SystemTalk

Tag: 1986

Mac History 86.12 - Apple IIGS and PhoneNET

Mac History 86.12 - Apple IIGS and PhoneNET

This month we get colourful with the Apple IIGS, watch Apple adverts with Roger Ebert, build a network with PhoneNET, run an email server from a floppy disk, and rage against poor service from Apple dealers. Read More...

Mac History 86.11 - Radius Full Page Display

Mac History 86.11 - Radius Full Page Display

This month we gaze at the Radius Full Page Display, hear of the fabulous 100 MHz Motorola 68040, create a blockbuster storyboard, return to labyrinthine wars, and dust off the mahjong tiles in Shanghai. Read More...

Mac History 86.10 - FullPaint and Archon

Mac History 86.10 - FullPaint and Archon

This month, the editor is missing his mouse, we check our spelling and change our desktop pattern, read reviews of Microsoft Works, FullPaint, and Archon before attempting to defuse a few bombs, or at least identify them. Read More...

Mac History 86.09 - SCSI Harder and Faster

Mac History 86.09 - SCSI Harder and Faster

This month is the twelfth issue of MacUser US and our twelfth SystemTalk post. Dig into the latest sexy hard drives, the indispensable Fedit Plus, outlining with MORE, and the first surgery sim. Plus another DTP supplement, another terrifying adventure game, and Oscar the Grouch. Read More...

Mac History 86.08 - Outfitting Your Office

Mac History 86.08 - Outfitting Your Office

This month, we speculate on forthcoming Apple computers, outfit a modern office, and hear of the first music program to use digitized sound. Plus, Steve Wozniak has finally graduated, Bill Gates fondly remembers the TRS-80 Model 100, and we take a two-part tour through Dracula’s home town. Read More...

Mac History 86.07 - They Sold Their Souls to the Fortune 1000

Mac History 86.07 - They Sold Their Souls to the Fortune 1000

This month we experience the joys of driving hard disks, flying planes, and drawing faces. We go beyond bare BASIC, begin a journey into Pascal, and fight for the soul of computing. Plus, we have a round-up of great games to play this summer. Read More...

Mac History 86.06 - Desktop Publishing Special

Mac History 86.06 - Desktop Publishing Special

This month we get a big helping of desktop publishing, find a worthy successor to MacPaint, review a cheap and powerful Pascal compiler, salivate over storage, and review the laws of personal computing. Read More...

Mac History 86.05 - Secrets of Word

Mac History 86.05 - Secrets of Word

This month we get advice on buying a Mac, learn the secrets of Microsoft Word, discover a way to bring colour to the Macintosh, try our hand at 3D modelling, and find out what Steve Jobs has been up to since departing Apple. Read More...

Mac History 86.04 - Halley’s Comet

Mac History 86.04 - Halley’s Comet

This month we distribute software on paper, get our creative juices flowing, write in Japanese, follow Halley’s Comet, cheat at adventure games, recreate famous battles, and build a calculator. Read More...

Mac History 86.03 - Macintosh Plus: Packed With Power

Mac History 86.03 - Macintosh Plus: Packed With Power

The Macintosh Plus is the focus of our sixth issue. Did Apple finally get it right? We also visit COMDEX ‘86, get down to businesses with databases, play chess and MazeWars, and discover why developers are switching to C. Read More...

Mac History 86.02 - Rogue and 68K Assembler

Mac History 86.02 - Rogue and 68K Assembler

This month, Neil Shapiro talks slots, the Apple Hard Disk 20 arrives with HFS, and we create a function key with 68K assembler. If that wasn’t enough, we take on slime monsters in Rogue, put your Mac in touch with the world, look at free software, and find a desk designed specifically for the Mac. Read More...

Mac History 86.01 - Deja Vu: A Nightmare Comes True

Mac History 86.01 - Deja Vu: A Nightmare Comes True

This month, MacUser chooses the best products of 1985. We also play detective in Deja Vu: A Nightmare Comes True, find a way to cool your Mac, learn that Steve Jobs has resigned from Apple, and get insights from Andy Hertzfeld. Programmers are not forgotten, with a tasty alpha-beta soup and a comparison of BASIC, C, Pascal, and Forth. Read More...