TidBITS#311/22-Jan-96
=====================

The bad news this week is that Apple announced big losses and
   anticipates laying off employees. The good news is that there's
   positive stuff happening in the Macintosh world anyway! We have
   news about Netscape betas, ShareDevil, and Shockwave, plus Adam
   reports on an Apple Internet Marketing dinner. Tonya details a
   few photo-related products from Macworld Expo, and Geoff offers 
   a detailed report on the beta of Microsoft's Internet Explorer 
   for Macintosh.

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 First MacOS Compatible!
   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: The first place to look for deals on cool Mac stuff!
   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/22-Jan-96
    Internet Marketing the Mac
    Bits Rule!
    Microsoft Unveils Internet Explorer for Mac
    Reviews/22-Jan-96

ftp://ftp.tidbits.com/pub/tidbits/issues/1996/TidBITS#311_22-Jan-96.etx


MailBITS/22-Jan-96
------------------
  We'll be moving our Internet server sometime this week. FTP,
  Gopher, and Web access to king.tidbits.com will be down at some
  point, and mail to all addresses at tidbits.com won't be delivered
  until the machine comes back up. With luck, the downtime won't
  last more than a few hours. [ACE]


**Apple to Reorganize & Lay Off 1,300 People** -- Last week Apple
  officially announced a $69 million loss for its first fiscal
  quarter of 1996 (despite increased sales) and revealed plans for a
  company-wide restructuring which will include laying off about
  1,300 employees from administration, sales, and marketing. The
  reorganization is expected to cost Apple at least $125 million
  next quarter, as well. Apple also announced plans to pursue
  broader licensing of the Mac OS and simplify its product line,
  possibly withdrawing from low-end and some mid-range markets.
  Supposedly, these markets would be opened for clone makers,
  although the ability of any clone vendor to meet demand in the
  low-margin, low-end market is unknown. Although the Wall Street
  Journal reports Apple has been shopping around for a buyer, Apple
  maintains it is not for sale, and analysts don't see a problem
  with Apple holding onto its core markets in publishing, home, and
  education. Meanwhile, speculation continues about the future of
  Apple CEO Michael Spindler. [GD]

http://product.info.apple.com/pr/press.releases/1996/q2/
960117.pr.rel.q1earnings1.html


**ShareDevil Now Available** -- Many thanks to the kind folks at
  ZMac/MacUser for making the late Robert Hess's ShareDevil utility
  available for free on the Internet. ShareDevil enhances System 7's
  file sharing, adding features such as a warning when someone
  connects to or disconnects from your machine, a file sharing and
  ARA status window, and an easy way of accessing the file sharing
  control panels. ShareDevil is an application and uses little
  memory, so it's a great candidate for the Startup Items folder.
  Before we set up our SE/30 as a fileserver, I used my 660AV as a
  server, and I loved having ShareDevil telling me when Tonya was
  connected (in case I wanted to restart or try flaky software).
  [ACE]

http://www.zdnet.com/~macuser/download/sharedevil.hqx


**Netscape 2.0b6a Available** -- Netscape released beta 6 and then
  beta 6a of Netscape Navigator last week, including fixes for a
  b-tree corruption problem and performance improvements for
  JavaScript and plug-ins. The archive is about 2.5 MB, and the beta
  expires 01-Mar-96; see the release notes for additional
  information.

ftp://ftp.netscape.com/2.0beta6/mac/Netscape2.0b6aInstall.sit.hqx
http://home.netscape.com/eng/mozilla/2.0/relnotes/mac-2.0b6.html

  Once again, Java support is not included in this release and
  Netscape's Marc Andreessen has been quoted as saying Java support
  may not be included in the final 2.0 release for Macintosh.

http://www.hotwired.com/staff/userland/itstwueitstwue_476.html

  Netscape has made changes to its installer with this release so
  the installer attempts to connect to a setup page after
  installation. If you have more than one version of Netscape on
  your computer, the installer may launch the wrong one, possibly
  corrupting preference files or causing other potentially serious
  problems. I recommend connecting to these pages manually after
  installation is complete. [GD]


