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Winconnect Server Vs Cracked Rib

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UpdateStar is compatible with Windows platforms. UpdateStar has been tested to meet all of the technical requirements to be compatible with Windows 10, 8.1, Windows 8, Windows 7, Windows Vista, Windows Server 2003, 2008, and Windows XP, 32 bit and 64 bit editions. Simply double-click the downloaded file to install it. UpdateStar Free and UpdateStar Premium come with the same installer. UpdateStar includes such as English, German, French, Italian, Hungarian, Russian and. You can choose your language settings from within the program.

Full text of ' FEBRUARY 25. 1391 VOLUME 13, ISSUE S PAGE 3 m: m i * ^ ixk/, n 1 ■ I «•« 1 [ M for Smart-UPS software, you can monitor your site's power quality, perform diagnostic tests from your keyboard, and even schedule boot-ups and shutdowns for your LAN. LAN Server, SCO Unix, AppleShare, and Banyan VINES. And for sites prone to brownouts, Smart Boost' automatically boosts low voltage without draining the Smart-UPS batteries.

Other features include a battery replacement indicator to warn you before prob- lems occur, load and volt meters, site wiring diagnostics, full-time line con- ditioning, and sine wave output. CO-DEVELOPER With both 1 17V and 220/240 V models, “the strongest support poli- cies” (lnfoworld), full safety approv- als (UL, CSA and TUV), and a 2 year warranty, the Smart-UPS Series is clearly the smart choice in network protection. Call for your free 1991 LAN Protection Handbook. The Smart-UPS Series offers solutions for servers, hubs and in ter- LAN hardware, CAD /CAM workstations, minicomputers and more. The Smart-UPS ' by American Power Conversion 800-541-8896, Dpt. 88 800-443-4519, Dpt. 88 in Canada 33-1-60078500 in Europe 01991 132 Fairgrounds Road., West Kingston.

RI 02892 Smart-UPS. PowerChute are APC trademarks. Other marks are the property of their owners. Thibauh des Vignes. 77462 Lagny, Cedex, France. At the 16th an- nual SAS User Wm Group intemation- M ■= W al (SUGI) meeting ® here, the Cary, North Carolina, company followed up its November release of SAS for OS/2 with a barrage of announcements for desktop systems. The Windows 3.0 version is a full implementation of the base SAS System.

It will include support for object linking and embedding (OLE) and Dynamic Data Exchange (DDE), features that are important in building front ends for mainframe information systems. SAS for Windows will ship in the fourth quarter concurrent with SAS, Version 2.0 for OS/2, which will have identical features, said Randy Betan- court, workstation marketing manager for SAS Institute. The SAS system provides extensive tools for data access, management, analy- sis, and presentation.

It is used in fore- casting, decision support, and statistical analysis, among other applications. The core software is written in C for portabil- ity to a variety of mainframe, minicom- puter. Workstation, and PC platforms. Conference attendees were enthusias- tic about the Windows version. “I gave a SUGI paper in 1984 on the need for full- screen display and graphics. This pro- vides everything I dreamed of then,” said Roger Muller, manager of animal health technical services for Eli Lilly.

The demonstration software had a 'natural feel and excellent performance' running on Compaq 33-MHz 486 PCs, Muller said. According to a technical paper released by SAS. Windows’ disk I/O speed and limited support for virtual paged memory will cause it to run slightly slower than the OS/2 product.

The new modules are SAS/EIS, an executive information system develop- ment tool: SAS/Calc, a three-dimensional spreadsheet; and SAS/Insight, a data exploration and visualization tool. For workstations, SAS announced support for Open Windows, Motif, and Nextstep interfaces. The products will ship for IBM, Digital Equipment Corp., Hewlett-Packard, and MIPS Computer Systems workstations in the first quarter, with other platforms to follow. SAS also showed a new workstation application, SAS/Nvision, a 3-D modeling, rendering, and animation package. “This is SAS’ first real jump into the Unix market,” said Tom Moore, a Unix analyst for IDC, in Framingham, Massa- chusetts.

