Date: Mon, 7 Feb 94 15:59:17 PST From: The Info-Mac Moderators Reply-To: Info-Mac@sumex-aim.stanford.edu Subject: Info-Mac Digest V12 #20 To: info-mac-list Info-Mac Digest Mon, 7 Feb 94 Volume 12 : Issue 20 Today's Topics: [*] 1993 Canadian tax forms (3 msgs) [*] 1993 tax form for New Brunswick [*] Aurora 3.0 [*] AutoBin 1.0 [*] ColorKey 4.0 [*] Comp-Sys-Mac-Comm FAQ (/info-mac/comm/info/csm-communications-faq.txt) [*] Flight Commander v1.1 Updater [*] Inside Mac Games, January '94 Free Preview Edition [*] Jewish Calendar, v 2.0 [*] Kai Sounds [*] LaserWriter 8.1.1 Patch v1.1 [*] my pot archive [*] New Version SchoolStat 1.0.8 [*] Open-wide 3.5.6 [*] PlainText >32K text editor (version 1.2.1) [*] PlainText source + improved TE32K [*] Re: AppleScript Scripting Extension Library [*] SCSI_Case1.1.txt [*] sound/midi - [MIDI Pack'en 1.0.2 - part 1 of 2] [*] sound/midi - [SendIt 1.0.2] [*] Submission: Factory Demo [*] SUMMARY: RAMdoubler vs. OptiMem [S] [*] Tar 4.0b [*] Tar 4.0b Source [*] update [*] VirtualDisk [*] Zedfont.sea.hqx (A) system boot logger (Q) Chemical Drawing Software (2 msgs) (Q) GIS Systems for the Mac? 128 Mac - Did you buy one? 1993 Canadian Tax forms 1993 tax form for BC file naming Al Bloom - Unchained America Online's problems Apple's opportunity? Apple 12" B&W monitor (A) Apple LaserWriter 8 lpd & lpr needed (Q) AppleScript support in apps (2 msgs) Autodoubler (R) AutoDoubler Flame Axion Serial Splitter: Not bad! Backup software recommendations Bad Sectors on Floppies Bold Symbols (A) Cron 1.0d13 submission Early Macs ethernet for Quadra 610 and MacIIcx (A) FDHD Replacement for MacIIfx Folder From Hell Government in your face and in your hard drive GPS software for PowerBook 180c Help: Trying to find publication... Help with Info. Home Internet Connections HP FTP site for drivers HyperCard 2.2 facts Info-Mac Digest V12 #19 Info re: Fetch (2 msgs) Internet in Europe InterSLIP and Fetch Looking for text processor... (A) MacSLIP on a network (Q) Mac utility for decompressing .ARC files (A) (2 msgs) MacX and the Meta key---a puzzle MaxFax and LineLink modem (A) Need Animaniac Icons! Need something scanned, HELP! New Mice Sticking New PICT into TText file? (2 msgs) Plot/Graph programs (2 msgs) Postscript error PowerBook ADB (Q) PPC FAQ List? Printing from a TCP/IP network to a LocalTalk Laserwriter (Q) Printing to line printer... PS to MS Word converter (Q) Puny Floppy Drive Capacity RamDisk (Q) RAMdoubler upgrade? Reading 128k Mac formatted disks on LC (Q) Re Nutritional Software Request replacing Chicago as system font (Q) SE HD doesn't mount... Slide makers and software SmartScrap (R) System Boot Logger (A) TIFF's, PCX, and EPS from PC to MAC (Q) Trouble with Apple HD Wanted: Tone dialer wanted [A] 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: Thu, 3 Feb 94 10:13:48 EST From: Robert Szarek Subject: [*] 1993 Canadian tax forms This is the 1993 Canadian tax forms for Prince Edward Island. Also the author has given permission to include these templates on the next Info-Mac archive CD. The author can be reached at (613) 237-4899 or an655@freenet.carleton.ca. [Archived as /info-mac/app/tax-forms-93-ca-pei-excel.hqx; 174K] ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 3 Feb 94 10:10:25 EST From: Robert Szarek Subject: [*] 1993 Canadian tax forms This is the 1993 Canadian tax forms for Saskatchewan [Archived as /info-mac/app/tax-forms-93-ca-sk-excel.hqx; 177K] ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 3 Feb 94 10:08:30 EST From: Robert Szarek Subject: [*] 1993 Canadian tax forms This is the 1993 Canadian tax form for Newfoundland. [Archived as /info-mac/app/tax-forms-93-ca-nf-excel.hqx; 177K] ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 3 Feb 94 10:06:35 EST From: Robert Szarek Subject: [*] 1993 tax form for New Brunswick The continuing tax saga: This is the 1993 Canadian tax forms for New Brunswick. [Archived as /info-mac/app/tax-forms-93-ca-nb-excel.hqx; 174K] ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 4 Feb 1994 18:41:14 -0600 From: mpinkert@sdcc8.UCSD.EDU (Mike Pinkerton) Subject: [*] Aurora 3.0 Aurora is a cdev (Control Panel device) that sits in your System Folder. With it, you have full control over the colors used to draw your windows, buttons, scroll bars, and menus. Ever wanted a mauve menu bar? No problem! Ever wanted puce scroll bars? Now's your chance! It's also very easy to do - as simple as choosing colors from the standard Apple color wheel - and you're off to colorizing (and personalizing!) your desktop. [Archived as /info-mac/gui/aurora-30.hqx; 31K] ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 3 Feb 1994 17:04:37 -0800 From: mxmora@unix.sri.com (Matthew Xavier Mora) Subject: [*] AutoBin 1.0 Enclosed is AutoBin 1.0. A drag and drop binhexer. I tried posting this earlier but I think it bounced. I will be sending the source in another message. Xavier [Archived as /info-mac/cmp/auto-bin-10.hqx; 24K] ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 4 Feb 1994 18:42:33 -0600 From: mpinkert@sdcc8.UCSD.EDU (Mike Pinkerton) Subject: [*] ColorKey 4.0 ColorKey is a combination of a system extension and a control panel that, when you hold down ***COMMAND*** and ***OPTION*** while you click the mouse, will cycle through the screen depths you select (black and white, 4 color, 16 colors, 256 colors, etc.). [Archived as /info-mac/gui/color-key-40.hqx; 23K] ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 2 Feb 1994 13:01:18 EST From: davido@phoenix.Princeton.EDU (David Lawrence Oppenheimer) Subject: [*] Comp-Sys-Mac-Comm FAQ (/info-mac/comm/info/csm-communications-faq.txt) 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. [Archived as /info-mac/comm/info/csm-communications-faq.txt; 126K] ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 4 Feb 1994 13:12:36 +0500 From: cem@cs.brown.edu Subject: [*] Flight Commander v1.1 Updater This program is a utility that will convert an existing copy of Flight Commander v1.0 into v1.1. This adds some new features and fixes several bugs. A new battle scenario is included as well. It is compacted with Compact Pro. [Archived as /info-mac/game/com/flight-commander-10-to-11-updt.hqx; 217K] ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 3 Feb 1994 08:34:30 -0800 (PST) From: Brian Thomas Subject: [*] Inside Mac Games, January '94 Free Preview Edition Inside Mac Games is a complete color electronic magazine with news, reviews, commentaries, interviews and many other features. This month's Free Preview Edition features an exclusive sneak preview of Alone in the Dark, an interview with Rand and Robin Miller (MYST authors), reviews of SimCity 2000, Crystal Caliburn, The Incredible Machine, and Dark See, a ton of new product announcements, the IMG game poll, the latest and games release list and much, much more. The magazine will work on any Mac and needs no other software to be viewed. Complete information about subscriptions is included in this free preview edition. [Archived as /info-mac/per/inside-mac-games-94-01.hqx; 782K] ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 14 Apr 93 14:21:17 PDT From: fy@lucid.com (Frank Yellin) Subject: [*] Jewish Calendar, v 2.0 This is version 2.0 of Frank Yellin's online Jewish Calendar program. Main additions include printing ability, an option to display the Torah portion of the week, and an option to switch between holiday schedules for Israel and the Diaspora (i.e. whether or not to include the extra day in the Galut). Totally free, and only 27K uncompressed! Downloaded from the Jerusalem One server (jerusalem1.datasrv.co.il). This should replace the previous version archived on sumex. Source code available on jerusalem1. Live long and prosper, Jan M.L. Martin --- martin@luc.ac.be [Archived as /info-mac/app/jewish-calendar-20.hqx; 34K] ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 04 Feb 1994 09:30:46 EST From: JOSHUA GOLUB 708-304-7573 Subject: [*] Kai Sounds enclosed is a folder of sounds entitled "kai sounds". kai (last name withheld) is a macintosh programmer, and this folder contains various sounds that he mutters when he is programming and debugging. anyone who has ever chased a bug will enjoy these sounds. if you would like to know the true identity of kai, you could send a polite email inquiry to: joshua golub golub@sgi.siemens.com [Archived as /info-mac/snd/kai.hqx; 688K] ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 4 Feb 1994 15:59:06 -0600 (CST) From: Neil Eric Mickelson Subject: [*] LaserWriter 8.1.1 Patch v1.1 Greetings, all! This is version 1.1 of my LaserWriter 8.1 Patch utility, and should replace version 1.0 in the archives. Thanks for everyone who has tried the patch, especially those who have reported problems. Version 1.1 should fix any reported problems; it works flawlessly my my IIvx (5/80/CD) with a whole load of extensions, etc., loading up at boot time. I have specifically tested to make sure the you can print another document while PrintMonitor is spooling one in the background; this had been a problem for some people. I didn't even have to tweak PrintMonitor's memory allocation. This folder has been compacted with Compact Pro, and BixHex'd with Stuffit Lite v3.0.7's translations. As always, please report any problems to me via e-mail. Documentation is included. Thanks a lot, and good luck! Neil E. Mickelson n-mickelson@uiuc.edu [Archived as /info-mac/prn/laserwriter-811-patch-11.hqx; 37K] ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 03 Feb 1994 18:20:23 CST From: pjb2142a@PANAM1.PANAM.EDU Subject: [*] my pot archive I sent you guys a copy of this newer archive to correct my email address and add a couple more sounds, because guys still keep sending email 2 my friends account, and he is kinda unhappy about it, so please post this newer archive over the old one, and title it "pot-v2.hqx," so my buddy doesn't keep getting my junk mail from all these potheads. Thank you your time and consideration, and for posting my first archive, etc., etc., etc. -Peter J.Bartoli [Archived as /info-mac/snd/pot-2.hqx; 422K] ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 2 Feb 1994 16:22:43 -0600 From: David Darby Subject: [*] New Version SchoolStat 1.0.8 SchoolStat 1.0.8 Updates the popular shareware statistics application intended primarily for late school and introductory college level statistics. This update adds the ability to save one's preferences, adds Kruskal Wallis tables and fixes several annoying bugs. THe next release will be an upgrade with more advanced statistical modules. Yours sincerely David Darby (author) [Archived as /info-mac/sci/school-stat-108.hqx; 791K] ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 4 Feb 1994 10:23:09 -0500 (EST) From: Jim Walker Subject: [*] Open-wide 3.5.6 Open-wide is a control panel extension (INIT/cdev) that