The Macintosh as a Web Platform


Tony Barry, Head, Centre for Networked Access to Scholarly Information, Australian National University Library, Canberra A.C.T. 0200, Australia. Phone +61 6 249 4632. Fax +61 6 279 8120. Email: tony@info.anu.edu.au Home Page: http://snazzy.anu.edu.au/People/TonyB.html [HREF 1]

Keywords: Macintosh, MacOS, World Wide Web

Introduction

Belatedly, as with Microsoft, Apple recently recognised the central importance of the Internet to its commercial future. Amongst the major strategic moves it has made is to abandon its proprietary networking service E-World and to delay the release of its new operating system Copland, to better integrate Internet capabilities. Macintosh users however have for some years seen the Mac as a flexible platform for Internet use. Public domain and increasingly commercial programs exist which support servers and clients to all the main Internet protocols such as smtp, popmail, DNS, ping, ftp, gopher, telnet,tftp,http, finger and so on.

This popularity has meant that the Macintosh has a far greater presence on the web that its 10% or so market share would suggest and I have seen suggestions that the MacOS is the second most used as a server after Unix. As a viewing platform the proportion of Macintoshes is also alleged to be much higher. Reports in the press suggest that 40% of Web documents are prepared on Macs although the source of this figure is obscure. The reason for this is not just that public domain tools are available for the Mac but also because of the advantage it has as a specialist platform for publishing and multimedia functions together with the ease of networking. This may well be a temporary phenomenon as Microsoft plans now to bundle TCP software with Windows 95 after abandoning its proprietary MSN networking technology.

My original intention with this paper was to list and link to reviews of specific products or provide reviews where none are available for Macintosh software which can assist in the operation of Web services. Where possible I wanted to provide Australian sites for this software, preferentially being those at ANU in particular the Australian Sunsite [HREF 2]. It houses mirrors of the main Macintosh archives at Stanford and Michigan as well as Web specific material on the main ANU campus Web server. [HREF 3]

In writing this paper I encountered a number of problems which limited my original ambitions and which readers should be aware of as it limits how useful they may find the conclusions I draw.

The continued rapid growth of the Web and the use of the Macintosh platform mean that -

The link provided at the bottom of the page to the interactive presentation will also link to the updated version of this paper as I develop it.

General Sources of Information

There are a number of general sources of information on the Mac platform. An excellent sire is Eric Lease Morgan's Teaching an old dog new tricks , which has and Australian source [HREF 4] which is an excellent overview of Mac tools but does not appear to have been updated since late last year.

Carleton University maintains the MacWWW FAQ [HREF 5] and COMVISTA has a detailed server with excellent information on commercial sources and appears to be very up to date, Macintosh WWW Resources [HREF 6].

Major Australian sources

Servers

The are a number of general reviews of mac Internet services and servers

Specific software includes -

httpd4Mac

Rating: * *
Australian source: Unknown
Source: ftp://ftp.freedonia.com/pub/servers/httpd4Mac-v123a.sit.bin [HREF 21]

Comments: A freeware Web server. Minimal implementation.
References:

  1. Morgan [HREF 22]

InterServer

Rating: Not seen
Australian source: Unknown
Source: http://www.intercon.com/newpi/InterServerP.html [HREF 23]
Comments: A commercial FTP, Gopher, and Web server.
References:

MacHTTP

Rating: * * * *
Australian source: Unknown
Source: http://152.1.24.177/teaching/manuscript/0750-0003.html [HREF 24]
Comments: This contains basic functionality and has the advantage that it supports password access. It also has an extensive library of CGI support. Most of this also will run on the commercial version of the software, Webstar. Undoubtedly the most popular of Mac servers
References:
  1. Morgan [HREF 25]


NetPresenz

Rating: * * * *
Australian source: http://redback.cs.uwa.edu.au/PeterLewis/WWW/netpresenz/netpresenz.html [HREF 26]
Source:
Comments: At $10 this cannot be beaten on price. Compared with MacHTTP its only failing is an inability to do IP limiting and authentication. It has the advantage that it also supplied an FTP server integrated with the Mac securuity system so that remote maintenance is simple. A high quality product like all Peter Lewis's programs.