“They are going in with their hip waders on.” As it does with all its software. SAS will license the desktop products for an annual fee. A single-user license for the base system under OS/2 costs $695, with added charges for additional modules and users. The estimated 25,000 licensees of SAS for PC-DOS will be offered an inex- pensive upgrade to the Windows version, Betancourt said. Copyrighted material TECHNOLOGY: IT S ALL IN THE ATTITUDE. Fast, Error-Free Modems By Cardinal ♦ (Cardinal™ We share your attitude about technology.

The real reason for technology is to make your job easier. To give you the time to do what you like to do.

That’s what you expect. And it’s why Cardinal creates original technologies that deliver beyond your expectations. MIS Director Third Degree Black Belt Hates errors. Cardinal modem user. All Cardinal modems use proven technology - MNP® Class 1-5 eiTor correction and data compression - to achieve quicker, error-free communications. Some models have the capability designed right into the hardware.

For others, we use our own unique FLASHlink™ software. That means every Cardinal modem can boost exchange rates up to two times, and our new V42 Series up to four times! Proven technolog)’.

Original designs. Superior performance.

Made in our own factory right here in the USA. They’re all part of the Cardinal attitude. For more information about Cardinal’s full line of modems, or any of our other computing products, call your local dealer or (800) 233-0187 today. Eitxn*/V«»Tul EXT NT EXT EXT INT EXT IMT NT NT NT NT* FLASH! M Com-oncJ9om Software «* - CM - MNP (up lo Level 5) m Software Of* m m CM - y»* can v Maivrum Darj TrroughpU ifepSJ 38*CC tMOO MOB *aoc *300 taoo on «eoo *eo: HjyssVAT CcftwrurxJ Cor'pKM ** rts yts yw yw )« c« CM yet PACE J m K09 *?« V2S SIBi 1199 JiS8 S19S *188 *?» *239 Where Originality In Technology Begins. 1827 Freedom Road, Lancaster, PA 17601 (800) 233-0187 • (717) 293-3000 All names, products and services mentioned are the trademarks or registered trademarks of their respective organizations. PAGE B NEWS FEBRUARY 25, 1331 Prices Falling to $500 For 9,600-BPS Modems Vendors Add Features to Beat Price Erosion Unicode Promises An International Character Set BY STUART J.

JOHNSTON A coalition of hardware and software makers last week backed an effort to replace ASCII with a 16-bit character set, a proposal intended to simplify the exchange of data among different types of com- puters in different ianguages. Next, Go, Microsoft. Novell, Metaphor, and The Research Libraries Group formed Unicode, which will coordinate the standardiza- tion effort. Instead of the 128 characters that are currently supported under ASCII. Unicode will sup- port more than 27.000 charac- ters simultaneously (out of a possible 65.000), said Ken Whistler, secretary of Unicode.

The organization, called Uni- code Inc., also includes Meta- phor and The Research Librar- ies Group. A computer system with Unicode support would be able to display characters from virtually all the alphabets and ideographic systems on Earth on ByTusedaA.Graggs Hewlett-Packard Co.

Will an- nounce today a 33-MHz 486 system designed to be used for network server use, as well as several other additions to in its HP's Vectra 486/337 PC. HP Continued From Page 5 starting from 100.000 3-D vec- tors per second and 10. Itunes Library Toolkit Keygen Mac. 000 3-D polygons per second included in the base machines, and going up to options capable of I million 3-D vectors per second, accord- ing to sources.

Analysts believe that the new the same screen. Mathematical and typographical characters, as well as various dingbats, will be supported under the system. With Unicode an Arabic- speaking user in France could send an E-mail message using English, French, and Arabic characters to another user via a commercial E-mail carrier. The receiving user would sec the message exactly as it was sent. Unicode promises to allevi- ate problems for Mac users who are tired of having some charac- ters, such as apostrophes, be- come garbled when transmitted to PC users, and vice versa.

