Date: Mon, 21 Feb 94 23:56:59 PST From: The Info-Mac Moderators Reply-To: Info-Mac@sumex-aim.stanford.edu Subject: Info-Mac Digest V12 #29 To: info-mac-list Info-Mac Digest Mon, 21 Feb 94 Volume 12 : Issue 29 Today's Topics: [*] "Here's How to MacPGP!" guide [*] 8balltips.cpt.hqx [*] At-Your-Service Upgrade [*] Atrain Editor [*] bajoran.hqx [*] Chat 2.0 - Macintosh TCP/IP Chat Server [*] Crystal Ball 1.1, Exquisite Entertainment [*] CTB Connection Tool C source [*] Demo: EndNote Mac 1.3 (with readme) [*] drop-q.hqx [*] externalman-13.cpt.hqx [part 1 of 1] [*] info-mac submission -> QuickSearch [*] Known Users vol. 1 v 1.7 [*] MacPager 1.0 (Comm/Util) [*] MandelZot 4.0.1 [*] NEW version 3.0.4 of LinksWare: please post. Thanks. [*] PasteColor Standard submission [*] Quiet Start 1.2 [*] ScatterBrains 2.1 [*] Sound-Trecker 2.0e4 patcher [*] SpeedPad.QT.Sit.Hqx [*] THINK Scripts 1.2.1.sit.hqx "bloated mac OS"-- was "small floppy capacity" $99 Mercury Plus 68030 Accelerator (Q) Think C 6.0.1 fatal error 840AV drive problems A cool shareware payment Ad. misprint flames Adaptor for Sony 1430 monitor AppleScript 1.0 to 1.1 updater? AppleTalk a'la serial cable APS Flame APS flame (R) Baud vs megabyte (A) Baud vs megabyte (R) Bug in Word's Equation Editor (C) Buying A Scanner CD-ROM Play Audio CDs upon insertion (Q) CD300 SCSI Driver for PC CD Plus Software changing KCHR CPU cycles and apps Customer's responsibilty [F] F-Key/extension to release port? Finder doesn't accept colons anywhere? ftp.apple.com (A) GeoPort Express Modem settings hangup modem automatically (Q) HELP I need a couple of email addresses Info-Mac Digest V12 #28 In the market for a PB Duo Is there a "virtual desktop" utility? Mac & VGA Monitor.(C) Mac+ and HD not working together (Q) Magic: The Gathering Card List Maxima (2 msgs) microsoft quick basic and system 7 (2 msgs) Mosaic/PPP (A) My command-Q can't quit application any more Newsgroup for Macs Nikon CoolScan Problems NMR Programs OED PortShare Pro 2.0 Demo problem (Q) Power CD-Good Deal? Problems with Powerbooks on network Problems with SITcomm Puny Floppy Drive and FaberFinder Putting Ears on an SE? RAM Doubler RAM Doubler, early Macs, & PowerBooks (a) RAM Doubler and Disk access (R) RamDoubler on an LC? RAM Doubler on old macs (A) Safeware Insurance (Q) Security of Mac Data (Q) Snooper and Help! Speech Manager default Terminal emulation software using Appletalk protocol and connections The Underground Mac Weather gif site... Will HFS change when the PowerMacs emerge? WinWord <-> Mac Word 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: Sun, 20 Feb 1994 17:46:34 -0800 From: qwerty@netcom.com (Xenon) Subject: [*] "Here's How to MacPGP!" guide Here's the latest version (2.7) of my "Here's How to MacPGP!" guide, to replace /info-mac/info/macpgp-guide-18.txt. Hey Mac user, having too much fun? Don't want your plans made public? You're sending e-mail on "postcards" if you don't have the free public key encryption program PGP. You heard about it in the news; here's your easy guide to getting and using it. It will get non-Mac users started too. -=Xenon=- [Archived as /info-mac/info/macpgp-guide-27.txt; 21K] ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 18 Feb 94 02:57:58 EST From: "David A. Hirko" Subject: [*] 8balltips.cpt.hqx 8balltips.cpt.hqx This application provides some personal tips & tricks on playing the commerical game Eight Ball Deluxe by AMTEX. It is divided into two sections: (1) keeping the game interesting, and (2) game tips. [Archived as /info-mac/game/com/eight-ball-deluxe-tips.hqx; 192K] ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 19 Feb 1994 16:25:42 +1100 From: tim.barlow@lib.utas.edu.au Subject: [*] At-Your-Service Upgrade Please upgrade AYS 1.2 with the attached version (vers 1.3). many thanks.........Tim Barlow [Archived as /info-mac/card/at-your-service-13.hqx; 712K] ------------------------------ Date: Sun, 20 Feb 1994 12:10:37 -0600 (CST) From: MDOUGLAS@VAX1.UMKC.EDU Subject: [*] Atrain Editor This editor for Atrain, lets you change the amount of money your cities have. Always run on a backup copy of your cities, not the original. [Archived as /info-mac/game/com/a-train-editor.hqx; 7K] ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 19 Feb 94 13:05:15 -0600 From: wonko@cs.wisc.edu (Wonko the Sane) Subject: [*] bajoran.hqx Subject: Update to "Bajoran" truetype and Type 1 Here it finally is, the long promised update to the font "Bajoran." Well, at any rate it is long promised to the people who asked for it. The fixes made include: o Cleaned up the curves on a few characters o Fixed a Kerning problem that made it impossible to correctly write "Star Trek" (boy, was THAT a complaint) o Finally got a decent picture of the Bajoran Emblem in there This font is $5 shareware, or at the very least emailware, from Kiwi Media. (c) 1993 Eric Oehler/Kiwi Media Group Enjoy. Eric Oehler wonko@dax.cs.wisc.edu [Archived as /info-mac/font/bajoran.hqx; 95K] ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 18 Feb 1995 16:47:58 -0600 From: nneul@umr.edu (Nathan Neulinger) Subject: [*] Chat 2.0 - Macintosh TCP/IP Chat Server **** WHATS NEW **** This is a new and improved version of Peter N. Lewis's Chat 1.1 Macintosh TCP/IP Chat Server. It now supports changing of channels, changing of user names, and many other nifty features. To customize it you will need to use ResEdit - most of the program's strings are contained in resources so it can be customized rather extensively. Use the /HELP command while connected to see a list of the command that are now available. For administrators: The \HELP command will list administrator commands. The default TCP port to connect to: 1420 The default user password for Chat 2.0 is "permission". The default admin password for Chat 2.0 is "admin". The source code to chat 2.0 is available by request from nneul@umr.edu If anyone would like to write some better documentation for Chat 2.0 - please do so and send it to me - I just do not have the time to do it. Thanks... Email any comments/suggestions/complaints/etc. to: nneul@umr.edu This software is shareware - if you want to distribute it on any commercial medium (information services, CD, etc.) contact me first - I would appreciate a sample copy of the CD for example. A sample telnet session to the chat server is enclosed. -- Nathan Neulinger BTW, I am a poor college student - send money if you think it's any good... :) [Archived as /info-mac/comm/net/chat-20.hqx; 61K] ------------------------------ Date: Sun, 20 Feb 1994 11:30:41 -0500 (EST) From: "Neil Schulman, emeritus" Subject: [*] Crystal Ball 1.1, Exquisite Entertainment This is Crystal Ball. It is your friend. It tries to help you in making decisions. It has a large number of phrases it can use in helping you make a decision. Crystal Ball is better than it's better known physical counterpart, the Magic 8 Ball. Crystal Ball is free and runs on any system running System 7 or higher. Crystal Ball is 32 bit clean and 68040 cache compatible. Crystal Ball needs Stuffit Lite 3.0.7 to be extracted. Crystal Ball is (c) 1994 Neil Schulman nwcs@delphi.com --or-- nwcs@utkvx.utk.edu [Archived as /info-mac/game/crystal-ball-11.hqx; 22K] ------------------------------ Date: Sun, 20 Feb 1994 04:52:41 -0500 From: peterc@gnu.ai.mit.edu (Peter Creath) Subject: [*] CTB Connection Tool C source Here is the skeleton code for a Communications Toolbox connection tool. It's fairly well documented and describes what needs to be implemented to make it fully functional. Note: I am the author. [Archived as /info-mac/dev/src/ctb-tool-c.hqx; 38K] ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 18 Feb 1994 19:16:41 -0600 From: Avi Rappoport Subject: [*] Demo: EndNote Mac 1.3 (with readme) Welcome to EndNote Plus, an Enhanced Reference Database and Bibliography Maker. As the subtitle suggests, EndNote Plus is a program with a dual purpose. First, EndNote Plus is a database manager_specialized in storing, managing, and searching for bibliographic references in your private reference library. Second, EndNote Plus is a bibliography maker_it builds lists of cited works automatically, and can format references to paste into footnotes as well. EndNote scans your word processor paper for in-text citations, and then it compiles a bibliography using the information in your database. Finally, it will produce a copy of your paper, reformatting the in-text citations and placing the bibliography at the end. You select the style to use and EndNote does the rest! EndNote can reformat documents created by Microsoft Word 3-5.1, WordPerfect 1.0-3.0, MacWrite 4.5-5.0, MacWrite II, WriteNow 1.0-3.0, and Nisus documents. EndNote can also reformat documents in RTF (Rich Text Format), mif (FrameMaker's interchange format) and plain text. Please contact our office for more information on other word processors or different versions of the word processors listed above. EndLink is the online database import facility for EndNote. It is an add-on module to EndNote which enables you to import journal references from online databases into your EndNote libraries. EndLink is not a program itself, rather it is a resource file which, when present in the same folder as the EndNote program, endows EndNote with a new import capability. [NOTE: EndLink is a separate product and is not included in the EndNote Plus retail package. If you need the functionality that EndLink provides, you should purchase EndLink along with the EndNote Plus program.] [Archived as /info-mac/app/end-note-13-demo.hqx; 371K] ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 19 Feb 94 16:48:25 PST From: macmod (Info-Mac Moderator) Subject: [*] drop-q.hqx <> DropQ is a little application for QuicKeys. If you use QuicKeys, you know it is very useful utility. You can execute a complicated operation with one key stroke. But wait, before execution, you at first open the file you want to process from your application. Have you felt that this is a little annoying? I have felt. That is why I made the DropQ. Using DropQ is quite easy. When you drag and drop a file (or files) into DropQ, it automatically launch the application you selected beforehand, tells the application to open the file you droped, tells QuicKeys to execute the sequence you selected beforehand, and after all files are processed, the application and DropQ quits. You can drag and drop more than one file at one time. All files are opend and processed one after another. This is the most useful part of DropQ. For example, to convert many TIFF format pictures to JPEG format pictures using Adobe Photoshop. DropQ can do virtuaIly any thing. It is up to your idea. This is the first post of my program to info-mac. GHA01754@niftyserve.or.jp 101070.1754@compuserve.com hagiwara@win.or.jp [Archived as /info-mac/app/drop-q.hqx; 84K] ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 18 Feb 94 22:38:21 -0500 From: michael.krause@exchange.wariat.org (Michael Krause) Subject: [*] externalman-13.cpt.hqx [part 1 of 1] Here is the Hermes II external, External(man) by Delphic Software. Version 1.3. This external basically ANSI-izes/restructures the Hermes II external menu. Try it out, neat! [Archived as /info-mac/comm/hermes-ii-external-man-13.hqx; 9K] ------------------------------ Date: Sun, 20 Feb 