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- From: Lloyd Wood <L.H.Wood@lut.ac.uk>
- Subject: Mac Screensave/After Dark FAQ v1.4
- Date: Tue, 7 Sep 93 0:49:59 BST
-
- Here's v1.4 of the Mac screensaver/After Dark FAQ. A copy should go wherever
- you archive the After Dark modules, and an alias or other copy wherever you
- keep other screensavers. I'd be grateful if you could call one 'After Dark
- FAQ' and the other 'Screensaver FAQ', to make sure that people look at it.
- Thanks.
-
- And I'd like to take this opportunity to thank Leslie Jones for his Zterm
- FAQ. Without the 'increase port buffer' advice therein, you wouldn't be
- reading this - it's the only thing that stopped ZTerm from crashing once
- my uni. server had received 16K of text and the *?!@ terminal server caused
- a backup that crashed ZTerm as it reached 20K and overflowed the standard
- 4K buffer. (And reinstalling everything I could think of was an interesting
- diversion before I hit on this.)
-
- Thanks, Leslie. And thanks, Dave Alverson, for a neat piece of software.
- Come the next version of ZTerm and its rumoured Kermit facilities, I might
- even be able to download from my *?!@ terminal server, since zmodem et al
- won't work that way... although I doubt it.
-
- -- Lloyd.
- ___________________________________________________________________________
- Lloyd Wood This space for rent. L.H.Wood@lut.ac.uk
-
-
- COMP.SYS.MAC FAQ: Screensaver/After Dark answers
-
- CONTENTS
-
- INTRODUCTION
- DO I NEED A SCREENSAVER? (0.0)
- --WHAT MAC SCREENSAVERS ARE AVAILABLE? (0.1)
- ----Modular screensavers (0.1.1)
- ----Standalone screensavers (0.1.2)
- --HOW DO I WRITE SCREENSAVER MODULES? (0.2)
- ----Writing DarkSide modules (0.2.1)
- ----Writing After Dark modules (0.2.2)
- ----Writing your own screensaver (0.2.3)
- --HOW CAN I SAVE MY SCREENSAVER PICTURES? (0.3)
- HOW CAN I UPDATE MY COPY OF AFTER DARK? (1.0)
- --HOW CAN I UPDATE MY COPY OF AFTER DARK v1.x? (1.1)
- --HOW CAN I UPDATE MY COPY OF AFTER DARK v2.x? (1.2)
- ----After Dark revision history (1.2.1)
- --HOW CAN I UPDATE MY COPY OF STAR TREK: THE SCREENSAVER? (1.3)
- --HOW CAN I UPDATE MY COPY OF MORE AFTER DARK? (1.4)
- --HOW CAN I UPDATE MY AD MODULES OR OBTAIN NEW MODULES? (1.5)
- --HOW CAN I UPDATE MY COPY OF DARKSIDE OF THE MAC? (1.6)
- HELP! I'VE FORGOTTEN MY AFTER DARK PASSWORD, AND CAN'T USE MY MAC! (2.0)
- WHERE SHOULD I PUT THE 'AFTER DARK FILES' FOLDER? (3.0)
- --MY STAR TREK MODULES SAY THEY ARE 'Out of memory', BUT THE REST PLAY FINE!
- (3.1)
- MY AFTER DARK CONTROL PANEL AND MODULES HAVE LOST THEIR ICONS! (4.0)
- --IN LIST VIEW IN THE FINDER, MY MODULES SAY THEY ARE '<a particular module>
- documents'! (4.1)
- AFTER DARK CRASHES MY MACHINE! (5.0)
- --MODULES THAT DON'T WORK UNDER MULTIMODULE AND RANDOMIZER (5.1)
- --MODULES WITH OTHER KNOWN PROBLEMS (5.2)
- EXTENSION INCOMPATIBILITIES (6.0)
- --KNOWN INCOMPATIBILITIES WITH AFTER DARK (6.1)
- MODULE NAME CHANGES AND SIMILARITIES (7.0)
- --THE NAME HAS CHANGED (7.1)
- --NOT TO BE CONFUSED (7.2)
- 8.0 MODULE REQUESTS
- DISCLAIMER AND LEGAL-WEASELLING
- --COPYRIGHT
- --DISCLAIMER
-
-
-
- COMP.SYS.MAC FAQ: Screensaver/After Dark answers
-
- Version: 1.4
- Last updated by Lloyd: Saturday, 4 September 1993
-
- Copyright (C) 1993, Lloyd Wood (L.H.Wood@lut.ac.uk).
- Not for physical distribution unless I get a copy of the medium - see Copyright
- at end
-
- This is a FAQ - a Frequently Asked Questions list. These are written and posted
- to newsgroups to cut down on needless repetition of questions that everyone (bar
- the ignorant questioner) knows the answer to. You can find many of the other
- FAQs in existence by searching back through newsgroups for 'faq', or by ftp'ing
- to rtfm.mit.edu. (If you don't know what ftp is, ask your systems administrator.
