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- From: gordonf@intouch.bc.ca
- Subject: Win95 FAQ Part 13 of 14: MS Plus etc.
- Message-ID: <19981108.8D7FAB8.1262E@ras4vpn10.reelwest.bc.ca>
- Date: Sun, 8 Nov 98 20:11:53
- Approved: news-answers-request@MIT.EDU
- Followup-To: comp.os.ms-windows.win95.misc
- Summary: These postings list many questions asked in said newsgroups,
- and answers them as best as I can. I make references to other
- Web sites and FAQs when appropriate. Visit the WWW home of
- this FAQ (http://www.orca.bc.ca/win95) for the appropriate
- links. This section is the 13th: MS Plus etc.
- Organization: Personal and Win95 FAQ maintainence
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- Xref: senator-bedfellow.mit.edu comp.os.ms-windows.win95.misc:326238 comp.os.ms-windows.setup.win95:77860 comp.os.ms-windows.networking.win95:59686 comp.os.ms-windows.apps.compatibility.win95:17913 comp.os.ms-windows.apps.utilities.win95:62549 comp.answers:33801 news.answers:144045
-
- Archive-name: windows/win95/faq/part13
- Last-Modified: 1998/11/08
- Posting-Frequency: Every two months
- URL: http://www.orca.bc.ca/win95/faq13.htm
-
- Subject: 13. Microsoft Plus (TM) and other Win95 add-ons
-
- * 13.1. What is Microsoft Plus and why do I care?
- * 13.2. How do I use System Agent?
- + 13.2.1. But (this program) already installed a scheduler!
- + 13.2.2. How can I use System Agent instead of those other
- schedulers?
- + 13.2.3. Why should I use System Agent instead of those
- other schedulers?
- + 13.2.4. Top ten reasons why System Agent is cool to use
- * 13.3. How do I use Internet Explorer and Setup Wizard?
- + 13.3.1. Why should I get Internet Explorer 2.0?
- * 13.4 How do I use DriveSpace 3?
- + 13.4.1. Is it safe to use Norton Utilities for Win95 with
- DriveSpace 3?
- + 13.4.2. Is it safe to use DriveSpace 3 on FAT32 drives?
- * 13.5. How do I use Desktop themes?
- + 13.5.1. How do I make my own theme and save it?
- + 13.5.2. Where can I get more themes?
- + 13.5.3. Why do all the themes I downloaded take up so
- much hard drive space?
- + 13.5.4. How did Microsoft replace all the drive, folder,
- printer, etc icons?
- + 13.5.5. How can I replace all the drive, folder, printer,
- etc icons?
- * 13.6. How do I use the "Visual Enhancements"?
- + 13.6.1. How do I remove the Visual Enhancements?
- * 13.7. How do I use the Dial-up Networking Server?
- * 13.8. How do I use 3D Pinball?
- + 13.8.1. How come 3D pinball doesn't play any music or
- sound effects?
- * 13.9. Top ten things missing from Microsoft Plus
- * 13.10. What are the MS Power Toys?
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Subject: 13.1. What is Microsoft Plus and why do I care?
-
- MS Plus! is all the stuff that Microsoft should've included in Win95,
- but decided they wanted to make you pay more for them. :-)
-
- OK, it's really a bunch of add-ons designed for high powered computers
- ('486 machines and Pentiums) to make your system run a little smoother
- and look a little nicer. Keep in mind that the Plus stuff is for high
- powered computers, which was probably the biggest reason MS didn't
- include this stuff with the operating system.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Subject: 13.2. How do I use System Agent?
-
- System Agent is a little scheduler that runs programs at certain
- times. It's quite handy because it already schedules disk maintenance
- processes, so all you have to do is keep your computer turned on and
- it keeps itself clean.
-
- To install System Agent, install MS Plus. A little icon shows up in
- the SysTray; the place with the date and time in it on the Taskbar.
- Double-click it to bring up the System Agent manager. You will see
- four programs already scheduled (five, if you installed DriveSpace 3)
- which will scan your hard drives, de-fragment them, check for low disk
- space, and re-compress any DriveSpace 3 drives you have.
-
- You can bring up properties for these programs, and change their
- settings and their scheduled run times. System Agent-Aware programs
- will offer special "Scheduled settings" requesters if you change their
- settings from here.
-
- NOTE: The ScanDisk entries don't automatically fix errors, and they
- will display prompts on the screen when they do find errors. Be sure
- to change each scheduled program's settings so they automatically fix
- errors.