widens directory dialogs (Open... and Save... dialogs), the better to see long file names. It can also stretch these dialogs vertically, so you can see more file names. Online documentation included. Postcard-ware. This update fixes minor compatibility problems with PageMaker and OtherMenu. System 6.0.4 or later is required; compatible with System 7. This is a StuffIt 3.0 archive. -- Jim Walker [Archived as /info-mac/gui/open-wide-356.hqx; 37K] ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 03 Feb 1994 17:46:51 -0600 (CST) From: MPARK@UTMEM1.UTMEM.EDU Subject: [*] PlainText >32K text editor (version 1.2.1) PlainText is a Public Domain text editor with automatic word wrap that you can use for files of all sizes. It has no 32K limit. PlainText incorporates a set of features that I have found useful during years of using several commercial and share-ware editors: Word wrap, better than standard search and replace, bookmarks, and more. You can use it to insert or remove hard carriage returns, convert between Unix, MS/DOS, and Mac end-of-line conventions, convert between straight and curly quotes, etc. Granted, the big, full-featured editors, like Pete Keleher's Alpha and BBEdit, by Rich Siegel, have these features, plus many more. PlainText incorporates a subset in a small, simple, and fast editor. PlainText even incorporates a few operating system commands in a command-line interface. PlainText requires System 6.0.5 or greater and is System 7 saavy. This is version 1.2.1 and is the first non-beta public release. It replaces version 0.3 which has been archived at various sites as plaintext0.3.cpt.hqx, plaintext-editor-for-files.hqx, plain-text.hqx, and plain-text.hqx.Z. Mel Park University of Tennessee, Memphis mpark@nb.utmem.edu mpark@utmem1.utmem.edu [Archived as /info-mac/text/plain-text-121.hqx; 106K] ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 03 Feb 1994 18:44:01 -0600 (CST) From: MPARK@UTMEM1.UTMEM.EDU Subject: [*] PlainText source + improved TE32K Here is the complete source for PlainText, a Public Domain text editor. PlainText is a pure C implementation of ideas contained in the object class library published in "Elements of C++ Macintosh Programming" by Dan Weston. For many applications, implementing objects in C is a path to elegant programming that avoids the lengthy compile times of some C++ environments. The text engine is modified from TE32K by Roy Wood and with contributions from Patrick C. Beard, Lee A. Fyoc, Dave Platt, and Teddy Slottow. In fact, the TE32K source files contained here can be used as a substitute for TextEdit in any application needing to handle files larger than 32K. Consult the documentation contained in the original TE32K package archived on Info-Mac and elsewhere. I have extensively modified TE32K in order to provide full arrow key support, undo, MPW-like selection hiliting, support for double and triple clicking, and more. Mel Park University of Tennessee, Memphis mpark@nb.utmem.edu mpark@utmem1.utmem.edu [Archived as /info-mac/dev/src/plain-text-121-c.hqx; 158K] ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 3 Feb 1994 03:28:55 -0500 From: gtq1@cornell.edu (Greg Quinn) Subject: [*] Re: AppleScript Scripting Extension Library Here is the next release of my library: GTQ Scripting Library. It now contains 41 extensions including PowerTalk support. Greg Quinn D3297 gtq1@cornell.edu Greg Quinn AppleLink:D3297 Internet:gtq1@Cornell.edu [Archived as /info-mac/dev/src/gtq-scripting-lib-10-as.hqx; 202K] ------------------------------ Date: 3 Feb 1994 15:35:54 -0600 From: "Glockzin Donald" Subject: [*] SCSI_Case1.1.txt This is a text file that describes how to build a case to hold multiple internal SCSI devices using a PC case. The cost is around $100 (US) and can hold 4 or more devices. The text file gives possible part numbers and hopefully answers possible questions from the average user. My system has been working for >3 months without any problems. If interested, read it. Flames accepted, but you should at least read it first. I am the author. THANKS -- DG Donald Glockzin Lead Engineer Motorola - CIG glockzin_donald@macmail1.ftw.rtsg.mot.com [Archived as /info-mac/info/hdwr/scsi-case-11.txt; 17K] ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 3 Feb 1994 10:00:27 +0900 From: setsu@lab2.yamaha.co.jp (Takashi Suzuki) Subject: [*] sound/midi - [MIDI Pack'en 1.0.2 - part 1 of 2] MIDI Pack'en is an application for the Macintosh which allows you to keep system exclusive data in files. (So called MIDI Data Filer.) When this application receives system exclusive data, a new window'll tell you the datasize and manufacturer. MIDI Pack'en can handle any kind of system exclusive data. Apple Script recordable. This application requires : System7 + QuickTime + Apple MIDI Manager or System7.1 + Apple MIDI Manager Shareware Takashi Suzuki [Archived as /info-mac/snd/util/midi-packen-102.hqx; 66K] ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 3 Feb 1994 10:05:12 +0900 From: setsu@lab2.yamaha.co.jp (Takashi Suzuki) Subject: [*] sound/midi - [SendIt 1.0.2] SendIt is Drag & Drop application for the Macintosh which allows you to send patch data edited/recorded by "DX7 Librarian", "JUNO Librarian" or "MIDI Pack'en". Apple Script recordable. This application requires : System7 or later + Apple MIDI Manager Freeware. Takashi Suzuki [Archived as /info-mac/snd/util/send-it-102.hqx; 20K] ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 3 Feb 1994 23:12:58 -0800 (PST) From: Patrick John Calahan Subject: [*] Submission: Factory Demo Factory Demo A playable demo of a new Macintosh game from Softstream International. You must assemble various consumer products from components moving along conveyor belts. Entertaining and addictive. [Archived as /info-mac/game/com/factory-demo.hqx; 274K] ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 3 Feb 1994 19:11:41 -0500 (EST) From: ericb@telecnnct.com (Eric Burger) Subject: [*] SUMMARY: RAMdoubler vs. OptiMem [S] Original Post: 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? The summary: [Archived as /info-mac/info/sft/optimem-v-ramdoubler.txt; 7K] ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 3 Feb 94 08:42:06 -0700 From: cruff@niwot.scd.ucar.EDU (Craig Ruff) Subject: [*] Tar 4.0b This is tar for the Macintosh version 4.0b. It contains rudimentary support for SCSI tape drives and some other fixes (see included manual). I am no longer going to make changes or enhancements to tar. Feel free to take the source (in a separate file) and modify to suit your needs. Craig Ruff (cruff@ncar.ucar.edu) [Archived as /info-mac/cmp/tar-40b.hqx; 40K] ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 3 Feb 94 08:42:27 -0700 From: cruff@niwot.scd.ucar.EDU (Craig Ruff) Subject: [*] Tar 4.0b Source This is the source for tar for the Macintosh version 4.0b. It contains rudimentary support for SCSI tape drives and some other fixes (see manual in the separate executable file). I am no longer going to make changes or enhancements to tar. Feel free to take the source and modify to suit your needs. Craig Ruff (cruff@ncar.ucar.edu) [Archived as /info-mac/dev/src/tar-40b-c.hqx; 58K] ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 3 Feb 94 9:51:13 MST From: simon@mmpe.mineral.ualberta.ca (Simon Tortike) Subject: [*] update DigiGraf is an application for digitizing graphical information on an Apple Macintosh computer. Simon Tortike, Ph.D., P.Eng. | tel : 403/492-3338 Assoc. Prof. of Petroleum Engg. | fax : 403/492-3409 Dept of Min-Met-Pet Engg., | University of Alberta, | Internet: simon@mmpe.mineral.ualberta.ca Edmonton, AB, CANADA T6G 2G6. | [Archived as /info-mac/grf/util/digi-graf-144.hqx; 111K] ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 4 Feb 1994 17:28:09 -0600 From: scottk@strl.labs.tek.com Subject: [*] VirtualDisk Know where EVERY FILE is ON EVERY DISK you own with NO EFFORT on your part! VirtualDisk=81 is a totally new way of keeping track of files on your removable media - floppies, SyQuest, M/O, CD's, network, etc. You never run a program to catalog or retrieve files. Disks are cataloged whenever the disk is removed. The catalog is a Macintosh volume that mounts on your desktop and is accessed with the Finder, Find File... or even Get =46ile dialogs from within applications. Each file cataloged has all the capabilities of a System 7 alias but does not take the disk space of normal aliases. The catalog is complete Macintosh file system, so the files are displayed as icons within folders that looks exactly like the original disk. You may use any of the view modes from Finder. This program REQUIRES System 7. This is a demo version of a commercial product. The demo will let you catalog up to 10,000 files for a 4 week evaluation time. Purchasing a copy of the program will allow you to continue the catalog and expand it up to 250,000 items. =46rom Continuum Software Inc. [Archived as /info-mac/disk/virtual-disk-11a-demo.hqx; 67K] ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 03 Feb 94 19:30:33 +0000 From: rej@ukc.ac.uk Subject: [*] Zedfont.sea.hqx Zed, A TYPE 1 FONT FOR THE Z SPECIFICATION LANGUAGE DESCRIPTION 'Zed' is a font for the Z specification language that can be used on Apple Macintoshes and under Windows. This release includes a PostScript Type 1 font, compatible with Adobe Type Manager, a TrueType font and, for the Macintosh only, bitmapped fonts in 10, 12 and 24 point sizes. CHANGES FROM EARLIER VERSION This version replaces the font 'Z'. Substantial changes have been made, and the two fonts are not key compatible, hence the change of name. These changes are described below. To preserve existing documents, do not discard the old 'Z' font. + Zed supports the Z Base Standard, Version 1.0. It includes all characters in the standard and those in the Spivey book (the old Z font was based on Hayes' book). Other characters have also been added, for example many different types of semantic brackets. + Zed includes characters for drawing schema borders (aside: these look much better on paper than on screen). + Zed is no longer a composite of the Symbol font: users will have to use Symbol explicitly to get, say, greek letters. This change has several advantages: - More characters are available. - Characters are no longer hidden in obscure places requiring multiple keystrokes. - Wherever possible, similar characters have been placed adjacently (at least on the Macintosh). - Some of the more common characters have been placed in more memorable positions, e.g. "for all" is at A, "there exists" is at E, ... + Zed includes Type 1 and Truetype fonts for use with Adobe Type Manager on the Macintosh or under Windows (Z was a Type 3 font). + Zed uses a 'blackboard' font for operators like the powerset symbol P, whereas Z used a serif P. Ditto for Z, F, N, R