- If you don't know what rtfm means, read some FAQs.) There are a number of
- Macintosh-specific FAQs, and anyone reading comp.sys.mac.whatever will have read
- through these FAQs and will be aware of the information in them.
-
-
-
- REVISIONS
- In reverse order:
-
- 1.4 - Saturday, 4 September 1993
- Apple releases 'Monitor Energy Saver', which will make the screensaver as we
- know it obsolete (0.0). Added Citadel, DiskLock, Screensavor and the Disney
- Collection (0.1.1). BS has made the programming information publicly available
- (0.2.2). Dealt with the 'screen capture' problem (0.3). Made how to update
- DarkSide more visible (1.6). Star Trek 'out of memory' explained (3.1).
- Mentioned umich more often. Made the copyright clearer.
-
- 1.3 - Tuesday, 26 July 1993
- NowFun! reported as being released. More contest info (0.2.2). DarkSide 4.0's
- password dialog crashes if Okey Dokey 1.0.1 shows time remaining (0.1). Added
- book/disk info (1.5). Added Faces in the Dark (5.1). Clarified info on
- AutoDoubler, Slide Show, and password problems. Adam Miller's email address is
- now AMILLER@YaleVM.YCC.Yale.edu (5.1).
-
- 1.2 - Saturday,10 July 1993
- Twilight Zone is out! It plays After Dark modules in program windows. Added more
- NowFun! info. (0.1.1). Rewrote (5.0) to try and cut down the number of 'help me,
- I'm far too lazy to read your FAQ myself'-type requests I'm getting.
-
- 1.1 - Wednesday, 23 June 1993
- Added some A/UX-related information (0.0). Pyro! reported at 4.1 (0.1.1).
- Received and tested modules I had had reports on, but hadn't yet seen (5.1) -
- thanks to Stephane Rousset (rousset@gvprod.enet.dec.com) for his thoroughness.
-
- 1.0 - Sunday, 20 June 1993
- Major revision, and sufficient corrections (including those from BS) to be
- called 1.0. DarkSide 4.0 is out, and it plays After Dark modules! Expanded
- details of common icon problems (4.0, 4.1). Detailed Macsbug and the alias trick
- (5.0). Added Have-a-Blast (5.2). Updated sumex-aim.stanford.edu ftp directory
- references from util/ad (old structure) to gui/ad (new). Many other
- additions/changes.
-
-
-
- INTRODUCTION
- Abbreviations used here:
- AD - After Dark, a commercial screensaver package for the Macintosh.
- BS - Berkeley Systems, the makers of AD.
- DS - DarkSide of the Mac. A freeware Mac screensaver that will run AD modules.
- MAD - More After Dark, a commercial pack of extra AD modules from BS.
- ST - Star Trek: the Screensaver, a commercial AD package and modules from BS.
-
- This FAQ answers common questions about screensavers for the Macintosh. What's
- available and whether or not you need a screensaver are covered. Most of this
- FAQ pertains to the most popular commercial Macintosh screensaver - AD from BS,
- and the modules available for it.
-
- This FAQ is crossposted to most of the comp.sys.mac.* newsgroups on an irregular
- basis whenever it is updated. A copy can always be found on
- sumex-aim.stanford.edu in info-mac/gui/ad.
-
- The FAQ details common AD problems and misconceptions, concentrating on 'Why
- does AD crash my machine?' The answer is almost always 'You need to get and run
- the free 2.0x updater' or 'You are using a badly-written third-party module
- running under the MultiModule or Randomizer modules'. [These modules impose
- stricter rules on how a module can run than AD alone does, and a large number of
- third party (shareware/freeware) modules either won't run as a sub-module or
- crash the Macintosh.]
- How to update AD is given in (1.0). A list of 'problem' modules that should not
- be run under MultiModule/Randomizer is given in (5.0).
-
- The information in this FAQ is based on my use of AD and tidbits I have gleaned
- from email from writers and users of third-party AD modules and with BS. I have
- no connection with BS other than as a user of AD and MAD. (I'm declaring the
- free T-shirt they gave me, though. Nothing underhand here.)
-
- I welcome comments and corrections, hints on using specific AD modules, and tips
- and compatibility information relating to other Mac screensavers.
-
- This FAQ does not cover the use of AD on the Windows platform - it's for the Mac
- version (and other Mac screensavers) only. There is no way to convert Windows AD
- modules to Mac AD modules without extensive rewriting of the source code - it's
- a job for the authors of that module, and few have experience of programming
- Windows AND the Mac. Module ports are unlikely. Windows users should look at
- 'Intermission', a freely-available application that runs Windows AD modules.