-
- You can also add new programs to this list. Hit Program/Schedule new
- program. Hit Browse to search for the program you want to run, or type
- its command line in the box. NOTE: Programs with long filenames or
- directory names belong in quotes, like "C:\Program
- Files\Plus!\RunMe.EXE" /parameter1 for example. Bring up properties
- for the included programs for examples.
-
- Any clickable object in Explorer can run from System Agent, including
- DOS .PIF files and even documents. I specify "PIF" because it's better
- to specify a DOS program's settings and use the PIF as the object to
- run. Win 3.1 and Win95 programs and documents will have their icons
- appear in this window.
-
- * 13.2.1. But Norton Anti-Virus (TM)/F-Prot Anti-Virus (TM)/Colorado
- Backup (TM) already installed a scheduler!
-
- So? You paid for System Agent when you bought MS Plus. Use it. I get a
- real kick out of people who run three different schedulers and then
- complain that their system swaps to the hard drive so often. They're a
- waste of memory.
-
- * 13.2.2. How can I use System Agent instead of those other
- schedulers?
-
- First you will need to remove the other schedulers. The three I
- mentioned all insert an icon in the Startup group in your Start Menu.
- They're easy enough to remove; here's how to remove Start Menu
- items.
-
- Second, read up on the programs you want to schedule. The three I
- mentioned all have instructions for running them from a command line.
- For example, Norton Anti-Virus will scan all local hard drives by
- running:
-
- NAVW32.EXE /L
-
- The /L means "local". Be sure to test this command line from a DOS
- session; Win95 DOS sessions can run Windows programs, and the START
- command in a DOS session can launch documents.
-
- Third, Hit the Program menu in System Agent Manager and select
- "Schedule new program". In the "Program to run" box, type in the
- command line that makes your program run (like the NAVW32 /L example
- above). Tell the program to run minimized if you wish.
-
- Last, select "When to run..." and pick a time for this program to run.
- Be careful not to overlap programs; you don't want an Anti-Virus scan
- to happen while running ScanDisk, for example. The System Agent
- Manager shows the last started and stopped times of all scheduled
- programs, so use this as a guide for adding new programs and
- preventing overlap.
-
- For another example, Win95's built in Backup lets you launch the
- backup set rather than the program. Just open the Full System Backup
- from Backup, which enables Registry back-up, then select the files or
- drives you want to back up. Pick your target (usually your tape
- drive), pick your options, and save the backup set with a unique name.
- Finally, schedule this backup set to run (by including the .FST
- itself; not the program, and don't include a START command; there's no
- need) in System Agent. Colorado Backup works much the same way. Other
- back-up programs will have different commands to use; experiment from
- a DOS prompt to get the commands right.
-
- * 13.2.3 Why should I use System Agent instead of those other
- schedulers?
-
- Is this a rhetorical question? You paid for it when you bought MS
- Plus.
-
- * 13.2.4. Top ten reasons why System Agent is cool to use
-
- 10. It takes practically no memory
-
- 9. It can stop scheduled programs if you start using your computer
-
- 8. It can run stuff on start up if you don't like Startup groups
- (Great for User Profile users)
-
- 7. It's always running (except in Safe Mode)
-
- 6. It's easy to schedule programs to run
-
- 5. It keeps your hard drives clean by running ScanDisk for you
-
- 4. It knows when you're on batteries (notebooks) and won't run big
- programs if you're on batteries
-
- 3. It can wake you up in the morning (heh heh... just schedule a .WAV
- file to play every day at 6:00 AM)
-
- 2. You don't need a Pentium to use it (heh heh)
-
- 1. It comes with all the other cool stuff in MS Plus
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Subject: 13.3. How do I use Internet Explorer and Setup Wizard?
-
- When you re-start the computer after installing Plus, you'll notice an
- obvious "The Internet" icon staring at you. Open it. This launches the
- Internet Setup Wizard. I won't get redundant, so to make it short
- & sweet, get an answer sheet from your service provider with answers
- to these questions:
- * Access phone number
- * Login name and login password
- * DNS server addresses
- * Gateway address (if using default gateway, ignore this)
- * E-MAIL address
- * POP3 server login name and password (Usually same as dial-up login
- name and password)
- * POP3 server name (usually mail.somewhere.com or something like
- that)
- * Also SMTP server name for outgoing mail (if it's not the same as
- the POP server)
-
- Check out the detailed Setup Wizard Instructions for the rest of
- the details. The wizard will add all the needed Win95 networking
- components to get you hooked to The Internet.
