Year: 1998

[MD1] Lasso 2.5.1

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
April 3, 1998

Media Contact:
Bill Doerrfeld, President & CEO
Blue World Communications, Inc.
425.646.0288, bill@blueworld.com

LASSO 2.5.1 NOW AVAILABLE
Free Update Provides Enhanced Stability and New License Agreement

Bellevue, WA – April 3, 1998 – Blue World Communications, Inc. today
announced the immediate availability of Lasso 2.5.1, a maintenance release
for the company’s award-winning solution for Web- and Java- enabling
FileMaker Pro for Mac OS from FileMaker, Inc.

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[MD1] Enter the Apple Design Awards

From:
Tim Holmes
Mac OS Developer Relations
Apple Computer, Inc.

Developer folk,

The Apple Design Awards deadline is fast approaching… (April 15th…
sound familiar?) If you haven’t entered your products yet (and I know some
of you haven’t), you should do so now!

I won’t belabor the point… Thanks for listening!

You can get the submission form and rules at the following URL:
http://devworld.apple.com/designaward/

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[MD1] WebSTAR SSI-WebInclude

From: Eric Zelenka (eric@starnine.com)
ANNOUNCE: Free WebSTAR SSI-WebInclude Release

StarNine is proud to announce the availability of WebSTAR SSI-WebInclude, a
free Plug-In for use with WebSTAR 3.0, enabling you to dynamically include
parts of remote web pages in the content being served.

WebSTAR SSI-WebInclude works by taking advantage of the new Tag Registry
capabilities of WebSTAR 3.0 to add even more functionality to the
server-side-includes (SSI) processing capabilities of the newly released
WebSTAR 3.0.

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[MD1] General Edit Lite 1.0.1

QUADRIVIO ANNOUNCES FREE HEX/ASCII/UNICODE FILE TOOL
General Edit Lite 1.0.1 Edits Simple Formats

Berkeley, CA-April 2, 1998-Quadrivio Corporation announced General Edit
Lite 1.0.1, a free tool for Mac OS programmers who need to edit data files.
It is based on the commercial version of General Edit.

General Edit Lite allows programmers to:
1) Open and edit disk files as hexadecimal bytes, ASCII characters, Unicode
characters (Roman encoding only), 16-bit decimal integers, or 32-bit
decimal integers.

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