-
-
-
- DO I NEED A SCREENSAVER? (0.0)
- Despite what many people will tell you, the answer is almost certainly 'no'. It
- takes a long time to burn the phosphor on a cathode ray tube with a still image
- - accidentally leaving your Mac on all weekend won't do it, so don't worry if
- you did this.
- Old Mac Plusses or monochrome Mac monitors that have seen years of service may
- have a ghostly bar at the top of the screen from the menu bar, visible when a
- menu bar is not present, but that's about it.
- The phosphor on colour monitors is even more difficult to burn, making
- screensavers even less useful than you may think.
- Running a screensaver (other than an Energy Star saver with an Energy
- Star-complaint setup, or a backlight dimmer on an LCD) does not decrease your
- monitor's power consumption. The US Energy Star programme will soon lead to the
- demise of the screensaver as unused monitors power themselves down.
-
- If you use a Quadra, Centris, or LCIII, AND use an Energy Star-compliant monitor
- (look for the star logo) off internal video on one of these machines, you no
- longer need a screensaver. Apple's freely-available 'Monitor Energy Saver'
- package enables the Energy Star features of your monitor with these machines.
- Your monitor will power down in stages when the Mac is not in use, saving on
- your electricity bills as well as saving your screen. 'Monitor Energy Saver'
- (also known by its codename 'DarkStar') is available on sumex-aim.stanford.edu
- (info-mac/cfg/monitor-energy-saver.hqx), on AppleLink, and should be on
- ftp.apple.com shortly.
-
- If you have just bought a Color Classic or LC520, which follow Energy Star
- recommendations, you should be using the Screen control panel supplied with the
- System Software to automatically turn off the monitor circuitry when the Mac is
- not in use - you DO NOT need a screensaver to save your screen, although you may
- want to 'smooth' the intrusion of the monitor switching off by using a 'dimmer'
- like Twilight.
-
- If you own a Mac with an LCD display you are unlikely to need a screensaver. The
- only screensaver you would be interested in is one that dims the backlight after
- a period of inactivity, to save power when running off the batteries - included
- in various PowerBook-specific utility packages. LCDs can retain the colour they
- are set to, whether black or white, in a 'memory effect' that takes time to
- change, but does fade away. If you use a (probably unnecessary) screensaver, it
- has been suggested that it should be one which flips all of the pixels
- regularly, to prevent this memory effect. (This is unrelated to the ni-cad
- battery 'memory effect'.) More information on both of these topics can be found
- in the PowerBook FAQs of the Mac newsgroups. Read through
- comp.sys.mac.portables.
-
- A/UX users may want to use something to cover the login screen. So far Moire has
- been reported as the only screensaver doing this. DS and other startup
- applications will never do this. Read through comp.unix.aux for more information
- on this and other A/UX issues.
-
- Screensavers are primarily fun, decorative things to have around, and should not
- be taken seriously. A screensaver is a useful for protecting your Mac from
- prying eyes while you are away from it, and many screensavers include optional
- password features for this. You may want a screensaver for its password
- protection, rather than its 'screensaving' abilities.
-
-
- --WHAT MAC SCREENSAVERS ARE AVAILABLE? (0.1)
- Far too many. This FAQ concentrates on AD because it is the most popular, the
- most well-known (being an advertised package), has the most support from other
- programmers in the form of different screensaver 'modules', and because there
- are other packages that can run AD modules. It's become a standard. AD is
- commercial and costs money, although updates, bug fixes, programming information
- and third-party shareware modules are freely available online.
-
- If you simply want to play the many shareware/freeware AD modules available from
- ftp sites, get DarkSide 4.1 (see below). As AD (or Pyro!, or NowFun!) is
- commercial, it and its commercial modules CANNOT (and SHOULD NOT) be obtained
- from ftp sites. Updaters can be obtained by ftp, but they must update the
- original package which you have bought. If you want to use AD (or Pyro!, or
- NowFun!) or the modules supplied with it, you must buy AD (or Pyro!, or
- NowFun!).
-
- If you are looking for a screensaver, it is well worth obtaining freeware and
- shareware savers from ftp sites (sumex-aim.stanford.edu in info-mac/gui,
- mac.archive.umich.edu in util/screensaver) and evaluating them before
- considering commercial products.
-
- But first, read (0.0). You may not even *need* a screensaver with your
- particular Mac setup.
-
- ----Modular screensavers (0.1.1)
- Modular screensavers, with a number of different effects, include:
-
- After Dark (AD) - commercial (brklysystm@aol.com) The most popular. Has the most
- modules available, and some third-party savers can run these modules. Includes
- the screensaver, modules and programming information. More After Dark (MAD) is
- an add-on package from BS that does not include the screensaver itself - just
- add-on modules and an updater for the screensaver. Star Trek - the Screensaver
- (ST), also from BS, includes the ST saver and modules, but not the programming
- information included in AD. BS has just launched the Disney Collection, a
- package similar to ST.