WebSTAR

Rating: * * * * *
Source: http://www.starnine.com/Webstar/Webstar.html [HREF 27]
Comments: The principal commercial Mac server. It even manages to have a page of Yahoo devoted to it.
References:
  1. Morgan [HREF 28]
  2. Yahoo page [HREF 29]
Other servers

The is also an extensive range of support software for servers with sites which deal with this generally -

Or specific discussion of CGI scripts -
Or with specific language support such as -

Or specific products -

Clients

There are a number of general reviews of mac client software -

Specific clients are discussed below -

Cyberdog

Rating: * * * *
Australian source: Unknown
Source: http://cyberdog.apple.com/ [HREF 59]
Comments: Cyberdog is more than a browser. Still in beta test is is difficult to give this software a rating until interoperability with other OpenDoc components is fully worked out.

  1. Cyberdog FAQ [HREF 60]
  2. Factsheet [HREF 61]



MacWeb

Rating: * *
Australian source: ftp://sunsite.anu.edu.au/pub/mac/info-mac/comm/inet/Web/mac-Web-111e-ppc.hqx [HREF 62]
Source: http://www.einet.net/EINet/MacWeb/MacWebHome.html [HREF 63]
Comments: The first Mac browser browsers after Mosaic. it appears to be no longer being developed in a public version. Still at HTML 1 which limits its utility. A new version which supports HTML 2 is only distributed as part of TradeVPI commercial Intranet activities.
References:
  1. MacWeb - Morgan [HREF 64]



Microsoft Internet Explorer

Rating: * * *
Australian source: Unknown
Source: http://198.105.232.5/windows/ie/ie20html.htm [HREF 65]
Comments: A browser from the "evil empire". This could well be the only product to give Netscape a run for their money.


Mosaic

Rating: * *
Australian source: ftp://sunsite.anu.edu.au/pub/mac/info-mac/comm/inet/Web/ncsa-mosaic-201.hqx [HREF 66]
Source: http://www.ncsa.uiuc.edu/SDG/Software/MacMosaic/ [HREF 67]
Comments:
The first of the browsers but dropping away in capability compared with other offerings. References: NCSA Mosaic - Morgan [HREF 68]


Netscape Navigator

Rating: * * * *
Australian source: Unknown
Source: ftp://ftp20.netscape.com/pub/navigator/ [HREF 69]
Comments: The standard against which other browers are judged. The size of the Netscape 3 Gold is providing cause for alarm even though it provides an editing capability.
References:
An interesting development on the client side is the emergence of scripting utilities for Internet protocols in the form of -
Applescript extensions to control MacTCP such as Mango Tree Software TCP/IP scripting additions and Allegiant Technologies Marionet [HREF 70] although both have implications for server gateways as much as clients. These tools raise the possability of the emergence of home grown browsers based for instance on Hypercard.

Editors

There are a number of reviews of HTM editors for the mac -


Alpha

Rating: * * *
Australian source: ftp://sunsite.anu.edu.au/pub/mac/umich/util/text/alpha6.0.sit.hqx [HREF 77]
Source:
Comments: A complex editor designed for programmers with many utilities for this, it does html tagging via menus. The sophisticated user with a programming back ground will find this very powerful because of its macro abilities.
References:
  1. Morgan [HREF 78]


Arachnid

Rating: * * * *
Australian source: ftp://sunsite.anu.edu.au/pub/mac/umich/util/comms/www/arachnid1.6b.sit.hqx [HREF 79]
Source:
Comments: Huge, and still in beta, the read me talks of "still many flaws". A project at the University of Iowa this product supports all the main HTML tags, including forms, maps, tables, graphics import and multiple pages in the one "project" document. While all the bells and whistles are there this editor needs a lot of resources to drive it.
References:
  1. Morgan [HREF 80]


