Date: Wed, 26 Jan 94 00:43:38 PST From: The Info-Mac Moderators Reply-To: Info-Mac@sumex-aim.stanford.edu Subject: Info-Mac Digest V12 #15 To: info-mac-list Info-Mac Digest Wed, 26 Jan 94 Volume 12 : Issue 15 Today's Topics: [*] 13" H.R. Giger Screens - Group 3 [*] 16" H.R. Giger Screens - Group 3 [*] ARA-USRobotics-vterbo-19200 [*] BrewArt for Macintosh, volu [*] CCL/ARAP Script Utility - ScriptSwitcher [*] comm - Anarchie 1.1.0 [*] Comp-Sys-Mac-Comm FAQ [*] CopyDoubler 2.03 Updater [*] Demo of MicroBridge Companion for mac/game/demo [*] DuoMon 1.2 [*] Final Frontier pre-alpha (re-submit) [*] FretNavigator 1.1 [*] GLMStat 1.0b0 [*] GNU Shogi 1.1E [*] GW-Ada/Ed Announced: Free Ada Compilation System for Mac [*] Hotlist2HTML (first submission; to comm/net) [*] hungry-frog-ion-eaters.hqx [*] HyperPuzzle... [*] Kawai-k4-librarian-1.0.3 [*] LanSatellite 1.0.1 [*] Macintosh Tips & Tricks 9/93 - 12/93 [*] MacLHA 2.13.sea.hqx [*] Mac screen refresh utility [*] math-factor-hopper.hqx [*] MNS REVIEWS [*] new blackjack program replaces any blackjack-13x.hqx [*] nightwatch-ii.sit.hqx [*] Online Cookbook [Planet Software] [*] pegicon.hqx [*] Petris 1.0 [*] RadFax 0.9 [*] sound/midi - [DX7 Librarian 1.0.4 - part 1 of 3] [*] Stuff and Hex 1.0 [*] submission of 840av.hqx [*] Switchback 2.3 Submission [*] Synchronize! 3.0.4 submission [*] The Archivist 4.1.1 Infos [*] The Archivist v 4.1.1 [*] TidBITS#210/24-Jan-94 [*] UUParser v1.7 [*] Wedding Planner [*] Wild [*] WindowBottom for FirstClass [*] WireTap Pro 107 demo.cpt [*] ZipIt 1.2.6.cpt .sgm suffix 128 Mac - Did you buy one? 1 bit startupscreen All modems are not created equal A Q on Zterm (R) BeHierarchic 2.0 is Commercial Best C Compiler (Q) Bold Symbol Bold Symbol -Solved ! Bold Symbol? Comment Converting a PICT sequence to a QuickTime movie (C) disable print command DMA on a Q800? (R) Downloading files with VersaTerm (R) Eudora & recombining "split" mail (Q) (2 msgs) Fastest Mac for System 6 Folders are larger than they appear (A) font questions Generic Icons (Q) HP laserjet 4ML printer Hypertext origins Info-Mac CD new release [?] Keyboard access to menus [C] Mac Curses Mangia! Cookbook location medical software Price of PowerPC601 vs. 68040 (Q) Prince of P II Demo problems Program to shut down with power key QuickTime file format for Windows? RAMdoubler vs. OptiMem [Q] Request for System 6.0.7 Required Reading for Info-Macers SmartScrap software Special Promotion on DSP Card (Q) Startupscreen on second monitor --Thankyou TCP/IP on an LC Unattended shutdown VT102 tool Wanted: a single A3 ribbon for a QMS ColorScript 100 30i printer The Info-Mac newsgroup is moderated by Bill Lipa, Gordon Watts and Liam Breck. The Info-Mac archives are available (by using FTP, account anonymous, any password) in the info-mac directory on sumex-aim.stanford.edu [36.44.0.6]. Help files and indices are in /info-mac/help. Mail articles for inclusion in the digest to info-mac@sumex-aim.stanford.edu. Send binaries to be placed in the archives to macgifts@sumex-aim.stanford.edu. Send administrative mail to info-mac-request@sumex-aim.stanford.edu. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Date: Tue, 25 Jan 1994 12:25:53 -0500 From: kkirksey@world.std.com (Ken B Kirksey) Subject: [*] 13" H.R. Giger Screens - Group 3 This archive contains scans of the following works by H.R. Giger, suitable for use as backgrounds screens on 640x480 (13") monitors: 396 - Alien Wreck 434 - Biomechanical Soul Journey 483 - Doppeltorso Mit Haken 597 - Biomechanical Landscape I 603 - Biomechanical Landscape All the images are in JPEG compressed PICT format. You should be able to use these files as-is with DeskPict, Decor, DeskPicture, or Fun Pictures IF you have QuickTime 1.6 or later installed. If you do not have QuickTime installed, you'll have to convert the image to an uncompressed PICT before use. Ken Kirksey kkirksey@world.std.com [Archived as /info-mac/grf/giger-13in-grp3.hqx; 349K] ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 25 Jan 1994 12:29:17 -0500 From: kkirksey@world.std.com (Ken B Kirksey) Subject: [*] 16" H.R. Giger Screens - Group 3 This archive contains scans of the following works by H.R. Giger, suitable for use as backgrounds screens on 732x624 (16") monitors: 303 - Necronom IV 350 - Hommage a Bocklin 380 - Alien Pilot 396 - Alien Wreck All the images are in JPEG compressed PICT format. You should be able to use these files as-is with DeskPict, Decor, DeskPicture, or Fun Pictures IF you have QuickTime 1.6 or later installed. If you do not have QuickTime installed, you'll have to convert the image to an uncompressed PICT before use. Ken Kirksey kkirksey@world.std.com [Archived as /info-mac/grf/giger-16in-grp3.hqx; 428K] ------------------------------ Date: Sun, 23 Jan 1994 22:29:45 -0600 From: ehfm@midway.uchicago.edu (Eric Hoffmann) Subject: [*] ARA-USRobotics-vterbo-19200 ARA file for the newer vterbo Courier and DS modems. A USR to USR link can maintain a connection at 21,600bps using ASL. A USR to another vterbo modem can connect at 19,200bps. [Archived as /info-mac/comm/ara-usrobotics-vterbo.hqx; 3K] ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 24 Jan 1994 08:24:27 +0000 (U) From: George Tempel Subject: [*] BrewArt for Macintosh, volu BrewArt for Macintosh, volume2 Welcome to the BrewArt Collection, volume #2 (for Macintosh)! copyright 1994 George (Ty) Tempel ABSTRACT: This collection is the second edition of a set of brewing related clip art that I am in the process of creating and compiling. I have used some of these elements on my beer labels, and a few of my network-friends have found them helpful as well. George Tempel 65 West George Street Freehold, NJ 07728 netromancr@aol.com Comments and suggestions are welcome, and stay tuned for more collections to be released at later dates! BrewArt, vol #2: adornmentso2: "Ale", Adobe Garamond "Ale", Apollo "Ale", Buccaneer "Ale", Fabliaux "Ale", Florentine swash "Ale", Goudy Medieval "Ale", Luftwaffe "Ale", Magdelena "Ale", Old English "Ale", Taranis "Lager", Luftwaffe "Lager", Magdelena banner ribbon woodcut scroll equipmento2: barrel front, b/w carboy carboy, full glasswareo2: weissbier glass, empty weissbier glass, full label formso2: black label Circle w/grain heads rect. label w/circle and corner Read Me First! o2 [Archived as /info-mac/grf/brew-art-collection-grp2.hqx; 260K] ------------------------------ Date: Sun, 23 Jan 94 22:11:39 PST From: edl@sangabriel.desktalk.com (Ed Leonahrdt) Subject: [*] CCL/ARAP Script Utility - ScriptSwitcher ScriptSwitcher is a simple drag and drop utility designed to help CCL developers create/edit ARAP script files with their favorite editor. What ScriptSwitcher does is simply set the type & creator fields of the file depending on the file types that are dropped on it. If the input file is a text file then it will make the file an ARAP script file, if the input file is an ARAP script file then it will make it a siple text file. You get a status window informing you of which way the conversion went, etc.. Pretty simple thing to do, but a timesaver if you have to keep fiddling with the type & creator each time you want to test or edit a CCL script that is complicated or noncooperative. This application is freeware. Please redistribute as much as you like with the manual as well, and don't forget to send some mail my way if you find the application useful. A note to the Info-Mac moderators: Feel free to put this on any CD. As to which directory to put this in, your first guess is probably better than mine. This file was compressed with your current favorite, Compact Pro. File was scanned with Disinfectant 3.3 and found germ free. -edl- edl@desktalk.desktalk.com [Archived as /info-mac/disk/script-switcher.hqx; 9K] ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 24 Jan 1994 11:59:47 +0800 From: Peter N Lewis Subject: [*] comm - Anarchie 1.1.0 Anarchie v1.1.0 is an Archie client and anonymous FTP client for the Mac. It is (IMO) the easiest way for users with MacTCP to fetch a file with a partially known name or to browse around the anonymous FTP archives. It includes a menu listing all the Archie servers, as well as FTP bookmarks for all the popular Macintosh FTP sites (including around 30 mirrors to Umich and Info-Mac). And as an added bonus, its Apple Scriptable and Recordable, and the scripting allows you to fetch and store files to/from FTP sites, so you can automate all sorts of routine FTP tasks. If you have Frontier, it supports Menu Sharing as well (and comes with a bunch of stuff from Leonard Rosenthol to get you started). Changes since v1.0.0 are many and varied and include: Bug fixes: Supports dumb FTP servers when using a username&password. Fix the "nothing found" problem caused by strange Owner names. New Features: Full support for browsing anonymous FTP archives. Finder-like sorting by name, date, size, etc. Supports most of the Finder's shortcuts in the listing windows. Saveable, double-clickable bookmark files for your favorite sites. Supports firewall FTP servers (on any port). Automatic MacBinary decoding. View selection downloads the document and displays it. Balloon Help. Logging. Fancy new About box with exclusive "newbie-rating". and much much more. Anarchie requires System 7, MacTCP, and is $10 shareware. Hope you like it, Peter. Anarchie v1.1.0 Copyright 1993-94 Peter N Lewis [Archived as /info-mac/comm/net/anarchie-110.hqx; 145K] ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 21 Jan 1994 15:53:04 -0600 From: macmod@CAMIS.Stanford.EDU (Info-Mac Moderator) Subject: [*] Comp-Sys-Mac-Comm FAQ Last-modified: Fri Jan 21 1994 This is the Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ) list for comp.sys.mac.comm This list of frequently asked questions and answers is intended to help reduce the number of "often asked questions" that make the rounds here in comp.sys.mac.comm. Since comp.sys.mac.comm is intended as a forum to discuss telecommunication (and related issues) that are specific to the Macintosh, most questions about modems, telecommunications in general, and other non-Macintosh specific communication questions are not listed here. The proper newsgroup for such questions is usually comp.dcom.modems. This list is posted periodically (about once a month) to the Usenet groups comp.sys.mac.comm, news.answers, and comp.answers. This FAQ is purely a volunteer effort. Although every effort has been made to insure that answers are as complete and accurate as possible, NO GUARANTEE IS IMPLIED OR INTENDED. The editor and contributors have developed this FAQ as a service to Usenet. We hope you find it useful. It has been formatted in setext format for your browsing convenience; use a setext browser, such as EasyView, to take advantage of setext. Please send your corrections, and comments to the editor, Eric Rosen, at