-
- Citadel 1.2 - commercial, by Datawatch. A security package reported as including
- hard disk and partition locking, passwording, file encryption and destruction as
- well as an AD-compatible screensaver. I haven't seen a copy of Citadel, and
- cannot comment on something I haven't seen - tips welcomed. I know nothing
- further.
-
- DarkSide of the Mac 4.1 (DS) - freeware, by Tom Dowdy, an Apple employee
- (dowdy@apple.com). **DS 4.x also plays AD modules** (unlike DS 3.2 and earlier).
- Like AD, DS includes a password feature and a Randomizer. DS runs as a startup
- application under System 7. It only patches one trap when it needs to. As it's
- an application you can quit it at any time if you need more memory, and restart
- it later. (System 6 users want the older DS v2.5, the last version to run under
- S6 - but they won't be able to play AD modules).
- Some of the forty supplied DS-only modules (e.g. Circuit, LostInSpace,
- VaseDance) are very polished and original and are well worth a look. Many others
- (e.g. Searchlight, Worms) are similar to AD's and Pyro's, but with fewer cute
- frills.
- An up-to-date DS package can be ftp'ed from ftp.apple.com (directory:
- /dts/mac/hacks). A copy should also be on sumex-aim.stanford.edu (directory:
- info-mac/gui).
- A number of people have posted, saying that they own AD and MAD, but that they
- prefer to use DS to run their modules.
- DS 4.1 uses less memory than AD does to play AD modules, and takes up less disk
- space and less CPU time. It is claimed to run all AD modules, with the known
- exceptions of the commercial BS ST modules ('for legal and technical reasons'
- the ST modules require an AD 2.0x control panel. DarkSide can't see or play
- these modules).
- [If you use Okey-Dokey 1.0.1, turn off the countdown display, which crashes DS
- 4.0's password dialog.
- If the MAD Confetti Factory module crashes, you are using DS 4.0. Get DS 4.1.
- If DS still seems to crash, try giving it slightly more memory (your INITS may
- be eating up a lot of program heap space) or trashing the DS Preferences file,
- and see if matters improve.
- If DS stays at the front on startup, check your Startup Items folder. DS should
- be there only once.
- If you keep your AD and DS modules together, note they both have 'Clock' and
- 'Puzzle' modules, and that MAD also has a 'Rain' module. Remove or rename one of
- each.
- To only randomize some DS modules, put them or their aliases together in a
- folder, and open that folder with Open...
- The docs are in MacWrite Pro format. Eventually, an XTND translator for this
- should appear. One in the package would be nice...]
- I'll attempt to detail further DS problems in this FAQ as I receive them.
- If you don't already have a screensaver, want to write screensaver modules, or
- are interested in using the wide range of free/shareware AD modules, this is THE
- screensaver to get. The price is unbeatable.
-
- NowFun! - commercial. This 'fun' compilation package from Now Software is
- reported as including FunScreenSavers, an AD-compatible screensaver with thirty
- modules (many previously shareware), FunPictures (an updated DeskPict),
- FunCursors, FunColors and FunSounds. I haven't seen a copy of NowFun!, and
- cannot comment on something I haven't seen - tips welcomed. I know nothing
- further.
-
- Pyro! 4.1 - commercial. This was the original 'fireworks' screensaver, and comes
- with fifteen or so modules. The modules are similar in function to the DS and AD
- modules. One or two third-party modules do exist, but nowhere near the volume AD
- has - and, unlike the others listed here, Pyro! cannot play AD modules. DiskLock
- 1.2 is reported as being a commercial security program, with similar features to
- Citadel, that also runs Pyro! modules. I haven't seen a copy of Pyro! 4.1 or of
- DiskLock, and cannot comment on something I haven't seen - tips welcomed. I know
- nothing further.
-
- Screensavor - Commercial, by MIFP Development (mbg3b2!mifp@uunet.uu.net or
- perednia@sandy.ohsu.edu) . A 'specialist' picture displayer. Includes a startup
- application (like DS) and an equivalent AD module. Sets of pictures (e.g.
- landscapes, kittens) also available. Does fades, zooms, and other effects.
- Shows GIFs and PICTs as well as its proprietary format - more flexible than the
- AD Slide Show module.
-
- Twilight Zone - an entry for MacHack 1993 by Steve Falkenburg (no email address
- known). Although it isn't a screensaver, this little application will run
- AfterDark modules inside individual windows. The modules can be resized, moved,
- run in the background, and more than one can be run at once. It won't run all of
- the Berkeley Systems modules - it crashes on most - but, as an example, I had
- Fractals, Mathos and Spinning Bow Tie running at the same time - faster than
- they do when screensaving. It's the only way to run more than one module at
- once. A copy can be ftp'ed from mac.archive.umich.edu or its mirrors (directory:
- util/screensaver/afterdark). It's unstable and buggy (it IS a hack!), and needs
- work - anyone want to use the source code (included) or know where to email
- feedback?
