The 1992 The HP Palmtop Paper Subscribers Disk contains some excellent examples of how the 95LX's features and programs can be combined in extraordinary ways. One of the most interesting of these, developed by Ed Keefe, uses the Phone Book program to implement a pop-up help function for HP CALC's Solver. Ed was able to do this because he saw Phone Book as a generic data base program, not a single purpose telephone directory.
I was really pleased with the preview copy I received of the Subscribers Disk. I think you will find it interesting and educational. Ed Keefe's Menu95 program itself is worth the price of admission. From me, that is quite a complement. I generally don't like menu programs, but this really simplifies the process of accessing DOS programs on the 95LX. Now if Ed will just create a companion menu program to load .EXM programs, I'll be satisfied (for a while). This is something really needed. I can remember only so many hot-keys, and a decent menu program might be a way around the limitations of APNAME.LST. (See page 8, this issue, for a review of SWITCH! -- Editor.)