**Static Got You Down?** If you have a ton of RAM and feel like
  balancing on the razor-sharp bleeding edge, check out the
  development version of Macromedia's Shockwave plug-in for Netscape
  2.0b5 or higher. Shockwave enables Web users to download and
  display material created in Macromedia Director.

http://www.macromedia.com/Tools/Shockwave/sdc/Plugin/special.htm

  Macromedia notes that this early version is "barely stable" and
  that seems like an accurate (or even generous) assessment. To use
  the plug-in, give Netscape Navigator at least 6 MB of RAM (I
  recommend 8 MB) and be prepared to spend a lot of time downloading
  Shockwave content once the plug-in is installed, since Shockwave
  files seem to range from 150K to 500K (or more) per item. If you
  ask me, that's a high price to pay for a spinning logo and a sound
  file looping in the background - so far, nothing I've seen
  currently using Shockwave could be described as compelling. [GD]


Internet Marketing the Mac
--------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>

  One of the more interesting events I attended at Macworld Expo was
  a dinner organized by Apple. The goal of the dinner, which was
  suggested by Chuck Shotton of WebSTAR fame, was to help Apple
  figure out what to do in terms of Internet marketing. Attendees
  included a bunch of well-known people in the Internet world, who
  were matched in number by Apple marketing people and product
  managers.

  After eating, we went around the room and introduced ourselves,
  each of us raising one or two points for discussion. Needless to
  say, the time allotted for discussion was nowhere near adequate. A
  number of attendees were worried about the messages Apple is
  giving about the Mac as an Internet client and as an Internet
  server. Others felt that Apple isn't doing enough to push the Mac
  as the ideal Internet publishing platform, and issues surrounding
  the marketing of the Mac into companies for internal Internet
  servers (so-called "intranets") were also raised.

  One of my pet peeves is that Internet service providers seldom
  know anything about the Mac, and related to that issue were
  concerns that Apple isn't doing much to inform and educate
  resellers or other Mac professionals (in education, for instance)
  of the advantages the Mac has on the Internet.

  In terms of future technologies, people were worried about Apple
  explaining Cyberdog well, especially considering the control
  Netscape exerts on the Internet market and the ascendence of Java.
  Finally, some discussion centered around the fact that few Apple
  employees participate on Internet mailing lists or newsgroups, and
  that in turn clouds any messages Apple tries to send about the
  company's involvement in the Internet.

  I don't know that any issues were resolved in the few hours we
  had, but I think the meeting was tremendously valuable for a few
  reasons. First, if nothing else, a great deal of business works on
  personal contacts, and the dinner ensured that Apple marketing
  people met some of us who spend our lives using and promoting Macs
  on the Internet. Second, although I don't think anyone left with
  the illusion Apple would suddenly understand either the Internet
  or how to market the Mac in terms of the Internet, most people I
  spoke with later felt that raising the topics we did would be
  cause for thought within Apple. Finally, I think one thing that
  did change at the meeting is that the Apple marketing folks
  realized the extent to which Apple isn't doing much marketing of
  the Mac _on_ the Internet itself. Even Mac users on the Internet
  may not realize that most any Mac makes a decent Web server, or
  how an array of identically configured Mac Web servers (the so-
  called RAIC, or rapid array of inexpensive computers) can handle
  most any load thrown at it.

  Although I was but one of the voices at the meeting, I wanted to
  offer my top five suggestions for Apple in one nice convenient
  spot - here.

  1. Offer and heavily publicize an Internet client Mac. Make it a
  mid-level Performa, say, with a bundled 28.8 modem and the Apple
  Internet Connection Kit (or Cyberdog, if this can't be done right
  away). And, although I'm utterly biased, I think Apple should
  bundle my Internet Starter Kit for Macintosh with it, because the
  Internet is a world unto itself, and to plop users down into the
  middle of it without explanation or a sense of historical
  placement is an injustice to both the user and the Internet
  community.