-
- ----Standalone screensavers (0.1.2)
- There are also a large number of small standalone screensavers to choose from,
- and many are present in the gui directory of sumex-aim.stanford.edu. Some aim to
- be as simple, small and unobtrusive as possible (e.g. TinySaver 2.2,
- FadetoBlack, BasicBlack). Popular choices include Eclipse 1.0 and Moire 4.01 (If
- you are using Moire simply because it also includes a menu-bar clock, consider
- getting the SuperClock! 4.0.4 control panel, which is far better, and another
- screensaver. Moire is also available as an AD module - you can run it under DS
- 4).
-
- There are a number of screensavers for Macs that support use of the Brightness
- control panel and dim an unused screen, e.g. Twilight. Twilight 7.1.4 onwards
- also 'dims' the same way on all other Macs, by allowing you to install the
- Brightness driver. The Brightness control panel can then be used on these Macs
- as well.
-
- [If you want software brightness control, but don't want to install the system
- software driver supplied for Twilight, a copy of the 7.0b1 Brightness control
- panel, which works on all Macs, can be found on sumex in cp - someone has added
- new icon and version resources.]
-
- If you do think you need a screensaver, look at what's freely available from ftp
- sites first - particularly DS if you're running System 7 or better. You will
- find something to suit you.
-
-
- --HOW DO I WRITE SCREENSAVER MODULES? (0.2)
- ----Writing DarkSide modules (0.2.1)
- If you don't own After Dark, but you have a neat idea for a screensaver and
- don't fancy writing an entire standalone package, look at DS 4. All the
- information and code you need to write DS modules is supplied within the
- complete package. At present, I know of only two third-party DS modules -
- there's definitely a market window here.
-
- If you are writing DS modules, bear in mind that older versions of DS have a
- deliberately incompatible module format - DS 4 won't play 3.x modules, and
- neither will play 2.5 modules. I suggest supporting 4.x (an easy upgrade for any
- System 7/3.x users) and, if possible, 2.5, which is the last version System 6
- users could use, although you'll have to dig around a bit to find a copy of DS
- 2.5 to get its example code and to test with.
-
- ----Writing After Dark modules (0.2.2)
- You learn to write After Dark modules by examining the example code that came
- with the AD package you bought. This example code makes up the Bouncing Ball
- module. ST does not include programming information - BS has posted the
- programming examples and information on AOL, AppleLink, and CompuServe. It's
- also available upon request from BS.
- Although some shareware modules do come with source code, it's probably out of
- date. Get the latest version of the AD package for up-to-date code, or contact
- BS.
-
- As an incentive to write AD modules, you can enter programming contests (This is
- why AD dominates). The 1993 contest closed on 15 July 1993. It had a grand prize
- of $10,000, with runner-up prizes of hardware, for the best AD modules in
- Macintosh, Windows, and Computer Artist categories. Contact BS for details of
- the next contest.
-
- The BS contest concentrates on good-looking modules. If you'd rather show off
- your programming skills, consider an alternative Dutch contest, organised by
- VAMP (Vereniging Actieve Mac Programmeurs) - cash prizes and a Symantec Mac
- development setup are on offer, with the chance of getting your modules
- published on CD-ROM. Entries will also be seen by BS. Closes 31 December 1993,
- judged by April 1994.
- Further details from info@fourc.nl <info%fourcnl@relay.nluug.nl if you need a
- gateway> - automatic response.
-
- If you are writing AD modules, you will want to make sure that they will also
- run without problems (either coding or cosmetic) under the freeware DS 4.1 and
- Twilight Zone, and probably NowFun! as well. No sense in unnecessarily limiting
- your market.
-
- ----Writing your own screensaver (0.2.3)
- Why bother? If you write a module for AD or DS you will have a much larger
- market than for yet another stand-alone screensaver, and all the stand-alone
- niches (smallest, brightness, clock etc) have been filled. You won't have to
- worry about incompatibilities with other software or breaking with the next
- system release - that's the job of the AD or DS authors. And you can enter the
- contests. No-one needs another standalone screensaver.
-
- If you want to write something that does interesting things with After Dark
- modules, the code supplied with Twilight Zone should be your starting point. If
- you really want to write your own screensaver, The Macintosh C Programming
- Primer (Vol 1, 2nd ed.) contains source code, as does The Macintosh Pascal
- Programming Primer.
-
-
- --HOW CAN I SAVE MY SCREENSAVER PICTURES? (0.3)
- This is short and simple, so it's here. First, have you tried the obvious -
- pressing command-shift-3? This is the 'Camera function key (FKEY)', which
- captures your screen to disk. [Under System 6, this only works in
- black-and-white. If you're using S6 on a colour Mac (why?), skip ahead to
- Flash-It!].
