Year: 2002

Bare Bones Software Releases Mailsmith 1.5 for Mac OS X

Bare Bones Software Releases Mailsmith 1.5 for Mac OS X

Bedford, MA — March 25, 2002 — Bare Bones Software today announced the
release and immediate availability of Mailsmith 1.5, an Internet email
client for Mac OS X and Mac OS 9.

“Mailsmith offers an unprecedented degree of flexibility and customization
with very powerful editing, filtering, and searching options,” said Rich
Siegel, President and CEO of Bare Bones Software.

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MacHack 17: Keynote Announced: Tim O’Reilly

MacHack 17: Keynote Announced: Tim O’Reilly

MacHack: The Annual Conference for Leading Edge Developers
http://www.machack.com/

Contact: Carol Lynn
mailto:info@machack.com
c/o Expotech
1264 Bedford Road
Grosse Point Park, MI 48230

March 25, 2002 – Dearborn, MI -MacHack: The Annual Conference for Leading
Edge Developers is pleased to announce that internet pioneer and activist
Tim O’Reilly will keynote the June event.

Tim O’Reilly is founder and president of O’Reilly & Associates.

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Fwd: Press Information: SQL4X Manager J released

SQL4X Manager J released

Dear Editor

We are proud to announce the new SQL4X Manager J 2.1. The new SQL4X Manager
J is the easiest way to access SQL database servers from Mac OS X. SQL4X
Manager J supports all major database vendors (Oracle, Microsoft SQL
Server, Sybase ASE, PostgreSQL, OpenBase, MySQL and several others).

SQL4X Manager J is designed to support developers and web site
administrators.

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Bibliography software comes to Mac OS X

Sonny Software today released Bookends 7, a Mac OS X compatible version of its full-featured bibliography/reference and information management software. Bookends allows users to import references from hundreds of on-line sources into a personal database, integrating with Microsoft Word and Nisus Writer to create publication-ready bibliographies. Bookends 7 sells for US$99, with a $30 discount for students. Upgrades are free to version 6 users and cost $49 for earlier versions.

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Higher costs hit industry-wide: PC makers raise prices

As Apple raised iMac prices last week to reflect increased component costs, so too are NEC and Dell. “We are in a situation where we have to jack up PC prices from the next new product line,” an NEC spokesperson said. Price increases from Fujistu and IBM Japan are also expected, according to Sunday’s edition of The Nihon Keizai Shimbun, as noted by CBS MarketWatch.

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