eric@cse.ucsc.edu. SHARE THIS INFORMATION FREELY AND IN GOOD FAITH. DO NOT DISTRIBUTE MODIFIED VERSIONS OF THIS FAQ. DO NOT REMOVE THIS NOTICE OR THE TEXT ABOVE. (INCLUDING THE 'LastModified' HEADER; THANKS.) **** TABLE OF CONTENTS: **** [1] Modems and Cables [1.1] What kind of modem will work with my Macintosh? [1.2] What kind of cable do I need to use my external modem with my Macintosh? (Includes cable pinouts) [1.3] What do V.32, V.42, bis, MNP, etc mean? [1.4] How fast can the Macintosh serial ports really go? [1.5] How can I disable call-waiting when using my modem? [2] File Formats and Conversion [2.1] What is a resource (or data) fork? [2.2] What is MacBinary? [2.3] What is BinHex? What is uuencode? What are atob/btoa ? [2.4] What is Apple-Single/Double ? [2.5] What do file suffixes like .hqx, .sit, .bin, etc ... mean and how can I convert such files back to normal Macintosh applications and documents? [3] Macintosh File-transfers [3.1] What program(s) do(es) Kermit, FTP (client), and/or X,Y,Z-MODEM and where can I get them? [3.2] What is the latest version of ZTerm? [3.3] What is the Communications Toolbox (CTB)? [3.4] Are there any public-domain or shareware Communication Toolbox tools that support Kermit, and/or X,Y,Z-MODEM? [3.5] How can I transfer Macintosh files to/from my Macintosh and other non-Macintosh computers (eg: mainframes, UNIX boxes, PCs)? [3.6] What's the best compression program to use when uploading files to an archive or BBS? Are there any other guidelines I should follow? [3.7] How can I use the programs that are posted to comp.binaries.mac? [4] Introduction to AppleTalk (and Remote AppleTalk) [4.1] What kind of hardware do I need to set up an LocalTalk network? [4.2] How can I change the Chooser "user" and name of my Macintosh? Also: Why can I no longer change the name of my hard-disk? [4.3] What is Apple Remote Access ? [4.4] Where can I get a Remote Access script for my modem? [5] Networking, MacTCP, Telnet, SL/IP, PPP [5.1] What is MacTCP and what kind of hardware and software do I need to use it? [5.2] What is the difference between AppleTalk, LocalTalk, EtherNet, EtherTalk, TCP/IP, etc? [5.3] What is Telnet, and is there a Telnet program for the Macintosh? [5.4] Is there a FTP (client/server) program for the Macintosh? [5.5] What are SL/IP, CSL/IP and PPP? [5.6] How does MacTCP resolve names into IP addresses? [6] MacX and Other Ways to Interface With UNIX [6.1] Can I run X-Windows on my Mac? [6.2] How can I run MacX over a modem? Is it feasible? [6.3] What is MacLayers and what do I need to use it? [6.4] What are UW and MultiSession? Are there other programs like MacLayers? [6.5] Is there a UNIX program that will convert between BinHex and MacBinary? [6.6] How can I create LaserWriter PostScript printer files and print them on a PostScript printer connected to a UNIX network? [6.7] What is the Columbia AppleTalk Package (CAP)? [7] Sending and receiving Mail and Usenet News with your Macintosh [7.1] How can I send/receive Internet mail with my Macintosh? [7.2] How can I read/post Usenet news with my Macintosh? [8] Miscellaneous [8.1] I don't have FTP --- How can I access the various archives through e-mail? Appendices: [A] List of Common File Suffixes and Abbreviations [B] List of Macintosh archive sites available through the Internet [C] Vendor Information [D] Contributors [Archived as /info-mac/comm/info/csm-communications-faq.txt; 127K] ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 22 Jan 1994 00:04:58 -0500 From: Charlie Mingo Subject: [*] CopyDoubler 2.03 Updater Enclosed is an updater from AOL which will take CopyDoubler 2.0x to 2.03. It will not work for CopyDoubler Lite or CopyDoubler 1.0x. CopyDoubler 2.03 fixes certain incompatabilities with System 7.1 Pro. [Archived as /info-mac/disk/copy-doubler-20x-to-203-updt.hqx; 136K] ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 22 Jan 1994 16:39:05 -0800 From: fowell@netcom.com (Richard A. Fowell) Subject: [*] Demo of MicroBridge Companion for mac/game/demo This is a demo version of the commercial bridge game, MicroBridge Companion, from Great Game Products in Maryland. They sell the full version direct for ca. $60 + $5 S&H To order: (800)426-3748 or (301)365-3297 This demo is a little behind their current version, but it is the latest demo. I like it better than the other Mac bridge program I bought. -RIchard A. Fowell, fowell@netcom.com, 1/22/94 [Archived as /info-mac/game/com/micro-bridge-demo.hqx; 306K] ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 24 Jan 1994 13:44:22 -0500 From: Mike Blackwell Subject: [*] DuoMon 1.2 This is version 1.2 of DuoMon - a little utility that tells you more than you ever wanted to know about your PowerBook Duo. Changes since 1.1: user settings are now stored in a Preferences file (so Dockernaut users can have different settings for different configurations), and knowledge of a few new battery types. [Archived as /info-mac/cfg/duo-mon-12.hqx; 40K] ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 25 Jan 1994 21:13:03 --100 From: cfranz@iiic.ethz.ch (Christian Steffen Ove Franz) Subject: [*] Final Frontier pre-alpha (re-submit) two days ago I submitted Final Frontier pre-alpha. I'm very sorry to inform you that I have posted a bad version. Steve Brecher of mac.archive.umich.edu informed me that the version I submitted did not check for compatability. Furthermore, the version I posted did not contain the correct menu drivers. Please replace the Final Frontier I submitted on sunday with the one that I'm submitting now. Thank you very much. Final Frontier If you liked ELITE, you'll probably love Final Frontier... This is a development pre-alpha 0.0 version of the upcoming game I will probably call FINAL FRONTIER. In this version you can't really do very much except fly around, target some spaceships, try to dock and communicate with base and ships (I wonder how long it will take you to figure out how to do the latter). I'm passing out this version to - see if there is interest in this kind of game - show that it is possible to write this kind of game - recruit an artist to help me with artwork and music - recruit Alpha/Beta testers - whet you appetite and increase my self-esteem Please read the 'Looking for ...' files if you are intersted in becoming Tester or Artist for Final Frontier. ATTENTION: YOU ARE USING A PRE-ALPHA. (THIS IS A STANDARD DISCLAIMER) Final Frontier is stable as far as I know. It is distributed AS IS. I will take no responsibility if it crashed (which it shouldn't) Use at your own risk. [Archived as /info-mac/game/final-frontier-00a.hqx; 597K] ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 25 Jan 94 10:18:16 EST From: jack@chroma.med.miami.edu (Jack Herrington) Subject: [*] FretNavigator 1.1 File: /sound/util/FN1.1.hqx Author: Jack Herrington Brief Summary: Macintosh application to analyze stringed instruments for chordal and scalar forms. Requirements: Macintosh with 2 megabytes of memory, optional Apple MIDI manager for MIDI output FretNavigator is a Macintosh application that analyzes stringed musical instruments looking for chord and scalar forms, as well as chord progressions, intervals, etc. It can output the forms through MIDI, or the internal speaker, it can also store them in editable tabulature. The program also comes with some other helpful music theory tools. The list of instruments, chords, and intervals is extensible. The ShareWare fee is $25, but I only expect it from people that get some real useful long-term benefit from the program. [Archived as /info-mac/snd/util/fret-navigator-11.hqx; 331K] ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 24 Jan 1994 09:51:08 +1000 From: FRUITCAKE Subject: [*] GLMStat 1.0b0 GLMStat is a statistical program for analysing generalised linear models. It provides a macintosh interface but otherwise operates in a similar fashion to GLIM but with less features (most of which you probably won't miss). Features of GLMStat are - spreadsheet style data entry - Normal, Poisson, Binomial and Gamma models with appropriate links and specification of convergence parameters - Scatter and Residual plots - Output of deviance, parameter estimates, residuals and parameter correlations - Saving of data files complete with all model specifications. - Online Help (under the apple menu) unfortunately there is currently no other documentation. - includes example data files for most examples in two of the texts. This is a beta version of the programme. The fully tested and slightly more tidied up version should be available within 1 to 2 months. The programme is shareware. Further details in "read me" file.Unregistered copies are fully functional but after June 1994 there is a short delay after each FIT operation with a reminder that the programme is unregistered. I would greatly appreciate any comments (good, bad or indifferent) on the programme. [Archived as /info-mac/sci/glm-stat-10b0.hqx; 190K] ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 25 Jan 1994 12:16:41 -0500 From: stoutepf@chemsci1.es.dupont.com (Pieter Stouten) Subject: [*] GNU Shogi 1.1E Please, find attached GNU Shogi 1.1E for the Macintosh (based on UNIX version 1.1 patch level 02). GNU Shogi plays Shogi, the Japanese equivalent of Chess. The main differences between Shogi and Chess are: 1) captured pieces can be dropped again by the captor, and 2) almost all pieces can promote. This makes for a very aggressive game, which (contrary to western chess) gets more interesting and complicated towards the end. Requirements: Macintosh with 68020 or better. System 6.0.7 or later. 