First, she copied the 6.5 files from CD-R to a Mac OS 9 partition. Then she transferred them via LocalTalk to the Power Mac, which ran a Windows 98 emulator through Virtual PC 3.0—slow as a glacier but bit-accurate. Inside the emulator, she ran PM65Convert.exe from a command prompt, redirecting errors to a text file. The first forty files failed. She tweaked the memory allocation. Fifty failed. She disabled the emulator’s sound card. Sixty-three succeeded.

So, why should you bother converting your PageMaker 6.5 files to 7.0? Here are a few compelling reasons:

On the fourth morning, the sixty-fourth file—the premiere issue, with its hand-drawn drop caps and nested tables—threw a different error: GlyphMorph data corrupted, but recoverable if orphaned styles are first stripped.