Unicode’s implementation will eventually require that hard- ware manufacturers, software Ethertwist line. The products are follow-ups to networking products released last year, and HP promised the release of more network prod- ucts in September. HP's Vectra 486/33T PC is capable of supporting more than 200 LAN users or 100 Unix- based terminals. It offers eight 32-bit EISA expansion slots, a custom memory controller with 128K external memory' cache and burst-mode support, a Wei- tek 4167 coprocessor socket, two serial ports, one parallel port, and a hard/floppy disk controller., The company has also en- hanced its previously introduced storage system by adding an EISA-bus host adapter for EISA systems. It also added support for SCO Unix System V/386 and support for a rewritable optical disc drive for Netware 386 LANs.

HP will also announce this week the Hub Plus/48, an EISA machines will keep HP in the running for workstation market share along with Sun and IBM, all at the expense of the market shares of DEC, other R3000/ 4000-based machines, and smal- ler players. “This will put ex- treme pressure on Sun, which won’t be able to jump to the 80- MIPS Sparc chips until very late this year,' said Terry Bennett, director of technology systems analysis at Infocorp. Bennett vendors, and users replace their existing operating systems, ap- plications, and fonts, Whistler said. However, because it will be an evolution, users will not have to upgrade everything at once. Future systems will need to support both existing 7-bit ASCII and the new Unicode character sets so that older applications remain usable. None of the companies has yet announced a date for release of Unicode-based software.

'It will be in [OS/2 3.0’s New Technology kernel] and any future versions of Windows be- yond 3.1,” said Asmus Freytag. Microsoft’s program manager for internationalization. Adapter Card/32, as well as some new fiber optic products. (See Product Spotlight, Page 31.) HP’s networking product family is focused on New Wave Office, which has been licensed by a number of companies, including AT&T and NCR Corp. Eighty-four of the United States’ Fortune 100 companies currently use HP’s networking systems.

But observers believe that the company’s efforts to become a force in the networking market is an uphill struggle. HP is entering a marketplace where other firms are already deeply entrenched and are far from standing still, said Alice Bradie, an analyst with Ham- brecht & Quist. With those companies already established, Bradie gives HP little chance of displacing existing networks. However, HP could succeed by reaching new networking cus- tomers, she added. Does not expect IBM to respond similarly until February 1992. Several observers expect a lower price RS/6000, with a diskless version priced from $5,000 to $7,500, to be introduced in April. “It’s an expanding market, and both IBM and HP will be doing the most expanding,” said Robert Herwick.

Senior technol- ogy analyst at Hambrecht & Quist, in San Francisco. By David Coursey Quantity buyers will be able to get 9,600-bit-per-second (bps) modems for $450 by the end of the year. That is the view of one analyst, who says that falling prices may hurt manufacturers as much as they help customers. Down from $2,000 per unit in 1987, 9,600-bps modems are now widely available for less than $ 1,000.

Tele- bit Corp. Recently introduced its T1600, a V.32 and V.42bis modem for $795. It was imme- diately discounted to $549 by one reseller, Uunet Technolo- gies of Falls Church, Virginia.

“We’re looking at where prices are going eventually, and we needed to make a statement that we’re a player in the V.32 market,” said Mark Huntzinger, Telebit’s director of product marketing. Universal Data Systems (UDS), which Dataquest esti- mates to control 36 percent of the V.32 market, recently low- ered the price of its V.32/ V.42bis Fastalk modem from $1,145 to $795. “We have led the waves of price reductions in the past and felt the time was right for another one,” said Bill Schlosser, UDS’ director of bus- iness development. Indeed some vendors, such as Practical Peripherals, are selling their V.32 modems for an aver- By Tom Quinlan Radius will introduce a color version of its popular Pivot monitor for the Macintosh on March 25 and follow it with a gray-scale PC version in April. According to sources familiar with Radius’ plans, the monitor will support 8-bit color initially and will have a price of about $2,200, $500 more than the original gray scale/ monochrome version of the product.

The 1 5-inch monitor can ro- tate 90 degrees from horizontal to vertical orientation almost instantly. It will still offer resolution of 640 by 864 pixels in portrait mode, with landscape resolution of 864 by 640. Radius sells a $ 1,295 version of the original monochrome Mac Pivot that doesn’t require a graphics board. But the first version of the color product will require both a hardware and a software component. The requirements to support age of $500, according to Larry Cynar.