600 KB disk space. GNU Shogi itself needs 1.2 MB RAM. The program comes with a rules document, a set of openings, etc. GNU SHOGI is written by Matthias Mutz. Kazuhiko Seki added a Mac graphical user interface. Enjoy ! Pieter Stouten [Archived as /info-mac/game/gnu-shogi-11e.hqx; 323K] ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 24 Jan 1994 18:43:04 -0500 (EST) From: Michael Feldman Subject: [*] GW-Ada/Ed Announced: Free Ada Compilation System for Mac GW-Ada/Ed Program Development Environment for Apple Macintosh January 1994 We are happy to announce the first release of GW-Ada/Ed for the Apple Macintosh family of computers. This software is now available by anonymous ftp from wuarchive.wustl.edu, in the directory languages/ada/compilers/adaed/gwu/mac. [Archived as /info-mac/dev/info/gw-ada-ed.txt; 5K] ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 24 Jan 94 14:20:57 +0100 From: weimann@sc.ZIB-Berlin.DE (Lutz Weimann) Subject: [*] Hotlist2HTML (first submission; to comm/net) The program Hotlist2HTML converts a MacMosaic Hotlist (resource) file to a HTML-page, wherein each URL of the Hotlist is associated with it's corresponding Menu-Item name. The program should run on any Macintosh were System 7 is installed. The Fortran source is included. You need Language Systems Fortran 3.x and MPW 3.2 (or 3.2.3) to make use of the it. Lutz Weimann date: 19.1.94 e-mail: weimann@zib-berlin.de [Archived as /info-mac/cmp/hotlist-to-html.hqx; 76K] ------------------------------ Date: Sun, 23 Jan 94 14:30:50 -0800 From: eric@dot.stanford.edu (Eric Hixon) Subject: [*] hungry-frog-ion-eaters.hqx Hungry Frog Ion Eaters (here chem-ion-game as posted) is a real-time animated multimedia game for learning ionic charges and ion formulas of most (about 100 or so) of the common inorganic and organic ions in basic chemistry. The game is adjustable in speed and difficulty, so it remains fun for both experienced students and students just starting to learn chemistry. Send Email comments to SESINC@applelink.apple.com or myers@bogart.stanford.edu [Archived as /info-mac/game/hungry-frog-ion-eaters.hqx; 771K] ------------------------------ Date: Sun, 23 Jan 1994 16:02:02 -0800 From: awele@sun-valley.stanford.edu (Awele Ndili) Subject: [*] HyperPuzzle... Somehow I had mistakenly sent in a prerelease version of HyperPuzzle with some bugs. I am sending the final version (ver 1.0.1 attached) which replaces the earlier copy of "HyperPuzzle.cpt" which I sent in. >Here's a game I built out of HyperCard. >HyperPuzzle : a $4 shareware. Awele Ndili [Archived as /info-mac/game/hyper-puzzle-101-hc.hqx; 6K] ------------------------------ Date: Sun, 23 Jan 1994 16:12:05 -0600 (CST) From: "DALE H. MARSH, MD" Subject: [*] Kawai-k4-librarian-1.0.3 KAWAI LIBRARIAN K4 is an application that allows one to save patch setting files from a Kawai K4 keyboard as a Macintosh file via a MIDI connection. This program is a simple patch librarian and comes with a number of banks of Kawai K4 public domain patches. The software is free to use and copy. For those interested in writing MIDI software the complete source code is available for $20. The source code is a good example of a simple Object-Oriented MIDI program. It is written with Think C 5.0 and uses the Think Class Library. Dale H. Marsh 1-21-94 marsh@rcf.mayo.edu CompuServe: 71530,676 [Archived as /info-mac/snd/util/kawai-k4-librarian-103.hqx; 108K] ------------------------------ Date: 21 Jan 1994 15:50:46 -0800 From: "Trygve Isaacson" Subject: [*] LanSatellite 1.0.1 I'm happy to announce the release of LanSatellite 1.0.1 (enclosed). LanSatellite is a network management application for viewing, monitoring, and graphically mapping your AppleTalk network and its devices. It searches the network in the background, gives you sortable list and icon views that you can modify and use with background pictures, lets you print your maps, and can alert you to devices that disappear from the network. It also has features that let you easily import icons for customization and handling of devices that it doesn't know about yet. LanSatellite is shareware US$20. I hope you like it! Trygve Isaacson trygve@apple.com [Archived as /info-mac/comm/net/lan-satellite-101.hqx; 570K] ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 25 Jan 1994 03:38:15 -0700 From: "Timothy J. Greear" Subject: [*] Macintosh Tips & Tricks 9/93 - 12/93 I was recently on the First Class BBS that SoftArc runs. While I was looking around I saw that they had some issues of Macintosh Tips & Tricks that were not posted to SUMEX. bye [Archived as /info-mac/per/mac-tips-n-tricks-93-09-to-93-12.hqx; 399K] ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 25 Jan 94 12:36:01 +0900 From: ISHIZAKI Kazuaki Subject: [*] MacLHA 2.13.sea.hqx This is an archive program that is compatible with PC/UNIX/Other LHA. Fix a bug that is occurred system error when drag-and-drop files. [Archived as /info-mac/cmp/mac-lha-213.hqx; 80K] ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 21 Jan 1994 20:21:09 +0500 From: adorfman@cs.tufts.edu (2d Lt Avram Dorfman) Subject: [*] Mac screen refresh utility Refresh is a utility that causes the entire mac graphics area to get redrawn. This is good for old or simple applications like Ars Magna (an anagram program) that erase the entire screen, but don't redraw it. You can put an alias to it in your apple menu items, or in a corner of your screen where you know it will be even if you can't see it. That way, even if you are "blind", you can refresh the entire screen in one action. -Avram Dorfman (adorfman@cs.tufts.edu) p.s. All I ask is that you send me mail telling me you think this is useful, if you use it. [Archived as /info-mac/gui/refresh.hqx; 6K] ------------------------------ Date: Sun, 23 Jan 94 14:30:30 -0800 From: eric@dot.stanford.edu (Eric Hixon) Subject: [*] math-factor-hopper.hqx The math factor hopper game is a very simple brain-teaser for anyone who can do simple multiplication and division. It is fun for adults and children and is simple to learn and play. Playing the game one practices factoring and multiplication It's so small - how can you not check it out!. Send Email comments to SESINC@applelink.apple.com or myers@bogart.stanford.edu [Archived as /info-mac/game/math-factor-hopper.hqx; 23K] ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 25 Jan 1994 03:29:01 -0700 From: "Timothy J. Greear" Subject: [*] MNS REVIEWS Hi I found an issue of MNS REVIEWS on a local BBS. I thought it was just what I was looking for to help the members of the local Mac User Group (Black Hills Mac Users Group) *Blatant plug* find out more about the Macintosh. I emailed Don Ritter and requested some back issues. I also asked if it was all right to send them on to SUMEX. Well, here they are. Don also said it was all right to include them on the next info-mac CDROM. MNS Reviews is a free monthly (and soon more frequently) online publication for the Macintosh Community provided by the MUG News Service (MNS). MNS is a UPI-like news service that has been reaching more than 350,000 Mac users who belong to user groups in the U.S., Canada, and 18 other countries each month since 1988. It is the goal of MNS to deliver the best information to the Mac community at no charge. Call Apple's toll-free number to find the User Group closest to you: 800/538-9696, extension 500 MNS Reviews will publish soft/hardware reviews, editorial, and articles on the Macintosh Industry and community by members of the Mac community. It is free but the entire contents are copyrighted by MNS. Individual copyrights apply and some articles are allowable for republication as stated in the articles. If you would like to correspond with MNS, please send your email or submissions to Don Rittner at afldonr@aol.com (from the Internet), or: AOL: AFL DonR CIS: 70057,1325 GEnie: MNS [Archived as /info-mac/per/mns-review.hqx; 446K] ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 22 Jan 94 11:47:58 EST From: udmorrow@mcs.drexel.edu (Dan Morrow) Subject: [*] new blackjack program replaces any blackjack-13x.hqx [Archived as /info-mac/game/crd/blackjack-14.hqx; 312K] ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 25 Jan 1994 22:02:09 +0100 (MET) From: "Rene G.A. Ros" Subject: [*] nightwatch-ii.sit.hqx Hi, Here is a JPEG file of a painting by Rembrandt called the Nightwatch (Note: I scanned A picture not THE picture). I use it as the Desktop background using the Decor control panel (version 1.3 or later) by Francois Pottier (pottier@dmi.ens.fr). And I suggest you to do the same! ;-) If you want to see the real picture, the address of the museum is listed in the ReadMe file... Regards, Rene Ros [Archived as /info-mac/grf/nightwatch-ii.hqx; 518K] ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 22 Jan 1994 12:23:50 GMT+13:32 From: Kenji Takeuchi Subject: [*] Online Cookbook [Planet Software] Here's a power yet easy to use (i.e. cool) cookbook stack for HyperCard 2.0 or higher. Includes 20 recipes. Enjoy. Kenji Takeuchi [Archived as /info-mac/app/online-cookbook-hc.hqx; 48K] ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 21 Jan 1994 22:51:10 -0800 From: "Cari D. Burstein" Subject: [*] pegicon.hqx This is a collection of 4 color icons (an orchid, two moons, and a wave), and a Resedit version containing 3 of them. I didn't make these icons- they were made by my suitemate Peggy Li, and they were really good, so I asked her if I could make them available to the general public. I hope you like them. -Cari D. Burstein cdaveb@soda.berkeley.edu [Archived as /info-mac/gui/grf/peggys-icons.hqx; 9K] ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 25 Jan 1994 18:47:56 +0100 From: pvscheve@vnet3.vub.ac.be (Peter Van Schevensteen) Subject: [*] Petris 1.0 Petris version 1.0 1993 by Peter Van Schevensteen Only Mac Tetris version I know of that supports 2 players competitive mode. With lots of fun sounds and nice pictures. Features include softdrop, show= next, choose your own configuration, no-long-blocks for die hard Tetris= freaks, 2 player mode (and penalties for the other player when you can= remove 2 or more rows at a time, very addicting :-)). Also introduces the= "fast preferences"-feature. Has problems with Classics running system 6.x= (they don't shut down afterwards). Needs to start with a new game twice on= more advanced Mac models (don't ask me why). Enjoy !! [Archived as /info-mac/game/arc/petris-10.hqx; 628K] ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 25 Jan 1994 15:01:34 +0200 From: Juri Munkki Subject: [*] RadFax 0.9 Here's version 0.9 (shareware release $25) for RadFax, a program for receiving weather maps via radio to a Mac with sound input capability. Requires color quickdraw and possibly at least System 7.0. Juri Munkki jmunkki@hut.fi [Archived as /info-mac/comm/rad-fax-09.hqx; 146K] ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 24 Jan 94 11:38:46 JST From: setsu@lab2.yamaha.co.jp (Takashi Suzuki) Subject: [*] sound/midi - [DX7 Librarian 1.0.4 - part 1 of 3] DX7 Librarian is an application for the Macintosh which allows you to make up library of voice data for DX7. One window has one voice data, and you can open windows as many as you want. When this application receives bulk dump MIDI data, new window will open and show you it's parameter. You can keep 32 voices in one file, so it's easy to replace DX7's internal 32 voices. Apple Script recordable. What's changed in 1.0.4. Fixed the bug related AppleScripts. Attached Sample Scripts. Requirement : System7 + QuickTime + Apple MIDI Manager or System7.1 + Apple MIDI Manager Shareware. Takashi Suzuki [Archived as /info-mac/snd/util/dx7-librarian-104.hqx; 119K] ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 24 Jan 1994 08:00:47 -0400 (EST) From: Chris Owen Subject: [*] Stuff and Hex 1.0 This application REQUIRES the Stuffit Engine=AA which is part of the Stuffi= t Deluxe=AA Stuffit SpaceSaver=AA and SITcomm=AA packages.=20 This application is just a quick (15 minute) hack that I did for my own use and then cleaned up a little for distribution. The purpose of the application is to first comress and then binhex files for electronic distribution. It is intended to be used as a drag and drop application.