  2. Immediately offer email and newsgroup based official technical
  support on the Internet. I've been suggesting this for years, and
  it will cut costs and improve Apple's image. Along with this,
  Apple should provide honest pre-sales advice for people interested
  in buying Macs. I can't tell you how many messages we at TidBITS
  get asking what sort of Mac someone should buy. TidBITS doesn't
  sell Macs, Apple does, and Apple should provide that sort of
  information via email. Such advice would help combat the confusion
  and misinformation often experienced in superstores and other
  dealers that don't specialize in the Mac.

http://www.zdnet.com/~macuser/mu_0296/features/shopper_sb1.html

  3. Find all Mac related mailing lists and newsgroups on the
  Internet and assign official Apple liaisons to them to track and
  participate in the discussions. When this is inappropriate (such
  as a list about a specific third-party program), Apple should
  strongly evangelize those companies to do the same. When Apple
  finds a significant topic without a discussion list, someone at
  Apple should start one. Apple has gotten where it is on customer
  loyalty - supporting and sponsoring discussions among users on the
  Internet can only help, and it's an inexpensive way of creating
  community.

  4. Recognize innovative Mac developers in the freeware and
  shareware worlds, as well as individuals or groups providing
  quality Mac-related information on the Internet. 1994's Cool Tools
  Awards are an excellent example of how this sort of recognition
  can help both Apple and the community (See TidBITS-247_). (I
  should have a followup on the Cool Tools Awards done soon.)

  5. Make sure Cyberdog has an OpenDoc part that plays Netscape
  plug-ins and another that runs Java applets. This move is
  paramount to Cyberdog's long-term success in the face of
  Netscape's hegemony in the Web browser world and the potential
  success of Java. And let's face it: Cyberdog is the killer app for
  OpenDoc, so for OpenDoc to succeed Cyberdog has to have some
  impressive new tricks.

  Although I'm sure many of you will immediately want to offer your
  suggestions for Apple, please don't send us your suggestions right
  now because (a) we can't do anything with most of them, and (b)
  shortly there will be a way for you to submit them directly to
  Apple. I'll write more about that when everything's ready.


Bits Rule!
----------
  by Tonya Engst <tonya@tidbits.com>

  Paper is dead. Yes, I know I'm writing this article with the help
  of a few paper handouts, but paper is dead. Easily half the booths
  at Macworld Expo featured products that do not assume your final
  creation will be paper output. In particular, several products
  revolve around the idea of photos as bits. Back in the old days,
  photos existed as atoms - physical objects that you pass around,
  arrange in albums, or archive in shoe boxes. Here in our wired
  world, photos exist as bits on hard disks and albums live on the
  Web, where friends and relatives from around the world can view
  them.

  Adam and I have experienced this transformation first hand, as
  proud owners of a no-longer-new QuickTake, and we've found the
  QuickTake and its output far more compelling than the 4 by 6 color
  glossy photos that my not-so-old analog camera can produce. (See
  Adam's article about the QuickTake in TidBITS-297_.)


**Cheap and Easy** -- If you have a digital camera or scanner,
  it's easy to put your photos on a disk, but if you don't, you
  might use Storm Technologies' EasyPhoto Reader, a $259 scanner
  designed to make it simple to digitize photos. The scanner can
  accept photos up to five inches wide, and as long as you like. It
  has a resolution of 200 dots per inch, and scans at 24-bit color.
  The software comes on CD, but the package includes an offer for
  ordering floppy disks. Normally, you'd feed photos through it, but
  you can pop the unit apart and use it to scan something that can't
  feed through (like a book page), though it looked to me like it
  would take practice to use the device in this mode. TidBITS reader
  Steve Maller <steve@maller.com> recently sent me comments about
  EasyPhoto Reader, and here's his real life story:

  "I was looking for a good, low-cost way of scanning photographs
  into my Macintosh. I have an older, 8-bit, grayscale Apple
  OneScanner, which works fine for documents and line drawings, but
  I've longed for color scans. I considered purchasing another
  flatbed or a slide scanner, but EasyPhoto Reader was cheap, so I
  decided to give it a try - 30-day return policies are great!

  "Installation couldn't have been easier. I attached the EasyPhoto
  Reader to a Power Mac 8500, a computer that I've found to be a
  compatibility challenge for many products. The scanner connects to
  the one of the two serial ports, and you don't need to specify
  which. I had my first scan in about five minutes, including the 45
  seconds it takes the scanner to warm up.