An analyst with Data- quest, a market research firm in San Jose, California. He believes that $450 pricing is in sight. Although an apparent boon to buyers, Cynar is not sure this is a positive development. “It’s helping to erode the market faster than it had to,” Cynar said. “Everybody is scared to death the clone guys are going to take over the market the way they did 2,400-bps modems.” With a growing dependence on standardized chip sets from Rockwell International and a few other vendors, modem makers are finding it more diffi- cult to compete with features rather than price.

Nevertheless, Hayes Micro- computer Products Inc.’s Ultra 9600 has X.25 packet capabili- ties, as well as high-speed mo- dem features for $1,199. Such capabilities can reduce commu- nications costs far in excess of the higher hardware price, said Hayes president Dennis Hayes. Microcom Inc.

Is also adding features to attract corporate cus- tomers while dropping prices. The company’s QX/4232hs model costs $ 1,099. Selling as an upgrade for last year’s $1,599 product, said Jay Bazznotti, a Microcom product manager.

“No one is helping the indus- try by making these prices go down,” Bazznotti said. Rotating 8-bit color at a reason- able speed have precluded bas- ing a color system entirely on software at this time, sources suggested. “Asking the software to com- pletely redraw the screen and track 8 bits of color information for every pixel on the fly with any kind of performance at all is a bit much,' said one source. The software-only version of the Pivot system will also work exclusively on those Macs — such as the LC and the llsi — with on-board video support. A monochrome Pivot for the PC — with limited gray-scale capability — will be introduced in April, these sources said. This product will also require an interface board to support the same level of resolution as that found on the Mac monitors. The final price for the PC Pivot has not yet been set, though it’s expected to be rough- ly comparable to the Mac version, sources said.

HPto Unveil 486 Server, Ethertwist Update Radius Colors Mac Pivot, But Goes Gray Scale for PC INFOWORLD Copyrighted i Borland’s Quattro Pro is the best spreadsheet Quattro' Pro 2.0 “Quattro' Pro provides more features and better performance than 1-2-3.. BYTE, November 1990 “Quattro Pro offers some of the most powerful charting and best-quality output you’ll see in a spreadsheet today.” PC Magazine, December 1990 “Overall, Quattro Pro has the best set of database features we’ve seen in a spreadsheet.” InfoWorld December 1990 “Quattro Pro 2.0 also offers more interactive pre- sentations, a more flexible desktop environment and smaller RAM requirements.” PC Week, October 1990 Lotus' 1-2-3 - r 3.1 “... Only masochists need to try [1-2-3, Ret. 3.1 on a 1 Mb machine]. Performance was so sluggish on a 1 Mb Compaq 386' /20 that we gave up after half an hour. ” InfoWorld, October 1990 '.

It [Ij)tus 1-2-3 Release 3.1] doesn ’t have every- thing you expect from a graphical interface... PC World September 1990..(.

1-2-3's ) WYSIWYG module has little knowl- edge of what is going on in the primary program..” PC Week, October 1990 “While the division of labor is mostly logical, it makes [Lotus 1 -2-3 ’s] system feel like exactly what it is: a patchwork. ” PC Magazine, December 1990 Lotus users! Save $395 off Quattro Pro 2.0! If you own Lotus 1-2-3, you can upgrade to Quattro Pro 2.0 for only $99 95! This includes our 60-day, money-back guarantee. See your dealer or CALL NOW 1-800-331-0877 BORLAND Makers of Paradox: Quattro • Pro, Turbo C+mputing power, you can count on IBM to give you rrific storage capability wherever you may need it.

Of your system. With Micro Channel busmaster adapters, you can incorporate multiple processors — like adding “computers” to your computer. And coupled with the industry- standard Small Computer System Interface (SCSI), you’ll be able to support new applications and continue to build on your system as your needs become more varied and complex. With optimized performance in balance, power, speed and adaptability, the new PS/2 Models 90 and 95 are designed to keep you ahead of the pack.