BBedit

Rating: * * *
Australian source: ftp://sunsite.anu.edu.au/pub/mac/info-mac/text/_BBEdit/ [HREF 81]
Source: http://www.barebones.com/ [HREF 82]
Comments: A fast text editor designed for programmers, its extendibility has added html capabilities. For those who are happy to work directly in HTML tags this is an ideal tool.
References:
  1. Webedge [HREF 83]


BBEdit HTML extensions

Rating: * * * *
Australian source: ftp://sunsite.anu.edu.au/pub/mac/info-mac/_Text_Processing/_HTML/bbedit-html-13.hqx [HREF 84]
Source: http://nti.uji.es/software/bb-html-ext/ [HREF 85]
Comments: This and BBEdit HTML tools provide similar functionality. It is a matter of taste which is used.
References:
  1. Morgan" [HREF 86]


BBEdit HTML Tools

Rating: * * * *
Australian source: Unknown
Source: http://www.york.ac.uk/%7Eld11/BBEditTools.html [HREF 87]
Comments: Similar to HTML Extensions.

  1. Morgan [HREF 88]


Claris Works 4

Rating: * * * *
Australian source: Unknown
Source: http://www.claris.com/products/ClarisWorks/index.html [HREF 89]
Comments: Only part of HTML 1 supported eg descriptive lists are not. It supports HTML via the styles feature. The ability to support literal HTML together with Macros make this extensible and the spreadsheet and database facilities can be used to compute table elements or convert structured data into HTML.

High Tea

Rating: * * *
Australian source: ftp://sunsite.anu.edu.au/pub/mac/umich/util/comm/www/hightea1.0.sit.hqx
Source: ftp://sunsite.anu.edu.au/pub/mac/info-mac/_Text_Processing/_HTML/high-tea.hqx [HREF 90]
Comments: Not WYSIWYG , unless you do it by hand, this editor is fast. Supports most of HTML 2 except does not support tables.
References:
  1. Morgan [HREF 91]



HTML Editor

Rating: * * *
Australian source: ftp://sunsite.anu.edu.au/pub/mac/info-mac/_Text_Processing/_HTML/html-editor-113.hqx [HREF 92]
Source: http://dragon.acadiau.ca/%7Egiles/HTML_Editor/Documentation.html [HREF 93]
Comments: Supports a good range of tags. WYSIWYG with tags visible. Keyboard short cuts for tagging makes this fast to use. Good Forms and tables interface. Hot link to viewer of your choice
References:
  1. Morgan [HREF 94]


HTML Pro

Rating: * * *
Australian source: ftp://sunsite.anu.edu.au/pub/mac/umich/util/text/htmlpro1.07.cpt.hqx [HREF 95]
Source: http://www.ts.umu.se/%7Er2d2/shareware/htmlpro_help.html [HREF 96]
Comments: An unusual editor that supports two windows for each document. One WYSIWYG and the other with the source data. Both can be edited and the changes automatically reflected in the other. While it only has a minimal set of tags it supports users extensions. The main advantage in this editor is speed.
References:
  1. Morgan [HREF 97]



HTML.edit

Rating: * * *
Australian source: ftp://sunsite.anu.edu.au/pub/mac/info-mac/_Text_Processing/_HTML/html-edit-173.hqx [HREF 98]
Source: http://ogopogo.nttc.edu/tools/HTMLedit/HTMLedit.html [HREF 99]
Comments: An unusual editor based on a hypercard format which supports a page on each card which can have standard headers and footers attached. Is able to export some or all pages at a site in individual cards as html files. An excellent choice for a project involving many small pages with similar header and footer requirements such as presentations.
References:
  1. Morgan [HREF 100]


Pagemill

Rating: * * * * *
Australian source: Unknown
Source: http://www.adobe.com/prodindex/pagemill/main.html [HREF 101]
Comments: A commercial product which has excellent drag and drop graphical abilities. It produces valid html although with a tendency to use <BR> codes where <P> might be more appropriate. The produced code is also difficult to edit in text based utilities because of the lack of suitable line breaks.

Version 2 [HREF 102]has just been released and adds forms and frames capability.