  "The scanner's software provides two ways of acquiring images: a
  stand-alone application called EasyPhoto and a Photoshop plug-in.
  I found no difference in the images acquired in these two ways,
  although the Photoshop plug-in seemed slower.

  "EasyPhoto uses a gallery metaphor for organizing images. As you
  scan photos, they're added to a scrolling window. They're also
  saved to JPEG files on your hard disk, although that's not
  obvious. [As a user, you have no control over the level of JPEG
  compression -Tonya.] EasyPhoto has limited (but effective) image-
  processing tools in its workshop. When you double-click a gallery
  image, EasyPhoto opens it in a window and displays a small suite
  of editing tools, including brightness and contrast adjustment,
  color balancing, and a nifty tool that removes red eyes. I was
  skeptical, but the red eye filter works. You can also rotate,
  scale, and crop pictures. In my experience, the file sizes are
  always less than 100K, and generally as little as 50K after
  fussing and cropping. Storm's expertise in photo image processing
  shows in the power and simplicity of the tool set. Nevertheless,
  most Photoshop users will be more comfortable using the plug-in
  and relying on Photoshop's vast array of tools.

  "The bottom line with any scanner is: how do the scans _look_? As
  with any pursuit, the quality of the output is constrained by the
  quality of the input. I did most of my scans from ordinary
  photographic prints from my neighborhood one-hour processor. I'd
  rate the quality of the scans as good, with some better and some
  worse. The results were clearly inferior to the quality I've seen
  in Kodak's PhotoCDs. Nevertheless, this product has a bright
  future. As more people clog the Internet with Web pages filled
  with pictures of their children and email enclosures of their
  family vacations, EasyPhoto Reader will provide an effective way
  of keeping those pipelines filled."

  Steve suggests checking out Storm's Web page for more technical
  details.

http://www.stormsoft.com/storm/

  One way or another, once your photos are digitized, you'll want to
  fuss with them. If you don't spring for EasyPhoto Reader, or want
  to go further with another piece of software, you might use two
  products that debuted at the Expo: Adobe's PhotoDeluxe or
  QuickMedia's Living Album/Web.


**Photoshop Made Easy** -- PhotoDeluxe is Photoshop for the rest
  of us (or at least those who have the hardware to run it; see
  below). With an estimated street price of $90, PhotoDeluxe is (in
  the words of an Adobe representative), Photoshop with a new user
  interface. Although PhotoDeluxe doesn't offer high end features
  like help with color separation, it does support Photoshop plug-
  ins. PhotoDeluxe has two modes: in the Guided mode, it steps you
  through basic procedures, and helps you think the way a
  professional image editor would think. Guided activities range
  from basic scaling and cropping to projects such as calendars,
  greeting cards, Acrobat pages, and coloring books. You can also
  switch out of Guided mode and do your own thing in a more flexible
  environment.

  PhotoDeluxe requires a 68040- or PowerPC-based Macintosh, System 7
  or later, 8 MB of application RAM on a 68040, 12 MB total RAM on a
  Power Mac with 5.2 MB allocated to PhotoDeluxe, 45 MB of disk
  space, a color monitor that supports at least 256 colors, and a
  CD-ROM drive.


**Online Albums** -- The $130 Living Album/Web 1.0 helps you store
  images online in what QuickMedia terms "multimedia albums." Such
  albums can include graphics, sounds, and video. It can also create
  Web pages that mimic analog photo albums, and users need not know
  any HTML to create what look like reasonable Web pages. A demo
  version of Living Album/Web is available on the Internet;
  according to a QuickMedia representative, the demo is fully
  functional, except it only lets you place six images in an album
  or Web pages. Living Album/Web comes on a CD and requires System 7
  and 8 MB RAM.

http://www.quickmedia.com/

    Adobe --  800/411-8657 -- 206/628-2749 -- <info@adobe.com>
    QuickMedia -- 800/957-0009 -- 415/508-1757 -- 415/596-4643 (fax)
    Storm Software -- 800/275-5734 -- <sales@stormsoft.com>


Microsoft Unveils Internet Explorer for Mac
-------------------------------------------
  by Geoff Duncan <geoff@tidbits.com>

  When Microsoft became a licensee of NCSA Mosaic and later shipped
  a Web browser for Windows called Internet Explorer, the Macintosh
  world didn't even blink. Microsoft was just another company
  jumping on the Internet bandwagon: what did another Mosaic-derived
  browser for Windows matter? "Internet Explorer" was dubbed
  "Internet Exploiter," and that was that.