-
- * 13.3.1. Why should I get Internet Explorer 2.0?
-
- Well, It's free, has a lot of things missing from the web browser
- included in Plus, and it's a direct upgrade. Visit the Internet
- Explorer Home Page.
-
- After you run the Internet Setup Wizard you could get a different
- browser instead, like NCSA Mosaic, and the auto-dialer and stuff will
- still work with it.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Subject: 13.4. How do I use DriveSpace 3?
-
- No point in being redundant... check out the Disk Compression
- Section.
-
- * 13.4.1. Is it safe to use Norton Utilities for Win95 with
- DriveSpace 3?
-
- I don't trust it, even though Symantec swears by it. Contrary to
- popular belief, Microsoft's ScanDisk and Defrag (You know; those
- programs that MS pirated off Symantec?) work just fine on DriveSpace 3
- drives, keeping them clean, especially if you schedule these programs
- to run regularly with System Agent.
-
- Notice though, that Plus comes with replacement versions of ScanDisk
- and Defrag, so that's enough to scare me from third party disk
- maintenance tools... MS must've changed something fundamental with
- DriveSpace 3.
-
- * 13.4.2. Is it safe to use DriveSpace3 on FAT32 drives?
-
- I guess not. DS3's setup program will blatantly refuse to create a
- compressed volume file on a FAT32 drive. (Hey, Stac Electronics!
- That's your cue... get on it!)
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Subject: 13.5. How do I use Desktop Themes?
-
- Be sure to install at least one theme from the included Plus themes to
- enable themes in general, otherwise Plus Setup won't install any theme
- support. You can always hand-delete the components of the theme and
- retain theme support.
-
- From here, you can use a theme from the included list, or download a
- favorite from www.windows95.com.
-
- * 13.5.1. How do I make my own theme and save it?
-
- To make your own theme, make your own custom changes to the desktop
- scheme, colour scheme, sound scheme, mouse pointers, and screen saver,
- using the Properties sheets or control panel programs for each. Once
- you're satisfied with your work, run the new Themes control panel and
- "Save As..." to create a .theme file.
-
- You may also change the icons for My Computer, Net Neighborhood, and
- Recycle Bin. Bring up Display properties and hit the Plus! tab to
- change them.
-
- You should store all the custom icons, animated pointers, sounds,
- screen saver, and bitmaps in C:\Program Files\Plus!\Themes so your
- theme users can install the theme easily. If you use a custom font,
- include instructions on copying the font to the Windows\Fonts folder.
- Batch files can use the Win95 START command if necessary.
-
- * 13.5.2. Where can I get more themes?
-
- www.windows95.com has a well regulated themes section. I'm sure
- other major FTP sites will also carry Plus themes.
-
- Usually a custom theme has a special installation procedure; you have
- to install a font, copy a screen saver to your Windows directory, copy
- a bitmap to your Windows directory, etc, for use in the theme. All of
- these options (except custom fonts) can go anywhere in the hard drive,
- so C:\Program Files\Plus!\Themes is a good place to keep them.
-
- * 13.5.3. Why do all the themes I downloaded take up so much hard
- drive space?
-
- Be warned: a typical theme is about 750 KB to 1 MB in size, and that's
- the compressed size!
-
- Be reasonable; pick a theme after you browsed all the themes you
- wanted to see, and delete the components of the others.
-
- * 13.5.4. How did Microsoft replace all the drive, folder, printer,
- etc icons?
-
- This is actually quite "cool" how they did this. Explorer has Registry
- entries for each icon type it displays, and grabs that icon type from
- an .ICO or .DLL file when it starts. It usually grabs them from
- SHELL32.DLL.
-
- Plus Themes also support these Shell icons, though they don't document
- them. Look for a library file labeled COOL.DLL (I'm not making this
- up!) and QuickView it, or try changing the icon for any shortcut and
- use COOL.DLL as the source for the new icon. There are icons in that
- library to replace all the normal Shell icons. Theme support also
- includes replacing the SHELL32 icons with these COOL ones.
-
- You won't notice any changes to the icons until you use 65 thousand or
- 16 million colour modes; then the system over-writes COOL.DLL with a
- HiColor version. The HiColor icons really stand out compared to the
- 256 colour ones. NOTE: If you ever have to re-install Win95, Setup
- will restore the original SHELL32 icons; you'll need to re-install
- Plus to restore the COOL icons.