and Q. The reason for this change is conformance with general practice rather than aesthetics. [Archived as /info-mac/font/zed.hqx; 114K] ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 04 Feb 1994 07:51:00 -0500 (EST) From: Bob Beason Subject: (A) system boot logger Gatekeeper will log system startup and shutdown times automatically. The only potential problem in a public lab is that someone who knows about the program can clear the log file. Bob Beason beason@uno.cc.genese.edu ------------------------------ Date: 04 Feb 1994 15:25:17 +0100 (MET) From: EICKHOFF@dornier.de Subject: (Q) Chemical Drawing Software Hello, I am searching for a PD or shareware program for drawing chemical molecules etc. Can anyone recommend special tools? Thanks Jens Eickhoff (eickhoff@dornier.de) ------------------------------ Date: 04 Feb 1994 15:25:17 +0100 (MET) From: EICKHOFF@dornier.de Subject: (Q) Chemical Drawing Software Hello, I am searching for a PD or shareware program for drawing chemical molecules etc. Can anyone recommend special tools? Thanks Jens Eickhoff (eickhoff@dornier.de) ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 3 Feb 1994 15:34:36 -0700 (MST) From: Shannon V Spires Subject: (Q) GIS Systems for the Mac? Anybody know of any GIS (Geographical Information Systems) for the Mac? If so, which are generally considered "good", and which, if any, can read ArcInfo files? Thanks for your help, Shannon Spires svspire@sandia.gov ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 4 Feb 1994 17:42:50 GMT From: n8145397@henson.cc.wwu.edu (Mark A Murgittroyd) Subject: 128 Mac - Did you buy one? I remember paying about $1700 for the Mac 128 with an Imagewriter. This was through an educational institution with their "special" prices. I did the 512K upgrade myself some years later. That cost $2-300 and hey, it quadrupled your memory. I remember being thrilled 'cus I could copy a 400K floppy iwth only one or twon disk exchanges, as apposed to the 8-9 before! My, how spoiled we get. I didn't even have a hard drive then, and know I can't live with less than 500MB hard drive space and 8megs! Who here remembers "recording" programs on cassette tape with the old Atari sysems....talk about painful! Mark ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 3 Feb 1994 15:45:15 -0800 From: jamiel@sybase.com (Jamie Lawrence) Subject: 1993 Canadian Tax forms >Date: Wed, 2 Feb 94 9:27:46 EST >From: Robert Szarek >Subject: [*] 1993 Canadian Tax forms >Icicle Computer has released it's 1993 shareware tax templates that can >be used with Microsoft Excel version 3 and higher. The forms includes >the following schedules and are Revenue Canada approved. Does anyone know of corresponding US ones? I was thinking about doing this, but if it is already ou there, don't want to bother. jamie ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 4 Feb 94 22:59:43 EST From: Robert Szarek Subject: 1993 tax form for BC file naming Dear moderator; It has come to my attention that the file: [Archived as /info-mac/app/tax-forms-93-ca-excel.hqx; 180K] has been saved as a "general" form for Canada. This is not true. The file should named as: /info-mac/app/tax-forms-93-ca-bc-excel.hqx since this file constains the tax forms for the province of British Columbia. I am sorry if I failed to provide you enough information to correctly label the file. Thank you for your time. -- Robert Szarek Land Software Engineering Center szarek@lsec.lete.dnd.ca "If you can make it, then we can break it." ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 4 Feb 1994 13:13:58 -0500 From: baim@harpo.aaec.com Subject: Al Bloom - Unchained Our beloved Al Bloom let fly at poor Daniel C. Clark in IM V12#19 who wrote in regarding his misery over the small capacity of your average floppy when faced with loading an application from the original floppies on a one-floppy Mac. He wondered "aloud" why larger capacity floppies aren't catching on faster. I wonder the same thing. Unfortunately, Al saw fit to lambast this guy in a fashion I cannot believe. The gem of the piece was: >why bother us with your complaints and/or wish lists? A sentiment expressed by the same beloved Al Bloom who regales us with frequent detailed (read: long winded) accounts of his own Mac adventures sprinkled with colorful reflections on a broad range of topics, as well as those of his wife, friends, and neighbors, whether we want them or not. In fact, he tells us about his wife's auto mechanic in the very same issue! I don't know if Al was having an off day, or his ego has inflated until his brain floated away, but I would like to remind everyone that Info-Mac works because of the sense of "community" that persists here. Intolerance and personal abuse are unacceptable. I'm sorry Dan Clark, and anyone else who hesitates to write in, if you are kept from future participation here by this type of behavior. You are welcome here, just like Al is. Paul Baim ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 04 Feb 94 08:23:51 PST From: Paul Brians Subject: America Online's problems Apple's opportunity? Yesterday I heard on National Public Radio's All Things Considered a report saying that America Online has been so successful in attracting new customers eager to get connected to the Internet via a friendly interface that it has gotten hopelessly clogged up (hard to log on). It struck me that this is a perfect window of opportunity for Apple's forthcoming EWorld service, similarly friendly--if only they've arranged for sufficient capacity. However, I was a tad troubled by the brief version of the MacWeek article on EWorld that I read on ZiffNet last weekend (I don't get the paper copy). It mentions "Internet mail" as its only Internet service. No mention of FTP, GOPHER, USENET news (which the press consistently confuses with the Internet) Telnet, etc. Does anybody have any more information, ideas, reactions? Paul Brians, Washington State University, Pullman, WA 99164-5020 ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 4 Feb 1994 10:04:54 -0800 From: kee@kagi.com (Kee Nethery +1 510 843 6140) Subject: Apple 12" B&W monitor (A) >At the University Hospitals of Leuven, Belgium, we're having a lot >of trouble with the Apple 12" B&W monitors. We have an unusual high >number of break-downs. In total we have 97 B&W monitors, 20 of which have >failed over the past year. Most of the failed monitors needed a motherboard >replacement. You wouldn't by chance have some huge electrical machines in your hospital that cycle on and off and cause huge voltage spikes? Maybe some X-Ray machines, MRI, CAT-scan, whatever? I think the operative words are "unusual high number of break-downs". Have you considered getting isolation transformers? How about something that monitors line voltage accurately enough to record voltage spikes? If it is high voltage, and the monitors will run on 120 VAC (US voltages), you might want to get transformers to pop the voltage down to 120 so that any killer spikes will be halved. Just suggestions, hey, maybe you got a bad batch of monitors. Kee Nethery ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 4 Feb 1994 00:58:18 -0500 From: bobb@vt.edu (Bob Beaton) Subject: Apple LaserWriter 8 lpd & lpr needed (Q) Hello MacWorld -- Does anyone know of a Macintosh version of the unix Line Printer Daemon (lpd) and Client (lpr) programs that work with the LaserWriter 8 drivers? I've tried Casper Boon's lpDaemon (v3.3.2), but it doesn't seem to work with the new laserwriter drivers. If someone could tell me Casper's e-mail address, I'll ask if an update is planned. Please reply to bobb@vt.edu Thank you very much, Bob Beaton Virginia Tech ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 4 Feb 1994 07:01:21 -0800 From: malldrit@sfu.ca Subject: AppleScript support in apps Hi, The simplest way to find out if an application is scriptable is to open the application's dictionary using the Script Editor. This will give you a list of the events and objects provided by the application. If the Script Editor does not allow you to open the application's dictionary it means the app. does not have a dictionary and is not scriptable. Determining recordability (what a word?) is a trial and error process, unless the application's documentation tells you. -Mark ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 4 Feb 1994 18:02:41 GMT From: isis@netcom.com (Mike Cohen) Subject: AppleScript support in apps Info-Mac@sumex-aim.stanford.edu writes: >Is there an easy way to tell if an app is supported by AppleScript and to >what extent - recordable, scriptable, etc? ResEdit and other methods >welcome. >Thanks >PETER CHANE >PCHANEUW@macc.wisc.edu >PCHANE@applelink.apple.com >University of Wisconsin-Madison, Home of the 1994 Rose Bowl Champions. The easiest way (although this won't tell you if its recordable) is to use the "Open Dictionary" command in Script Editor and select that application. -- Mike Cohen - isis@netcom.com NewtonMail: MikeC49506 / ALink: D6734 / AOL: MikeC20 ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 04 Feb 1994 09:50:46 -0600 From: "Michael L. Ayler" Subject: Autodoubler (R) Just a note of information about Autodoubler for ABRODY@VAX.CLARKU.EDU. While I am pleased with Autodoubler's performance, I had to remove it. It seems something happend when I launched an application from a network folder--it took FOREVER to launch. HyperCard required at least three minutes (a guess), other apps required long waits as well. Even with Autodubler turned off the wait continued. Only when I removed the CP and rebooted did normal launch times return. And NO, the remote apps were not compressed. I suppose there may be a simple explanation, but it eludes me at the moment. Michael L. Ayler Texas Christian University User Services Consultant Fort Worth, Texas ayler@gamma.is.tcu.edu (817) 921-7695 ext. 6851 ------------------------------ Date: 5 Feb 1994 07:24:23 GMT From: srjg7930@uxa.cso.uiuc.edu (johnson r scott) Subject: AutoDoubler Flame Info-Mac@sumex-aim.stanford.edu writes: >I have used AutoDoubler on the following Macs >Mac Plus running System 6.07 with lots of init >Radius 16 accel Mac SE running System 7.0 with lots of extensions >Performa 475 running System running System 7.1P3 with lots of ext. >Quadra 610 running System 7.1 with lots of ext. >I have found AD 2.03 to work flawlessly. The only corruptions I experienced >was caused by a failing hard disk. Performance was based on configured AD >Cache. >I recommend AD and DiskDoubler to everyone I know who needs this capability. I'm not sure if I'd recommend them. I've had backups of files that were corrupted to the point that the file recovery programs that are included with auto/disk doubler couldn't recover them. Those files were on floppies. I've also had programs which were already compressed