  Late last year, Microsoft announced plans to bring Internet
  Explorer to the Macintosh. Of course, the Macintosh world barely
  blinked at this news. What could Microsoft - a company not known
  for its Internet savvy and whose recent mainstream Office
  applications for the Mac have met with less than unbridled
  enthusiasm - bring to the table that Netscape, InterCon, and
  TradeWave could not?

  Well, last week Microsoft released a public beta of Internet
  Explorer for Macintosh and proved it can still surprise the Mac
  community.


**Where to Find It** -- Microsoft has made the first beta Internet
  Explorer 2.0 available on their Web site. (Apparently it's
  numbered 2.0 to maintain parity with the Windows version.)
  Versions are available for both Power Macintosh and 68K Macs, and
  each download is about 1 MB in size.

http://www.microsoft.com/windows/ie/mac/macdl.htm

  Internet Explorer requires a Mac with a 68030 processor or better,
  System 7.0.1 or later, and a at least 8 MB of memory (but see
  below for more memory details). The beta may be used until a final
  version is available, at which point users are required to obtain
  the final version and register with Microsoft (for free).


**Basic Features** -- Based on NCSA Mosaic, Internet Explorer is
  an HTML 2.0-compliant Web browser that supports a selection of
  HTML 3.0 tags (including tables), many Netscape HTML extensions,
  and a number of its own extensions. Unlike Mosaic, Internet
  Explorer can load Web pages through multiple TCP connections, and
  progressively renders a page so users can examine the content
  before the page is fully downloaded. (These are the same features
  that originally gave Netscape a performance advantages over
  earlier browsers.) Explorer supports FTP, gopher, news, and mailto
  URLs, progressive rendering of GIF and JPEG inline images,
  backgrounds, text selection in the main window, and a bookmark
  feature (called Favorites). Explorer also has a bizarre history
  mechanism where pages you've seen can be listed at the end of the
  File menu, in a modeless History window, or in a pop-up on the
  browser window.

  In terms of interface, Internet Explorer is very much a "post-
  Mosaic" application and breaks little new ground. The top of the
  browser window holds a text field for the currently-loaded URL as
  well as the obligatory button bar, although Explorer's is
  cluttered.

  Internet Explorer includes preliminary support for AppleScript,
  although it's unfortunately modeled after Netscape's and does not
  support the GetURL event. This beta version of Internet Explorer
  also does not support Frontier menu sharing or Internet Config.


**What's New** -- In a good move, Internet Explorer's button bar
  sports controls that proportionally increase or decrease the size
  of the text displayed in the entire page. This is handy for
  viewing pages "enhanced" for Internet Explorer (which invariably
  come across in tiny 10-point type on the Macintosh), or for people
  who need (or want) larger type on their screens.

  In place of Netscape's animated "N" indicating a page is loading,
  Internet Explorer features either a spinning globe or an animated
  version of the Windows logo - a move sure to earn Microsoft lots
  of friends in the Mac community.

  In a step ahead of other Web browsers, Internet Explorer handles a
  number of audio formats without helper applications, including Sun
  .au, AIFF, and Windows WAV. Additionally, Internet Explorer
  handles QuickTime movies by itself and supports inline AVI (Video
  for Windows) movies. Oddly, it does not come preconfigured to
  handle other common file types, including BinHex or StuffIt
  archives, and Explorer's interface for configuring helper
  applications is weak (although I haven't seen any Web browser
  handle this well.)

  Internet Explorer also has predefined "home" and "search" pages,
  which you set in Explorer's awkward, tabbed Options dialog box.
  When launched, Explorer tries to connect to its home page, which
  by default is set to the Microsoft Network Web site. Unless you
  want Explorer to try to connect to the Internet every time it's
  launched (potentially dialing your modem and racking up phone
  charges), set the home page to an HTML file on your local hard
  disk. There's currently no way specify you don't want a page
  loaded at startup.