-
- Angelo Di Pierro says these HiColor icons are really 256 colour icons
- (eight bitplanes) and you can control which version of the icons come
- up with the Registry key
- HKEY_USERS\.Default\ControlPanel\Desktop\WindowMetrics (or
- HKEY_CURRENT_USER\etc... if you use User Profiles) and the value
- "Shell Icon BPP". Use values 8, 16, or 24. This seems to work
- regardless of what display mode you're actually using. You can also
- change the Icon size in this key; it support three size versions
- (small, normal, and large). This logic works because modern DLL and
- .ICO files (including COOL.DLL) include several versions of each icon.
-
- Theme support does not include directly modifying these icons, but you
- could do some searching with REGEDIT (if you feel adventurous) for the
- key "DefaultIcon" in any of the HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\CLSID sections.
- There is a DefaultIcon key for most of those.
-
- * 13.5.5. How can I replace all the drive, folder, printer, etc
- icons?
-
- This is a theory, but it is possible based on the COOL.DLL stuff last
- section. COOL.DLL is really a 16-bit library (QuickView it to see for
- yourself). So, it is possible to edit COOL.DLL with a Win 3.1 icon
- editor that supports library files (such as Borland's resource editor
- for Win 3.1 which comes with Turbo C++), or copy it and replace all
- the icons. This is safer than Registry hacking, and it's easier to
- transport with your theme.
-
- Angelo says the best icon editor around is "Microangelo". You can also
- find many HiColor icons at
- http://www.southern.edu/people/jrbeck/iconpacks (I hope you can
- find Microangelo there!)
-
- Once you do that, save it with the name COOL.DLL and replace the one
- in your SYSTEM directory with this one. You will need to re-start
- Win95 for this to take effect. You will need to replace the Computer,
- Net Hood, and Recycle Bin icons the normal way, but the icons can come
- from the COOL.DLL replacement you make up.
-
- NOTE: Check out the INFGEN.EXE tool which comes with Service Pack 1
- Admin Edition. Since many of the newest themes include replacement
- LOGO.SYS files, new fonts, and the like, it might make sense to
- prepare a theme installable from Add/Remove Programs / Windows Setup /
- Have Disk. Win95 .inf files can contain any kind of configuration
- info, including Registry changes and replacements for any kind of
- file. This method can also work if the user doesn't have MS Plus
- installed!
-
- Every time I see the file "COOL.DLL" I think of an AVI file Microsoft
- distributed with their VidTest 1.0 package, which had Bill Gates
- saying "Cool!" at the end of it. Look for COOL.AVI in the MS
- Multimedia Demo CD-ROM, or in VidTest.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Subject: 13.6. How do I use the "Visual Enhancements"?
-
- Check out the Plus! tab in Display Properties. This tab shows up when
- you install the enhancements from Plus Setup. From here, you can
- enable full window drag (which drags the contents of a window instead
- of an outline), wallpaper scaling, font smoothing, etc.
-
- Many of these options only work on fast computers with faster video
- cards. Don't attempt to use these on a computer less than a '486 with
- some kind of high speed video (VESA local bus, PCI) and a proper video
- driver for Win95. Font Smoothing only works on 65 thousand or 16
- million colour displays; it uses gray shades to fill in the jagged
- edges of large point sizes, and really isn't necessary if you use
- TrueType a lot.
-
- * 13.6.1. How do I remove the Visual Enhancements?
-
- Just turn them off in Display Properties, on the Plus! tab.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Subject: 13.7. How do I use the Dial-up Networking Server?
-
- Make sure you install Dial-up Networking before you install Plus. If
- you choose the dial-up server, you will see a new "Dial-up server"
- entry in the Connections menu. Dial-up server works with Win95 (PPP)
- dial-up clients, and Windows for Workgroups (RAS) clients. Check out
- the Dial-up server Details.
-
- From here, select a modem (all the modems appear as tabs in this
- requester) and enable or disable caller access. If you use User
- Level Security you can allow particular users on this dial-in
- connection, or you can install a password. You may only enable one
- modem as a dial-in modem; Microsoft had to disable this functionality
- so it doesn't kill sales of NT server. heh heh
-
- The dial-up server uses the same bindings as the dial-up connections,
- so you need to install the Dial-up Adapter and protocols for it in
- your Network Properties. It will automatically use all protocols
- available to it for PPP clients, but only use NetBEUI for RAS clients.