Pagespinner

Rating: Too new to assess
Australian source: ftp://sunsite.anu.edu.au/pub/mac/info-mac/text/_HTML/page-spinner-11.hqx
Comments: The newest shareware editor, released in June. Supports HTML3 and Netscape extentions. WYSIWYG with tags showing.

Web Weaver

Rating: * * *
Australian source: ftp://sunsite.anu.edu.au/pub/mac/info-mac/_Text_Processing/_HTML/www-weaver-11.hqx [HREF 103]
Source: http://www.potsdam.edu/Web.Weaver/About.html [HREF 104]
Comments: If you like floating menus this editor is for you. It also has a button bar for editing, menus and a few keyboard macros. WYSIWYG with tags in small coloured font.. Good support for special characters. Now available in a commercial version.


The choice of editor is often one of personal taste and the type of work to be done. Starting from raw text HTML Markup or BBEdit is often a good choice to get a working HTML document for further refinement.

Starting from scratch using a word processor and converting to HTML once the base document is written is preferable. ClarisWorks make this fairly simple even though it does not yet support all tags. Various converts are listed in the table below.

Refining a document after that stage can be done in any editor although BBEdit is very fast if you are happy to use raw tags. If you want to avoid them and use a lot of graphics Pagemill cannot be beaten. For fast and dirty work HTML Pro is good especially for small documents. To maintain sets of documents which are interlinked Arachnid, Pagemill and HTML.edit would have to be preferred. Sitemill is not mentioned above would be ideal but out of the cost range of most individuals.

As well as editors there are a range of converters for specific formats.Some of these are -

CSVCSV-to-HTML 2.0
FoxProdbf-to-html-11-fox-pro.hqx
Hotlisthh-conv-hc.hqx
hotlist-to-html-072.hqx
Hypercardlufa-02.hqx
Pagemakerdave-10-as.hqx
pm-Web-sucker-28-hc.hqx
Quark ExpressCollect HTML 1.3.2
>html-xport-122-quark.hqx
quark-to-html-pl.hqx
RTFrtf-to-html-converter-275.hqx
Setextsetext-to-htm-pl.hqx
Texthtml-markup-201.hqx
hyperize-11.hqx
text-to-html-131.hqx
Word 6msword-to-html-15.hqx
>ANT_HTML_DOT
Wordperfectwordperfect-html-macros.hqx
XTND capable softwarehtml-plus-xtnd.hqx

Java and VRML

I had intended to add some material to this paper on developments in Java and VRML but this is in a state of great flux at the moment as can be seen from these links -

Any commentary would, perforce be superficial.

Link Editors

This is another area which I had hoped to add material however operating system developments might well make many of the small scale databases written recently obsolete and the products available currently seem to be many, varied and changing rapidly so I have not attempted to survey this field. It may well be that the personal bibliographical tools will be expanded to cover this area. At the larger scale, the integrated library management system vendors are moving into this area as well as tentative steps by major bibliographical utilities such as OCLC.

Conclusions

The Macintosh as a Web platform has a rapidly increasing range of software and enjoys a popularity greater than its market share would suggest. As with other platforms the rate of change is such that trying to survey what is available is difficult. It is clear that those who use a Macintosh platform on the Internet have a wide choice of shareware and public domain software to publish and view documents on the Web. A rapidly growing commercial market for software appears to be building up in parallel.