=20 You can use it to choose files, but not folders, from the 'File' menu. After I had written this it turned out that Drop=A5Stuff (also part of Stuffit Deluxe=AA package) also does this (I always use Magic Menu rather than Drop=A5Stuff). I decided to go ahead and distribute it because lots o= f people have the Stuffit Engine as part of Stuffit SpaceSaver=AA and SITcomm=AA, but don't have Drop=A5Stuff.=20 Chris Owen owen-christopher@yale.edu [Archived as /info-mac/cmp/stuff-and-hex-10.hqx; 22K] ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 25 Jan 94 11:22:50 GMT From: M.B.B.Bointon@lut.ac.uk (mbb Bointon) (mbb Bointon) Subject: [*] submission of 840av.hqx Here's a startupscreen for 840AV users. It says "Welcome to Macintosh" in silver above "840AV" in chrome over a red and yellow blobby surface. There's space at the bottom for your extensions! All rendered and anti-aliased in Infini-D. It's a 640*480 24-bit PICT, and so it suitable for 13" or similar. If anybody really likes it, I could be persuaded to re-render it at higher resolutions! Marcus Bointon PS I hope the line feeds on this work OK! [Archived as /info-mac/grf/quadra840av-startup.hqx; 298K] ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 25 Jan 1994 11:45:41 +1300 From: jeff@stonebow.otago.ac.nz (Jeff Home) Subject: [*] Switchback 2.3 Submission SwitchBack 2.3 by Glendower Software Ltd. SwitchBack has been well received by the Macintosh community, gaining particular praise for its interface. With this version SwitchBack you can log errors to a report window that is displayed after the backup has completed. What is SwitchBack? SwitchBack is a utility program that synchronises two folders, so that both folders have a copy of the most recent version of their files. The two folders can reside on the same volume, on two different volumes, or indeed on two different computers connected by a network. It has been designed principally for those people with two computers (especially desktop and PowerBook) who need to ensure that they have the most recent version of their documents available to them. It also functions well as a simple backup utility for people with one computer. For example, a folder residing on your main hard disk can be linked to a folder residing on a floppy disk. What this Archive Contains. SwitchBack 2.3 SwitchBack Help User's Guide (MWII) in MacWrite II format Read Me (this document) Registration Form [Archived as /info-mac/disk/switch-back-23.hqx; 155K] ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 24 Jan 1994 22:47:50 -0600 From: hdsontag@mmm.com (Hugh Sontag) Subject: [*] Synchronize! 3.0.4 submission Dear Sirs: This is a copy of Synchronize! 3.0.4, for your archives. It should replace version 3.0.2, which is currently in your archives. Hugh Sontag (author) >From the enclosed info file: This is Synchronize! 3.0.4, a file synchronization utility. As a way of introducing you to Synchronize!, you may use its basic file synchronization features FREE. Decompress this Compact Pro archive and try it out. The many advanced features of the program may be demonstrated with folders which contain less than 400K. Unlimited use of the advanced features requires the purchase of the program, which is $29.95, plus shipping. [Archived as /info-mac/disk/synchronize-304-demo.hqx; 217K] ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 24 Jan 94 20:36:37 EST From: JRobert.Thibault%FORESTERIE%ULAVAL@CAMPUS.ULAVAL.CA Subject: [*] The Archivist 4.1.1 Infos This text file is to be read prior to using The Archivist version 4.1.1 [Archived as /info-mac/info/sft/archivist-411-info.txt; 27K] ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 24 Jan 94 20:33:27 EST From: JRobert.Thibault%FORESTERIE%ULAVAL@CAMPUS.ULAVAL.CA Subject: [*] The Archivist v 4.1.1 About The Archivist update 4.1.1 I programmed this document database with a support of the Apple Canada Education Foundation and Apple Canada Inc. It is a Hypercard database that can hold small or rather large documents, the limitation being the size of your hard drive. It can be considered as an electronic binder than can multiply itself to form new binders for your own purposes. With it is attached a small "Read me" file. This document database must be used on a Macintosh with a monitor size of at least 480 pixels by 400 pixels or anyone monitor bigger than that. HyperCard version 2,1 (or better) must be used accordingly with its Home file. HyperCard must be partitioned to a minimum of 2 megs RAM or bigger. The new 4.1 version is PowerBook compatible!!! Happy archiving! J.-Robert Thibault Ph.D. InterNet: JRTHIBAULT@CAMPUS.ULAVAL.CA [Archived as /info-mac/text/archivist-411-hc.hqx; 371K] ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 24 Jan 94 21:25:24 PDT From: ace@tidbits.com (Adam C. Engst) Subject: [*] TidBITS#210/24-Jan-94 TidBITS#210/24-Jan-94 Happy Birthday, Macintosh! We glance back at Apple's view of its past through quotes from annual reports and then look forward at some of the intriguing new technologies Apple plans for the future. A few small comments, the embedded speech commands necessary to make your Mac sing Happy Birthday, and the issue rounds out with a review of a most interesting program, Meeting Space from World Benders, which creates virtual conference centers on any network. Topics: MailBITS/24-Jan-94 Happy Birthday, Macintosh! Singing Macs New Apple Technologies Meeting Space Reviews/24-Jan-94 [Archived as /info-mac/per/tb/tidbits-210.etx; 30K] -- Adam C. Engst, TidBITS Editor -- ace@tidbits.com -- info@tidbits.com Author of The Internet Starter Kit for Macintosh -- tisk@tidbits.com ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 22 Jan 1994 11:41:08 -0800 From: jsl@netcom.com (John S. Lee) Subject: [*] UUParser v1.7 RELEASE NOTES FOR UUPARSER version 1.7 Please read the HELP for additional info as to some of the features in UUParser version 1.7. UUParser v1.7 is a maintenance release. Some items of interest are: - Parsing in the background. - Drag & Drop Join funtion (choose the files, drag them to the UUParser application while holding down the COMMAND key). - Parse large files without increasing the memory partition. - Can stop any operation by COMMAND-"." (period). - File extensions are no longer case sensitive (so if the file has a ".Jpg", or ".JPG" extension, UUParser will set the file type and creator according to what you've specified). - Better parsing algorithm gets rid of most uneeded header/footer/cut lines. - Change filenames to UPPERCASE on the fly. Please remember: IF you are using anything less than version 1.5, please get rid of your preferences file. Version 1.5 users have upward compatibility. The shareware fee is STILL $10. $15 for disk updates. Use 20 times and please register. Thanks for using UUParser!!! UUParser is Copyright =A9 1993, 1994 by John S. Lee & Truly Mac, Inc. All Rights Reserved Please report any bugs/comments/suggestions to: Internet: jsl@netcom.com AOL : JSLEE other : John_Lee.DPI@notes.worldcom.com Legal note: The author makes no warranties expressed or implied, and is not responsible for any loss of data., work, time etc. The software has been tested as best possible. Use of this software at your own risk. [Archived as /info-mac/cmp/uu-parser-17.hqx; 89K] ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 24 Jan 1994 21:24:16 -0600 From: Gene McCabe Subject: [*] Wedding Planner This email includes a .SEA file that has been encoded via BinHex4.0. The file should be named: wedding-planner10.hqx. I submit it for posting to the SUMEX archive. My name is Gene McCabe and I can be reached on Internet at: mccabe@eagle.sangamon.edu. A description of the file follows. My wife and I developed this wedding planner to organize our own wedding and found it very useful. It will help you pick a wedding date, develop a budget, manage all those little and not so little things that must be done, keep track of attendants and invitations and gifts, and print warm, professional mailing labels. It will also provide you with an abundance of useful information on how to plan and implement a successful wedding. The software was developed in HyperCard; however, it is a stand-alone application (HyperCard is embedded in the software). [Archived as /info-mac/app/wedding-planner-10.hqx; 647K] ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 25 Jan 94 14:49:13 AWST From: giulio@perth.dialix.oz.au (Giulio Zambon) Subject: [*] Wild Wild is a free AppleScript addition which lets you select files and folders with wildcarded names. It also supports other filtering criteria to identify specific files (eg. file creator and type). Wild accepts a list of folder and file names (one or more of them can be wildcarded) and returns a list of actual names which match the initial list and satisfy the additional filtering criteria that you selected. Ciao, Giulio. _--_|\ Giulio Zambon, giulio@DIALix.oz.au / \ Rainbow Hill Pty Ltd, 25 Urawa Rd, Duncraig WA 6023, Australia. *_.--._/ Voice: +61-9-448 0946 Fax/Voice: +61-9-447 8418 v [Archived as /info-mac/dev/wild-as.hqx; 70K] ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 21 Jan 1994 08:40:30 -0500 From: Richard_N.K._Chong@eastern.com (Richard N.K. Chong) Subject: [*] WindowBottom for FirstClass If you use FirstClass software, why do you need this FKEY? Each time you start a download, what do you do? Do you leave the window where it is along with all the others, or do you move it to the bottom of the screen so that you can see what's going on? For those of you who fall into the second category, I made an FKEY for you that will do all the work. This FKEY moves all transfer windows, not just the active one. This permits you to download many things, and execute the FKEY only once. Further instructions on use and installation are included in this BinHex'ed CompactPro archive. The FKEY was programmed by Jean-Pierre Poulin who lives in Quebec City in Canada. The instructions were originally written in French by Jean-Pierre, and later translated to English by Richard N.K. Chong@cmac.eastern.com. Enjoy! [Archived as /info-mac/comm/first-class-window-bottom-fkey.hqx; 14K] ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 24 Jan 1994 00:26:37 -0600 From: ehfm@midway.uchicago.edu (Eric Hoffmann) Subject: [*] WireTap Pro 107 demo.cpt Here is a full working Demo of the WireTap Pro v1.07 Telecommunications Software for the Mac. The commercial version supports over 300 terminal emulations, most popular file transfer protocols, and 100% zmodem/zmodem-90 compatibility. The demo requires that you already have a suitable CTB Tool, such as the Serial Tool. You are limited to 10 minutes total for each demo online session. The demo comes with PC ANSI terminal