To find out more about the new leader in 486 computing, contact your IBM Authorized Remarketer or IBM marketing representative. For a remarketer near you, call 1 800 272-3438. Designed To Keep You Out In Front. For the turns and hurdles ahead, you’ll need chnology that has foresight built in. Through a lique design, the Expandable Processor (XP) lows for an architected family of upgradable ■ocessor enhancements that can extend the life PS/2 *95 How re you going to do it? Period System/2.

PS/2 and OS/2 are neutered trademarvs ar*J Mcro Channel is a trademark: of IntematxxiaJ Bus-ness Macfwies Corporate 486 is a trademark ol Intel Corp Techracal *A1rabon created uung (Acrografx Designer and provided courtesy Of Mcrogra/x Inc. Richardson Texas Oc 1990 IBM Corp Copyrighted materia WeVe been called just thermit product at just the right time, the killer app, and a bulldozer Looks like the press has taken a liking to us. We're InfoAlliance” from Software Publishing Corporation. And to once again quote the press, 'InfoAlliance is the first product...to address the problem of inte- grating production data from multiple sources.' * Call for more information or ask about our free client/server conferences. Cp You'll like what you see. — ‘SOFTWARE ^PUBLISHING Find out why you'll like InfoAlliance.

Call 1-800-521-1955, Operator 217. •Source: InfoWorld, 10/1/90. InfoAlliance is a trademark of Software Publishing Corporation. ©1991 Software Publishing Corporation, 1901 Landings Dr., Mountain View, CA.

Copyrighted material FEBRUARY 25, 1991 PAGE 1 3 SOFTWARE Superbase 4 Windows, Version 1.3 offers support for 24-bit color, color printing, and Windows users interface access. Superbase 4 Windows Upgrade Adds SQL Links Dossier Attaches Dbase Code Windows Software Allows Migration of Dbase, Clipper Applications BY Scon MACE Windows front ends for data- base servers and Dbase will be shown at the Windows & OS/2 Conference and Exhibition March 5 through 7, which will feature veteran DBMS Super- base 4 Windows, and Windows newcomer Quadbase SQL. Precision Software will an- nounce Superbase SQL Library, which works with Versions 1.3 of Superbase 2 and Superbase 4 Windows.

Dynamic Link Li- braries (DLL) included in Su- perbase SQL Library will allow multiple connections to data- base servers via Superbase’s Data Manipulation Language (DML), as well as through Su- perbase’s forms designer and report generator. The initial release supports Microsoft and Sybase SQL Serv- er and Gupta SQL Base. Also planned is support for Oracle, XDB Server, and IBM’s OS/2 Extended Edition Database Manager. Superbase SQL Li- brary will sell for $495. Download Free Uw Honor Program Deadline Chart. Superbase 4 Windows 1.3 includes SQL syntax support and improves performance, LAN networking, and query optimization. Also added is sup- port for color printing, 24-bit color, and Windows user inter- face access from Superbase’s DML.

Quadbase will show Quad- base SQL for Windows, a multi- user DBMS compatible with Dbase data files. Updatable scroll cursors, outer joins, and referential integrity are suppor- ted. The system can directly ac- cess Dbase IV, Lotus 1-2-3, and Symphony files, as well as index files created with Foxpro, Clip- per. And Dbase IV. The price of Quadbase-SQL for Windows is $995 per development kit. Precision Software, 8404 Sterling St., Irving, TX 75063; (214)929-4888.

Quadbase Systems Inc., 790 Lucerne Drive, Suite 5 1, Sunny- vale, CA 94086; (408) 738-6989. By Scott Mace Dbase III Plus and Summer ’87 Clipper programmers will find it easy to migrate applications to Windows 3.0 when Dossier for Windows ships next month. The product, designed in Brazil, will be marketed in the United States by Malachite Corp. Its file browser lets users attach portions of Dbase code to data fields.