with DiskDoubler B, which were then "further" compressed when I started using AutoDoubler resulting in the file being corrupted and unusable. I am very pissed about this since a couple of those file were backups of items that I have no way of replacing. S. Johnson ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 5 Feb 1994 11:50:59 +0000 From: Francis Knight Subject: Axion Serial Splitter: Not bad! Thanks to those folks who wrote with their experiences on the Axion Serial Splitter. Traffic has died down now, so here's a short summary. A couple of folks noted that the product had matured from non-functioning with their set-ups, to pretty smooth and transparent. In this process, Axion technical support was demonstrated to be umm... supportive. The remaining wrinkle seems to be an occasional reluctance to select a port on first request, (even it is the port set as the default using the control panel) but asking a second time (from a system-wide pull-down menu) does the trick. Hardware handshaking to modems, one of my concerns, is supported. It's important to make sure you buy the ironed-out version, which can be identified by a DC power socket on the side. This allows parasitic peripherals to be powered by a splitter cable from the ADB port. The corresponding software is version 2.2.0. There is a competing product, Momentum's Port Juggler, which provides expansion to four ports, and can be used either way round, i.e. to use four Macs with one peripheral or four peripherals with one Mac. I don't know much about it apart from what Adam Engst wrote in TidBITS #208 the same day I posted my original query. Oh. And then there's the uniquely British solution. The Brits were 100% united in suggesting a mechanical T-Switch instead. Pundits could have a field day relating this to the robustness (or otherwise) of the British economic recovery, and the return of consumer confidence! For me, the Axion's problem with reliable port selection rather rules it out; I need to start up, dial-in and exchange E-Mail overnight to avoid the congestion brought about by the increasing poularity of my Internet provider. (I can easily waste an hour per day trying to dial-in during waking hours as MacPPP won't do this in the background.) So I'll have to check out Port Juggler. Or maybe I'll get that T-Switch! Thanks again to those who responded. Francis K. At a Mac Oasis Somewhere in Suburban Hertfordshire ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 04 Feb 94 11:52:55 EST From: stevtaylor@aol.com Subject: Backup software recommendations In Info-mac Digest V.12 #8 Sandro Menzel opines: >One problem you might encounter is that DiskFit Pro likes to make the >destination disk exactly like the original. If you have multiple >original disks that you're backing up to one large destination (or >vice-versa), you might run across some problems. Actually, DiskFit Pro lets you easily define what it calls "Subvolumes" on a large destination drive. You simply create a new folder on the large drive and designate it as a subvolume. Then, whenever you want to back up a smaller drive, you back it up to the appropriate subvolume. The entire contents of the smaller drive will be backed up to the folder/subvolume on the larger one. ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 04 Feb 94 10:19:07 EST From: Pete Tamas Subject: Bad Sectors on Floppies "Jeffrey K. Carney" asked: > While we're on the topic. Does anyone have any accurate > field data on the life expectancy of a floppy? I run a lab > and from time to time diskettes go bad and files get > unreadable, causing much distress. Doesn't seem to > matter what brand. But age does seem to make a difference. > I'd like to be able to say "Buy a new disk after so many > months of daily use," or "after so many writes." > What I do now is run Sector Collector before I put anything important on a floppy disk. Occasionally this finds a few bad sectors and puts an invisible file on that sector so that the Mac does not try to use this sector. I do not have problems after that. My hypothesis is that if a sector will go bad, it will be in the first few months of the disk's use and that either the magnetic media is put on properly or its not. My guess is it is like paint, every so often you can see that the paint does not fully cover the previous coat. I can't suggest a time frame because the disks that I bought in 1986 have anywhere from 0 to 6 bad sectors. I very rarely throw a floppy away. I suggest you try fixing the bad sectors with Public Utilities or Sector Collector (part of 911 Utilities now, I think, I never up- graded). Norton Utilities does not fix bad sectors and will say the disk is fine.(!) But Norton Optimizer allegedly does (never tried). Public Utilities a has damaged files by "fixing" directories but I have not examined that carefully. If you use that then turn all the features off except Bad Blocks and examine the disk. Public Utilities will recover files that will crash Norton and MacTools 2.0. Pete Tamas Gnome@VM.Temple.edu or TempleVM.bitnet ------------------------------ Date: 4 Feb 1994 13:30:43 U From: "WJ Shack" Subject: Bold Symbols (A) Bold Symbols (A) 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. Povl H. Pedersen replied >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. > >You solution is to choose any other word processor for the pages that gives >you the problems, and things should be OK. On my HP DeskWriter things works >as supposed to. Microsoft is known to have different sorts of font >problems, but it is some time ago since I wrote something in Word. I use >Nisus now, and can always save in Word format if that is what I want. Alas, this time MS is innocent. The problem is with the Apple supplied Symbol font. If you use the Adobe Screen Font (available from sumex), you get bold symbols when you print. I suspect using the MT Symbol font supplied with Word 5.x would also work. The Symbol font supplied with MathType prints bold. I use the Adobe font myself. ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 04 Feb 94 17:27:24 +0100 From: px@fct.unl.pt Subject: Cron 1.0d13 submission edh@wn3.sci.kun.NL (E Hoenkamp) says: > Regarding Joaquim Baptista's putting someone else's program on the net: > I'm strongly opposed to putting software on the net without the author's > knowledge, let alone without the author's prior consent. > (BTW I have used to program for half a year to my satisfaction, but the > author didn't seem eager to put it on the net. I am disturbed by the > thought of people bugging me about a program that I did not release for > public use.). Well, I almost agree. First, I wouldn't have done it for an "unimportant" program. But this utility is so useful for a server, that it really should get wider attention. About the distribution of the program... I retrieved it from an anonymous ftp area. This certainly is public, and there was no restriction to redistribution in any README file either in the ftp server or the package itself. I published it in a much more visible location, but in fact it was already publicly available. About bugging the author... it will probably happen, but then again we are talking about FREE software, and the author has no obligation whatsoever to mantain the software, although it is considered adequate and nice to do so. -- Joaquim Baptista, alias pxQuim Email: {px,archive}@fct.unl.pt Fax: +351-1-295 5641 Snail: Dept Informatica, Universidade Nova de Lisboa P-2825 Monte de Caparica, Portugal ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 4 Feb 1994 00:12:42 -0800 From: jonpugh@netcom.com (Jon Pugh) Subject: Early Macs OK, so I didn't buy a 128. I have a good friend that did. I remember walking down to the Apple dealer in Bellingham, Washington and playing with the Lisa in 82 or 83. I was going to school and lamenting because we were in such a computing backwoods. I was trying to draw pictures on a RamTek color terminal with 16 colors (only 8 if you didn't snarf the alpha channel). I was downloading ascii subroutines to the terminal and then sending commands to execute them because the "GOSUB 1200" command was faster at 9600 baud. I was writing VT100 graphics games on our VAX/VMS system (8 Megs of RAM for 20+ people). The Lisa was an incredible machine, but absurdly out of my range as a poor student. When the Mac came out in March of 84, I just started work in California at the Cray supercomputer center in Livermore, just on the outskirts of the silicon valley. A friend I met on my first day of work bought a 128 shortly thereafter. He complained about the lack of memory. I decided that a VM bum like me wasn't going to fit in a piddly little 128, so I bided my time and bought a 512 just as soon as it came out (which is 10 years from next year) in March 85. I paid $2400 for a Mac, external 400K drive and an Imagewriter (it wasn't even a 1 yet) at the educational discount (the lab is run by the U of CA). I had to wait 6 weeks for delivery. On May 15th I was in a car wreck. I spent a few moments too long admiring my date and caught about a foot of an oncoming van. It's amazing how fast life can change. Actually, looking at it from the perspective of time, it didn't have much gross affect (thank you Mr. Seatbelt). Just some details. Like my teeth. ;) (By the way, we have an admirable health and dental care system. Appreciate it despite its costs. It saved my life.) So, about my fifth day in the hospital, my Mac shows up. I can't even go and pick it up. Lew goes for me and brings it to the hospital. We plug it in and get the happy Mac. Everything's going to be all right. As soon as I'm out I start beefing the sucker up. ThunderScanner for digitizing the millions of old Omni magazines and other stuff I had lying around. I put my library of books (mostly SF, duh!) into a FileMaker database (although I moved it to Hypercard after trying to index all the short stories and short story authors unsuccessfully). I put it to use. I was able to work from home with my 2400 baud modem (hey, fast at the time!) while I recuperated. I forget when I added the 2M memory upgrade, but it was right away. I would stick a disk in and walk away while it booted (doesn't everyone?). It would load the System, Switcher, MacWrite, MacDraw and MacPaint onto a RAMdisk and then launch the apps into memory partitions of 128K each (for a total of 1Meg used for apps, 400K for the RAMdisk and room to spare). It was damn fast, although I had to have the Switcher animations on because they were so cool! I bought my 512KE upgrade as soon as I could and got harddrive 1313 from Jasmine. It was an 80. Big stuff. Room to burn. I filled it. I had already written ShowSizes in TML Pascal to tell me where my 20M drive on my MacPlus at work had gone. Sounds and pictures. What a surprise! I was active in the