-
- Disable your screensaver password if you use one, and set your screensaver
- going. When ready, press command-shift-3 together. You should hear a camera
- shutter click and your screensaver will wake. If this is successful, a PICT
- file called 'Picture <number>' will appear in your hard disk's Finder window.
-
- Double-click on this to open it with TeachText and see what you have captured.
- If it's the screensaver picture, well and good. This method appears to work fine
- with AD 2.0x under S7.1, although it may not work for earlier ADs and/or earlier
- Systems. This doesn't work for DS 4 under S7.1, which wakes before the screen
- capture takes place - you will get a picture of your desktop instead.
-
- If the Camera FKEY didn't work for you, you need to get Flash-It!, a control
- panel (v3.0.2 at time of writing), from an ftp site like sumex-aim.stanford.edu
- (directory info-mac/cp). Drop Flash-It! into the 'Control Panels' folder and
- restart. Choose one of Flash-It!'s functions and set the function hotkeys to be
- command-shift-3, replacing the Camera FKEY. Repeat the above procedure, and this
- time you should get your picture.
-
-
-
- HOW CAN I UPDATE MY COPY OF AFTER DARK? (1.0)
- What version of AD do you own? There are two major revisions, namely versions 1
- and 2. When someone mentions they own 'After Dark', you can assume they mean
- version 2, of which there have been a number of minor revisions in the past few
- years, listed below. Version 2.0 was released back in August 1990, so version 1
- is OLD.
-
-
- --HOW CAN I UPDATE MY COPY OF AFTER DARK v1.x? (1.1)
- An updater to 1.1c is available from sites on the Internet. If you are already
- running 1.1c and wish to upgrade to version 2, you can do so by returning your
- master disk to BS with $15. There is NO free updater from version 1 to version
- 2, and the changes are major.
-
- You may find that version 1.1c fails to work on the brand-spanking new Mac* you
- have just bought. If so, trash it or, better, upgrade to version 2 - see (1.2).
- Or, if you are running System 7 or better (which AD 1.x will have problems
- with), get the free DS 4.1, which plays AD modules.
-
- *Here, even a clapped-out IIci running System 6.0.5 qualifies as 'brand-spanking
- new'. Version 1 is THAT OLD.
-
-
- --HOW CAN I UPDATE MY COPY OF AFTER DARK v2.x? (1.2)
- An updater to update the various revisions of version 2 to the latest revision
- can always be found in the info-mac archive on sumex-aim.stanford.edu
- (directory: info-mac/gui/ad) or on one of the mirror sites scattered world-wide.
- You can also try mac.archive.umich.edu (directory: util/screensaver/afterdark).
-
- BS issues updaters periodically, in line with new Apple machines or System
- software. The updater generally takes up to a couple of weeks from release to
- reach sumex-aim.stanford.edu, so be patient if you have heard rumours of an
- updater but can't find it yet.
-
- Alternatively, if you don't have access to ftp or an email file-server, you can
- return your master disk to BS to have it updated for free. (You do own a master
- disk, don't you?) MAD includes a copy of the AD updater (2.0u or later,
- depending on when the MAD disk was mastered.)
-
- The updater updates version 2 revisions (NOT version 1 - see (1.1)) to the
- latest revision, currently 2.0x. The 2.0x updater updates both the control panel
- and all of the modules supplied with the AD package, making minor revisions
- throughout.
-
- Note that you want the 2.0x updater v1.02 - the first release of this updater,
- without a version number, scrambled the password - clear the password and turn
- off passwording to avoid this. The second release, again no version number (tut,
- tut!), fixed this by clearing any stored password. v1.02 is the only updater to
- add the longer-than-five-minutes Randomizer times mentioned in some of the posts
- about the new features in 2.0x, and to fix the -'Fish!' sea-floor showing
- inverted blocks of colour problem- that users of the earlier updater versions
- experienced, by updating Fish! to v2.01.
-
- There is no reason not to upgrade. The newer your model of Mac and/or System,
- the newer your copy of AD must be to run correctly. If you have a problem and
- you're not running the latest version of AD, don't even bother asking about it
- UNTIL you've updated and seen if that fixes it. Experience is that not running
- an up-to-date After Dark is usually the problem, and the reported 'problem' is a
- symptom of this, which vanishes when AD is updated.
- This FAQ assumes that you have the latest revision of version 2 (2.0x, updater
- v1.02, at time of writing).
-
-
- ----After Dark revision history (1.2.1)
- The version history of the updater releases (not detailing the numerous minor
- improvements, bug fixes, or feature additions to modules) is:
- 2.0 - August 1990 - initial release.
- 2.0h - Bug fix relating to using (H)yperCard with AD.
- 2.0s - Bug fix of (s)ound code. Last version where the letter meant anything,
- since they had squandered two-thirds of the alphabet already.
- [They're not making this mistake with the Windows version - after 2.0 came
- 2.0a....]