1994 20:09:34 -0600 From: marcouet@edupac.qc.ca (M ARCOUET) Subject: [*] info-mac submission -> QuickSearch QuickSearch is a realy fast tool for searching words or sentences in documents. The search can be done inside one or more documents, in one or more folders and in one or more disk. Easy to use. Wildcard, case sensitive or not, many other options. Can launch application-document on fly, for the found word (system 7 only). French and English documentations. Free software. Version 1.1 fix selection problem in 'One by one' dialog and other minor bugs. [Archived as /info-mac/app/quick-search-11.hqx; 69K] ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 18 Feb 1994 16:32:26 -0800 (PST) From: Kevin Savetz Subject: [*] Known Users vol. 1 v 1.7 This Hypercard stack is an archive of back issues of Known Users, the monthly newsletter of the Sequoia Macintosh Users Group, located in Humboldt County, California. In most cases, the stack contains full article texts, which can be read onscreen or printed. It contains articles from 1/87 through 12/93. I can't bear the thought of this stack growing beyond its present size, so I've renamed this stack to "Known Users - the Early Years." Newsletters from 1994 through 2000 (eep!) will get a stack of their own. The stack contains reviews, columns and tips on a plethora of Mac-related topics. You can search by keyword, article title or author, or just browse. You may reprint articles for your newsletter (with restrictions, see the stack for details) or use our articles as ideas for articles of your own. This is verison 1.7 of the stack. Contact Kevin Savetz (Internet: "savetz@rahul.net"; America Online: "Savetz) for questions or feedback. [Moderators: this replaces any older version of the this stack in the archives.] "Anybody who uses email probably has three times more opinions per head than people who don't." -Scott Adams, "Dilbert" [ Kevin M. Savetz -- savetz@rahul.net ] [ -- faq-book-info@northcoast.net ] [Archived as /info-mac/per/known-users-v1-17-hc.hqx; 796K] ------------------------------ Date: 17-FEB-1994 16:36:34.10 From: Douglas Scott Reuben Subject: [*] MacPager 1.0 (Comm/Util) Hi- MacPager 1.0 (TM) (demo) is a program which will notify you remotely when you receive an incoming call or calls. Unlike a few other programs with some of the same features, MacPager is quite flexible, and will work on almost any Mac platform and modem. As long as your Mac can properly talk to your modem via the "AT" command set, this program will work for you. MacPager (TM) will notify you at a beeper, regular telephone, carphone, or deposit a message on an answering machine. If you have Caller ID, and a Caller ID modem, it will also relay the incoming CID data to you. A Call Log stores the incoming call data (as well the success or failure of remote notification) for later retrieval, and will, at your discrection, make automatic backups to your disk or hard disk. The program a Binhxed file of a "self-extracting" Compact It 'capsule' containing the MacPager (TM) 1.0 demo. Feel free to use, copy, and distribute the encapsulated version at will. It's free (hey, it's only a demo :) ), but please don't distribute the "extracted" file, since you may unintentionally leave out the info files. If you have any questions about decoding this file, or about the software in general, please call (203) 499-5221. Thanks! [Archived as /info-mac/comm/mac-pager-10.hqx; 68K] ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 17 Feb 94 20:51:44 -0800 From: dplatt@snulbug.mtview.ca.us (Dave Platt) Subject: [*] MandelZot 4.0.1 This mailing contains release 4.0.1 of MandelZot, a "freeware" program for exploring the Mandelbrot set and other fractals. Version 4.0.1 is a bug-fix release; there are no new features. Dave Platt dplatt@snulbug.mtview.ca.us (domain/MX) or apple!snulbug!dplatt (uucp path) or dplatt%snulbug.uucp@apple.com (non-MX Internet) [Archived as /info-mac/sci/mandel-zot-401.hqx; 179K] ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 18 Feb 1994 21:59:39 -0500 (EST) From: VALLEAU@delphi.com Subject: [*] NEW version 3.0.4 of LinksWare: please post. Thanks. NEW Version 3.0.4 dated 2/18/94. All users should update to this version. Multimedia for less than $50! This is version 3.0.4 of LinksWare, including revised documentation and a new lower price: $49.00. Yes, this is the full commercial program. The author/publisher has decided to pursue distribution exclusively via electronic media: Internet, commercial services & etc. This, in turn, significantly lowers costs, while protecting the environment. Version 3.04 fixes some bug pointed out by Internet downloaders. My thanks to all of you for your courtesy in helping me produce an even better product. In brief, LinksWare operates on standard Mac documents, without altering them, and allowing links between them. It works with files on floppy, harddisk or CD-ROM. File types include word-processor, text, graphic, sound, movie and AppleScripts. For example, clicking on the word 'elephant' in a Microsoft Word document could automatically retrieve and play a QuickTime movie of elephants (or get more text, move to a different location in the same document, play a sound, show a picture etc.) Used by government, industry and education. Three mice from MacWeek. The closest thing to true hypermedia yet. [Archived as /info-mac/app/links-ware-304.hqx; 454K] ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 19 Feb 1994 22:15:32 +0200 (EET) From: Guy Zaslavsky Subject: [*] PasteColor Standard submission PasteColor is an extension for HyperCard, which allows the plain user to add color pictures to cards, with copy and paste simplicity. You can then drag them around, cut, copy, and dupicate them. It is fairly fast, but a LC-3 or better and 4Mb RAM or more are recommended. All you have to do is use the installer to add the required resources and scripts to your stack. No HyperTalk knowledge is needed whatsoever. This version of PasteColor is not very new, it's been at umich (mac.archive.umich.edu) for several months now. I posted it here at about the same time, but it got corrupted on the way and I didn't get around to reposting. HyperCard 2.2 was announced recently, so I thought PasteColor will be obsolete. However, I received several letters urging me to keep supporting PasteColor, because many people can't afford the $295 HyperCard 2.2, but can afford PasteColor for a $25 shareware fee. So here it is... :) ------------------------------ Date: Sun, 20 Feb 94 14:30:58 +0100 From: zxmbt07@student.uni-tuebingen.de (Thomas Bridgwater) Subject: [*] Quiet Start 1.2 Quiet Start version 1.2 This program replaces Quiet Start version 1.1 author's e-mail address: tbridgwa@cymbal.calpoly.edu Quiet Start is a system extension which will keep some Macintosh models from making the usual chime at startup or restart. I made it particularly for those PowerBook users who may really want to use their computer as a laptop and may find themselves in an environment where the chime would be disturbing to others (like in a classroom). [Archived as /info-mac/cfg/quiet-start-12.hqx; 8K] ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 19 Feb 1994 03:09:12 -0600 From: dhansen@ccwf.cc.utexas.edu Subject: [*] ScatterBrains 2.1 ScatterBrains=81 2.1 is a simple database tool that lets you keep track of v= arious bits of information. It differs from most other progroms in its user interface: You don't have to waste time defining fields and clicking several times to navigate around your data. ScatterBrains=81 2.1 lets you name your categories on the fly and change them whenever you want. You can see the titles for 58 categories on the same screen, and you can get to any of them with a single click. A single click (or Enter key) takes you back to the list. [Archived as /info-mac/app/scatter-brains-21.hqx; 25K] ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 17 Feb 1994 22:14:51 -0600 From: vinko@spss.com (Vinko Tsui (312) 329-3455) Subject: [*] Sound-Trecker 2.0e4 patcher Enclosed is a Patcher to convert the excellent MOD player "Sound-Trecker", by Frank Seide. It patches the German version to the latest English version. The German to English translation was done by Andrew Barnert. This patcher will patch the following versions: Sound-Trecker V1.0 (German) Sound-Trecker 2.0 (German) Sound-Trecker 2.0e3 (English) the resulting file will be called "Sound-Trecker 2.0e4". -- Vinko [Archived as /info-mac/snd/util/sound-trecker-20e4-updt.hqx; 189K] ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 17 Feb 94 22:05:21 CST From: leo bleicher Subject: [*] SpeedPad.QT.Sit.Hqx Here's another little QT dittie I whipped up... Enjoy Aardvark-V [Archived as /info-mac/grf/qt/speed-pad.hqx; 5202K] ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 18 Feb 94 22:38:27 +0100 From: Reinder Verlinde Subject: [*] THINK Scripts 1.2.1.sit.hqx THINK Scripts 1.2.1 Five AppleScript droplets for use in combination with Symantec C++ 6.0.1. Items new in versions 1.2 and 1.2.1 are marked with a bullet. The only difference between versions 1.2 and 1.2.1 is that the scripts from version 1.2 were compiled with AppleScript 1.1, making them unusable for owners of Applescript version 1.0. THINK Bring Up to Date THINK Bring Up to Date & Shut THINK Compact Projects THINK Remove Objects THINK Set Options These scripts are freeware and may be included on CD-ROM collections. Reinder Verlinde (reinder@neuretv.biol.ruu.nl) [Archived as /info-mac/dev/think-scripts-121.hqx; 40K] ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 19 Feb 1994 23:51:26 -0500 From: ai261%freenet.carleton.ca@Forsythe.Stanford.EDU (Matthew Ahrens) Subject: "bloated mac OS"-- was "small floppy capacity" *FLAME ON* >The idea that a modern Mac cannot boot from the largest >conventional-sized floppy that it supports is rather ridiculous. I don't know about other people, but i can start up with system 7.1 from a floppy on my duo 210 or quadra 605 just fine. Even with a few utilities on it also. >Good idea--why can't Apple stick a copy of >7.1 on the ROMS if they can't make a Quadra run system 6 or shoehorn >their bloated OS onto a 1.44 disk? as i said above, 7.1 fits comfortably onto a HD floppy. I would by no means consider system 7.1 to be "bloated". it is the most compact user interface I know of. (DOS is smaller, but it is not a user interface ;) used a windows machine rescently? notice how a standard install of the os takes over 10mb. os/2 takes up 30MB (no, that is not a typo, thirty mb for a standard install of os/2) notice that on the mac it takes less than 4MB for a complete install, including fonts. *FLAME OFF* I do think it would be nice if floppys were larger, but I think that there are more important advances that we can push on apple than increacing the standard floppy size. -- My opinions are mine only and tentative, pending further data Live Long and Prosper Matthew Ahrens ai261@Freenet.carleton.ca ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 21 Feb 94 08:40:16 -0500 From: msullivan@carib.vf.ge.com (Michael Sullivan) Subject: $99 Mercury Plus 68030 Accelerator Someone posted a question about the $99 Mercury 68030 16 mhz upgrade from MacUpgrade Specialists (for the Plus - model TSL16-Plus) a few weeks ago on the net. I just installed the upgrade