-
- NOTE: WFWG dial-in clients (using their included RAS software) won't
- work with Win95 dial-up servers running User Level Security,
- because the dial-up server can't get a clear-text version of the NT
- domain password. If you want WFWG clients to dial into NT domains
- through Win95 dial-up servers, disable user level security on the
- dial-up server!
-
- The server also acts as a NetBIOS and IPX router to any network it's
- connected to, and there's no way to turn off routing. Administrators:
- If you don't want your users to open up your network to the world,
- disable all Win95 dial-up servers through system policies.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Subject: 13.8. How do I use 3D Pinball?
-
- Use? Play, you mean. Just install it from Plus Setup. You'll find the
- icon for it in your Games group on your Start Menu, along with the
- other classic time wasters like Minesweeper, etc.
-
- * 13.8.1. How come 3D pinball doesn't play any music or sound
- effects?
-
- Most likely because you don't have a sound card, but if you do, turn
- on the Music and Sound from the game's Options menu. The first time
- you run Pinball you'll find these turned off.
-
- Music won't play unless you have a working MIDI device installed. This
- works by default on cards with Win95 drivers, but Win 3.1 drivers
- require special MIDI mapper tuning. Gravis Ultrasound users will have
- to manually load a patch map into the GUS's memory before 3D Pinball
- will play music. Get updated drivers from www.gravis.com to fix this.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Subject: 13.9. Top ten things missing from Microsoft Plus
-
- 10. IMAP4 client for Exchange instead of POP3
-
- 9. Internet Explorer 2.0
-
- 8. Nice method to replace any Shell icon
-
- 7. Hardware interface to coffee pot, to start it from System Agent
- (Right after it plays a .WAV file for a wake-up alarm!)
-
- 6. Method of starting a dial-up connection from System Agent (Any
- ideas here?)
-
- 5. Win95 admin tools for NT and NetWare networks (The NT resource kit
- does have Win95 admin tools though)
-
- 4. Good TCP/IP control utility for setting RTU, TTL, etc
-
- 3. Internet Idioms for Exchange
-
- 2. A proper Marijuana plant icon for the Recycle Bin in the 60's theme
-
- 1. A TCP/IP router for the Dial-up Server
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Subject: 13.10. What are the MS Power Toys?
-
- The Power Toys are system hacks that the Shell group over at MS
- cooked up to "improve" some of the finer points of Win95. I don't
- advocate using these things if you don't know how to even use the
- basic OS. Even MS will warn you that you're on your own when you use
- these.
-
- The Power Toys home page describes them better than I could, but for
- the sake of simplicity I'll document what to watch out for. Don't fall
- into these traps:
- * TweakUI can add unnecessary switches to the MSDOS.SYS settings
- file. These settings can load DriveSpace drivers and double buffer
- drivers that waste conventional memory. This is the most common
- memory-waster in Single Mode DOS. To remove TweakUI's settings you
- need to manually edit the MSDOS.SYS file and remove the offending
- entries.
- * CabView won't uninstall properly, and I don't know how to remove
- it without re-installing Win95.
- * QuickRes can cause some Win 3.1 apps to freeze; most don't support
- dynamic colour-depth changes or screen resolution changes.
- Diamond's video drivers do much the same thing, though I'd rather
- use QuickRes than Diamond's software. Just exit all apps before
- changing the screen mode.
-
- Just to make things interesting, the Kernel group did the same
- thing... and henceforth came the Kernel Toys. These are really
- advanced things, but in relation to FAQ page 12, I really like the
- MS-DOS Mode configuration tool the best. This tool lets you customize
- (or add more) components you can add to a DOS config via the
- "Configuration..." button in a game's PIF file. Perfect for setting up
- someone else's machine (great for OEMs) where they can customize their
- DOS mode settings without hand-writing the special config files. The
- Time Zone Editor lets you customize the time zone file in case you
- travel a lot and can't find the time zone you're in amongst the
- built-in choices.
-
- --
- ==============================================================================
- = I am Gordon of Winterpeg. Junk mail is futile. Post MakeMoneyFast =
- = Find out why: http://spam.abuse.net/spam/ Or eat pink meat from a can =
- = World's best computer: http://www.amiga.de/ they're both the same =
- = Windows 95 FAQ: http://www.orca.bc.ca/win95/ http://ga.to/mmf/ =
- ==============================================================================
-
-