- 2.0t - September 1991 - Supports new System 6.0.7 sound code.
- 2.0u - June 1991 - Full System 7 compatibility. Understands new System Folder
- layout. Much faster when only the Finder is running.
- 2.0v - August 1991 - Fixed 040 cache-compatibility problems.
- 2.0w - September 1992 - Fixed problems with newly-released machines running
- System 7.1 (IIvx, Duos) - old (pre-7.1) machines running System 7.1 could still
- use 2.0v. Added 'All' and 'None' buttons to the Randomizer. Prevents Randomizer
- and MultiModule recursively launching each other. [Updater 2.0w is unusual in
- only updating the control panel, MultiModule and Randomizer, and not other
- modules.]
- 2.0x - February 1993 - new control panel icon, updater clears password (first
- release of updater scrambled it - see above), more 'When' options, muting sound
- via the control key. Slide Show (updated to 2.1) now works with QuickTime
- without crashing. Some recognition of aliases of modules. Brings AD and the ST
- package into line with each other feature-wise. AD can now play ST modules.
- Longer Randomizer times, but only with v1.0.2 of the updater updating a non-2.0x
- Randomizer (Fish! is updated to 2.01 from a previous 2.0x update).
-
- [Updater release info from Jim Tso at BS]
-
-
- --HOW CAN I UPDATE MY COPY OF STAR TREK: THE SCREENSAVER? (1.3)
- At time of writing, by applying a revision 2 updater LATER THAN 2.0w, i.e. 2.0x
- or later. This will update the control panel and modules shared in common with
- the AD package (Randomizer, MultiModule).
-
- At time of writing, there is no updater for the ST modules. A ResEdit template
- for extracting PICT resources from the ST files is available from a number of
- ftp sites, for use by the inquisitive.
-
-
- --HOW CAN I UPDATE MY COPY OF MORE AFTER DARK? (1.4)
- There isn't an updater for these modules, and there are no longer plans for one.
- There was a minor revision of MAD from 1.0 to 1.0a to fix some obscure bugs -
- this is only available by returning your disk to BS. I haven't yet seen this
- revision.
-
- The changes in 1.0a are:
- Mowin' Man bug-fix. With some large monitors and video cards, Mowing Man could
- crash if the mower started from the top right of the screen.
- Tunnel bug-fix. With some video cards, Tunnel could crash if the Round
- Rectangle setting was used.
- Virex-D was removed from MAD 1.0a as it was no longer up-to-date - see (5.2).
-
- [MAD revision info from Jim Tso at BS]
-
-
- --HOW CAN I UPDATE MY AD MODULES OR OBTAIN NEW MODULES? (1.5)
- If the modules are part of the AD package which you bought, you need the updater
- that also updates the control panel - see (1.2). If they are part of the MAD
- package which you bought, you can return your disk to BS to get 1.0a - see
- (1.4). If they are shareware or freeware, look at sumex-aim.stanford.edu
- (directory: info-mac/gui/ad) and mac.archive.umich.edu (directory:
- util/screensaver/afterdark) to see if a later version has been released. These
- are also the place to look for new modules - read the info-mac digest and new
- files @ mac archive (in comp.sys.mac.digest) for news of new Mac software,
- including AD modules.
-
- If you are having problems with a particular third-party module, see first if a
- later version is available from an ftp site like sumex-aim.stanford.edu. If not,
- mail or email the author of the module about the problem. Authors do appreciate
- feedback and fan-mail, if not cold hard cash.
-
- There are also two book/disk packages containing AD modules:
- 'Art of Darkness', author Erfert Fenton, Peachpit Press, ISBN 1-56609-012-1.
- I'm told it includes ten modules (of which only Movies 'til Dawn and an older
- version of Blackboard are available for ftp), info about screensavers in general
- and histories of BS modules - BS supplied modules and info for the book. I
- haven't seen this book or its modules, so I cannot comment on it. I know nothing
- further.
-
- 'Cool Mac After Dark', author Ross Scott Rubin, Hayden Books. I'm told it
- contains advice on writing a Quickeys macro to activate AD, data files for use
- with modules and a number of freeware modules available for ftp (including
- NetTrain, which I haven't seen). I am unsure which modules this book contains.
- I haven't seen this book or its modules, so I cannot comment on it. I know
- nothing further.
-
-
- --HOW CAN I UPDATE MY COPY OF DARKSIDE OF THE MAC? (1.6)
- An up-to-date DS package can be ftp'ed from ftp.apple.com (directory:
- /dts/mac/hacks). A copy should also be on sumex-aim.stanford.edu (directory:
- info-mac/gui). The apple site always gets a new release first, direct from the
- author.