  Explorer can be configured to show HTTP server messages (useful
  for some people), and Explorer's HTML parser and layout engine
  both seem fast.


**Road Testing** -- In my tests over a 28.8 Kbps modem, Internet
  Explorer performed respectably, but not significantly faster or
  slower than current versions of Netscape. Reports from users with
  faster connections indicate Explorer may outperform Netscape in
  some cases.

  Although this is an early beta, a few missing items did stand out.
  Explorer offers no key commands for simple navigation or some
  common menu commands, and the Find command doesn't always scroll
  the browser window to the found text (particularly if the page
  contains tables). Users of Netscape 2.0 will find Explorer's
  bookmark-management features lacking, although, when first
  launched, Explorer will offer to use your Netscape bookmarks and
  configuration. Explorer's newsreading capabilities are functional,
  though not outstanding.

  The most troubling aspect of Internet Explorer is its memory
  usage. Explorer says it requires 4 MB of RAM; maybe I'm spoiled,
  but when I give an application 4 MB of memory, I expect it to stay
  there. During normal use, Internet Explorer uses significant
  amounts of temporary memory in the system heap to store
  information. Although this is a perfectly acceptable technique
  (used by programs like BBEdit to great effect), I watched in
  astonishment as Explorer increased the size of my system heap from
  about 4 MB to over 11 MB in under twenty minutes. Admittedly, I
  was doing intensive browsing to test Explorer's bounds, and
  Explorer does relinquish this temporary memory when you quit.
  However, it's too easy to get in trouble with this scheme,
  resulting in a bloated system heap that prevents you from
  launching other applications and possibly requires you to restart.
  As an experiment, I configured my machine so Explorer would only
  have access to a little system memory; in that case, Explorer
  correctly used space in its own partition, but its performance
  quickly deteriorated and the program eventually locked up.


**Let's Play <TAG>** -- The beta currently supports a number of
  Netscape extensions to HTML, but it does not support frames or
  other Netscape extensions introduced with Netscape 2.0. In a
  unique approach, Internet Explorer can pose as a version of
  Netscape, thereby receiving any Netscape-specific content that
  server might provide. (Some sites, like Yahoo, serve different
  content depending on your browser.) It's unclear to me if there's
  any point to identifying yourself as Netscape 2.0 when no Netscape
  2.0 features are supported.

  In a move that reminds me of two schoolyard bullies comparing the
  size of their muscles (or other parts of their anatomy), Microsoft
  followed Netscape's dubious lead and introduced its own set of
  HTML extensions with Internet Explorer. These tags suggest that
  Microsoft doesn't understand the point of HTML. Among Microsoft's
  "innovations" are tags that make sounds play when a page loads
  (these can't be turned off); specify a particular typeface (I'm
  not even going to start on why that's a bad idea); add the ability
  to embed AVI movies in image tags; and give ability to specify
  "margins" for an HTML page (which basically guarantee you'll have
  to resize your browser window in order to read the text). Fans of
  the Netscape extension <BLINK> will love Microsoft's <MARQUEE>
  tag, which may only serve as proof Netscape exercised some
  restraint with its HTML extensions.


**Conclusions** -- The word on the street is that the Mac version
  of Internet Explorer is being developed by a set of "real"
  Macintosh programmers from companies like Claris and Radius,
  rather than by Windows programmers in Redmond. This is certainly
  reflected in the first beta of Internet Explorer, which is
  surprisingly Mac-like given Microsoft's recent history with
  Macintosh applications. The potential of Explorer is undeniable,
  and with Java support (Microsoft is a Java licensee) and support
  for Netscape and Explorer plug-ins, the picture gets more
  interesting. With better memory management, interface
  improvements, and support for technologies like Internet Config,
  Internet Explorer could become a significant alternative to
  Netscape Navigator. For this to happen, though, the program must
  successfully fend off the weight of Microsoft's Windows-centric
  Internet strategy.


Reviews/22-Jan-96
-----------------

* MacWEEK -- 15-Jan-96, Vol. 10, #2
    Painter 4.0 -- pg. 25
    NetWare Client for Mac OS 5.1 -- pg. 25
    Dabbler 2.0 -- pg. 27


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