TriValley Mac users group and the A32 users group in San Jose. We would get together in the back room while someone gave a demo of their latest software in the front. We'd trade scans and sounds, play network games and marvel at the latest betas we'd gotten from friends at Apple and other places (we got in trouble for running AppleShare before it was released, but it was DAMN cool). We'd call it pirating now, but then it was a matter of survival. To be a guru you had to know and paw through everything. I'd buy and recommend the good stuff and slam the bad here on the net. I remember how often I would try every permutation of the modifer keys while clicking every pane in every window. It was a learning adventure without manuals or fancy boxes (I bought a lot of software in baggies). I sold more Macs in those first few years than most dealers ever do. I showed people, because I carried it almost everywhere I went (now I lug the PowerBook). Well, I'm almost as bad these days with my Q800 16" dual screen system with a VideoSpigot, 14.4Kb modem, a 1200 dpi color scanner and Ethernet to my 600 dpi Laserwriter (and the wife's Q900). It's a tough life. We've all come a long way. To see the way the Macintosh changed the world though, we can't look at the Macintosh. It's still essentially the same, although a bit longer in the tooth and more complicated. It's clone machines that show how much of an effect the Macintosh has had. How many do you see running DOS any more? Even unix machines are running GUIs. Chalk it all up to PARC and what Bill Atkinson thought he saw there. I'll just end with this anecdote that qualifies as Apple lore. Steve, Bill and the boys got a 3 hour tour of Xerox PARC. They saw the windowing system and a bunch of way cool demos. They saw a vision of the future, and they were awed by it. Then they went home, and thought about what they had seen. They had seen overlapping windows. They had seen popup menus. They had seen impressive graphics. They didn't know how it worked, so they started working on building a system which would work however it could. Bill got stumped when he came to the fact that programs would have to refresh non-rectangular areas of windows which show up from behind other windows. He knew they had done it (but they hadn't; they had booted on the problem, but Bill could have sworn he saw it and didn't have video). So Bill came up with a way of clipping the screen to an arbitrary region of pixels mathematically and implemented it in QuickDraw, patenting the notion of regions and giving Apple an edge. That's what got the Macintosh going in those memory limited conditions. Regions, purgeable handles and the lot. A lot of _us_, that is. ;) Jon "I'm talking and I can't shut up." ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 04 Feb 94 10:41:53 -0500 From: mikeg@endgame.gsfc.nasa.gov Subject: ethernet for Quadra 610 and MacIIcx (A) Just to elaborate on what Allan said... At work we have been using Star Nine's new AAUI connector (mainly because we have special wiring that needs to not be forced into a 'T' but it is much more expensive for the home.) It has worked great, it also comes with a 'T' connector. And they also sell a NuBus card (but I have not seen it) for $99. Which I would lay a bet comes with a 'T' connector too. MacWhareHouse sells Star Nine's products. This is what your netowrk will probably look like: }-------T-----------------------T-----------------------T--------{ | | | Mac IIx Quadra 610 Apple Laserwriter {, } == Terminators ---- == Coax cable T == 'T' connector | == In the case of the Quadra and the Laser writer this will be the AAUI transceiver (the product from Star Nine). In the case of the IIx, if the coax connector sticks out the back far enough to just connect the 'T', then it is just the 'T'. If the 'T' won't fit then you will have to come up with an extender. If you use coax for the extender, use less than 2 feet. But I think you will be able to get the 'T' on there. Of course I am assumming that you have at least a Laser Writer IIg or above that has a built in AAUI (Apple's AUI). Make sure you use Ethernet grade coax, it is at 50 ohm. As opposed to RGB cable that is 75 ohm. Either will work as long as your segments are not to far away from each other. But if you have to run some distance the 75 ohm will give you problems. Also make sure you have at least 2 feet of coax between each station. I forget the max, something like 300 feet. I also favor putting 2 feet of cable before the terminator, but you don't have to. The above is going to run you about $230 for the connectors + the cost of the cable + the cost of the terminators. Farralon's new product is another option, but I have not experience with it, nor what it would cost. Good Luck, Mike mikeg@asylum.gsfc.nasa.gov ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 4 Feb 1994 09:59:10 -0500 From: Randy.Patton@vt.edu (Randy Patton) Subject: FDHD Replacement for MacIIfx [Rick Russell writes that he needs a replacement FDHD for his IIfx] >There's an Applied Engineering 1.44Meg drive for ~$200, but as far as >I can tell that's only an external device. Of course, the IIfx has no >external FD port. > Rick, that's not a problem if the product you're looking at is the Applied Engineering Plus Drive. I had a Plus Drive hooked up to my Mac II for about a year, and IIs don't have external floppy ports either. The Plus Drive attaches to the _internal_ floppy port via a ribbon cable that runs to a port you install at the back of one of the Mac's expansion slots. (You don't actually lose the slot, just access to it from the outside.) Once it's installed, the Plus Drive works pretty well. Some caveats, though: --You'll still have a broken internal drive, so if you sell the IIfx, you'll probably have to sell the Plus Drive with it. --The Plus Drive requires an extension on some Macs. I don't think the IIfx is one of them, but it wouldn't hurt to check. --You can't install a video card, digitizer, or any other card that has ports or connectors on it in the same slot you use for the Plus Drive's floppy port. (Of course, you _do_ have six slots.) Hope this helps. H. Randy Patton (randy.patton@vt.edu) Technical Coordinator, Virginia Tech English Department ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 4 Feb 94 09:47:18 +0100 From: jew@language.ou.dk (J|rn Erik Wennerstr|m) Subject: Folder From Hell Hello netters I m aware that this might be a FAQ-thing but nevertheless I have a problem with one of these pesky folders that refuse to leave its cosy HD. Only yesterday I browsed the archives (Sumex mirrored on SUNET) plus made Archie & Gopher queries as to such a folder. I did nt find anything of use. Has anyone out there got any idea - short of various renaming stunts or restarting the Mac with the FFH in the bin. Direct replies please - I don t have the time to read the mail regularly. I ll summarize any useful stuff for the rest of you. ------------------------------ Date: Sun, 6 Feb 94 11:55:04 -0500 From: Steve Eisenberg Subject: Government in your face and in your hard drive I found this very disturbing, but at least we can voice an opinion. There is currnetly a proposal in the works called the Clipper proposal. The Clipper proposal is an encryption standard which the government wants to make the standard the encryption of digital signals. While this affects few of us now, in a few years it will protect the privacy of much our daily interactions with companies and others over (I hate this buzzword) the information superhighway: your conversations over next generation telephones, the security of your transactions while "banking at home," your choice of movies over interactive TV, your private email, etc. The problem with the government's proposal is that it has a built in back door which the government can use to snoop on you. Legally, they must have court permission just as they need a court order to wiretap your phone. However, unlike the old days where they had to show that order to the telephone company to get them to turn on the tap, they will pretty much be able to turn it on any time they like. (This assumes that two agencies work together.) Furthermore, the encryption scheme is classified, so no experts in the field have been able to verify how well it really works or how easy it is to break. On January 24, many of the nation's leading experts in cryptography and computer security wrote President Clinton and asked him to withdraw the Clipper proposal. The public response to the letter has been extremely favorable, including coverage in the New York Times and numerous computer and security trade magazines. Many people have expressed interest in adding their names to the letter. In response to these requests, CPSR is organizing an Internet petition drive to oppose the Clipper proposal. They will deliver the signed petition to the White House, complete with the names of all the people who oppose Clipper. To get your name on the letter and experss your opposention to the Clipper proposal, please send a message to: Clipper.petition@cpsr.org that says: "I oppose Clipper" (no quotes) You will receive a return message confirming your vote. A transcript of the letter to be sent to the president follows: > > ===================================================================== > > The PresidentThe White HouseWashington, DC 20500 > > Dear Mr. President: > > We are writing to you regarding the "Clipper" escrowed encryption > proposal now under consideration by the White House. We wish to > express our concern about this plan and similar technical standards > that may be proposed for the nation's communications infrastructure. > > The current proposal was developed in secret by federal agencies > primarily concerned about electronic surveillance, not privacy > protection. Critical aspects of the plan remain classified and thus > beyond public review. > > The private sector and the public have expressed nearly unanimous > opposition to Clipper. In the formal request for comments conducted > by the Department of Commerce last year, less than a handful of > respondents supported the plan. Several hundred opposed it. > > If the plan goes forward, commercial firms that hope to develop > new products will face extensive government obstacles. Cryptographers > who wish to develop new privacy enhancing technologies will be > discouraged. Citizens who anticipate that the progress of technology > will enhance personal privacy will find their expectations > unfulfilled. > > Some have proposed that Clipper be adopted on a voluntary basis > and suggest that other technical approaches will remain viable. The > government, however, exerts enormous influence in the marketplace, and > the likelihood that competing standards would survive is small. Few > in the user community believe