\centerline{\bf Fallen by the wayside} \medskip \noindent Over the last year or so, many of the commercial \TeX ware vendors have changed. Some are merely name changes, but since this lack of continuity is confusing, at best, and damaging, at worst, it is useful to detail the metamorphoses. The first player to fall was Addison Wesley. AW are still \DEK's publisher, and continue to publish all the \TeX\ books. What has changed is their attachment to software. At one time they supplied both the {\sc ibm pc} micro\TeX, and the Macintosh \TeXtures{}. Of these, perhaps the most noticeable loss was for micro\TeX, since AW `disinvested' at just the time that the AM fonts were being replaced by the CMs. After a very long hiatus, ArborText picked up micro\TeX, and will market it as $\mu$\TeX{}. There appears to have been a fair amount of development work going on, and apart from some qualms about supply and support outside the US, this change is to be welcomed. \TeXtures\ had only just reached its `full-release' when AW returned to books. In any case \TeXpert\ quickly stepped in; there is at least one other supplier, but she remains well hidden. Shortly after \TeXtures\ reached full release status, Kellerman \& Smith, who supplied not only \TeXtures, but also a {\sc vax vms} implementation of the \TeX ware, parted company, to become Blue Sky Research (the Barry Smith, \TeXtures\ part) and Northlake Software (the David Kellerman, {\sc vax vms} part). This came as a surprise to many of us. ArborText themselves had changed their name from TextSet. If you have a pc version of \TeX, micro\TeX\ or pc\TeX, you are probably using one of their driver programs. The probable reason for changing their name was to avoid confusion with Texet, who are involved in the same general area of document software. Or rather, {\it were} in the same general area. Texet folded last year. Perhaps TextSet\slash ArborText should have waited. One other casualty seems to have been {\sl FTL systems\/}' Mac\TeX{}. Nothing has been heard of them for some time. They made no appearance at Montreal, nor have there been any advertisements in \TUGboat{}. McQueen, who supplied the software in this country have themselves abandoned all software sales, returning to `real' printing. Even in the Atari world the pattern is repeated. Kettler {\sc edv}, who were supplying one of the two German Atari \TeX\ versions folded last year, but the software is now handled by \TeX sys (who are essentially the people who implemented the software). I suppose this is all inevitable with software, but it does confuse, and makes the \TeX\ world look a little unstable from some viewpoints.