Thanks for taking the time to read this issue of My Mac Magazine! We hope you enjoyed reading it as much as we did creating it.
My Mac is a FREE magazine dedicated to the users of the Macintosh Operating System the world over. If you would like to subscribe to our email list to be contacted when the My Mac Online site is updated with each new issue, please contact <subscribe@mymac.com>. You can also visit our Web page and fill out the subscription form there.
As a free magazine, we always need help. Help from readers to write in and let us know what you think. Help from vendors for review of products. Help from anyone looking to advertise products in a magazine with well over 25,000 subscribers. In short, we need YOU to help keep My Mac Magazine in publication! But most importantly, we want you to enjoy this as much as we do, so please let us know your thoughts on how we can all make My Mac a better magazine.
 
All information is correct to the best of our knowledge, but we make no guarantees, warranties, or promises. Written articles and the My Mac logos cannot be reprinted without the express written permission of My Mac Productions. All opinions expressed by the writers are not necessarily those of My Mac Magazine or My Mac Productions. My Mac is a registered trademark of My Mac Productions. We reserve the right to edit all letters received for clarity and length.
My Mac's icon was created by Jason Rainbows <jasonrainbows@mindspring.com> exclusively for My Mac Productions and cannot be used without his permission. <http://www.mindspring.com/~jasonrainbows/Contents.shtml>
 
Send email to <reviews@mymac.com>, or send mail to:
My Mac Productions
110 Burr St.
Battle Creek, MI 49015-2525
Vendors wishing to advertise on the My Mac website can send email to: <publisher@mymac.com> or to the postal address above.
My Mac Magazine #45 is due the first weekend of January, 1999
 
Tim Robertson <publisher@mymac.com> is My Mac's originator, and also serves as Publisher and Editor in Chief. Tim has been a freelance Macintosh consultant, web page designer, database creator, and Macintosh instructor for third graders. Be sure to email him with any comments, or sponsorship / advertising information.
Russ Walkowich <editor@mymac.com> is the Editor of My Mac. He also works for the government full-time, is a freelance writer, and is My Mac's editor for production and submissions.
Adam Karneboge <webmaster@mymac.com> is My Mac's webmaster, and a computer graphics & design major at Dominican University <http://www.dom.edu> in River Forest, IL, 2 miles away from the Chicago city limits. When Adam isn't hard at work on an assignment, or diligently working on the My Mac website, he can be found playing tennis, his favorite sport. Adam is also the proud owner of a PowerBook G3. Adam loves email, so write to him anytime at <webmaster@mymac.com>.
Jim Moravec <copyeditor@mymac.com> is My Mac's Copy Editor. Jim lives in Darien, Illinois, and is a salesman with two children.
Mike Gorman <mikegorman@mymac.com> a hard-core Mac fan, lives way up north in Waterville, ME. He is a freelance cartoonist who's work has appeared in such places as the NY Press, the New York Times, Entertainment Weekly, Mac Addict, and elsewhere. Stop by his playground of vices, the Scum Worm, at: <http://members.aol.com/nycgorman/home.html>
Pete Miner <pete@mymac.com> is a full-time truck owner/operator and freelance Macintosh columnist. Pete spends a vast amount of his life alone in his truck crisscrossing the United States, and likens it to solitary confinement with a view. Be sure to check out Pete's home page, The Macintosh Funnies, at <http://www.wolfenet.com/~pminer>.
Susan Howerter <susan@mymac.com> has been teaching special education for 25 years. Susan now has two Macs at home, a 5215 and a StarMax 3160, both with 48 megs of RAM and a couple of APS hard drives. Susan would love to hear from you, so be sure to drop her an email with your thoughts and comments.
John Nemerovski <nemo@mymac.com> is a musician, photographer, outdoorsman, and Mac consultant residing in sunny Tucson, Arizona. He is an enthusiastic participant in the local and international Macintosh and Internet communities, and welcomes reader comments.
Mick O'Neil <mickoneil@mymac.com> is a former columnist for PCW Magazine in the UK and a freelance writer contributing articles to a number of periodicals including Byte Magazine, MacUser and MacWorld (UK and Australia), and the Journal of Computing in Higher Education. Mick's home page is at <http://www.geocities.com/CollegePark/3423/mick.html>
Jason Kim <jason@mymac.com> is a high school student in Irvine, California. He's literally grown up with the Macintosh since his dad brought home a 512K when he was just 1 year old. Now his family has 4 Macs: that original 512K, a Macintosh IIcx, a PowerComputing Power 120, and a Performa 6400/200. Among many interests related to Macs, Jason likes to write his own software and dabbles in alternate operating systems (BeOS, MkLinux). Jason's home page is at <http://jasonk.home.ml.org>.
Mike Wallinga <mikew@mymac.com> is a sophomore college student from Northwest Iowa. He readily admits that this month's contest is really just an underhanded way of getting more readers to email him. So what are you waiting for? Drop him a line at <mikew@mymac.com> Mike also wants to wish a blessed holiday season on all the Mac users out there!!! Merry Christmas!!!
Fenton Jones <manavesh@mymac.com> known to his friends as Manavesh, lives in beautiful Santa Cruz, California, and works mostly in landscape construction with some design work on the side. He wants to do more designing in the future to justify spending more money on computer graphics. He's a single father with two girls.
Mark Marcantonio <markm@mymac.com> is a parochial middle school teacher in the Portland, OR area. He spends much of his free class time trying to keep the school's Windows machines running. In the meantime, the Macs at the school just keep going and going... One day he hopes to have Steve Jobs actually buy one of his advertising ideas. In the meantime, he'll keep spending his miniscule paycheck five minutes after getting it.
Ed Tobey <edtobey@mymac.com> is a licensed Apple Service Technician (A+ Certified,too) with almost 8 years in the field. He is currently deployed in the beautiful Shenandoah Valley of Virginia (Harrisonburg, to be precise) where he toils diligently repairing Apple IIe's to PowerMac G3s and anything in between. A father of two near-perfect children, he spends his leisure time relaxing in a calm round of Paintball and writing articles for his column (he likes to cook, too!). Check out the new Web page he just set up for his computer business at <http://www.freeyellow.com/members3/advantagemac>.
Barbara Bell <barbara@mymac.com> is a Marketing Communications Coordinator for a major healthcare device manufacturer in Massachusetts (say that five times fast!). She is an avid Mac fan and constantly fights the good fight of Mac vs. Wintel at work. She shares her life with her long time companion, James, and his two daughters, Krystal and Briann. Don't be shy about emailing your questions and comments to her at <barbara@mymac.com>. She'll help you find the answer!
Ralph J. Luciani <ralph@mymac.com> is Operations Manager at a medium-sized firm in Toronto whose job duties include cleaning toilets, removing garbage, graphic design and invoicing customers—in that order). Ralph lives in the quaint and picturesque small town of Oakville, Ontario, where he's rabid in his devotion to all things Macintosh, much to the chagrin of his long suffering wife, RoseAnne. Other family members are: Christian, a film major and mini-Mac fanatic; a G3MT; and an SE 30. He uses his own IIvx at work in place of the other OS. ("Productivity is important to me!”)
 
<http://www.inno-tech.com>
 
<http://www.macbookshop.com>
My Mac Magazine ® 1999 My Mac Productions. All Rights Reserved.