that the proposal would be truly > voluntary. > > The Clipper proposal should not be adopted. We believe that if > this proposal and the associated standards go forward, even on a > voluntary basis, privacy protection will be diminished, innovation > will be slowed, government accountability will be lessened, and the > openness necessary to ensure the successful development of the > nation's communications infrastructure will be threatened. > > We respectfully ask the White House to withdraw the Clipper > proposal. Again, I emplore you to consider this carefully and send the message. Also, please destribute this as widely as you're willing, so that more people can learn about this proposal and hopefully help do something about it. Thank you for attention. ------------------------------ Date: 4 Feb 1994 15:30:09 CDT6CST From: "Erik" Subject: GPS software for PowerBook 180c Netters, I am looking for Global Positioning System Software for the Mac. I would like to connect my PB 180c to a GPS system via a RS-232 line. I have heard of a package called "MentorPlus Flightmap" as it was used by Dick Rutan in his record-setting Closed Circuit 2,000 Kilometer Speed Without Payload (Av. speed 244.0 mph) run December 20, 1993. (He used a PowerBook for navigation too!). I would also be interested in other packages, GPS reciever information and/or experiences. Please reply to evensone@samnet.jsc.nasa.gov and I will summarize later... Thanks in advance! Erik E. Evenson Voice: (713) 483-8950 FAX: (713) 483-2162 E-Mail: evensone@samnet.jsc.nasa.gov Address: NASA ATTN: ES64 2101 NASA Road 1 Houston TX, 77058-3696 ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 4 Feb 1994 10:50:03 -0600 (CST) From: Fred Hartman Subject: Help: Trying to find publication... In response to a networking question my Apple technical support person referred me to: "The Design and Planning of Enterprise-Wide AppleTalk Internetworks" by Addison Wesley. I've not been able to find it. When called, Addison Wesley disavowed any knowledge of the book. Does anyone know if the book exists and if so where it can be found? Thanks all. Fred Hartman Bemidji State University ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 04 Feb 1994 23:14:24 -0600 (CST) From: LD108@VAX1.Mankato.MSUS.EDU Subject: Help with Info. Path: vax1.mankato.msus.edu!ld108 From: ld108@vax1.mankato.msus.edu Newsgroups: comp.sys.mac.digest Subject: Help with Info. Message-ID: <1994Feb4.231405.314@vax1.mankato.msus.edu> Date: 4 Feb 94 23:14:05 -0500 Organization: Mankato State University News-Moderator: Approval required for posting to comp.sys.mac.digest Lines: 5 I am searching for information on Stuffit Compression in a shareware archive. Can someone please tell me where to find it and once I do how to download the program? If you are an Internet guru I would gladly heed your kind wisdom. Carl ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 4 Feb 1994 16:02:53 -0600 (CST) From: Neil Eric Mickelson Subject: Home Internet Connections Greetings all! I'm interested in finding out what exactly I would need to set up for InterNet access from my home (probably through a SLIP connection; I need to check with my university on that). I would love to be able to take advantage of shareware wonders like Fetch, Eudora, Anarchive, TurboGopher, and NewsWatcher; can I do this from a v.32bis SLIP connection? I'd like to avoid buying any expensive books if I can; however, if I need MacTCP (I probably do, don't I?), I'll get Adam Engst's book. How can I order it (I can't find it around here). Thanks for all of your help! Neil E. Mickelson n-mickelson@uiuc.edu ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 3 Feb 1994 16:03:59 -0600 From: ehfm@midway.uchicago.edu (Eric Hoffmann) Subject: HP FTP site for drivers I just saw this small announcement in comp.sys.mac.hardware and thought that it deserved wider distribution. "Hewlett-Packard is now (as of 2-1-94) offering an official anonymous ftp site that contains the latest drivers and information for HP printers and scanners. It's located at: ftp-boi.external.hp.com *or* (192.6.71.2)." --- This is welcome news! ------------------------------ Date: 4 Feb 1994 14:40:36 +1300 From: "matt n." Subject: HyperCard 2.2 facts > pothiers@aries.saic.com (Steve Pothier) asked: > > What's the latest version of HyperCard? What does it > provide over the previous version? Is someone providing a > low cost upgrade? If you're willing to hang on for a bit, a description will probably appear in TidBITs real soon, but here are some quick facts. Cost is said to be $89 from Apple for registered upgrade; $250 or so for off the bat purchase but I ordered mine direct from apda@apple.com and they only charged me $99, so there seems to be some sort of good deal if you act now. Changes over 2.1: A lot of little bug- and convenience-fixes, too many to describe. (Things like how you talk about menuItems in HyperTalk, etc. A lot of important stuff is finally messaged, like whether the menubar is showing.) More major stuff: Popup buttons. Buttons that look like standard mac buttons. "List" fields. "MouseDoubleclick" message. Radio buttons handled automatically through a new button property, "the family". Real important, at *last* you can figure out how your buttons and fields are mutually layered on the card with a new property, "the part". QuickTime movie windows supported thru an XCMD, lots of cool options. Color supported thru an XCMD and a cool utility stack that makes it easy to add color automatically to a stack (but you can do much cooler stuff by talking to the XCMD yourself). Add single color to buttons and fields, have single-color rectangles, display color rectangular PICTs, all seeming to be *part of the card*. Biggest change, of course, is that AppleScript is incorporated (and comes with it). Not just AppleScript; you can send commands in *any* scripting language your system currently supports. So a field can hold a script in QuicKeys' scripting dialect and I just say "do field 1 as QuicKeys" in a handler, and presto, QuicKeys is taking over and doing all sorts of cool stuff to some other app, all with the benefit of HC's variable-setting and looping abilities and stuff. matt neuburg, phd = clas005@csc.canterbury.ac.nz ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 3 Feb 1994 21:48:12 -0600 (CST) From: Daniel Pollock Subject: Info-Mac Digest V12 #19 I am looking to purchase a style writer 1 ink jet printer, it must be in mint condition. Anybody willing to part with theirs let me know at pollock@ccu.umanitoba.ca Thanks Dan Pollock Ps: I would also be willing to consider a desk writer it must also be in mint condition. Thanks Dan Pollock ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 4 Feb 1994 15:22:31 -0800 From: sn0016@wimsey.com (W Paul Blakey) Subject: Info re: Fetch I'm new to Internet and a virgin Fetch user. Are there any diagrams of how Fetch finds its way through the net? The different fields make no sense to me. What is the Host field in relation to the Directory field? Any good books you can suggest? Thanks :-) wpb ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 4 Feb 1994 15:27:23 -0800 From: sn0016@wimsey.com (W Paul Blakey) Subject: Info re: Fetch I'm new to Internet and even newer to Fetch. Are there any good books, (particularly ones with excellent diagrams) that explain how to use the program? What is the difference between Host field and Directory field? Thanks (and I hope you don't get two of these messages because I tried to send one earlier but I don't think it got through - my apologies if I screwed up) :-) ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 4 Feb 94 14:41:02 PDT From: ace@tidbits.com (Adam C. Engst) Subject: Internet in Europe In Regards to your letter <199402032317.AA26642@nwnexus.wa.com>: > I don't know about providers in Europe, but all the software you need, > included MacTCP v.2.02 (available from Apple at $59.95), for a SLIP/Mac > TCP connection comes with a great book entitled "Internet Starter Kit > for Macintosh" by A.Engst (published by Hayden books.) Here in the US > the price is $29.95 and it's available everywhere. I don't know if > you can find it in Europe but you might as well get someone buy it for > you here and send it over. Thanks for the kind words, Paolo. I'm seriously thinking about adding a section on non-US connections and localized programs in the next edition of the book, but this information seems to be extremely hard to find, if not non-existent. Hmmm... 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: Fri, 4 Feb 94 14:43:16 PDT From: ace@tidbits.com (Adam C. Engst) Subject: InterSLIP and Fetch In Regards to your letter <199402032317.AA26642@nwnexus.wa.com>: > I have version 1.0fc3 of Interslip and version 2.1.1 of Fetch. > Both seem to be giving me problems on my Mac. Fetch freezes > and locks up the Mac. Interslip connects to my service > provider but doesn't seem to be "aware" of it and highlights > the Connect button again. First off, you want to get version 1.0.1 of InterSLIP since it fixed some bugs that plagued 1.0fc3. Second, Fetch will crash if you are not already connected to your provider since it expects a connection to exist. In theory InterSLIP can see this request for MacTCP services and connect automatically, but in practice this works badly. Always connect via InterSLIP manually, then run Fetch. You can find the InterSLIP update in disk image format (requires Apple's DiskCopy) at ftp.tidbits.com in: /pub/tidbits/tisk/mactcp/slip-ppp/ DiskCopy is in /pub/tidbits/tisk/utilities 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: Fri, 4 Feb 1994 10:04:59 -0800 From: kee@kagi.com (Kee Nethery +1 510 843 6140) Subject: Looking for text processor... (A) >Hi. I am in need of a program that can open (or just look inside of) short text documents in order to find a word. When it finds that word, it has to alert me with a sound. If it doesn't find the word, nothing happens. I know this is a pretty specific request, but if anyone has any info, please email me. Thanks. Sounds like a job for ... AppleScript and it's trusty companion ... Scriptable Text Editor! Get AppleScript and with it comes a scriptable text editor and as they always said in college, the rest is left as an exercise for the student. Kee Nethery ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 3 Feb 1994 18:32:19 -0500 From: lt10@cornell.edu (Li-Hsiang Tu) Subject: MacSLIP on a network (Q) If I am using MacSLIP to connect to a remote network, is there a way for other macs on my local network to use the network connection too? Thanks. ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 4 Feb 1994 12:45:47 -0600 From: chavey@beloit.edu (Darrah Chavey) Subject: Mac utility for decompressing .ARC files (A) Paul Schwarz asks: >Is there a Macintosh utility out there for decompressing .ARC files? The program is called ArcMac, or ArcMac.ARC. You should be able to find it via archie or anarchie, the compress-translate directory of sumex. I know it's in umich in /util/compression/arcmac. Stuffit Deluxe (commercial software) includes a translator for .arc format files. --Darrah Chavey Department of Math & Computer Science chavey@beloit.edu Beloit College; 700 College St; Beloit, Wisc. ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 4 Feb 1994 10:05:05 -0800 From: kee@kagi.com (Kee Nethery +1 510 843 6140) Subject: Mac utility for decompressing .ARC files (A) >Is there a Macintosh utility out there for decompressing .ARC files? Stuffit Deluxe Kee Nethery ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 3 Feb 94 20:39:09 -0500 From: Leonard N. Foner Subject: MacX and the Meta key---a puzzle I'm running MacX 1.1.7. I'm trying to use my Meta key (called Option or Alt on Mac keyboards), but MacX is outsmarting itself and refuses to even send the keypress events for Meta until I've typed some other character, whereupon it sends (e.g.) "aring" for Meta-A instead of just sending A with its meta bit on. And for characters for which the Macintosh doesn't define accents, it sends nothing at all. I can tell this by running "xev" on a UNIX and watching what events get sent when I type characters. Needless to say, this makes using EMACS highly irritating. I've been living with this for over a year now, and I'm close to the snapping point, especially since I constantly have to remember, depending on what my interface is, whether I have to type ESC-something (two keystrokes) or can just type Meta-something (one, much easier, keystroke). I know that this is not the most current version of MacX, but I'm not going to spend additional money to upgrade unless I have some assurance that this is fixed (somehow) in the latest release, or that there is a workaround for it that nonetheless requires the latest release. Is there _any_ way of convincing MacX to send all of the keypress events to X? I'll take solutions of the form "use ResEdit to bash _this_ thing" or whatever, if I have to. (No, xmodmap is not a solution, at least not until MacX can be convinced to at least send the events to X in the first place.) (While we're at it, of course, this probably implies switching its handling of the Meta key with no characters---which is to go into "moving a window with the mouse" mode---to some other key, such as the Command/Clover key, unless it was clever enough to send Meta-something if I typed, else move the window if I hold down Meta and wave the mouse.) Alternately, can anyone suggest other vendors of X server software for Macs that may work better? Personal experience with such a product is, of course, always the best, but I'll take just names & phone numbers of vendors if necessary. Please reply directly to me. If there is sufficient interest, I'll summarize. Thanks. ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 3 Feb 1994 18:22:31 -0800 (PST) From: Brian Veenker Subject: MaxFax and LineLink modem (A) I had trouble with my LL and Maxfax when I first got it; it turned out to be nothing more than cable problems: you must use the cable that came with your modem. It's got the extra "hardware handshake" line in it that generic modem cables do not. Since then, it works great! (I use it all the time.) Brian Veenker ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 4 Feb 1994 15:35:43 GMT From: lorenzo@rintintin.Colorado.EDU (Eric Lorenzo) Subject: Need Animaniac Icons! Has anyone thought of creating some Animaniac icons for the mac? The person who created the Tiny Toon icons sitting on Sumex did a great job with those. Maybe they'd like to undertake the next generation of WB cartoons.=) Thanks, Eric ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 4 Feb 1994 15:15:53 -0600 From: (Pete Chane) Subject: Need something scanned, HELP! I have a laser-printed letter consisting of 12pt. Times text that I need scanned into my Mac 660av. I tried the Apple Color OneScanner with a variety of settings, but it won't give me the quality I need. How can I scan 12pt laser (300dpi) text into my Mac at full resolution? It doesn't seem too daunting of a task considering scanners can do color photos these days. Peter Chane Apple Computer, University of Wisconsin-Madison AppleLink: PCHANE Internet: PCHANEUW@macc.wisc.edu ------------------------------ Date: 04 Feb 1994 10:06:48 +0000 (U) From: "Dees, Ted E." Subject: New Mice Sticking On Thu, 3 Feb 94 10:13:53, Troy Kelley wrote: >My new Quadra came with a fancy new style mouse and it seems to be sticking. >It is not a hardware problem, I mean it does not physically stick, but it >sticks on the screen, which makes me think that it is a software problem. >Or maybe it is a hardware problem that manifests itself on the screen. >Whatever, it is getting worse. Anyone heard of this? Is this covered under >my warrenty? Is it a software fix kinda problem? Maybe just a patch routine >would fix it. I'm having the same problem with my Centris 650 -- I first noticed it while trying to place water pumps in SC2000! (Imagine my dismay when 15 water pumps appeared sprinkled across the landscape ... .) It's similar, if not identical, to a mouse problem I had with my IIci -- the effect is as if the mouse down is stuck or rapidly going up and down. As I recall from discussions surrounding the IIci era mouse problem, Apple refused to admit that there WAS any problem (just like there's no IIsi sound problem). This is on an Apple Desktop Bus Mouse II, Family No. M2706, Assembled in Malaysia. Ted ted.dees@stpete.honeywell.com ------------------------------ Date: 4 Feb 1994 12:25:18 -0500 From: "Bill Fleischmann" Subject: New PICT into TText file? New PICT into TText file? All, Brief version: Since S7, TeachText has been able to open PICT files; however, it is not possible to *paste* a new PICT directly into a TeachText document. I seem to recall--from many months ago--a workaround that involved creating a PICT resource with a specific ID in the TeachText document. Does anyone have the details of this method (if it exists)? Big picture: I'd like to save some small Excel charts as PICT files so that users could view them with *quickly* with TeachText--in most cases, the user will have quit from TeachText faster than Excel can launch. I haven't found any way for Excel to save a chart as a PICT file, so you have to use the clipboard. I *could* paste the PICT into a graphics package, save *that* document, and then change the document's creator code to "ttxt"; that method requires two applications between Excel & TeachText (the graphics pkg plus something to change the creator code). If the PICT resource method I describe above can work, I will need only one application--ResEdit --between Excel & TeachText. But I'm open to correction and/or simpler alternatives. With my humble thanks in advance, >>Bill Fleischmann fleisch@umich.edu ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 4 Feb 94 21:58:04 PDT From: ace@tidbits.com (Adam C. Engst) Subject: New PICT into TText file? > Big picture: > I'd like to save some small Excel charts as PICT files so that users > could view them with *quickly* with TeachText--in most cases, the > user will have quit from TeachText faster than Excel can launch. > I haven't found any way for Excel to save a chart as a PICT > file, so you have to use the clipboard. I *could* paste the PICT > into a graphics package, save *that* document, and then change the > document's creator code to "ttxt"; that method requires two > applications between Excel & TeachText (the graphics pkg plus > something to change the creator code). If the PICT resource method > I describe above can work, I will need only one application--ResEdit > --between Excel & TeachText. But I'm open to correction and/or > simpler alternatives. > > With my humble thanks in advance, > >>Bill Fleischmann fleisch@umich.edu Interesting problem. Here's a thought. Use Flash-It to take a screen shot of the top window (the Excel chart) and set Flash-It to save it as a TeachText document. That's what I do with the screenshots for my books, so I see no reason it shouldn't work for your situation. Then there aren't any secondary programs. 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: Fri, 4 Feb 1994 07:07:54 -0700 From: bmnatio@sass165.sandia.gov (Brad Nation) Subject: Plot/Graph programs Does anyone know of a good Shareware plot/graph program that allows the user to put the vertical and horizontal labels on and print out the plot/graph? It does not have to handle a large number of data points, less than 100 data points will do. Please send replys to bmnatio@sandia.gov; I will compile for the net. Thanks in advance. Brad Nation ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 4 Feb 1994 07:07:54 -0700 From: bmnatio@sass165.sandia.gov (Brad Nation) Subject: Plot/Graph programs Does anyone know of a good Shareware plot/graph program that allows the user to put the vertical and horizontal labels on and print out the plot/graph? It does not have to handle a large number of data points, less than 100 data points will do. Please send replys to bmnatio@sandia.gov; I will compile for the net. Thanks in advance. Brad Nation ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 4 Feb 1994 16:16:33 -0500 (EST) From: LAN Supervisor Subject: Postscript error Help! When we attempt to print an MS Word document containing a font that is NOT a default printer font, we receive a postscript exception error. There is no font substitution on our IIg, IIf and IIntx laserprinters. However, all requests to our old Laser Plus print perfectly. Can someone tell me what's going on. BTW, we do have Font Substitution enabled in the Print Setup dialog box. Josephine Colmenares Fordham University colmenares@murray.fordham.edu ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 4 Feb 1994 19:06:52 -0800 From: dohan@uclink.berkeley.edu (Daniel Dohan) Subject: PowerBook ADB (Q) I've hooked up my non-low power, SE/30 vintage, extended keyboard to my PB 160 (4/80 with a PowerPort Gold) ADB despite warnings in the manual not to do so. Having heard that this will ruin my battery, I pulled the battery out (I usually have the PB plugged in). Two questions: (1) Does running the PB without a battery in hurt the PB? If so, how and why? (2) Will running the extended keyboard off the plugged-in PB hurt the computer and/or battery? Again, how and why? Direction to a FAQ list would be greatly appreciated. TIA. -dan <== dohan@uclink.Berkeley.EDU ==> ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 04 Feb 94 10:11:58 CST From: Mack Willingham Subject: PPC FAQ List? Is there a PPC FAQ list available, and if so, where may I download it? Mack ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 4 Feb 1994 16:46:58 +0100 From: williams@tours.inra.fr (John Williams) Subject: Printing from a TCP/IP network to a LocalTalk Laserwriter (Q) The question says it all. We have several Apple Laserwriters and we would like PCs and Suns hooked up to the same heterogenous network using the TCP/IP protocol to be able to access these printers. HP market the LaserJet IVsi and Apple the LaserWriter 830, both of which are truly multiprotocol, but they are expensive. Our printers are still good for several hundred thousand pages, so I am hunting for another solution. Recently, vendors are advertising boxes which seem to handle the bridging between the two environments (Etherwrite, Etherprint ...). Do they work well? Has anyone any experience? All answers will be welcomed with my thanks in anticipation. John Williams INRA Station de Recherches Avicoles, Centre de Recherches de Tours, 37380 Nouzilly, France Tl (33) 47 42 78 47 Fax/tlcopie (33) 47 42 77 78 ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 4 Feb 94 10:42:54 -0600 From: Todd E. Frenzel Subject: Printing to line printer... Greetings, Does anybody know of a print driver for the Mac that allows you to spool text documents to a unix host so that they can be queued to a high speed line printer. I have a Ethernet TCP/IP network that connects Macs, Suns, and NeXT. I would like to be able to queue database reports created on the mac to the LP print server and print them out with the rest of my unix print jobs. Currently I use a shiva net serial and Mac Daisy Print drive to access a Genicom 4440. But this is proving to be unreliable with future system upgrades, and I want to get away form local talk cabling and the fastpath if possible. Thanks in Advances. Todd Frenzel Texas Animal Health Commission Austin, Texas ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 04 Feb 1994 18:12:17 +0100 From: Cas Meijer Subject: PS to MS Word converter (Q) Dear Netters Does anyone know if there exists a converter that converts PostScript to something like an MS Word file? I write an article together with someone and he send me a PS file I do not like to type it all. The word version I have (5.1.a) does say it is converting an EPS file but it does not show anything i.e. a nearly empty picture with just the filename, the title the creator (Windows PSCRIPT :-0) and the number of pages (0). But it prints fine on a PostScript printer. (12 pages). :-( Thanks for the help Cas Meijer ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 04 Feb 94 01:24:56 EST From: Allan Hunter Subject: Puny Floppy Drive Capacity Why anyone would be in the unfortunate position of being unable to put SOME kind of OS on the hard drive and reboot--and thereby avoid the Toaster Tango--is beyond me (even System 7.1 fits on a single 1.44, doesn't it?); but if you want solutions nevertheless, get a second floppy drive. As for the 21MB solution, they are usable media, but they take too long between insertion and disk mount, and any storage product that already calls itself a FLOP-anything is unlikely to become an industry standard. (I own one and it works but it just ain't there yet). -Allan Hunter ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 3 Feb 1994 22:11 EST From: Don't Panic! Subject: RamDisk (Q) Dear Netters, Is there freeware or shareware to create Ramdisks on a Mac LC (the 68020)? If so where may I find it on the FTP or Gopher links to the net? Thank you. Sincerely, ABRODY@VAX.CLARKU.EDU ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 4 Feb 1994 15:49:48 +0100 From: johan.solve@itn.hh.se (Johan Solve) Subject: RAMdoubler upgrade? I'm looking for an upgrader for RAMdoubler 1.0 -> 1.0.1. Could someone tell me where this can be found via ftp? Johan Solve johan.solve@itn.hh.se Halmstad University, Sweden ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 04 Feb 94 15:16:16 EST From: Marshall Rosenstein Subject: Reading 128k Mac formatted disks on LC (Q) I'm using Access PC and Easy Open Translators on a 4/40 LC. Is there any way I can read 3.5 floppies which were formatted on the 128k Mac? Would it work in reverse if I formatted a low density floppy on my LC first? I've already tried to read a 128k formatted floppy, but my LC can't do it. Thanks. ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 5 Feb 1994 13:24:46 -0600 From: Tammy B Frietsch Subject: Re Nutritional Software Request I got an offer in the mail today form Ohio Distinctive Software. They want to sell me their $218.95 Nutrition Software for $8.00 + $3.00 postage and handling. It includes Executive Diet Helper, which analyzes your diet and reccomends substitute foods, Menu Planner, which creates daily menu plans for any calorie needs or special needs, and the Weight Loss Planner. I have not ordered this package, and I know nothing about it, but it might fit your needs. The price is certainly not bad. Their address is Ohio Distinctive Software 4588 Kenny Road Columbus, Ohio 43220 Phone (614)459-0453 Tammy Frietsch Yoakum Jr. High P.O. Box 737 Yoakum, TX, USA 77995 *** L.I.F.E. - Learning is for Everyone *** ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 4 Feb 1994 09:08:40 +0100 From: Daniel.Wismer@unifr.ch (Dan Wismer) Subject: replacing Chicago as system font (Q) I have read once how to do it, but can't find it anymore (I have searched old digests): I would like to substitute Chicago with the font used in the cdev Chicago Nice. This involves copying the font into the system and modifying a setting in the system file with Resedit. But, what do I have to modify ? Thank you for your help. ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 4 Feb 1994 21:03:35 -0600 From: "Joshua B. Colglazier" Subject: SE HD doesn't mount... I have a Mac SE whose hard drive no longer mounts. It doesn't come up with an error message or anything, just the "?" showing that it doesn't see a valid startup disk. When started with a startup disk, the computer functions, but still doesn't recognize the HD. First Aid doesn't see the HD, nor does HD Setup. Silverlining spots something on the SCSI chain, but doesn't recognize the driver. It seems to say that the driver doesn't exist. Does this mean the HD is trashed? Is there anything that I can do to retrieve the files? Could this simply be a loose cable or something? I've tried the option-command-shift-delete/backspace trick, but that doesn't bring up the HD either. Any ideas? Please email directly. Thanks in advance. ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 3 Feb 1994 17:54:02 -0500 (EST) From: Sridar Narayanan Subject: Slide makers and software Hello, We will soon be purchasing a slide-making unit to produce 35mm slides from Persuation, PowerPoint and PostScript files. If any of you have any experience or words of wisdom to offer on which products and driver software to look for or stay away from, I'd like to hear it. The folks around here want to get a 486 clone for the most CPU bang for the buck, but I think that a Quadra would be much easier to set up and maintain. I also think that Macs are far ahead of PCs in graphics performance. What type of host computer will we need? Is a Quadra 610 enough, or should we get an 840AV. How much memory, etc? Any input you have will be much appreciated. Thanks, Sridar ------------------------------ Date: 4 Feb 1994 13:07:22 -0500 From: "Kaufman Peter" Subject: SmartScrap (R) >>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? MultiClip Pro from Olduvai does that stuff, and a lot more. Regards Peter Kaufman kaufman_peter@bcgny.com ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 4 Feb 1994 10:05:09 -0800 From: kee@kagi.com (Kee Nethery +1 510 843 6140) Subject: System Boot Logger (A) >I am looking for some piece of software that will create a log showing entries for just these two things: SYSTEM STARTUP with Date and Time SYSTEM SHUTDOWN/RESTART with Date and Time This too looks like a perfect job for ... (sound of trumpets) .. AppleScript and it's pal ... Scriptable Text Editor. You could very easily on startup open a document, write "startup" and the date time, close and save the document, and then on quit when the machine shuts down, open it again and write "shutdown" with all the relevant info. Kee Nethery ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 4 Feb 1994 10:09:38 -0500 From: Robert Scott Lillard Subject: TIFF's, PCX, and EPS from PC to MAC (Q) Hello I-M Netters: I am trying to convert images scanned in to a PC (through an HP ScanJet IIC with HP DeskScan software) to my LC. The PC software allows the images to be saved as TIFF, PCX, EPS GIFF as well as others. My Access PC software on my MAC will allow me to designate these formats as Superpaint TIFF's, EPS etc ... When I try to open these files on my MAC, however, nada! (for you non-Spanish speaking netters 'nothing'). It gives me an error on reading the file ('file damaged' or the like). which I know not to be true as I can read the file fine on a PC (with PhotoFinish). I have tried XlateGraph which I got off the net last year, and while it will open the TIFF's the images are incomplete or copied over several times in the same window. Any sugggestions? Know of any other nets which may be able to help? Imageless and TIFFed-off scott lillard rsl8m@virginia.edu ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 3 Feb 1994 17:21:11 -0500 From: brantley@tthsc4.hsc.ttu.edu Subject: Trouble with Apple HD I have encountered a problem with a Centris 650 with a 230 Mb Apple internal drive. The drive became sufficiently damaged that it would not mount. I use CP disk tools to fix the disk and in the process had to tell CP to "write an emergency driver to the disk and mount it". This worked and the disk is working fine now but it is no longer recognized by Apple HD SC Setup 7.2.2 -- the test button works but the Initialize and Update buttons are dimmed. I then used ResEdit to hack the program to recognize non - Apple drives with no change. It still will not let me re-install the original driver for the disk. Anybody have any ideas about how I can reinstall the Apple driver. Thank You, Ken Brantley TTUHSC Dept of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology Lubbock, TX Brantley@tthsc4.hsc.ttu.edu or HBCHS@ttacs1.ttu.edu ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 4 Feb 94 10:16:06 WET From: Paul Russell Subject: Wanted: Tone dialer wanted [A] "Jef Kennedy" asks for a utility which will tone dial a number on the clipboard. I am happy to report that such a piece of software exists - MagicDialler, an FKEY, does exactly this and costs nothing. I submitted it to info-mac some time ago and haven't checked whether it's still there. I'll upload it again if there's any demand... //Paul ------------------------------ End of Info-Mac Digest ******************************