Hypertext references

HREF1
http://snazzy.anu.edu.au/People/TonyB.html - Tony Barry's Home Page
ftp://sunsite.anu.edu.au/pub/mac
HREF3
ftp://www.anu.edu.au/pub/
HREF4
ftp://sunsite.anu.edu.au/pub/mac/info-mac/comm/info/tricks-10-html.hqx - an Australian source
HREF5
http://arpp.carleton.ca/mac/contents.html - MacWWW FAQ
HREF6
http://www.comvista.com/net/www/WWWDirectory.html - Macintosh WWW Resources
HREF7
http://www.apple.com.au/ - Apple Computer Australia
HREF8
http://www-mugc.cc.monash.edu.au/~acope/h/mac.html - Australian Macintosh Page
HREF9
http://tyndale.apana.org.au/Digester/InfoMac.html - Info-mac HyperDigests (Australia)
HREF10
http://www.ozemail.com.au/~pkortge/mac/mum.html - OzEmail Mac CyberCentre
HREF11
ftp://sunsite.anu.edu.au/pub/mac - Sunsite Mac archives at ANU
HREF12
http://www.uq.edu.au/~bcggriff/umac.html - The ULTIMATE Macintosh
HREF13
http://mac.unsw.edu.au/ - The UNSW Macintosh Software Archive
HREF14
http://owl.qut.edu.au/qsite/resinter/mac_inter.html - QSITE - Internet Macintosh tools
HREF15
http://www.freedonia.com/pism/ - Internet Servers for MacOS
HREF16
http://www.cen.uiuc.edu/~wronkiew/macos_servers/
HREF17
Ihttp://www.yahoo.com/Computers_and_Internet/Internet/World_Wide_Web/HTTP/Servers/Macintosh/
HREF18
http://www.comvista.com/net/www/server.html
HREF19
http://redback.cs.uwa.edu.au/PeterLewis/ - Peter Lewis Home page
HREF20
http://152.1.24.177/teaching/manuscript/0750-0001.html - Morgan
HREF21
ftp://ftp.freedonia.com/pub/servers/httpd4Mac-v123a.sit.bin - httpd4Mac-v123a.sit.bin
HREF22
http://152.1.24.177/teaching/manuscript/0750-0002.html - Morgan
HREF23
http://www.intercon.com/newpi/InterServerP.html - InterServerP.html
HREF24
http://152.1.24.177/teaching/manuscript/0750-0003.html
HREF25
http://152.1.24.177/teaching/manuscript/0750-0003.html - Morgan
HREF26
http://redback.cs.uwa.edu.au/PeterLewis/WWW/netpresenz/netpresenz.html - netpresenz.html
HREF27
http://www.starnine.com/Webstar/Webstar.html
HREF28
http://152.1.24.177/teaching/manuscript/0750-0003.html - Morgan
HREF29
http://www.yahoo.com/Computers_and_Internet/Internet/World_Wide_Web/HTTP/Servers/Macintosh/WebSTAR/ - Yahoo page
HREF30
http://www.be_lab.udel.edu/Documentation/Tools.html - Tools for Use with MacHTTP
HREF31
http://www.comvista.com/net/www/sitemaint.html - Site Maintenance Tools
HREF32
http://152.1.24.177/teaching/manuscript/0900-0-server-tools.html - Server enhancements and evaluation tools
HREF33
http://www.comvista.com/net/www/CGIactive.html - Active Page CGIs
HREF34
http://www.mccom.com/CGIinC/ - Mac CGIs in C
HREF35
file:///Avery%20HD/WWW/MacHTTP%20server/Tutorials/Extending_MacHTTP/ExtendingMacHTTP.html - Extending MacHTTP
HREF36
http://arpp1.carleton.ca/grant/mac/grantsCGI.html - Grant's CGI Framework
HREF37
http://www.gbi.com/gbi/DataWeb.html - DataWeb (Oracle and Sybase connections)
HREF38
http://www.Webedge.com/resources/reference/frontier/ - Frontier CGIs
HREF39
http://www.comvista.com/net/www/CGI.html - CGI Applications
HREF40
http://www.comvista.com/net/www/CGIshell.html - CGI Shells
HREF41
http://www.claris.com/support/journal/fmCGI/article.html - Claris Filemaker Pro CGI
HREF42
http://cy-mac.welc.cam.ac.uk/CGI.html - Applescript/Frontier CGI Tour