this past weekend and am happy to report that it works great; however, installation can be troublesome depending upon the Plus's actual configuration. I suffered every conceivable problem (except short of wisps of smoke) during this installation; the vast majority of my making. Here's a summary of my experience for those that may upgrade their trusty old Plusses. First a short description: The Mercury 68030 upgrade consists of a small (approximately 3" by 4") multilayer PC board that plugs into a "Killy" clip that clips to the Plus's 68000. The "Killy" clip has connectors that contact the 68000 cpu chip pins and is held to the 68000 by tongues that clip to the ends of the chip. The top of the clip resembles an IC socket that mates with pins on the adaptor board. An extender socket is used to ensure that the adapter board clears the memory SIMMS of the Plus. The board has a socket for a companion FPU (I did not purchase the FPU), a 68030 chip, and some associated logic. The 68030 is clocked by the Plus's internal clock (just shy of 16 Mhz) (the plus's 68000 is clocked by a divide-by-two circuit) which is brought to the adaptor by a short wire terminated by a small clip that attaches to a specific IC pin on the Plus logic board. A 800K disk accompanies the package with system 6 and system 7 extensions and some readme files with additional installation instructions and notes on compatibility. One of the notes said that Jasmine Drivers usually caused problems. I ignored the warning. An installation manual completes the package. I waited until the weekend to commence the installation into my trusty Plus. The Plus and I go way back; I sold my IBM-PC in 1985 to get the money to buy it (it was a 512k "Fat-Mac" then). I paid more money to upgrade it to a Plus (with a large 800K drive, SCSI port, 1 meg expandable memory) and bought a Jasmine 20 mByte Hard Drive when they became available. It now sports 4 megabytes of memory. Just enough (almost). I had opened the case many times before; no problem there. The manual provides good instructions. The logic board came free easily after unplugging the power harness and the floppy drive cable. The Killy clip installed without any major problems - just be careful that the pins are aligned correctly - be very careful. The manual is reasonably clear here - too bad the photos are all missing. The accelerator board mounts on the Killy clip and just clears the metal framework above the logic board. The manual could be a little clearer on the proper orientation of the accelerator board. The legend on the board shows the orientation of the board with respect to the logic board's 68000. If you keep that orientation you will be ok. (It's probably impossible to physically mount the logic board/accelerator in the Plus if you have it backwards.) You have to spread the metal rails that support the logic board in order to install the logic board with the accelerator board in the Plus. In many respects this is the trickiest part of the installation since the accelerator mounts on top of the Killy clip and is held simply by the friction of the pins in the socket. I found that clipping the clock lead to the proper chip required knowing the numbering convention of ICs: pin 1 is found to the left of the index mark at the end of the chip looking down at the chip from the top. No problem here, but be careful to get a secure connection. I buttoned up the Plus and had a passing thought that I should check the power supply voltage. I let the thought pass and went for the gold - power ON! NO BEEP! No happy Mac, just a strange screen pattern. I opened the case and checked the installation. I found that I had mis-aligned the Killy clip and bent one of its pins. I realigned the pin and reinstalled the clip and tried again. BEEP! Success. Now the fun began. I reconnected my Jasmine HD20(System 6.8) and tried booting from it. No luck. I disabled the accelerator by the programmer's switch - interrupt switch sequence described in the manual and the system booted. Good. I then added the system INIT to enable the accelerator board and rebooted from the Jasmine. No good. I disabled the accelerator and tried rebooting. No good. Uh Oh. I tried a few more times. No good. A sad Mac showed up from time to time during the boot sequence. Now where is the table of codes? I put off looking. Now I was worried. I got my Norton Utilities "Emergency Disk" and ran a diagnostic on the Jasmine Drive. It showed up but the Disk Doctor refused to complete repairs ("NDD cannot complete the repair"). I started recovery and copied what I needed to a series of floppies. I thought that I would reformat the drive and start again, assuming that the installation of the INIT caused a problem (maybe just one of those things). During this whole sequence I ignored the occasional sad Mac failures and assumed that a proper installation of a reformatted hard drive would solve my problem. The Jasmine formatter refused to work; I tried again and finally got the Jasmine formatter to work through the whole formatting sequence (The Jasmine manual says you might have to try a few times). The Plus would only reboot if I rebooted through the special sequence used to disable the accelerator. It would not reboot from a straight power up. This was beginning not to be fun. I finally woke up and started looking for the Sad Mac error codes. Do you know how hard they are to find? I looked all over the place, in "Inside Mac", in the promotional edition of "Inside Mac" (I swear they are there, but I couldn't find them), and in other books. I finally found them in "On Macintosh Programming: Advanced Techniques" by Daniel K. Allen. The codes indicated that the memory was occasionally failing the initial tests. Could the memory be too slow for the 68030? Worked fine before. Then I remembered Larry Pina's excellent book on Macintosh repair ("Macintosh Repair & Upgrade Secrets") and its warning about undervoltage Mac Pluses. He described a procedure to check the voltages through the external floppy drive connector (top row: 5th pin from left is connected to the 5 volt supply). I checked mine and found 4.65 volts. Way too low. I opened the case again and adjusted the the 5 volt supply for 5.05 volts (The adjustment is just above the speaker on the video/power supply board). I reassembled the plus again and the sad macs went away. But still no hard drive boot. I then tried to reformat the Jasmine disk again on the assumption that the previous format may have been faulty due to the low voltage. This time the old Jasmine formatter refused to work at all. Then I remembered the warning about Jasmine Drives in the readme files. It was time to reformat and install a new driver, the only problem is that it was now Sunday afternoon. Where do you get drivers on a Sunday afternoon? The Apple HD SC Setup utility would not recognize the Jasmine drive at all. SEDIT recognized the drive and reported its signature: Seagate ST225N. I recalled some Info-Mac discussions of modifications of the Apple utility to recognize non-Apple drives. Sure enough, buried in the Info-Mac archives was a discussion of modifications to the old and new utilities. The old utility could be modified by Resedit (Code: %A5Init) by replacing the "08" ahead of the ascii blank in front of "SEAGATE". I made the change. Then I ran the HD SC Setup utility on the modified plus and it recognized my disk! The formatting and installation went on normally from then on. I installed a fresh copy of System 6.8 and the special accelerator INIT. IT ALL WORKED! And she is recognizably faster. So, in summary: Its a good accelerator. Works fine. Just watch out for all the other items attached or part of the Plus: voltage, hard drives (Jasmine), assumptions. I recommend the Mercury Accelerator highly. Whew, what a weekend. I also registered the kids for softball, went to church, fixed my daughter's bed and watched the Olympics! Mike Sullivan - 609-338-4098 @ Martin-Marietta Comms Systems - Camden NJ ------------------------------ Date: 21 Feb 1994 10:05:49 +0100 (MET) From: EICKHOFF@dornier.de Subject: (Q) Think C 6.0.1 fatal error Hello, in a small programming project I encountered a nice compiler error which is called internal error (ZREF) The manual says that this error should never occur and symantec should be contacted thereupon. I'll do that, but I'd like to know if somebody else has also encountered that problem and what the gurus know about it. Some more facts. I have the update from Thinkk C 6.0 to 6.01 installed. The error occurs in both the Think C version and a slightly modified Think C++ version. The error occurs when writing the file. It compiles the application correctly, it links correctly it asks under which name to save the file, it asks if it is permitted to overwrite the old file and then - bang!! it crashes and I have no chance, the mac must be rebooted. I am not able to detect exactly which of the modifications I made to a former project version lead to the problem. Any ideas, hints, background info? Jens Eickhoff (eickhoff@dornier.de) ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 21 Feb 1994 11:31:54 -0500 From: acc00bcg@unccvm.uncc.edu (Bonnie Gable) Subject: 840AV drive problems I am wondering if other folks on the net are having problems with the disk drive on the Quadra 840AV. When you try to re-initialize an 800k floppy it goes through most of the procedure and finally says, "Disk Initialization Failed!". I then tried formatting the same diskette on my Quadra 700 and it works fine. I have tried all sorts of possible fixes. At first I thought it might be a problem with Macintosh PC Exchange but I turned it off and restarted and had the same problem. I turned off all extensions, etc. and it still failed. I know that the 840 and 660 AV's have "New Age" controllers instead of the old but relatively reliable "SWIM" controllers. I posed the problem to an Apple systems engineer. His reply was that the New Age controller was much more precise and much less tolerant than the SWIM controller. He recommended I use only name brand, high density floppies. Not a good solution when you have about 150 diskettes (old software versions) which you wish to recycle. I also tried formatting a diskette (that failed to format on the 840AV) on the 660 AV and it formatted fine. Has anyone else been experiencing these problems? Does anyone know the solution? (The 840AV is still under warranty). Thanks! --Bonnie Gable acc00bcg@unccvm.uncc.edu ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 19 Feb 94 13:43:27 +0100 From: "Fabrizio Oddone" Subject: A cool shareware payment Michael Crichton is a proud Macintosh shareware user, indeed! My friend Alessandro Levi Montalcini recently received a signed hardback copy of "Jurassic Park" (the Italian version, BTW); he even found a $5 bill inside (interestingly indeed, inserted at the beginning of the chapter titled "Nedry"). Unfortunately, we do not know which of the zillions utilities Alessandro wrote he is using. -- Fabrizio Oddone ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 18 Feb 94 18:21:08 -0800 From: Leslie_Ballentine@sfu.ca Subject: Ad. misprint flames As if we had not already heard enough on the topic of misprints in advertisements, writes: >Jeez what a snake! I tell ya, the way some