emulation as well as TeleVideo 925. Built in help as well as Balloon help is available. For a limited time, purchasers will receive the Windows version along with the Mac version for the retail price of $49.95. Special features include: > Toolbar - with icons > Keypad Menus > Phonebooks > Auto-Dialer > Suffix Database - for automatic translation of file PC file extensions > Terminal Text Selection > Billing Timer/Clock > Stationery Pads > Over 300 Terminal Emulations > Pascal Script Language > Watch-Me Mode > ZModem/ZModem-90 Support > CommToolBox Support > 32-Bit Clean > Full Backgrounding - Transfer files in the background > TCP/IP Supported - if you have the CommToolBox TCP/IP tool [Archived as /info-mac/comm/write-tap-107-demo.hqx; 479K] ------------------------------ Date: Sun, 23 Jan 1994 22:01:36 -0500 (EST) From: Tommy Brown Subject: [*] ZipIt 1.2.6.cpt ZipIt 1.2.6 is a full-featured Macintosh program to zip and unzip files. It is fully compatible with PKZip version 2.0g as well as all prior versions. It achieves compression comparable to that of StuffIt and Compact Pro. Best of all, it sports a complete Macintosh interface. Version 1.2.6 adds a number of often-requested features, and many bug fixes. It also includes rewritten documentation, an AppleScript droplet to zip files by dragging-and-dropping, and other enhancements. Users may register by mail or by phone. Please replace version 1.2 with this version in your archives. Thanks! Tommy Brown tbrown@dorsai.dorsai.org tommy6@aol.com [Archived as /info-mac/cmp/zip-it-126.hqx; 267K] ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 25 Jan 94 21:57:32 -0500 From: hawkins@husc.harvard.edu Subject: .sgm suffix i recently downloaded a file named "genji.zip" from world.std.com. after unzipping it, i got a document named "genji.sgm." what does the .sgm suffix mean? what sort of program can read files in .sgm format? how can i get to the file and work with it? please mail any suggestions directly to me if possible. TIA!! (hawkins@husc.harvard.edu) ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 25 Jan 94 09:30:15 EST From: jensen@itd.nrl.navy.mil (Larry Jensen) Subject: 128 Mac - Did you buy one? Greetings Info-Macers, The other day I was going thru some old papers and I found my receipt for my first Mac. I had forgotten how soon after the Mac was announced that I ordered one. Yeh, ORDERED! I had to wait 6 weeks for it to come! It being the TENTH anniversary of the Mac I wonder how many of you out there classify as Macintosh Pioneers? If you bought a 128 Mac BEFORE 1 May 1984 I think that would qualify - not sure I want to start a bragging contest - but it could be interesting - not that anyone could prove their claim easily to the net. If you are wondering, my "original" Mac is now upgraded to a 512KE and still doing what it was bought for - word processing, some Multiplan spreadsheets for my church treasurer wife, and a little graphics. I later bought a used 512K Mac for both my boy and girl to take to college with them for writing papers, etc. Larry Jensen Annandale, Virginia ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 25 Jan 1994 20:49:05 +0100 From: arild@oslonett.no (Arild Eugen Johansen) Subject: 1 bit startupscreen Not a very big problem, but when I start up my vx/7 pro and during the loading of extensions (three rows on a 16" screen) I am staring at a 1 bit background just like the old original Mac. I am using two screens, one 13" and the 16", so including a startup picture helps only on one screen, the other one is as dull as ever. After the extensions have loaded I get my nice blue background (chosen in the General Controls). Do the newer macs still have a b/w background in ROM? Any clues? Arild Arild Eugen Johansen * Sinus Software & Design ANS ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 24 Jan 94 16:46:29 EST From: Murph Sewall Subject: All modems are not created equal Dan Hofferth's post about high speed modems reminds me that I've been meaning to pass along the saga of my brother's Christmas present. Both my brother and his wife are Mac users (she's an associate professor of education at UALR and he and a colleague convinced the whole law office at Blue Cross/Shield of Arkansas to upgrade to Macs). Both bring work home. They didn't have a modem so I figured that the $99 Datamodem 14.4 kbps from MacWarehouse would be just the thing. Info-mac has featured good reports on the $99 high speed modem, so I ordered one. Before I gift wrapped it, I decided to test it for myself. Bummer; it would connect but it failed to do the protocol handshaking and got hung up somewhere between CONNECT and ready for business :-( I tried several different host modems. Often I couldn't even establish a connection. MacWarehouse was very nice. They arranged for me to air express the modem back and sent me a another one (all at their expense). Alas, the second Datamodem 14.4 fared as badly as the first (rats!). I have a Zoom 14.4 that works fine on the identical setup. The Zoom has a poor reputation for being able to deal with phone line noise, so if the Zoom works and the Datamodem 14.4 doesn't, I'd guess it must be truly awful in all but squeaky clean environments. My brother and his wife have no prior experience with modems, so I decided not to burden them with a finicky modem that wouldn't work for me (maybe it would work for them, maybe not). I bit the bullet and asked MacWarehouse to send me a $199 PowerUser 14.4 modem (again MacWarehouse paid the return air freight and delivered the new modem the next day). The PowerUser 14.4 worked, but after 10 minutes it emitted an acrid order and died (oops, manufacturing defect). MacWarehouse kindly sent me the fourth modem in as many days and paid for the return of the defective one (by this time the Airborne Express delivery person and I had become old friends). In the end, I was able to get my brother and his wife a gift wrapped, functional 14.4 modem before Christmas (I paid for the Airborne Express to Arkansas :) I've also received my credit card bill and MacWarehouse got all the paperwork correct. I'm impressed by MacWarehouse's customer service. If you want to find out if the $99 modem will work for you they will make good on their money back guarantee with a minimum of fuss. However, prepare for the possibility of being disappointed. All of Dan Hofferth's tricks may not be enough, if you want high speed, it may be necessary to spend more or wait for the price of better quality modems to decline to your budget range. Boycott Abaton/Everex! s/ Murph ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 24 Jan 94 21:35:04 PST From: jbthoo@ucdavis.edu (John Thoo) Subject: A Q on Zterm (R) On 22 Jan 1994 MY KARMA RAN OVER MY DOGMA wrote: > Does anybody know of a way of making Zterm use KERMIT protocol? > I find, for me, the only drawback of zterm is no kermit support. > thanx According to [comm/info/zterm-faq-16.txt] Dave Alverson will be adding the Kermit protocol to the next incarnation of ZTerm, due to be release this quarter. (Thanks for zterm-faq-16.txt Leslie :-) --John. J. B. THOO, Math Dept, Univ of California, Davis ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 24 Jan 1994 15:21:40 -0700 (MST) From: gertner@lord.Colorado.EDU (Brad Gertner) Subject: BeHierarchic 2.0 is Commercial > Date: Fri, 21 Jan 94 16:24:28 +0100 > From: Karl.Pottie@uz.kuleuven.ac.be (Karl Pottie) > Subject: [*] BeHierarchic 2.0 > > This is BeHierarchic 2.0, a control panel which makes your Apple menu > hierarchical.It gives folders in the Apple menu their own submenu, and > folders within those folders their own submenu, etc., up to 5 levels. > > I prefer BeHierarchic above the alternative "Menuchoice" because it is a > lot faster. > > This version is System 7 dependent, so the archivers should probably leave > the previous version in the archives as well. > > I am not the author of this software, I'm just posting it. > > [Archived as /info-mac/gui/be-hierarchic-20.hqx; 25K] This is a Commercial Product! It was posted mistakenly before and was removed from the archive; it needs to be removed again, before it causes serious problems. -- -Brad Gertner (gertner@lord.Colorado.EDU) -A Concerned 'Netter... ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 24 Jan 94 13:50:16 CST From: payne@digicon-hou.com (Barton Payne) Subject: Best C Compiler (Q) I'm soliciting opinions on the best C compiler for the Macintosh. I'm particularly interested in mathematical and signal processing functionality, and execution speed (as opposed to compilation speed). One key feature is to integrate smoothly with Mathematica's Mathlink library. Think/Symantec C 6.0 seems to be the most popular, are there any others worth considering? Direct email is appreciated, I'll be happy to post a summary. Barton Payne ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 25 JAN 94 13:32:18 GMT From: EFE@V1.PH.QMW.AC.UK Subject: Bold Symbol Poul Pedersen replied to a query as follows: >Bruce Bromberek wrote: >>Please forgive me if this is a FAQ (if it is just point me >>to it and I'll sulk out of here) but how can I get BOLD >>symbold to print. MS word 5.0 will show it correctly on the >>screen, but the printed result is plain. > >Whenever you find a frequently occuring bug, or lots of annoying "features" >in your Word processor, then it is because it is Microsoft Word. Microsoft >has never written software according to Apple's standards, and I doubt they >have ever bought Inside Macintosh. I don't think this is the problem! The official Apple release of the Symbol font in PostScript does not include a bold version, it never has (I can't understand why not) and this is an 'old' story. The reason Poul gets symbol printed bold is that his DeskWriter is not a PostScript printer. As far as I know this is NOT a Word problem. I have no axe to grind for or against Microsoft but it isn't very rational to blame every problem you find on them without investigating a bit. Eric Eisenhandler, Physics Dept., Queen Mary & Westfield College, University of London EFE@V1.PH.QMW.AC.UK PS And I have to admit that I do use Word and don't find it bad at all! ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 25 Jan 1994 19:00:20 -0600 (CST) From: "Bruce Bromberek" Subject: Bold Symbol -Solved ! Thanks to the net for fast responses. The problem: could not get symbol font to print bold on laserprinters. The solution: The problem is with the font itself. In the symbol font a bit that tells where the "offset to style mapping table" is located. Normally, when you send bold symbol to a POSTSCRIPT laserprinter, the printer looks at the data and says No No No you don't want that and defaults to plain old symbol. To get bold symbols ( a desire that escapes 90% of computer users) it was necessary to hack at the font resource and change the bit. I have been informed that hacked versions of the bitmapped font are available in the file /fonts/adobe_screen.hqx. Thanks to Peter MacDonald and Rick Jamis for sending me directions how to hack the font myself. (There hack also works for True-Type symbol also!!) I'll repopst the directions if anyone is interested. Thanks once again. Long live the net! ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 25 Jan 1994 12:23:45 -0500 From: jow@helix.nih.gov (Jim Owens) Subject: Bold Symbol? Comment Bruce Bromberek asked how to get print Bold Symbol font from MS Word 5.0 Then Povl Pedersen suggested that Word was at fault and that any other word processer (he uses Nisus) would print Bold Symbol. Well, I just tried the experiment with my favorite word processor, WriteNow 3.0. (Mac IIfx, System 7.1 but with the old PostScript version of Symbol font, not the TrueType version, installed both on the computer and the LW IIf.) WriteNow certainly made a BOLD symbol alright. Then I used Word 5.0a on the same IIfx (favorite word processor of everybody else in my lab). It made a bold Symbol. The boldness was puny compared to WriteNow, but evident when compared to plain Symbol from Word. Whereas the WriteNow version is unmistakenly bold, the Word version might not seem so when seen in isolation from the plain Symbol. The Word Bold Symbol was cleaner looking, had less stairstep effect, and had more of the curvature of the plain Symbol font. Just my $.02. Good luck, Jim Owens ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 24 Jan 94 21:18:27 PST From: jbthoo@ucdavis.edu (John Thoo) Subject: Converting a PICT sequence to a QuickTime movie (C) On 21 Jan 1994 Kenny wrote: > I've been trying to convert a series of black-and-white PICTs into a > QuickTime movie using Movie Converter 1.0, which came with the original > QuickTime Starter Kit. This probably doesn't answer your question, but I thought I'd mention that one of my profs creates PICTS of animations in Mathematica, and then uses Adobe Photoshop to convert them to a QT movie. --John. J. B. THOO, Math Dept, Univ of California, Davis ------------------------------ Date: 25 Jan 1994 12:21:32 -0500 (CDT) From: vreddy@Acd.Tusk.Edu (Vijaya Reddy) Subject: disable print command I want my students to look at one of my MacWrite II files. But I don't want them to print it. Is there any way I can disable the 'print' command >From the 'file' menu (including keypress command). I will appreciate any help. Thanks --vreddy ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 25 Jan 94 14:50:20 +0100 From: "Fabrizio Oddone" Subject: DMA on a Q800? (R) > We just bought Silverlining. I recall reading here that > Silverlining's drivers don't support Direct Memory > Access (DMA). So if one installs Silverlining on a CPU > that uses DMA, hard drive performance speeds will slow > down. Assuming I've understood that part correctly, > the big question is, which machines use DMA and which > ones don't? The issue is not DMA support but asynchronous I/O support. Async I/O means that the CPU (the microprocessor) tells your hard disk, tape drive, or whatever: "I want to read this file into memory". The CPU continues working on other tasks, until the device says to the CPU: "The transfer you asked for is complete". Look at this scheme: +----------+ +--------------+ +-------------+ | hardware |<->| SCSI manager |<->| SCSI driver |<-> ... +----------+ +--------------+ +-------------+ +--------------+ +-------------+ .. <->| File manager |<->| Application | +--------------+ +-------------+ The File Manager supports asynchronous requests from applications since 1984. The problem is that the SCSI manager running on almost all Macs handles the async request exactly as it was a sync request. That is, the CPU has to sit down until the transfer is finished. SCSI Manager 4.3, present in the ROMs of the AV Macs, *does* support async I/O. Unfortunately, the old SCSI drivers (Silverlining et al.) tell the SCSI Manager to transfer data "the old way". The new Apple SCSI driver inside Apple HD SC Setup 7.2.2 knows how to speak to the SCSI Manager 4.3, exploiting async I/O. I do not know of any other hard disk formatters taking advantage of SCSI Manager 4.3. Will Apple implement the SCSI Manager 4.3 on other Mac models? I know that the December developer CD from Apple includes SCSI Manager 4.3a2, a little extension that adds the new SCSI Manager to all Quadra models. Maybe System 7.5 will have that included? Another useful piece of information: software running at interrupt time is forced to use async reads&writes, because sync system calls will not work (at interrupt time); networking software runs at interrupt time => networking software (FIle Sharing, etc.) uses async calls, so it should be more efficient, provided that the SCSI driver exploits the SCSI Manager 4.3. -- Fabrizio Oddone ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 25 Jan 1994 16:53:58 GMT From: mcguire@UTKVX.UTCC.UTK.EDU (Michael A. McGuire) Subject: Downloading files with VersaTerm (R) In Article <9401241748.AA01094@CAMIS.Stanford.EDU>, info-mac-request@SUMEX-AIM.STANFORD.EDU (The Moderators) wrote: >Date: Sat, 22 Jan 94 08:41:56 JST >From: vpablo@cc.titech.ac.jp > >Hello: > >I'm a Spanish chemistry researcher in Japan, and I'm using a VersaTermPro >UNIX emulator running on Macintosh to connect to the Internet. >I would like to be able to transfer my UNIX files to the Mac, but it >seems that I cannot do it with this emulator. >Can you help me with this? If you have some information about the subject >I would very grateful if you shere it with me. > >Thank you very much > >PABLO VITORIA > >e-mail vpablo@nc.titech.ac.jp VersaTerm-Pro will download files. Since you do not describe the problem you are having it will be difficult to help. Many different protocols are supported by VersaTerm-Pro. What you are able to do depends on what protocols are supported by you host and how you are connected. Michael A. McGuire, UTCC - User Services mcguire@utkvx.utk.edu ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 24 Jan 1994 22:01:42 +0000 From: m.stoermer@mailbox.uq.oz.au (Martin Stoermer) Subject: Eudora & recombining "split" mail (Q) >Does anyone know how to automatically recombine large emails that are >"split" by Eudora into smaller equal-size messages? .......... Sure, just shift-select the split files and do a single save as...., and they will be one file. martin stoermer, 3D Centre, University of Queensland, QLD, AUSTRALIA ------------------------------ Date: 25 Jan 94 09:22:45 GMT From: jrrk@camcon.co.uk (Jonathan Kimmitt) Subject: Eudora & recombining "split" mail (Q) Info-Mac@sumex-aim.stanford.edu writes: >Does anyone know how to automatically recombine large emails that are >"split" by Eudora into smaller equal-size messages? For example, each >Info-Mac Digest mailing I receive is split up by Eudora into a series of 3 >or 4 smaller messages that I manually paste back together into a single >file using my text editor and then save to disk. Is there some way to >automatically recombine these back together when I save them? If the parts are all in order, just drag select all the parts together and save. If they are not in order, transfer the parts in order to another mailbox, then select them all together ... The reason for this nuisance is that the mail reader can only handle 32K since it is based on built in toolbox textedit. If you have an attachment however, an attachment of arbitrary size can be saved automatically. ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 24 Jan 1994 18:30:55 -0600 From: forbes@mailhost.tcs.tulane.edu (Graeme Forbes) Subject: Fastest Mac for System 6 The fastest Mac that can boot a version of System 6 may be the fastest Mac period. There is supposed to be a version of System 6, 6.0.8L, *not* an Apple product but someone's hack, which boots on any Quadra. I believe you can find it at rascal.ics.utexas.edu in /support-of-products/Apple/sys.soft I have absolutely no idea how well it works, whether it melts your machine down, or whatever. In fact, I don't even know for sure that it exists. Graeme Forbes ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 24 Jan 94 12:18:42 EST From: Pete Tamas Subject: Folders are larger than they appear (A) > Info-Mac Digest V12 #9 > Date: Mon, 17 Jan 94 21:26:01 CST > From: edward@pro-ren.cts.com (Edward Floden) > Subject: Finder File Size v. Real Size Probably this has already been answered, but the difference is probably from the invisible Icon_ file which has the cutom icon for each file/folder. Let us know what it is! Best wishes, Pete Tamas Gnome@VM.Temple.edu or TempleVM.bitnet > The file in question is a folder, containing nothing but more > folders, each with a custom icon. (It's a custom icon collection.) > According to the System 7.1 Finder's Get Info, this folder has a > size of 12K (yes, _twelve_), and contains 596 items. Yet, when > I attempt to copy this seemingly minuscule folder, the Copy > command will inform me that the folder contains 1186 items, > almost double what Get Info says. And, when I first attempted > to copy this folder onto an 800K disk, I was also informed > that an additional *1.7MB* was needed to copy the items. ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 24 Jan 94 17:42 CST From: Subject: font questions I have a question about installing fonts on macintoshes, and then verifying that two different machines have the same fonts. We have had some trouble getting different macs in our lab to format documents the same way. The information I have on this is somewhat outdated. For instance, I have one machine running system 7.0 and one running 7.1. The fonts go in different places, and we have files that are clearly screen fonts, and post- script fonts, and true type in some cases. How can I be sure that the "times" installed on both machines is really the same font, and will be treated the same way by word processers and printers? Are there good references on this? The "get info" boxes on our fonts doesn't hold any useful information, at least for old postscript fonts that came with our printers. Thanks for any help on this. -Joe Ross Physics, Texas A&M University ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 25 Jan 1994 16:17:02 -0800 (PST) From: "Mark E. Ranes" Subject: Generic Icons (Q) I know this question has been asked before. I combed every IM digest >From last year looking for any ideas that might help my problem, with no positive results. It seems like this problem has been popping up more often lately... Upon returning from MacWorld this month and before installing some new software I bought, I figured it was about time to rebuild the desktop on my Centris 610. It had been about three months since I'd last performed this operation that is recommended (to be done on a regular basis) in my Mac's manual. BIG MISTAKE! It turned all of my application icons into generic icons. I'm sure by now everyone knows all of the bad stuff that goes along with this problem, so I won't bore you. Here's what I've tried to remedy the problem. First off, I tried to rebuild the desktop again. The second time, and every subsequent time, the thermometer dialog box shows up on my screen for perhaps half a second and then disappears. I know from past experience that rebuilding the desktop can take a minute or two, so I'm assuming that the desktop is not rebuilding. I've tried shift-rebooting to turn off extensions before rebuilding with no luck. I've tried TechTool, Desktop Reset, and manually trashing the Desktop DB and Desktop DF files with no positive results. The same ultra-short thermometer dialog briefly shows and nothing happens. I've used the applications Fix Icons and Save A Bundle to manually repair individual icons and all seems well until I try to reset the desktop. Everything goes generic again! Last night in desperation, I trashed my system folder and then installed a clean system folder. No results when I try to rebuild. Grrr! It's my understanding that rebuilding the desktop is supposed to cure the problem I'm having, not cause it. I think that the fact the that the rebuilding dialog progress box shows for only a split second is significant, but I don't know what that significance is. All that I can possibly think of to do at this point is to reformat the hard drive, but I don't look forward to backing up 230 megs on floppies. Please, any help or ideas would be greatly appreciated! Mark mranes@eis.calstate.edu ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 25 Jan 1994 16:32:55 +0000 From: Stuart Borthwick Subject: HP laserjet 4ML printer I have a Macintosh which is connected to an Ethernet. I would like to connect a local printer to the LocalTalk port (an HP 4ML printer). What options are there for connecting to both EtherTalk and LocalTalk at the same time ? I'm really looking for an alternative to Apple Internet Router which seems a bit expensive both in terms of cash and memory. ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 24 Jan 94 23:52:02 PDT From: ace@tidbits.com (Adam C. Engst) Subject: Hypertext origins In Regards to your letter <199401241801.AA15548@nwnexus.wa.com>: > I have always been under the impression that hypertext was a "Mac thing". > Recently someone told me it's origins are in DOS. Anyone know which is > true? Just curious. Neither. The term was coined by Ted Nelson in the late 60s sometime, well before there were any personal computers. Read his Computer Lib/Dream Machines for more info... cheers ... -Adam -- Adam C. Engst, TidBITS Editor -- ace@tidbits.com -- info@tidbits.com Author of The Internet Starter Kit for Macintosh -- tisk@tidbits.com ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 25 Jan 94 13:27:44 EST From: up421@lfkw1.bgm.link.com (Nick Blackwell) Subject: Info-Mac CD new release [?] Hi All, Does anyone Know when the 1994 Info-Mac CD is to be released. Also where can it be ordered from and what is the price going to be ? Thanks...... nblackwell@link.com CAE-LINK Corp. Binghamton, NY __ ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 24 Jan 94 21:26:08 PST From: jbthoo@ucdavis.edu (John Thoo) Subject: Keyboard access to menus [C] > I'd like to be able to do as much as possible on my Mac using the keyboard > instead of the mouse. > [...deleted...] > what I'd really like is a general > mechanism to browse and choose menu items. Word provides something close > with the Activate Keyboard Menus command (command+tab or num key pad-.). > > Does anyone have any suggestions? Thanks. Sorry, I have no general suggestions, but I thought I'd mention that FullWrite can do this. E.g. pressing cmd-1 drops the File menu; cmd-2 drops the Edit menu; etc. Once the menus have dropped, another cmd-key combo will select a menu item. Watch out for FullwWrite 2 scheduled to be released sometime this quarter. --John. J. B. THOO, Math Dept, Univ of California, Davis ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 25 Jan 94 11:28:31 -0500 From: lonadar@judy.indstate.edu (Lonadar the Wanderer) Subject: Mac Curses Does anyone know of or where I could find code for a Mac of curses, or something similar to it? Victor E Aldridge III Lonadar the Wanderer lonadar@judy.indstate.edu ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 25 Jan 94 08:55:02 EST From: Gene Mayro Subject: Mangia! Cookbook location I found the three cookbooks (I can't recall the names) in the /info/nms directory. -Gene Mayro (geno@vm.temple.edu) ------------------------------ Date: 25 Jan 1994 14:01:38 GMT From: arinbjor@rhi.hi.is (Arinbjorn Bjornsson) Subject: medical software I am interested in getting some information about educational software that is primarily intended for medical studies. The subjects would include chemistry, organic chemistry, biochemistry, anatomy, physiology, medical physics, medical psychology, histology, medicine, pharmacology, embryology, cell biology etc. I would like to know what is available for IBM-PC & clones and Macintosh. Included in this would be tutorials, graphical teaching material and preferably software that comes on CD's. I anyone can give me information please email it to arinbjor@rhi.is or send me a mail to A. Bjornsson Storholt 27 105 Reykjavik Iceland Thanx ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 25 Jan 1994 19:16 EST From: Don't Panic! Subject: Price of PowerPC601 vs. 68040 (Q) Dear Netters, Even if this is a FAQ, I don't want to hear about it as a FAQ. Discounting all the surrounding bells and whistles of the machine, how much more is the PowerPC 601 chip than the 68040 chip? Would there be an additional cost, and if so how much, for the software to emulate the PC and Macintosh software (pre-powerpc compatible)? Is there going to be a PowerPC that has all the AV technologies, and/or is the Centris AV upgradable to a PowerPC while still maintaining its unique multimedia capabilities? Has the PowerPC 603 chip been manufactured yet, if so, how much more expensive is it than the the 601 chip? Has anyone announced an upgrade path for the LC/I II or III to the PowerPC series chips, and if so, has anyone announced some form of pricing? The reason I ask for a specific answer, is that all I hear right now is stories about how fast it will be, and how compatible it will be. I don't have time to sift through FAQs unless they have a key word index, with definitions of words that aren't in common use, and what page number to find the word where it used. Neither can I use Hypercard 2.1 stacks as I only have 2.0. Please send me e-mail a simple answer to these questions when any of them are answerable. I realize most of the prices haven't been released yet. Thank you. Sincerely, ABRODY@VAX.CLARKU.EDU ------------------------------ Date: 24 Jan 1994 17:45:59 -0800 From: joungwoo@mensa.usc.edu (Joung-woo John Kim) Subject: Prince of P II Demo problems Info-Mac@sumex-aim.stanford.edu writes: >Working off a 4/80 PB165 and an external monitor, I can't get the >Prince of Persia II demo to work... It says, during installation, that >my system setup should work (sys 7.1, QuickDraw, color, 4mb RAM) but >then when I try to run it the program asks for over 3mb of free RAM. >Well, I tried to get my System under 1 mb but that's next to impossible >-- even if I startup from the Disk Tools disk (with the small System). >Sadly, the PB won't run an older (smaller system) and PoP2 doesn't work >with virtual memory. >Any ideas? I *KNOW* it's just a game (you high-minded scoffers out there) >but the first Prince of Persia was perhaps the best game I've run across fro >for the Mac.... (not to mention, we're snowed in here in DC and are other- >wise bored!) >Thanks for any help, Christopher HOPKINS@AMERICAN.EDU The demo of the version 2 does not have several levels (was it 3 levels?) as the demo of the version 1. Demo 2 only has one level. The prince breaks out of the window and lands on a roof of a Persian building. He jumps over to other buildings' roof, while killing many guards and finally come to a pier. As he reaches the end of the pier, a sail boat starts to leave. He has to run and jump far to barely grab the edge of the boat. The demo ends here and the demo programs teases you saying something like, "Don't you know what happens after he gets on the boat?" I hope I didn't spoil your fun, but my point here is that you didn't miss much by not being able to run demo 2. John -- Joung-woo John Kim joungwoo@cs.usc.edu CS Dept.,Univ. of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA 90089-0781 ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 25 Jan 1994 00:05:12 GMT From: Sven Guckes Subject: Program to shut down with power key Jim Burmeister writes: >The AV macs (and maybe other new macs as well) are set up such that if >you press the power key while the Mac is on, you get a dialog asking if >you want to shut down, and you can then shut down the computer (or cancel). Hm, I don't think that any AV users use PwrSwitcher then? Sven :) ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 25 Jan 94 15:46:20 +0100 From: Johan S|lve Subject: QuickTime file format for Windows? How do I save a QuickTime movie so it can be viewed on a PC with QuickTime for Windows? If I remember correctly, it should be a simple trick in Movie Player, but I can't recall how it was done. Johan Solve Department of Science and Technology johan.solve@itn.hh.se Halmstad University, Sweden ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 24 Jan 1994 15:30:38 -0500 (EST) From: ericb@telecnnct.com (Eric Burger) Subject: RAMdoubler vs. OptiMem [Q] Anyone have experience with OptiMem? There's been lots of talk about RAMdoubler (Connectix), but OptiMem (Jump Development) has been out for a while now. For that matter, any further incomatibilities found with RAMdoubler? I'll summarize. -- -- Eric William Burger -- Eric.Burger@telecnnct.com -- -- The Telephone Connection -- Tel. +1 301/417-0700 -- ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 25 Jan 1994 16:30:19 -0500 (EST) From: GILBERTG@cofc.edu Subject: Request for System 6.0.7 Can someone tell me where I can get system 6.0.7 for my lowly Mac SE with 1M memory. Thanks much! ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 25 Jan 94 16:51:00 EST From: jensen@itd.nrl.navy.mil (Larry Jensen) Subject: Required Reading for Info-Macers For those of you who have bought or used your first Macintosh in the last five years, you might find reading an article in the IEEE Spectrum of Dec. 1984 titled "Design case history: Apple's Macintosh" by Fred Guterl, starting on page 34, very interesting. It "explains" why some of the Mac features are what they are. For example, why the first Macs had NO slots and how the sound generator can to have 4 voices. I do not belong to IEEE but a friend gave me a copy to read. Perhaps someone on the net is in IEEE and could request permission for IEEE to "reprint" the article by scanning it in and placing it in the Info-Mac archives for the benifit of the Info-Mac community. I'm sure many Info-Macers will not have access to the IEEE Spectrum of Dec. 1984 so the archives would be the only way they could read the article. Larry Jensen ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 25 Jan 1994 18:01:46 -0800 From: "JAMES BERGMAN" Subject: SmartScrap A Friend of mine had a old program called SmartScrap for his Mac SE that allowed a user to have multiple scrapbook files and allowed you to manipulate them. Where can I get thisprogram? Are there other programs that can do this also (Shareware/freeware)? And are they 7.X compatible? Thanks, Jim Bergman... ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 25 Jan 94 10:03:11 -0100 From: Ben Squire Subject: software Please do me a favor. I am looking for a commercial software program that can do detailed scheduling for 300 doctors for a one year period. the program should allow for each doctor to be scheduled for eight different tasks without overlap and allow for different shares of tasks to be specified for certain doctors. can you suggest a suitable program for either pc or mac compatible? I am sure that such a program exists. Please reply to btsquire@leland.stanford.edu Thank you in advance for your help. ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 25 Jan 1994 12:23:16 -0800 (PST) From: Jay Handel Subject: Special Promotion on DSP Card (Q) My friendly Apple dealer is offering a limited time promotion of the following item: "Power PDS Card for Centris/Quadra - $119.95[Canadian]". When I inquired about this device, I was informed by a salesperson that it probably should have read "PowerPC PDS Card..." and that it would let me run my Centris as a PowerPC (instead of getting a logic board swap later on). Now, I am highly skeptical of such claims, especially before the PowerPC has even been released. My questions: 1. What _is_ this card (whichever name is correct) and what capability will it give Centris/Quadro owners that they now lack. 2. Is it good value, or is there a better alternative? Respond to the Digest, since answers may also interest other readers. Merci. -- Jay Handel handel@sfu.ca ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 24 Jan 94 23:06:58 GMT From: Lloyd Wood Subject: Startupscreen on second monitor --Thankyou Chris Ursich asks: My question is.. Why doesn't Apple document these things in the manuals? How come they keep these things secrets >From everybody unless you know who to ask? Here's my next question which the manual does not mention: What is the startup key combination for zapping PRAM? I know it is P, R, and some other keys, but which? 1) They're easter eggs. Anything that isn't documented, good or bad, falls into this category. Apple's manuals appear to be aimed solely at first-time, complete-novice mac buyers; there doesn't seem to be an Apple intermediate-level list-of -hints-n-tips including things like this. 2) Command-Option-PR on startup. L. ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 25 Jan 94 09:42:48 -0700 From: gendreau@mc.maricopa.edu (Christofer Gendreau) Subject: TCP/IP on an LC Does anyone know if you can run TCP/IP based applications such as Mosaic and/or Fetch on an LC using Apple Talk? Obviously we can't get an ethernet card into the LC. I see that MAC/TCP gives the selection of local talk on the LC rather than the ethertalk selction on other Mac's with an ethernet card. Thanks in advance..... Christofer......gendreau@mc.maricopa.edu ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 25 Jan 94 14:51:42 +0100 From: "Fabrizio Oddone" Subject: Unattended shutdown > Is it possible to have a small INIT to shutdown > unattended, and at a certain time of the day, a Mac Plus > (on system 7.1 and 4 Meg RAM) without using QuicKeys > which takes a considerable amount of useful RAM? I have > used QuicKeys just for this "simple" action giving up > other useful INITs and Extensions. You might also use the DarkSide 4.1 screensaver with my DarkShutdown module. (DarkSide 4.1 requires System 7.0 or later) Since DarkSide is an application, you surely get no INIT conflicts, and you can regain its memory without restarting by simply quitting DarkSide. DarkShutdown is a Darkside 4.1 module which will restart/shut down your Mac besides darkening the screens after the given time has elapsed. The Finder or At Ease must be running, because I restart/shut down by telling them to do it (with Apple Events), so that all open applications are closed correctly. There is even an option for responding automatically to the "Do you want to save..." dialog boxes, useful if the Mac is unattended. It is able to work in conjunction with Alessandro Levi Montalcini's Shutdown Delay 2.0.1. DarkShutdown lets you restart/shut down: - at a specified time; - once a specified period of time has elapsed after the Mac starts up; - once a specified period of time has elapsed after the screen saver engages. DarkShutdown fades the screen and shows the countdown. DarkShutdown speaks the countdown (ten-nine-eight-seven...) then speaks "restart/shutdown" if the Speech Manager is installed. Both DarkSide 4.1 and DarkShutdown 2.1 are available on the sumex and umich archives, maybe elsewhere, too. -- Fabrizio Oddone ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 25 Jan 94 12:15:46 EST From: stngiam@MIT.EDU Subject: VT102 tool I've been trying Termy and Communicate lite, which use the communications toolbox tools, and while I like the concept of tools, I must say that I couldn't find a way to increase the number of rows displayed. Is it possible to display more than 24 rows on screen using the VT102 tool? Are there any other free/shareware VT100 tools that will allow me to do so? Shih Tung Chem E Best l'il Tech School on the Charles ------------------------------ Date: 25 Jan 1994 17:45:38 +1100 From: keithm@uow.edu.au (Keith Marshall) Subject: Wanted: a single A3 ribbon for a QMS ColorScript 100 30i printer I need a single A3 ribbon for a QMS ColorScript 100 30i printer (I'm too poor to buy a new set). I'm starting up a small printing business and a single ribbon will enable me to get started. I'm happy to pay for postage to Australia as there aren't many QMS ColorScripts here. My email address is keithm@wampyr.cc.uow.edu.au ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 25 Jan 94 18:36:19 -0500 From: gt5052b@prism.gatech.edu ANNOUNCING..... T H E F I G G L E S U T I L I T I E S Is your Newton all that it can be? Are you missing out on the best (or nearly best or, perhaps, merely good) utility applets out there? The Figgles Utilities may be the answer to your Newton prayers. These utilities help you enter, edit and manipulate data on your Newt, access your Extras Applets, monitor and massage the Newt memory stores and perform dozens of other tasks which make your Newt a lizard of another color. The Figgles Utilities are Shareware. To register this program before 3/1/94, please send $20.00 (after 3/1/94, the fee is $25.00) by check to ERICA SADUN 112 Hampshire Court Avondale Estates, GA 30002 attn: Figgles Utilities PLEASE PLEASE PLEASE take the time to register your copy in good faith. Be sure to send your name, contact information (address, phone, fax, email), platform information and any comments or suggestions for this or future products. What are the Figgles Utilities? * Keyboard PRO, formerly the immensely popular freeware "Keyboard", is an application for the Newton* which not only dices, slices and julian fries but gives you immediate access to multiple convenient built-in or custom keyboards. With Keyboard PRO you can * Define your own keyboards and macros * Paste notes from your folders into any application * Call any Applet from your Extras Drawer at any time -- even from other applications. * Edit your text using cursor movement keys, "select all" and direct access to the Styles slip * Organize your thoughts using "Superbullets" * Clean up your Newt's memory by straining the system "soups" or doing a "Garbage Collection" and much, much more! * Typomatica lets you type into any Newt field from any computer with a serial port. Just hook up with a null modem cable, your favorite communications software and go! Perfect for entering notes, names, appointments and to do lists before you hit the road. Typomatica alone is easily worth the shareware price! (Don't forget to listen for the "all clear" beep before making another serial connection) * KeyQUICK gives you instant access to Keyboard Pro from any application. Just turn it on to activate the "KeyQUICK Dot" in the upper left hand corner of the Newt. * KeyMAKER lets you build custom Macros for Keyboard Pro, install prebuilt keyboards and remove unwanted prebuilt, custom or third party keyboards from the Newt's stores. A tap on the KEYS icon previews nine useful prebuilt keyboards. * Third Party Keyboard Access provides sample code for creating third party keyboards for Keyboard Pro. Create a set of keys, macros or common words for your own application and have them accessible through Keyboard Pro. With the developer toolkit, you can customize this code for your own keyboard installation programs. You might notice that a version of this code is being used already in KeyMAKER. * TikTok is a teenyweeny clock that takes up almost no screen space but is suprisingly convenient for keeping track of the hours. Monitor lets you keep track of time, temperature, memory usage and battery levels. * 24 is a fun (and non-trivial) brain teaser game which challenges you to add, subtract, divide and multiply four numbers to come up with a total of twenty-four. Every puzzle has an answer--but try not to give up too quickly. Lots of these puzzles are very tricky. There are several thousand puzzles--don't be put off by the 6+6+6+6 puzzle which appears everytime you open the game. Games are chosen randomly. ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS The Figgles Utilities would not be possible without the wonderful feedback of my beta-testers. A big big big Thank You to all you guys. Thanks especially to JESSE DEVINE who iconfied me in the best way possible, to JOHN SPEAR who gave detail a pedestal and to the inspirational help of DAVID DUNHAM. More thanks to Igor Livshits, Bob Cunningham, Rob Bruce, Jon Conradt, Chris Hanson, John Zaharychuk, Larry Slack, John Martellaro, Mark "NANUG" Underwood and David E. Frank. And super special thanks to KENT SANDVIK, MIKE ENGBER and WALTER SMITH whose Llamas whoop in particularly fine ways. ------------------------------ End of Info-Mac Digest ******************************