between the
  clipboard and a file.


**Minor Annoyances** -- These are things I noticed in passing,
  which probably shouldn't affect one's overall judgment of
  KeyQuencer. A few commands may not work perfectly: the sound-
  volume commands had no effect on my computer; the "scroll
  top/bottom" commands don't work in Nisus Writer. Some keystroke-
  combination triggers (such as the one that toggles KeyQuencer on
  and off) are not user-configurable. On my computer, Now
  SuperBoomerang sometimes didn't work within the Editor, and
  opening a suitcase sometimes writes garbage in the Online Help
  window and crashes. Within the Launcher, you can't configure the
  sort order in which the lists appear (by name versus by
  keystroke); you're stuck with the sort order you were using in the
  Editor the last time you saved. The syntax of the HyperCard XCMDs
  is not documented, and, finally, the manual could use more clarity
  of explanation and design.


**Slouch To Judgment** -- Here I'm supposed to sum up and tell you
  whether this is the macro utility you've been waiting for all your
  life. Truthfully, I just don't know. Though this is one heck of a
  program, I suspect it's not everyone's cup of tea; a great deal
  depends upon your mindset, your priorities, and your present
  repertoire of tools. Your best bet is to download the demo version
  that is supposed to appear soon on Binary's Web site and see how
  you like it. Meanwhile, some provocative reflections.

  For sheer functionality, there's probably little QuicKeys can do
  that KeyQuencer can't somehow be made to do, and KeyQuencer has
  some abilities that QuicKeys lacks. Still, to some, the language
  might feel too daunting, or not fully-featured. My personal macro
  Holy Grail is to be given tools to build tools, and my mind runs
  along a one-program-one-function organizational track; so to me,
  KeyQuencer feels like a miscellany of extensions bundled together
  by an intractable language. I prefer OneClick's fuller programming
  and informational constructs that permit me to build my own
  multiple clipboards (vs. KeyQuencer's Clipboard command), to drive
  AppleScript to open or close MacPPP (vs. KeyQuencer's PPPSwitch),
  to obtain a list of windows and close all but the front one
  (which, as far as I can tell, KeyQuencer can't do at all). Also,
  since no one program does everything I want, I don't mind calling
  upon a battery of scripting tools to help me - Frontier,
  AppleScript, HyperCard, and so on. Possibly I'm just weird. I
  suspect your own feelings about these philosophical questions will
  be more decisive than feature issues such as KeyQuencer's lack of
  application-specific macros and recordability. For those who like
  a collection of ready-built high-level tools, KeyQuencer should
  prove attractive.

  Most important, KeyQuencer operates to a high rigorous standard,
  something that not every macro program does. In the case of
  something so simple as a keystroke that scrolls the active window
  up one line, OneClick can't cope with Nisus Writer's windows
  because the scroll bar's up-arrow isn't in the normal location,
  but KeyQuencer "tells" the window to scroll in some deeper way and
  has no problem. KeyQuencer can simulate double-control-clicking on
  a window's title bar, which on my system activates WindowShade; I
  can't get OneClick to do that. This testifies to the dedication,
  the know-how, and the philosophical outlook of KeyQuencer's
  author, Alessandro Levi Montalcini. It's wonderful that such
  clean, powerful functionality can emanate from one person's brain
  in this day and age of megalithic software development
  corporations.


**Another Deal** -- We've also worked out a deal for TidBITS
  readers who wish to purchase KeyQuencer from Cyberian Outpost. If
  you use the specific URL below, you can order KeyQuencer 2.0
  online and receive a $4 discount (think of it as free shipping).

<http://www.tidbits.com/products/key-quencer.html>

  [Those of you hoping to compare KeyQuencer, OneClick
  (TidBITS-350_), and QuicKeys (TidBITS-348_) should stay tuned
  for a future issue. -Adam]

    Binary Software, Inc. -- 310/449-1481 -- 310/449-1473 (fax)
      <binary@binarysoft.com>


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