companies treat their >customers is simply outrageous! >... >What a jerk! Who cares how many products they sell!?! It was the one item >that Mark wanted that was misleading. I would be willing to bet it is >also one of their more popular items. Besides, people would make a HUGE >fuss if APS falsely advertised one of their expensive products. > Get a life, or at least a sense of proportion. Our local computer store recently posted a price list that offered an 800Meg hard drive for about $55. Obviously a misprint! I did offer :-) to buy one at that price, but I was not offended when they refused. > >Mark, I'd take this guy up on his offer. You HAVE been wronged. Take the >free one, man! > Fuddle-duddle! (Those of you who remember the former Canadian Prime Minister, Pierre Trudeau, will understand what I mean. ;-) Just HOW has he been wronged? What loss or injury has he suffered? None at all! It is that selfish attitude of demanding compensation for imaginary injuries that is ruining the country (and increasing the ratio of lawyers to productive workers). There was a misprint in an Ad. Forget it. ------------------------------ Date: Sun, 20 Feb 94 02:02:21 EST From: stngiam@MIT.EDU Subject: Adaptor for Sony 1430 monitor I recently got a Sony CPD-1430 multiscan monitor but there was no video cable adapter in the original box, so I had the (mail order) dealer send me out an adapter later. After setting everything up, I was somewhat surprised to see that only "Macintosh Hi-Res Display" appeared in the Monitors control panel. When I checked the supplied cable adapter, I found that the sense pins were wired to emulate an Apple 13" RGB monitor. The adaptor was marked TMACSTD on one side, and PATENT 333460 on the other. Is that the adapter normally supplied by Sony, or did the dealer send me a third-party adapter? The monitor works, by I'd just like to try out the 800x600 SVGA resolution. Otherwise, the regular VGA resolution is 640x480, same as the Apple Mac display. Just for the record, MacWarehouse's VGA adapter did not work. One of the RGB video pins was not connected, I don't remember which. Shih Tung Chem E Best l'il Tech School on the Charles ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 19 Feb 1994 23:40:47 -0500 From: ai261%freenet.carleton.ca@Forsythe.Stanford.EDU (Matthew Ahrens) Subject: AppleScript 1.0 to 1.1 updater? well, all that you need is the extension, and any new scripting additions apple may have added. what you need to do is find someone who has the applescript developer's pack, they are allowed to distribute unlimited copies of the extension and the additions and other stuff, but not the script editor, but you already have the script editor from version 1.0, rite? so, ask someone with the applescript developer's kit to give it to you, and it is perfectly legal! -- My opinions are mine only and tentative, pending further data Live Long and Prosper Matthew Ahrens ai261@Freenet.carleton.ca ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 19 Feb 94 02:38:41 EST From: stngiam@MIT.EDU Subject: AppleTalk a'la serial cable >I usually carry a printer din-8 cable in my PB's carrying case. That way, when >I'm helping out some user with a crashed HD, I only need to get some sort of >system with Appleshare up, so I can remote mount the PB's HD and get ahold of >the necessary resuscitation tools. Wait. Does that mean you can fake a two-node Appletalk network by using a serial cable? Specifically, could I set up file sharing between an LC and a Q605 by simply connecting the printer ports together with a serial cable? Shih Tung Chem E Best l'il Tech School on the Charles ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 18 Feb 94 16:45:36 EST From: "Allan M. Bloom" Subject: APS Flame On Thu, 17 Feb, Brian Veenker wrote: >I'm sorry. I don't buy this excuse at all. I spent several years working >at [a well-known retailer] and we did everything we could to accomidate >wrongly determined prices EVEN WHEN IT WAS A MISPRINT. It was OUR >responsibility. Mark, I was about to congratulate you on never having made a mistake. Then I noticed the "accomidate." Al Bloom, Virginia Tech ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 19 Feb 1994 01:32:17 -0500 (EST) From: RICKCHIN@delphi.com Subject: APS flame (R) I totally support APS. I have received nothing but excellent customer support. Their prices have consistently been excellent and their technical support personnel are the MOST informed people I have ever talked to about all Mac-related subjects, especially about hardware items. When I bought a DAT drive and prices went down the next week, I called and they sent me a refund check for the $200 difference. Anyone who is in the computer business knows that margins are slim, competition is high, customers call with support problems without reading manuals (Is it plugged in? Oh yeah. Oops!). Computer products vendors work in one of the most difficult industries to support and there are a hundred ways for a vendor to lose his profit margin with just a small problem. Then you get situations like this where an advertising mistake was made. In this case, it was only $10 ($19 ad vs. $29 actual). People seem to find this small mistake easy to pounce on. What if it was a bigger mistake ($19 ad vs. $119 actual)? I bet people wouldn't find it so easy to criticize. Anybody who actually runs a business (as opposed to just complaining about those who do) knows the difficulty of making these kind of decisions. It's not like they were asking this guy to pay a fortune more. Maybe if APS charged everybody $49, they could accomodate a mistake like this. Screw everybody for the sake of one guy? Haven't we had enough of that from other companies? Personally, I wonder how APS can do such a good job AND still have such low prices without going belly-up. Ultimately, companies do a DISSERVICE to their customers by pricing their products TOO LOW because they eventually go out of business, leaving their former customers as prey for higher priced competitors and repair vendors. I'm not saying we want to pay higher prices, but if I have to pay $20 more to have good service and a viable company, I'll pay it. It will be cheaper than all other possibilities. Please don't worry about guys like the one who relied below; there are thousands of customers who have been waiting for a company like APS to appear. Do what you can to make them happy, although I'm not sure they will ever understand that they get what they pay for. The rest of us will live happy lives, knowing we got a great product and valuable support for an excellent price. Value, value, value. Give this guy a SCSI-Boy if it will satisfy him. But ask him if he can fund a comparable product of comparable quality and durability for less than $29. If he can, I'll buy it for him. I'm a computer consultant and Mac User Group president. I estimate that 50 to 60 of my clients own APS equipment, probably 100+ pieces of equipment. Many other vendors' products are used also. No one company has even come close to the quality, consistency, service, and pricing of APS. Thanks, APS! --Rick Chin ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 21 Feb 1994 15:46:52 GMT From: qraast@kiba2.ericsson.se (Anders Stegen) Subject: Baud vs megabyte (A) >What is the relationship between a modem's baud rate and file size? >Is there a way to determine roughly how long it will take to send >a file of a certain size on a modem of a certain baud rate? baud rate = bits per second (when using telephone line modems anyway). Due to start and stop bit overhead it takes 10 bits to send one byte (8 bits) thru a modem. A 14,400 baud modem thus sends 14,400 bits per second and is capable of sending 1,440 bytes per second. 1 Megabyte = 1024 Kbytes = 1,048,576 bytes (there are other definitions but this is mine :-). So. A modem capable of 14,400 baud should transmit a 1 MB file in 1,048,576 / 1,440 = 728.2 seconds (12 minutes). The calculations above is without data compression and are theoretical maximum figures. At these rates the handling within the sending and receive computers also affects performance (downwards). Data compression is useful if you have text files, wordprocessor documents and spreadsheats which all contains a lot of "air" and can be compressed to about 40-50% of their size (my experience). If your modem (and the modem on other side) has built-in compression (and agrees on the compression protocol) you seem to get a much higher throughput than the baud rate suggests. This is why a 14,400 modem often connects to your Mac using 57600 baud. On the other hand, if you use your 14,400 baud modem to connect to a 2400 baud modem without built in data compression you are stuck with transmitting 240 bytes/second. Hence the usual hype about 57600 baudrate using a 14400 modem assumes that your data is compressable by a factor of 4. This is true for wordprocessor documents but NOT for already compacted files (compact pro and stuffit archives). Hope this helps! /Anders ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 18 Feb 1994 18:23:36 EST From: "Jeffrey N. Fritz" Subject: Baud vs megabyte (R) Pete Tamas asked: PT> What is the relationship between a modem's baud rate and file size? PT> Is there a way to determine roughly how long it will take to send a PT> file of a certain size on a modem of a certain baud rate? Yes, Pete, there is a relationship and a way to calculate transfer time. Modems are rated in baud which is roughly (but not exactly) rated to bits per second (bps). For most purposes, you can assume that baud=bps. So, a 2400 baud modem transfers 2400 bits per second. There are eight bits in a byte. So a 100,000 byte file has 800,000 bits. At 2400 bps, the file would take: (100,000*8)/2400 = 333.33 seconds or 5.5 minutes. In reality most protocol transmit both ways (so the other side knows that the packets have been received), so the actual transfer time will vary slightly. Jeffrey Fritz jfritz@wvnvm.wvnet.edu West Virginia University ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 19 Feb 1994 22:06:57 +0000 From: ajcarr%ccvax.ucd.ie@Forsythe.Stanford.EDU (Dr Alun J. Carr) Subject: Bug in Word's Equation Editor (C) I recently installed a few of the debugging extensions from Apple the other day. One was DoubleTrouble, which checks for an application disposing an already disposed handle. For some bizarre reason, I had to use a copy of Word 5.1a off a campus server (I normally stay well clear of Microsloth products these days). I tried to insert an equation, and Bingo! there I was in MacsBug, with the following screen: User break at 000E25E4 DisposeHandle on a disposed handle! ------------------------------------------------------------ No procedure name 000E25E4 *MOVEM.L (A7)+,D0-D5/A0-A2 | 4CDF 073F The only peculiar thing about my system (Centris 650 8/500, System 7.1) is that I don't have the MTExtra font installed. Perhaps if someone from Design Science or Microsloth is listening, they might look into the problem... Alun Dr A. J. Carr, Mech. Eng. Dept., UCD, Belfield, Dublin 4, Ireland. Internet: ajcarr@ccvax.ucd.ie ------------------------------ Date: Sun, 20 Feb 1994 23:11:10 -0800 (PST) From: Brian Amira Subject: Buying A Scanner I am looking at buying a scanner and had some questions. If I will be outputing