HREF43
http://www.unimelb.edu.au/%7Essilcot/macperl-primer/home.html - MacPerl Primer
HREF44
http://err.ethz.ch/~neeri/macintosh/perl.html - MacPerl Homepage
HREF45
http://err.ethz.ch/members/neeri/macintosh/perl-qa.html#Q1 - MacPerl Q&A
HREF46
http://www.its.unimelb.edu.au:801/ma/public/macperl/maillist.html - MacPerl Discussion List Archive
HREF47
http://kreeft.intmed.mcw.edu/pf.html - The Pocket Forth Repository
HREF48
http://www.python.org/ - Python Language Home Page
HREF49
http://www.iliad.com/formsaver - FormSaver
HREF50
http://www.maxum.com/NetCloak/ - NetCloak
HREF51
http://www.maxum.com/NetForms/ - NetForms
HREF52
http://152.1.24.177/teaching/manuscript/0900-0010.html - ServerStat Lite
HREF53
http://152.1.24.177/teaching/manuscript/0900-0009.html - Redirect.aCGI
HREF54
http://152.1.24.177/teaching/manuscript/0900-0012.html - WebStat
HREF55
http://152.1.24.177/teaching/manuscript/0900-0004.html - folder_list2
HREF56
http://www.Webedge.com/resources/reviews/browsers/ - Web Browser Review
HREF57
http://www.browserwatch.com/ - BrowserWatch
HREF58
http://www.comvista.com/net/www/client.html - Client Software (Browsers)
HREF59
http://cyberdog.apple.com/
HREF60
http://cyberdog.apple.com/br/techfaq.html - Cyberdog FAQ
HREF61
http://product.info.apple.com/productinfo/factsheets/cyberdogfactsheet.html - Factsheet
HREF62
ftp://sunsite.anu.edu.au/pub/Macintosh/info-Macintosh/comm/inet/Web/Macintosh-Web-111e-ppc.hqx - Macintosh-Web-111e-ppc.hqx
HREF63
http://www.einet.net/EINet/MacintoshWeb/MacintoshWebHome.html - MacintoshWebHome.html
HREF64
http://152.1.24.177/teaching/manuscript/0400-0003.html - MacintoshWeb - Morgan
HREF65
http://198.105.232.5/windows/ie/ie20html.htm - ie20html.htm
HREF66
ftp://sunsite.anu.edu.au/pub/Macintosh/info-Macintosh/comm/inet/Web/ncsa-mosaic-201.hqx - ncsa-mosaic-201.hqx
HREF67
http://www.ncsa.uiuc.edu/SDG/Software/MacintoshMosaic/ - MacintoshMosaic
HREF68
http://152.1.24.177/teaching/manuscript/0400-0004.html - NCSA Mosaic - Morgan
HREF69
ftp://ftp20.netscape.com/pub/navigator/
HREF70
http://the.arc.co.uk/ARC/InternetAp/r2901614575_txt.html - Marionet
HREF71
http://152.1.24.177/teaching/manuscript/1100-0-html-editors.html - Macintoshintosh-based HTML editors
HREF72
http://www.comvista.com/net/www/htmleditor.html - HTML Editors - Comvista
HREF73
http://www.Webedge.com/resources/reviews/wysiwyg/ - HTML Editors - Webedge
HREF74
http://www.comvista.com/net/www/htmlconverter.html - HTML Conversion Tools - Comvista
HREF75
http://www.comvista.com/net/www/htmlbatch.html - Batch and Automatic HTML Processors
HREF76
http://www.yahoo.com/Computers_and_Internet/Internet/World_Wide_Web/HTML_Editors/Macintoshintosh/ - Yahoo Macintosh editors page
HREF77
ftp://sunsite.anu.edu.au/pub/Macintosh/umich/util/text/alpha6.0.sit.hqx - alpha6.0.sit.hqx
HREF78
http://152.1.24.177/teaching/manuscript/1100-0001.html - Morgan
HREF79
ftp://sunsite.anu.edu.au/pub/Macintosh/umich/util/comms/www/arachnid1.6b.sit.hqx - arachnid1.6b.sit.hqx
HREF80
http://152.1.24.177/teaching/manuscript/1100-0002.html - Morgan
HREF81
ftp://sunsite.anu.edu.au/pub/Macintosh/info-Macintosh/text/_BBEdit/ - BBEdit
HREF82
http://www.barebones.com/
HREF83
http://www.Webedge.com/resources/reviews/bbedit352/ - Webedge