A built-in dialog box editor creates database rec- ord editing windows, also using Dbase language commands. “Unique to Dossier for Win- dows is its ability to attach program code to any data field or Windows control, such as push buttons,” said Raul Bcs- ker, a principal of MS Antunes Informatica, a consulting group based in Sao Paulo, Brazil. “This feature allows the pro- grammer to focus on the partic- ular behavior of any part of his application without constantly rebuilding the entire system,” Besker said. “By the end of 1 99 1, we will have ported all our applications over to Dossier for By Lisa Picarille Describe and Software Publish- ing Corp. Are expected to an- nounce Windows versions of their word processors next week, giving Microsoft Word for Win- dows some competition in the Windows 3.0 environment. SPC's Pro Write Plus will ship next month.

The $249 program will feature rudimenta- ry drawing tools, an address book, and the capability to Windows. The ability to attach code to fields allows us to do our port in small pieces, with time to test the system as we go along.” Dossier for Windows coexists on a LAN with Clipper and Dbase applications which re- spect Dbase III Plus’ LAN lock- create multiple-column docu- ments. Pro Write Plus will also include links to electronic mail via MHS that will enable users to attach and send documents and graphics files from within the program, according to sources briefed on SPC’s plans. SPC’s Professional Write led the pack of low-end DOS word processors, but Amy Wohl.

President of Wohl Associates, questioned whether low-end us- ers would seek a Windows prod- uct. “I think low-end products have a separate audience. It’s not clear yet whether that audi- ence will want a Windows prod- uct. Windows typically requires a fairly expensive machine.' Describe for Windows, slated to ship in the second quarter, will closely resemble its OS/2 Presentation Manager counter- part.

The two programs will have the same file format, but the Windows version will not support OS/2-specific features such as APIs for drawing Bezier curves and fillets or multi- threading capabilities, said Cliff Whalen. Describe’s vice presi- dent of marketing. Describe for Windows may also include the multidirectional DDE support found in the com- pany's OS/2 release.

If imple- ing conventions. The $495 package includes a user’s guide and tutorial, a programmer’s tutorial, a pro- grammer’s reference, and on- line help. Malachite Corp., 313 Iona St.

Narberth, PA 19072; (800) 477-7147. Users could establish links between Describe for Win- dows and several other Win- dows applications simulta- neously. This would provide automatic updating of data in all applications concurrently, Wha- len said. Also, like Describe 1.3 for OS/2, the Windows offering will be available in a server edition ($595) with additional nodes ($250 each) available for use on a LAN. A $15 demo version of the product will be available at the end of March. The demo re- lease performs all of the func- tions of Describe for Windows, but its printing, spell-checking, dictionary, and graphics con- verter features have been dis- abled.

Forthcoming programs from Word Perfect Corp., Wordstar International Inc., and Ashton- Tate Corp. Are also expected to add some depth to the field, said observers.

Word Perfect for Windows, which has met with development delays, is now slat- ed for release late in the second quarter. Wordstar for Windows - — based on technology licensed from NBI — should appear later this year.

Users can also look for a Windows version of Ashton- Tate's Multimate word proces- sor by the end of the year. ■ PRODUCT SPOTLIGHT Access to all of the yellow pages in the United States is now available on a CD ROM from Dataware Technologies Inc. Of Cambridge, Massachusetts. Speed Dial con- tains the National Business Tele- phone Directory, listing 9 million telephone numbers from every city in the country. Speed Dial can be called up with one keystroke and used simultaneously with other PC ap- plications. To quickly locate a supplier of office equipment in Chicago, for example, users do not even need to know the company’s name. Speed Dial is available now from Dataware and is priced at $399.

SPEED DIAL (tn) NATIONAL BUSINESS TELEPHONE DIRECTORY FI -Mo Ip FZ-Ztmim F3-0ntpii» F4-MI ndoM PS—Difl ] FA-CIna F7~Scan •8-Cotmt FIO-Oiu Nane: INFOWORLD. J INFOWORLD YP Heading: ' HARSH HD, MENLO PARK CA City: State: Area Code: (4 IS) 320-4602 IHI0TXT CORPORATION CINCINNATI r. OH (513) 6717777 INFOUIDt CORPORATION INC WETHERSFIELD ’ >, CT (ais) r/.i ivm INF0UISI0H DAYTON OH (513) 274 5854 INF0UJSI0N l-ANCASTLR ■ PA (71?) 384-1771 INI0WAHE INC (407) 783-477?