to a 600dpi printer, what dpi should I scan images at? Is there a rule or equation to figure this stuff out? --Brian | Brian M. Amira | Internet E-Mail: Brian@scs.unr.edu | ------------------------------ Date: Sun, 20 Feb 1994 04:54:49 -0700 (PDT) From: AUNE_N@SALT.PLU.EDU Subject: CD-ROM Play Audio CDs upon insertion (Q) Hello Netters! Lacking an audio CD player, I have come to rely on my Apple CD-ROM drive to play my audio CDs. It works great except that everytime I put a CD in the caddy and insert it in the Mac I have to go through a zillion steps to get it to start playing. Is there a way I could automate the following using Quickeys, Applescript, etc 1) Open Sound Control Panel 2) Select Input Options 3) Select CD input and Playthrough option 4) Adjust volume so that I can hear the music 5) Start playing the compact disc 6) Close all windows that were opened to execute the script If this is too much for my feeble computer to automate, I would settle for automatic playback upon insertion. I don't use the Speech Recognition software very much (takes up too much memory) so I usually have it set to CD-input. But is there a way to check if it is already set to CD-input, so it doesn't have to go into the Sound Control Panel? Thanks, Nate aune_n@salt.plu.edu ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 19 Feb 94 01:54:02 EST From: JJSTEP00@UKCC.uky.edu Subject: CD300 SCSI Driver for PC You might try TRANTOR. They write most of the SCSI drivers for most of the SCSI Host Adapters, and I've read somewhere that they have some drivers that should work with any CD-ROM drive with most Host Adapter Cards. Trantor also makes HACs. (At least I recall seeing one advertised in Computer Shopper.) Trantor will sell their drivers to individual consumers. --Wish I could tell you how to get in touch with them, but don't remember where I read about their driver availability, though it was probably in a PC magazine at work, where I am not now. | Jason Stephenson | | jjstep00@ukcc.uky.edu | ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 18 Feb 94 19:26:01 EST From: "Allan M. Bloom" Subject: CD Plus Software On Fri, 18 Feb, Guy Zaslavsky wrote >A friend of mine recently recieved a new Quadra 650 with the new CD300i >Plus (built in). We installed the cd-rom software that came with it >(version 4.0.2), but it refused to mount any cds. I think it may be >because of the old cd-rom version, which does not recognize the new >model. I read that apple released version 4.0.5 of the cd-rom software, >but I can't seem to find it anywhere, including at ftp.apple.com >(bric-a-brac.apple.com), nor do they have it at the local Apple Center. >If I'm right, how can it be that apple ships hardware with software that >does not support it? Any information would be greatly appreciated, >but if happen to have it at hand, please send me a copy. As I said to Guy privately, the 4.0.5 version is quite obsolete. On the Washington Apple Pi BBS, Apple Software section, is v5.0 of the Apple CD- ROM installer. WAP is often ages ahead of ftp.apple.com and other sources of goodies. I treasure my WAP membership and the piddling cost of its BBS I made the offer to Guy, and I make it to y'all. A disk image is a tad largish to mail through the internet, so I broke it into two Stuffit segments and binhex'd each. If you can handle that, feel free to ask me for your very own copy. I trust I'm not annoying any Apple lawyers with this offer. Who but an owner of a 300 (plus or otherwise) could benefit? And the beast would be at ftp.apple.com if Apple cared to do it. BTW, apart from knowing about the "plus" drive, the main advantage I see >From the 5.0 version is that playing audio CD's now gets a cp called Audio CD Player instead of a cp and an ext goofily called "CD Remote." Gee, this could get strange. Apple actually naming something by what it does? Dunno if I can cope. Al Bloom, Virginia Tech ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 19 Feb 1994 00:56:23 +0100 From: gores%sip.medizin.uni-ulm.de@Forsythe.Stanford.EDU (klaus-peter gores) Subject: changing KCHR hi, maybe someone can help to solve the following problem. setup: macintosh plus system 6.0.7, german problem: no control key, but we need one, because the mac is connected to a unix host (via helios terminal) and using vi or tcsh requires a control key. my close-to-success-solution: i made a copy of the german KCHR, and changed the mapping of alt-a to ascii-code 1, thus having access to the code of control-a by preesing alt-a. i did this with some other keys to get access to all needed control-keys. so far so good, but: now the key on the right to the spacebar, usually the less-than key is mapped to the #-character. solutions? maybe one has to change some of the other keyboard related ressources, too. who knows which one? any help appreciated, thanks in advance kp orig sig was here , mail was resend, new sig is here. shit happens ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 19 Feb 94 13:43:07 +0100 From: "Fabrizio Oddone" Subject: CPU cycles and apps > I run Monitor (watches all running processes) on my 660. > I have 8 apps running in addition to the Finder and > Express Modem. When the Monitor program is in the > foreground, it lists ClarisWorks 2.0 as taking up 70-80% > of CPU even when it has no windows open and is hidden in > the background. Now, I love ClarisWorks 2.0 and I use it > for everything, but what's the deal? It is very likely that Claris programmers are not using correctly the sleep parameter to the WaitNextEvent system routine. A little explanation follows. Every Mac application "listens" to events. In the old times (before MultiFinder) they did so by calling the GetNextEvent system routine. If you click the mouse, for instance, the GetNextEvent call returns saying "the user clicked the mouse in that point"; if you press the key 'X', the GetNextEvent guy says "the user pressed the key 'X'". What if the user does absolutely nothing, i.e. the computer is "idle"? The GetNextEvent guy says "nothing" (a programmer would say "sends a nullEvent"). While you are doing nothing and the Mac is waiting for your actions the GetNextEvent guy continuously says "nothing, nothing, nothing...". When the Apple guys created MultiFinder, they noticed that this blah, blah about nothing was a problem if lots of appls were running concurrently: it kept the CPU busy doing a rather useless thing. So they created the WaitNextEvent routine. This guy works the same way as GetNextEvent, except for two important things, both added to eliminate the blah, blah wasting CPU power. The first is called "sleep time". I could call this Mean Time Between Saying "Nothing". Suppose your application sets the sleep to one minute. The WaitNextEvent guy will tell you "nothing", if nothing happens, after one minute, avoiding the "nothing, nothing, nothing..." syndrome, wasting CPU time. If your application is not doing any calculations or tasks at idle time, an application should set the "sleep" parameter to the maximum possible. The "sleep" parameter can be changed by the application in a dynamic fashion, depending on the internal status of the app (working/not working). If your app needs to do calculations at idle time, you use a zero sleep value, so that the WaitNextEvent guy sends a continuous stream of "nothing". At each "nothing", the app completes a piece of the task it has to perform. The obvious question from the user is: will a badly written app, using a zero sleep time even when it is doing absolutely nothing useful (as is ClarisWorks in your example), affect my Mac? The answer is: yes, it sometimes will. The Murphy's Laws immediately transforms the answer in: yes, it surely will. Detailed example: MPW compilation when MPW is in foreground: elapsed time = 20 secs. the same compilation running in background when Disk Charmer 2.x (calling WaitNextEvent with a very large sleep value) is in foreground: 20 secs. the same compilation in background when BadApplication calling WaitNextEvent with sleep = 0 is in foreground: 1 minute 47 secs. More than five times slower. Sufficiently bad for me. The second question is: how can I tell when one given app is sleep-savvy, so that I may bash the programmers if it is not? Use Monitor :-) or, if you dare, use Macsbug. Go into the target application, hold the mouse button down in the menu bar, press the interrupt button in order to activate Macsbug; type "atba waitnextevent;g" and your Mac will break when the target app calls WaitNextEvent. Look at the top left corner; you should see the following: SP xxxxxxxx xx xxxxxxxx xx YYYYYYYY <- this is the sleep time in hexadecimal, in sixtieth of a second If you do not jump into Macsbug, the app is probably calling some other routine like the old GetNextEvent. To restore Macsbug to its normal state, type "gg" or "atc;g". -- Fabrizio Oddone ------------------------------ Date: Sun, 20 Feb 1994 00:58:14 PST From: "Don W." Subject: Customer's responsibilty [F] << I spent several years working at [a well-known retailer] and we did everything we could to accomidate wrongly determined prices EVEN WHEN IT WAS A MISPRINT. It was OUR responsibility. >> A "responsibility" at most to company policy, which was presumably intended to maintain good customer relations. I've seen no claim made here that it's a legal responsibility, but some customers react to advertising errors as though the advertisement somehow constituted a contract. It doesn't; it's merely an invitation to make an offer. The offer need not be accepted; even correctly advertised prices can change without notice. Misprints can raise false hopes, and occasionally would-be customers come unglued under the strain of the disappointment. That's the customer's responsibility, not the retailer's. ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 19 Feb 1994 17:17:01 -0800 (PST) From: VANNUYSD@sonoma.edu Subject: F-Key/extension to release port? Dear Netters, I use an A/B swtichbox to switch between two different applications that use two different serial devices off my printer port. One of the applications fails to release the printer port, so I can switch without rebooting the whole system. Is there an F-Key, extension, or application that would force the printer port to free up? Please reply by e-mai. Thanks in advance. David Van Nuys Psychology Dept. Sonoma State University ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 18 Feb 94 22:43:50 +0100 From: Reinder Verlinde Subject: Finder doesn't accept colons anywhere? I found a nice feature in the Finder (version 7.1). It appears to be impossible to type a colon in the Finder. I know filenames shouldn't contain colons, but my Finder also disallows colons in file comments, inserting hyphens instead. Reinder Verlinde ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 19 Feb 94 13:42:58 +0100 From: "Fabrizio Oddone" Subject: ftp.apple.com (A) In Info-mac digest #26 "Allan M. Bloom" writes: > Can one or more of you Apple folk address this question? Is ftp.apple.com > a tolerated stepchild? > Ftp.apple.com is far from useless. But is seems to be far from current. Far from current, indeed. The Network Software Installer 1.4.2 appeared on AppleLink at least two weeks before appearing on ftp.apple.com. The Apple CD-ROM Setup support is even worse. A friend of mine gave me version 5.0 (presumably taken from AppleLink), a MAJOR overhaul, which is not on ftp.apple.com yet. The Audio CD Player in 5.0 is fabulous, to say the least. (Aesthetically speaking: I saw it on a friend's Mac, looking over his shoulder. I will get my AppleCD 300 next week, hopefully). > Can y'all please stop? Every time I rebuild my system, I have to throw in > 4 or 5 updater disks after the install. I do hope that Apple merges as soon as possible all those Enablers, Updaters, Tuners, Enforcers, Annoyers into the System. The situation is intolerable. You did not mention the bugs in the Installer Script that Apple guys do not seem inclined to fix. I have discovered the cause of the problems with the Monitors Control Panel, reported in the Read Me First document in the System 7.1 disks when installing System 7.1 on a Quadra (a friend of mine had the same problem on a Mac LC, though): the Monitors Panel is OK; the Installer gleefully forgets to copy into the System the resources DITL -4096, and mntr -4096. Doing that manually solves the problem (the resources are compressed, and ResEdit actually uncompresses them in the copying process). It is a shame Apple started charging money for a System Software whose installation causes so many troubles, but it is next to incredible that this silly bug has not been removed from the System 7 Pro Installer Script. And what about the Hardware System Updater 2.0.1? At least on Quadra 610 & 700 it "forgets" to install Sound Manager 3.0; you have to install it manually. I think a "normal" user will not notice this, unless he has a helpful friend like me :-). -- Fabrizio Oddone ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 19 Feb 1994 21:20:20 -0600 From: (Pete Chane) Subject: GeoPort Express Modem settings Does anyone know the proper GeoPort Express Modem control panel settings? I use MacSLIP, AppleLink, Communicate Lite. I was setting it to Express Modem but here is what the Read Me says from Express Modem for GeoPort software 1.2 says: - The Express Modem control panel now incorporates buttons for selecting Express Modem or an External modem via the modem port. Turning the modem on or off works as described in Appendix A of the Express Modem User's Guide for the GeoPort Telecom Adapter. Normally, you should leave the Modem Port Setting set to its default "Use External Modem". The Modem Port Setting "Use Express Modem" is provided for compatibility with communications applications which are not compatible with the Macintosh Communications Toolbox. If one of the communications applications you are using is not compatible with the Macintosh Communications Toolbox you will need to select "Use Express Modem" while you are using this application with the GeoPort Telecom Adapter. If you then want to use some other serial device on your modem port after this you will need to reselect "Use External Modem". For use with AppleTalk Remote Access leave the Modem Port Setting set to "Use External Modem". Use of AppleTalk Remote Access is described more fully in the following item. ------------------------------ Date: Sun, 20 Feb 1994 03:12:34 -0500 From: lt10@cornell.edu (Li-Hsiang Tu) Subject: hangup modem automatically (Q) I am using SLIP for news and email. I am using some application to shutdown my Mac some period later. But my SLIP won't be disconnect automatically. Is there a shareware that will hang up a modem automatically when run? If so, then I can use an application called shutdown-item to hang up my modem and then shut down my Mac. Does anyone have any suggection? Thanks. ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 21 Feb 94 12:50:04 +0100 From: "'CARLOS ENRIQUE RUBIO NAVARRO'" Subject: HELP Date : 21 February 1994 Help >From : Prof. Juan Carlos VIDAL (or Carlos RUBIO) Analytical Chemistry Department, University of Zaragoza (Spain) E-mail : crubio@mcps.unizar.es TO : E-mail :info-mac-request@sumex-aim.stanford.edu I have working for a little time with Mac-TCP on the Internet and I would like you send me the following information : - I am interested in program for plotting "Sigmaplot" (Jandel scientific, Germany) for macintosh. Have you any information about this software?. Where could I get a demo version for testing?. - Have you information (or where can I get it) about actualised lists of FTP sites, preferently in my area (Europe)?. I am interested mainly in macintosh information. Thank you for your consideration. ------------------------------ Date: Sun, 20 Feb 94 18:58:14 MEZ From: David Steiner Subject: I need a couple of email addresses Howdy, Folks. I'm looking for a couple of email addresses: 1) Ross Tyler, the author of Stretch. I have a couple of questions for him. 2) DataViz, (MacLinkPC). If anyone out there happens to have one (or both) of these, it would be great. TIA, -David- David R. Steiner, Research Assoc., Remote Sensing & GIS ISPA-Uni. Osnabrueck D-49364 Vechta, Germany ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 21 Feb 1994 01:04:01 -0600 From: bkim@ddsw1.mcs.com (Brian Kim) Subject: Info-Mac Digest V12 #28 >I remember a utility that let a mac with a small monitor use applications that >require large screens by scrolling the screen. The 13" monitor would thus be a >small window that could scroll around what the Mac thinks is a larger screen. >Can anyone please send me the name of that utility. It was popular when most >users had the small 9" screens. Thanks. > >Stephen Tseng >SQT2717@acfcluster.nyu.edu I believe that Berkley Software used to have a piece of software called "Stepping Out II" that created virtual screens. I don't know if they still support it... ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- "I hope everybody know how much I love the Macintosh" | Brian Kim - Bill Gates | bkim@ddsw1.mcs.com CEO of Microsoft | Glenview, IL ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 18 Feb 1994 14:33:07 -0800 (PST) From: "Sweigart F.W.,4890,ISS" Subject: In the market for a PB Duo I am looking into purchasing a Powerbook Duo to use while traveling It will mainly be used for Database management, word processing and lots of faxing. I'm interested in an all in one desktop/portable solution. Apple changes their product line so quickly it's hard to keep up. Any opinions pro or con will be greatly appreciated. Please respond my mailbox in order to keep the list uncluttered. TIA FWS Remember, no matter where you go, there you are. B. Banzai ------------------------------ Date: 19 Feb 1994 09:17:20 +0000 From: hewat@ill.fr (Alan Hewat, ILL Grenoble) Subject: Is there a "virtual desktop" utility? Stephen Tseng writes in info-mac #28: >I remember a utility that let a mac with a small monitor use applications that >require large screens by scrolling the screen. The 13" monitor would thus be a >small window that could scroll around what the Mac thinks is a larger screen. Its called "Stepping-Out II" by Berkeley Systems. I still use it on my old SE-30 at home. Unfortunately Berkeley make so much money out of "After-Dark" that they don't bother with real software like SO-II anymore. Alan Hewat, ILL Grenoble, FRANCE (hewat@ill.fr) Fax (France=33).76.48.39.06 ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 19 Feb 1994 03:17:54 +0100 From: wilnij@knoware.nl (Willem Nijenhuis) Subject: Mac & VGA Monitor.(C) Dear netters, The scheme for building a cable to connect a Macintosh to a (S)VGA monitor I've placed in Infomac #26 is correct, but is only usable for connecting newer PowerBooks to such a monitor.I am sorry not to have mentioned that. Willem Nijenhuis (wilnij@knoware.nl) ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 21 Feb 94 17:29:29 +0100 From: Gunnar Wenngren Subject: Mac+ and HD not working together (Q) To help a temporary assistant at our office to some Mac power :-) I tried to install a Mac+ with an external Apple HD 40 for her. Both items work perfectly, but not together :-(. The Mac does not recognize any SCSI devices attached to it. The HD works properly when attached to my SE/30 but the Mac+ doesn't have a clue that it has got an HD on the line. Neither Apple HD SC Installer nor StoreWare will recognize the HD when I run them on the Mac+. Our tech says that there is something special about the Mac+ SCSI port and that he once met this kind of problem and then even the Apple gurus had to admit that they could not help. Any advice etc, TIA Gunnar Gunnar Wenngren Link|pings universitet Link|ping University 581 83 Link|ping S-581 83 Link|ping, Sweden tel 013/281050 tel +46 13 281050 fax 013/282825 fax +46 13 282825 email: gunwe@rek.liu.se ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 19 Feb 94 17:17:06 GMT-0800 From: fogelson@ursula.uoregon.edu (Nick Fogelson) Subject: Magic: The Gathering Card List This is a microsoft excel spreadsheet that catalogs your Magic: The Gatherin card collection. It also gives you totals for each color of card, as well as telling you how many of each common, uncommon, and rare cards you have. Nick Fogelson ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 18 Feb 1994 23:04:30 +0000 From: cmszopin@students.wisc.edu (infidel) Subject: Maxima Does anyone know about Connectix's Maxima? Is it worth getting along with RAMDoubler? Thanks. Corey Szopinski cmszopin@students.wisc.edu ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 19 Feb 1994 19:18:44 +0000 From: cmszopin@students.wisc.edu (infidel) Subject: Maxima Does anyone know about Connectix's Maxima? Is it worth getting along with RAMDoubler? Thanks. Corey Szopinski cmszopin@students.wisc.edu ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 17 Feb 1994 09:59:00 GMT From: dvorah@agri.huji.ac.il (DVORAH ART) Subject: microsoft quick basic and system 7 A user of ours has been happily using Microsoft Quick Basic ver 1.0 under system 6 and has now upgraded to system 7. Quick Basic doesn't work any more, he reports. Is this expected behavior? If so, does Microsoft provide an upgrade path? Please reply directly to me. Thanks, Dvorah Weisman dvorah@agri.huji.ac.il or dvorah@hujiagri.bitnet ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 17 Feb 1994 09:59:00 GMT From: dvorah@agri.huji.ac.il (DVORAH ART) Subject: microsoft quick basic and system 7 A user of ours has been happily using Microsoft Quick Basic ver 1.0 under system 6 and has now upgraded to system 7. Quick Basic doesn't work any more, he reports. Is this expected behavior? If so, does Microsoft provide an upgrade path? Please reply directly to me. Thanks, Dvorah Weisman dvorah@agri.huji.ac.il or dvorah@hujiagri.bitnet ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 18 Feb 1994 13:22:57 -0800 From: kee@kagi.com (Kee Nethery +1 510 843 6140) Subject: Mosaic/PPP (A) >Does anyone have Mosaic running via a dialup PPP connection? >I have Mosaic running from ethernet connected macintoshes but >it will not connect to the www server when used through >PPP links. >Tried supply a route from the mac directly the local gateway >and it didn't help. Works fine for me. Maybe your Mac going in through a PPP link does not have it's name/IP address registered in an inverse DNS? Several servers will not let you connect unless they can verify that you are who you say you are. Kee Nethery ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 21 Feb 1994 14:20:03 +0800 From: hntay@tamklm.sps.mot.com Subject: My command-Q can't quit application any more I just came back from 2 weeks' vacation and found that the keystrokes command-Q could not quit application anymore. In spite of that, one of the applications in the application menu is alway associated with a command-Q. In order words, my command-Q acts to select appication in the appication menu. Anyone have any idea of how this can happen, and how to put it back? Thanks in advance. Huan-Nan --------------------------------------------------------------------- HC11 E9/7E9 PE TEL: 60-3-7731133 EXT 2382, 2510 KLM MPU FINAL TEST FAX: 60-3-7731015 (COUNTRY CODE 60) ====================================================================== ------------------------------ Date: Sun, 20 Feb 1994 12:43:22 +0000 From: cmszopin@students.wisc.edu (infidel) Subject: Newsgroup for Macs I am wondering if there is a newsgroup specifically for Macs. More specifically, I am looking for a group (or just general informaiton) on Duos. Does anyone know where I can find such an entity? Thanks. Corey Szopinski cmszopin@students.wisc.edu ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 21 Feb 94 08:15:18 EST From: "David B. Miller" Subject: Nikon CoolScan Problems When using the Nikon CoolScan Slide scanner with its supplied software (Nikon Control v.1.1.1 w/Nikon Scanner Plug-In v.4.5.1) on my Centris 650, the following events sometimes happen: (a) cursor turns into never-ending stopwatch following scan necessitating reboot, (b) cursor turns into fuzzy square in Nikon Control when altering settings, (c) off-color vertical bands appear on scan necessitating re-scan (several times). Problems (a) and (c) do not seem to occur when using Plug-In with NIH Image software. These software versions supposedly contain the "fix" for the Centris 650. Nikon tech. support has ceased returning my phone calls. Any suggestions?? Reply directly to David Miller at MILLERD@UCONNVM.UCONN.edu ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 18 Feb 1994 11:56:59 UTC+0100 From: Javier Modrego Subject: NMR Programs Probably this is a somewhat sepecialized question. I am looking for NMR spectroscopy programs for the mac, either commercial or free. I would like to know about their capabilities, hardware requirements, importation of spectral data and how to get them. I have heard about one called MacNMR but I know just the name. What I want to do is to get the data from the instrument an processing and manipulate them on the mac. Can anybody out there help me? Javier Modrego, Dept. of Inorganic Chem., Univ. of Zaragoza (SPAIN) ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 21 Feb 94 06:09:50 PST From: LISTSERV@RICEVM1.RICE.EDU Subject: OED Received: from RICEVM1.RICE.EDU (NJE origin LISTSERV@RICEVM1) by RICEVM1.RICE.EDU (LMail V1.1d/1.7f) with BSMTP id 3569; Mon, 21 Feb 1994 08:12:52 -0600 Date: 21 February 1994, 09:03:58 EST From: Robert E. Moore 404-651-3990 PRPREM at GSUVM1 To: INFO-MAC at RICEVM1 Subject: OED I am interested in finding out if there is currently a location on the internet where a remote user can get access to the Oxford English Dictionary. I used to occassionally reference the one at Stanford via turbogopher; recently, however, it has been made unavailable to users not from Stanford. Is there an alternate location? Thanks. ------------------------------ Date: Sun, 20 Feb 1994 20:32:09 -0500 From: lt10@cornell.edu (Li-Hsiang Tu) Subject: PortShare Pro 2.0 Demo problem (Q) I have succesfully tried PS Pro Demo a week ago. But today when I wanted to try it again before I decided to buy it, I could not make it work. I followed the instructions in the ReadMe file. The following was what I did: 1) On the server, open the PS Pro Demo CDEV, select modem port, click "Shared" box, enter "modem" in the "Network Name:" field, and close the CDEV. 2) On the client, open the PS Pro Demo CDEV, create a virtual modem port, select the virtual modem port, BUT NOTHING appears in the right side of the panel!!! Does any one have similar experience? What did I do wrong? Thanks ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 19 Feb 1994 19:59:24 -0600 From: ehampton@rex.uokhsc.edu (Monty Hampton) Subject: Power CD-Good Deal? I am intrigued by the recent MacWarehouse offer of the PowerCD for $199. I realize that it is a 150 machine, but the PhotoCD and audio/TV options seem awfully tempting. Anyone out there with one care to provide any feedback? Is it *REALLY* that slow? Do the PhotoCD and Audio options work well? Is it even worth $199? Any comments, direct or posted, would be appreciated. TYIA. Monty ------------------------------ Date: Sun, 20 Feb 1994 19:45:43 -0500 From: Claude_Bellavance@UQTR.UQuebec.CA Subject: Problems with Powerbooks on network We are connected to our campus ethernet network via a Gaterstar. We have frequent and intermittent connection problems when we use Powerbooks on that network. Those difficulties may appear after many days without problems and on different Powerbooks located in different physical places. All other types of Macintosh work fine. We were thinking that low power battery could be reponsable but, after testing, we realised that it was not the case. If anybody has something to say about it, let us know. Thanks in advance, Claude Bellavance Centre interuniversitaire d'etudes quebecoises Departement des sciences humaines Universite du Quebec a Trois-Rivieres Quebec, Canada ---- internet: bellav@uqtr.uquebec.ca ---- ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 19 Feb 1994 06:59:17 GMT From: harrym@netcom.com (Harry Myhre) Subject: Problems with SITcomm Info-Mac@sumex-aim.stanford.edu writes: >>Initializing and resetting the modem take a very long time (maybe as >>much as a full minute)... >Yes, this *is* irritating, isn't it? What you're seeing is the Apple >modem tool being extra extra careful. A long time ago I did some >programming with modems, and I found that I had to go out of my way to >put delays between commands, etc., because some modems were just stupid >and were not ready to receive commands even though they had said so. >However, I think the Apple modem tool may go too far. I believe I have >heard Aladdin is working with Apple to make this a little more bearable. >Another option you have is to download one of the other tools from >sumex. I believe there is a scriptable tool. Maybe it is better. In >any case, not SITcomm's fault. Users don't like finger pointing, so >I don't pretend that this explanation makes your complaint go away, >but I have been able to content myself with the notion that now that >an active force like Aladdin is relying on the Apple modem tool as the >partial basis of a product, they will successfully encourage Apple to >fix whatever needs fixing. ClarisWorks is able to dial out with the Comm toolbox faster than SITComm on my Mac. I'm not a Macintosh programmer and don't even pretend to know what's going on with the Comm Toolbox, but I can tell with my stopwatch that ClarisWorks is able to dial faster than SITComm. -- Harry Myhre \ Weather: Sunny, Cool, No rain Los Angeles, Ca \ Music: none ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 19 Feb 94 13:42:49 +0100 From: "Fabrizio Oddone" Subject: Puny Floppy Drive and FaberFinder The e-mail problems you report are probably related to the fact that I changed my POPmail configuration: in the "Mail Server name" field I put a IP number instead of the server name because of temporary problems with the DNS here. Unfortunately, I think I used a IP # of a mail server which is not always turned on. People who replied to my messages had the IP # appended to simula3@ instead of the correct server name, so that did not work. Try sending mail to simula3@di.unito.it and see what happens. In Info-mac digest #26 "Allan M. Bloom" writes: > Fabrizio, what does FaberFinder do? I downloaded it from > I-M today and got a boot and an open dialog. When I > clicked on an app, my Mac died. You did not RTFM. :-) > Important note for making System 7 emergency disks: > simply putting FaberFinder disguised as the Finder in > the System folder does not work. That is, when you boot > with the disk and try launching an application, the Mac > hangs. The solution requires using a sector editor or > boot block editor (unfortunately, a power user tool). > Open the System folder on your disk, and rename Finder > to FaberFinder (keep the System folder window open in > the Finder, otherwise the Finder will detect that you > changed the name and possibly invalidate the boot blocks > on the disk). With the boot block editor, change the > Finder Name to FaberFinder and change, if necessary, > the Initial File to Run to Finder. Eject the disk > without touching its windows. The disk should boot fine, > and FaberFinder will not hang when launching > applications. Our lovely User Interface Guidelines dictate that this note should have been included as a warning inside FaberFinder, but since this utility is meant to be as small as possible, I decided to put it into the Read Me doc only. Hope this helps, -- Fabrizio Oddone ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 18 Feb 94 21:03:50 EST From: Allan Hunter Subject: Putting Ears on an SE? I have yet to see an ad in, let's say, MacWarehouse, saying "Record sounds with your pre-microphone-equipped SE or Plus--our SCSI or serial- port doohickey microphone plus program and/or INIT/cdev will let you record sounds in this-and-that format, edit it later in SoundEdit, etc." Is there a highly meaningful REASON I haven't seen such an ad? You mean to tell me there ain't such a creature? Somehow I doubt that. { How ought I to go about putting ears on my SE? -Allan Hunter ------------------------------ Date: Sun, 20 Feb 94 11:59:32 PDT From: ace@tidbits.com (Adam C. Engst) Subject: RAM Doubler In Regards to your letter <199402182049.AA22174@nwnexus.wa.com>: > Will RamDoubler work > with system 6? Maybe. > With Mac Pluses? No. > With SE's? No. RAM Doubler requires System 6.0.5 or later and a 68030 processor, along with 4 MB of RAM. 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, 18 Feb 1994 18:59:46 -0600 (CST) From: "William M. Porter" Subject: RAM Doubler, early Macs, & PowerBooks (a) Jonathan Kamien asks if RAM Doubler will work with earlier systems. The answer is NO. Reading from the manual, RAM Doubler "requires a Macintosh equipped with a 68030 or 68040 microprocessor and System 6.0.5 or later." Manual goes on to state that you CAN NOT use it with a 68000 or 68020 Mac (unless the latter has a '030 accelerator installed). I do not think that RAM Doubler expands the amount of memory that your processor can address. An LC II, for example, can only address 10Mb. Installing RAM Doubler on an LC II that already has 8Mb of physical RAM installed sounds to me like a waste of money. Somebody correct me if I'm wrong. Pete Tamas asks about RAM Doubler and Powerbooks. I'm using it on my PowerBook with complete success: I have only 4Mb of physical RAM, but now have 8Mb of RAM available for applications. I have not noticed the battery hit that you have with Virtual Memory on the Powerbook. I think that VM is just one of the strategies that Connectix uses. I must admit that I tend to use my PB plugged in, but so far (for a week of use) I haven't noticed any problems. Will Porter / University of Houston ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 18 Feb 94 22:58:30 PST From: jbthoo@ucdavis.edu (John Thoo) Subject: RAM Doubler and Disk access (R) On 17 Feb 94 Pete Tamas wrote: > If someone wants to use RAM doubler on a Powerbook and put the > drive to sleep, will using RAM Doubler thwart the plans? I > understand that RAM Doubler uses an efficient type of virtual > memory. No problems on my PB170 4/40 so far (knock on wood :-) (As I understand it, RAM Doubler resorts to using the HD only as a last resort. Someone please correct me if I'm mistaken.) --John. ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 21 Feb 1994 13:50:30 +0000 (GMT) From: "G.J. Berry APEME (Microelectronics) ext 4570 " Subject: RamDoubler on an LC? Hello all, I just tried to order RamDoubler from MacLine in London only to be told that it will not work on an LC (original model). The information that I read elsewhere however says that it will "double the memory on any Mac with a 68020 or above". Can anyone clarify the situation? I have postponed my order for the time being as I do not want to spend money (albeit not a particularly large sum) on software which is no use. The idea of an LC with 20 Megs of RAM appeals to me quite a lot, so I hope MacLine are not correct! Please e-mail me directly, and I will summarise. Thanks in advance, Graham Berry Dundee University Scotland gjberry@uk.ac.dundee.dux PS Sorry if this has been asked before and I just missed it. ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 21 Feb 94 15:16:53 GMT From: Fergus Sullivan (ITL Temp) Subject: RAM Doubler on old macs (A) Jonathan.Kamien@uvm.edu (Jonathan Kamien) asks a few questions about = Ram Doubler, =A6Will RamDoubler work =A6with system 6? Don't know. =A6With Mac Pluses? No =A6With SE's? No You need an 030 or an 040 processor. ****You also need a minimum of 4 = Mb RAM already installed.**** You need a hard disk if you have more = than 8 MB or RAM. Cheers, Fergus Sullivan t-fergus@microsoft.com (not for much longer) v-fergus@microsoft.com (soon) ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 18 Feb 1994 17:43 EST From: Don't Panic! Subject: Safeware Insurance (Q) Dear Netters, I was considering getting insurance for my computer, and saw an ad for a company called Safeware in the MacUser magazine. Anyone have good or bad experiences with them or other insurance companies for computers? My computer is well out of its 1 year Apple Warranty. Thank you for any information you can provide about this topic. I have also called UniCom, called them once and found it more expensive to insure my computer than buy a used equivalent of my computer. Sincerely, ABRODY@VAX.CLARKU.EDU ------------------------------ Date: Sun, 20 Feb 1994 23:10:46 EST From: bouldin@anvil.nrl.navy.mil Subject: Security of Mac Data (Q) I never thought this would matter to me, but I think that I need to take some steps to protect the data on my hard disc. I am interested in suggestions for password protecting folders, volumes or discs, and in encryption programs. I know there are several things in the archives: PowerLock looks good for locking the disc and Enigma and MacEncrypt both look good for encryption. However, I am quite interested in recommendations from other peoples experience. I'm also interested in commercial products *if* they are good. I am, most of all, very concerned about being able to reverse or override any of these protection/encryption schemes. Thanks!! ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 19 Feb 1994 14:38:30 -0500 From: "Marc D. Field" Subject: Snooper and Help! >Can anybody tell me the most recent version numbers of Snooper and Help! ? I'm not sure of the latest version of Snooper, but Maxa is no longer supporting it. Actually, Maxa isn't supporting anything anymore, as they stopped operations in July 1993. Micromat has taken over some of Maxa's products, but apparently they are not supporting them either. This info is >From a recorded announcement on Maxa's old tech support number, 800-788-6292. Call that number for the details. BTW, if anyone knows how to get a copy of the latest version, I'd love to know. I have version 1.0 with a registration card that promises a free upgrade to 2.0. Obviously Maxa won't be able to send the upgrade, and Micromat/Maxa's recording seems to indicate that Micromat won't be any help either. ...MF ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Marc D. Field School of Law mfield@virginia.edu University of Virginia ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ------------------------------ Date: Sun, 20 Feb 1994 08:34:25 -0600 (CST) From: Mark Vellek Subject: Speech Manager default Okay, this is probably a FAQ, but how do I change the default voice that the Speech Manager uses? Mark Vellek Columbia, MO ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 21 Feb 94 10:26:12 +0100 From: "Ad Herweijer" Subject: Terminal emulation software using Appletalk protocol and connections I am looking for (an upgrade for) terminal emulation package which allows communication between the Mac and a LaserWriter using Appletalk protocol and connections. LaserWriters have a comprehensive PS interpreter on board. Interactive communication between the Mac (the terminal) and the printer (the computer) is possible using terminal emulation software. Usually such software assumes connection of the Mac via the serial port of both devices and RS-232 protocols. Besides the Laserwriter must be hardware-switched from Appletalk to RS-232. When your printer is networked, however, this is of course not a practical solution, as you don't want to disconnect the printer from the network. A terminal emulation program that allows communication using Appletalk protocol and the existing network-connection would solve these problems. In fact, such a tool exists: until now I have been using a little application called Postscript Tool (not to be confused with Adobe's PSTool, which serves a different purpose). It is a 'preview edition' and was made by Clayton M. Ewell of Helicon Designs (Columbus, OH) back in 1986. The accompanying Readme announces a much improved and extended commercial version to be released 'soon' (in 1986, that is!). Despite the fact that it is surprising that the software still works with System 7.1 and Laserwriter Driver 8.1.1, it has some inconveniences -particularly in the user interface- that start annoying me. Does anybody know what happened to Postscript Tool (not PSTool) and/or it's makers: Helicon Designs. Does anybody know of another package that will do this job? Please mail your response to ad@ph.tn.tudelft.nl and I will summarise to the digest. Ad Herweijer ir. Ad Herweijer Delft University of Technology Fac. of Applied Physics Pattern Recognition Group Lorentzweg 1 2628 CJ Delft the Netherlands Phone: +31 15 782408 FAX: +31 15 626740 E-mail:ad@ph.tn.tudelft.nl ------------------------------ Date: 20 Feb 1994 19:03:40 GMT From: datamike@home.interaccess.com (datamike) Subject: The Underground Mac Recently I sent issue #09 of my biweekly publication, The Underground Mac. It hasnt' shown up yet. Is there some reason it isn't being posted? Thanks! Michael Shannon ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 19 Feb 1994 23:46:04 -0500 From: ai261%freenet.carleton.ca@Forsythe.Stanford.EDU (Matthew Ahrens) Subject: Weather gif site... so, is there an ftp site that we can get satellite maps from? thanx lots!! -- My opinions are mine only and tentative, pending further data Live Long and Prosper Matthew Ahrens ai261@Freenet.carleton.ca ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 21 Feb 94 6:58:44 EST From: "Jamie R. McCarthy" Subject: Will HFS change when the PowerMacs emerge? > Hi, I've been wondering about the new Power PC Macs. Will I be able to > exchange disks with someone with a PPC Mac? Yes, you will. Apple's goal is no compatibility problems: none, zero. While I haven't seen a Mac on PPC yet, I can safely estimate that they're not going to change HFS of all things! There were rumors earlier that new Macs this year would have crippled floppy drives. Apple now assures us that is not true. So if you were thinking it would be physically difficult, that's not a problem either. -- Jamie McCarthy Internet: k044477@hobbes.kzoo.edu AppleLink: j.mccarthy ------------------------------ Date: 21 Feb 1994 07:08:41 -0500 (CDT) From: Dwight Lemke at Wisconsin Oshkosh Subject: WinWord <-> Mac Word What's the recommended way to transfer files back and forth between Word for Windows (2.0, I believe) and Word 5.1a? RTF? Save in WinWord on my Mac? Let the PC do the translations? Which requires the least clean-up afterwards? Is the same method the best in both directions? Thanks! -Dwight ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 18 Feb 94 21:21:38 GMT From: "G.C.Q.Birch" In reply to recent queries about removing Word temp files on start up, I remember at one time using version 1 of an extension called "Temperament" which does just this. I believe that there's a version 2 which removes any file type you specify, but I haven't used this one. I couldn't find either at info-mac though :-( Maybe someone can send Temperament in "gifts" or whatever it's called. -- Greg Birch Computing Services, Southampton University, U.K. ------------------------------ Received: from [198.207.242.1] (198.207.242.1) by [157.22.101.101] with SMTP (MailShare 0.96b1); Fri, 18 Feb 1994 13:03:20 -0800 X-Sender: kee@pop.kagi.com Mime-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii" Date: Fri, 18 Feb 1994 13:01:48 -0800 To: Info-Mac@sumex-aim.stanford.edu From: kee@kagi.com (Kee Nethery +1 510 843 6140) Subject: Modems w/ RJ-45 Connections (A) Cc: Tom_Scott@qmengr.mail.cornell.edu Message-Id: <1450545894710622@[157.22.101.101]> >Many of my administrators are looking to set up modems in their offices >to facilitate dial-in access, but unfortunately, they have digital >phones using the 8-wire RJ-45 jacks. The modems I've seen so far just >have the 4-wire RJ-11 jacks. Is there any modems that will accept a >digital RJ-45 jack? Or is there an RJ-45-to-RJ-11 converter? Is there >a reason for this restriction? Thanks for any help you can provide. reply was, get an analog phone line for your modem. Do not go through the digital PBX. Your modem converts the digital signal to analog tones. Digital phones digitize the analog modem signal back to digital. The digital PBX converts back to analog to talk to the phone company. The phone company digitizes to send around on their links. The phone company converts back to analog to send to the receiving modem. The receiving modem converts back to digital. If you are going slow speeds, 2400 bps, you will be OK but at higher speeds, all the conversions create errors. Plus, the modem to digital phone converter boxes cost a bunch of bucks. Get an analog line for modem use. The alternative to running an analog line to every administrator's desk is to get a network box that allows people to dial into the network and that gives you the ability to monitor who is dialing in and to insure that they are who they say they are. Security!. And for this dialin server, get analog phone lines! Kee Nethery ------------------------------ End of Info-Mac Digest ******************************