HREF84
ftp://sunsite.anu.edu.au/pub/Macintosh/info-Macintosh/_Text_Processing/_HTML/bbedit-html-13.hqx - bbedit-html-13.hqx
HREF85
http://nti.uji.es/software/bb-html-ext/ - bb-html-ext
HREF86
http://152.1.24.177/teaching/manuscript/1100-0003.html - Morgan"
HREF87
http://www.york.ac.uk/%7Eld11/BBEditTools.html BBEditTools.html
HREF88
http://152.1.24.177/teaching/manuscript/1100-0004.html - Morgan
HREF89
http://www.claris.com/products/ClarisWorks/index.html
HREF90
ftp://sunsite.anu.edu.au/pub/Macintosh/info-Macintosh/_Text_Processing/_HTML/high-tea.hqx - high-tea.hqx
HREF91
http://152.1.24.177/teaching/manuscript/1100-0005.html - Morgan
HREF92
ftp://sunsite.anu.edu.au/pub/Macintosh/info-Macintosh/_Text_Processing/_HTML/html-editor-113.hqx
HREF93
http://dragon.acadiau.ca/%7Egiles/HTML_Editor/Documentation.html
HREF94
http://152.1.24.177/teaching/manuscript/1100-0006.html - Morgan
HREF95
ftp://sunsite.anu.edu.au/pub/Macintosh/umich/util/text/htmlpro1.07.cpt.hqx
HREF96
http://www.ts.umu.se/%7Er2d2/shareware/htmlpro_help.html
HREF97
http://152.1.24.177/teaching/manuscript/1100-0007.html - Morgan
HREF98
ftp://sunsite.anu.edu.au/pub/Macintosh/info-Macintosh/_Text_Processing/_HTML/html-edit-173.hqx
HREF99
http://ogopogo.nttc.edu/tools/HTMLedit/HTMLedit.html
HREF100
http://152.1.24.177/teaching/manuscript/1100-0012.html - Morgan
HREF101
http://www.adobe.com/prodindex/pagemill/main.html
HREF102
http://www.adobe.com/prodindex/pagemill/pm2main.html - Version 2
HREF103
ftp://sunsite.anu.edu.au/pub/Macintosh/info-Macintosh/_Text_Processing/_HTML/www-weaver-11.hqx
HREF104
http://www.potsdam.edu/Web.Weaver/About.html
HREF105
http://www.seas.upenn.edu/~mcrae/projects/Macintoshjava - Apple Flavored Java
HREF106
http://homepage.seas.upenn.edu/~mcrae/projects/Macintoshjava/Macintosh/Macintoshjava.html - Apple Flavored Java - Macintosh Specific Resources
HREF107
http://www.comvista.com/net/www/htmlalternates.html - HTML Alternatives
HREF108
http://www.Webedge.com/resources/featured_site/past/05.23.html - JavaWorld
HREF109
ftp://sunsite.anu.edu.au/pub/java/JDK-1_0_2-MacintoshOS.sea.hqx - JDK-1_0_2-Macintosh...
HREF110
http://cafe.symantec.com/javacentral/index.html - Symantec Java Central
HREF111
http://www.roaster.com/ - The NI Café - Roaster Home Page
HREF112
http://www.spectra.net/~dsaur/vrml.html - VRML

Copyright

Tony Barry, ©, 1996. The author assign to Southern Cross University and other educational and non-profit institutions a non-exclusive licence to use this document for personal use and in courses of instruction provided that the article is used in full and this copyright statement is reproduced. The authors also grant a non-exclusive licence to Southern Cross University to publish this document in full on the World Wide Web and on CD-ROM and in printed form with the conference papers, and for the document to be published on mirrors on the World Wide Web. Any other usage is prohibited without the express permission of the author.

Pointers to Abstract and Conference Presentation
Abstract Interactive Version Papers & posters in thistheme All Papers & posters AusWeb96 Home Page

AusWeb96 The Second Australian WorldWideWeb Conference"ausWeb96@scu.edu.au"