IHF0W0RKC ROST ON HA (617) 48? 1619 INFOWORLD HENI.0 PARK CA (415) 328-460? INFOWORLD HA0A2JNK ii.' (206/ (.4 1 777® IHF0X SYSTEMS INC COLORADO SPRINGS >CO INFRA CORP WATERFORD (313) 623-040(1 JNFJIA ENERGY DESK HTRS KANSAS CITY (913) 432- *044 INFRA IYiK DALLAS INC DALLAS TX ' C214) 630-7581 •INFRA RED t ULTRASONIC SCANS PORTLAND ' OR- (503) 255-6974 INFRA-RED AUTO RAKE liODY LOS ANGELES • CA (213)- 663-0076 Dbase III Plus and Clipper applications can now appear within the Windows 3.0 environment, using Dossier for Windows. More Windows Word Processors Emerge Describe for Windows and SPC’s Pro Write Plus Are Latest Offerings INFOWORLD Never Norton Does Windows.

Norton On Networks. 'VotPr Norton^ When it comes to your crucial data, Peter Norton just won’t take OFILE NOT FOUND for an answer. With programs like the Mace Utilities* and PC Idols,* data recovery is often mission impossible. But with the Norton Utilities*5.0, data recovery is mission critical — and it can recover what no other utility can. The Norton Utili- ties is the safe DOS utility program for use with windowing environments like Windows*3.0 and DesqView Because PCTbols and Mace Utilities are blind to multi- tasking, they can irreversibly damage your files. While the Norton Utilities 5.0 offers three full levels of safety checks under Windows 3.0.

Microsoft Windows fl With a dear vision of the PC's future, the Norton Utilities 5.0 provides safe Windows 3.0 recovery. Data Recovery is serious business, which requires serious features. And the Norton Utilities has them all DATA RECOVERY NORTON PC MACE FEATURES UTILITIES TOOLS 1990 Number of DOS Error Messages With On-Line Advice 75 0 0 Different Types Of Data Loss Problems Solved File System Corruption 31 12 15 Physical Hard Disk Damage 6 0 0 Internal Data File Damage (i.e. DBASE, Lotus) 10 0 6 Disk Reliability Testing (Number Of Patterns) 80 0 0 System Information (Topics Reported) 94 15 16 NETWORK file recovery YES* NO NO ‘File Save must have been installed phor to data loss. WINDOWS Safe Operation YES NO NO Failsafe Design YES NO NO Effective File Encryption That Does Not RequireYouToChangeThe Way You Work YES NO NO The Norton Utilities is the only utility program that provides file recovery on Novell and DOS-compatible networks. So you can use File Save along with UnErase * to recover deleted files,* or File Fix' to recon- struct Lotus* 1-2-3* and dBASE* files.

Rum any node on the network. What’s more, MIS will appreciate the Norton Utilities’ compliance with existing network security restrictions.

System Information provides detailed reports on network information and TSR memory allocation, as well as graphical benchmarks of disk, CPU, network, and general computer performance. The next best thing to being there is being on the network And the Norton Utilities 5.0 is the only data recovery tool that is. Copyrighted material Norton’s Superior Recovery Technology.

The Norton Utilities handles the toughest data recovery situations easily — predicaments other utilities handle poorly, if at all. Advise explains cryptic DOS error messages in plain English so you can understand the problem, and gives specific recommenda- tions on how to fix it.

So your valu- able data is not at the mercy of risky trial-and-error procedures. Unlike the competition, Norton recovery procedures are easy to use and completely failsafe. And be- cause you can UNDO changes, you won’t make a bad situation worse. In fact, while using the Norton Utilities your data will even survive a sudden power loss.

All in all, it’s the safest, most extensive diagnostic and recovery utility available. And only the Norton Utilities gives you every- mentioned arc trademarks or registered trademarks of their respective holders. Is not associated with the Norton Utilities 5.0 and endorsement Is neither expressed nor implied.