-
-
-
- HELP! I'VE FORGOTTEN MY AFTER DARK PASSWORD, AND CAN'T USE MY MAC! (2.0)
- A common problem. If you are using System 7, hold down the shift key on restart
- (press the reset button, or control-command-power on newer Macs - don't turn the
- Mac off and on!) to disable all extensions and control panels, including AD. If
- you are running System 6, you will need to startup from a floppy disk instead of
- holding down the shift key. If you have an 'extensions manager' installed, use
- that to disable AD instead. (I suggest Extensions Manager 2.01 by Ricardo
- Batista, an Apple employee. It's a free control panel on all the ftp sites.)
-
- Note that you must fully disable AD. If you don't, the password information will
- be carried over to the fresh control panel as a security measure. Simply turning
- off AD with its on-off switch does NOT disable it, and won't do you any good. If
- you can open any copy of the AD control panel, you haven't disabled AD on
- startup, and the password will be carried over.
-
- Throw away the control panel and replace it with a fresh copy from your master
- disk. Restart and enter a new password.
-
- If you have misplaced your AD master disk, you could try grabbing a copy of the
- 2.0x (or later) updater and updating the control panel instead of replacing it.
- 2.0x is the first updater to clear the password on updating the control panel -
- see (1.2).
-
-
-
- WHERE SHOULD I PUT THE 'AFTER DARK FILES' FOLDER? (3.0)
- If AD can't find the modules that are sitting as they should be in the 'After
- Dark files' folder, you probably need to update AD. Versions 2.0u and later of
- AD will recognise the folder in System 7's Control Panels folder, in the
- Extensions and System folder, and on the Desktop, whereas 2.0t and before
- expected the AD control panel and files folder to be in the same place. (This is
- detailed in the MANUAL that came with the AD PACKAGE that you BOUGHT. No 'Can
- you tell I'm a pirate?' questions, please.)
-
- If you are using AutoDoubler, you can try putting the AD files folder on the
- Desktop - that's next to your hard disk, OUTSIDE all folder windows - so that
- AutoDoubler can compress it. This works well as long as MultiModule and
- Randomizer are not deliberately compressed while in use. If a module then
- crashes your Mac, you can often find out what module it was by looking in the
- AutoDoubler Temporary Items folder on restart, as AutoDoubler put copies of all
- open compressed files there.
- [AutoDoubler 1.0x users should see the comments on the PowerDown module in (5.2)
- as well].
-
-
- --MY STAR TREK MODULES SAY THEY ARE 'Out of memory', BUT THE REST PLAY FINE!
- (3.1)
- This is answered here because, like the 'After Dark Files' folder question
- above, it's a matter of getting the files in the right place. The Star Trek
- modules have a lot of pictures, sounds and features in common, and to save space
- these are provided by a number of files in a 'Shared Resources' folder, which,
- like the modules, must be in the 'After Dark Files' folder.
-
- The Star Trek package installs everything correctly, so this really shouldn't be
- a problem.
-
-
-
- MY AFTER DARK CONTROL PANEL AND MODULES HAVE LOST THEIR ICONS! (4.0)
- There are a couple of module floating around that have accidentally had their
- 'bundle bits' set, and you have either just obtained one of these modules or
- just rebuilt your desktop, bringing the problem to light.
-
- The 'bundle bit' of a file tells the Finder that the file has icon information
- the Finder must show. A module with a bundle bit set causes its (non-existent)
- icon information to replace AD's correct icon information - hence the 'blank'
- generic icons you are seeing.
-
- To fix this, you need a utility that will show file flags, such as ResEdit 2.1.1
- or FileTyper 4.0. Go through all your modules, bringing up the file flag
- information (This is the 'Has BNDL' box under the 'Get File/Folder' option in
- ResEdit 2.1.1's File menu) and make sure the bundle bit is cleared. If it isn't,
- clear it and save that file. Alternatively, just drop all of your modules on
- FileTyper, clear a bundle bit and 'change all' - a simple drag and drop
- operation. (Check that the AD control panel *does* have a bundle bit - if it
- doesn't, the Finder won't know about its icons.)
-
- Once you have cleared that bundle bit, restart and hold down option and command
- to rebuild your desktop files. If you haven't found a set bundle bit, it's
- possible that something like Norton Utilities found and fixed the bundle bit a
- while back, in which case you merely need to rebuild your desktop. You should
- then see the AD icons in all their glory. (There aren't any ics resources for
- the modules or MultiModule documents. No, I don't know why!)
-
- [Aside - Isn't FileTyper wonderful? Now drop a floppy disk on FileTyper, set
- hasCustomIcon, drag the disk to the trash and then reinsert it. No INITs needed
- to give you colour floppy disk icons! And, while we're talking lost icons, if
- your hard disk is showing a blank piece of paper as its icon, you need to drop
- it on FileTyper to clear hasCustomIcon to get it back to a white box after
- restart, then repaste that icon you spent ages designing and kept a backup copy
- of. In an ideal world, setting hasCustomIcon on a hard disk would give you a
- grey-shaded box... Oh, and if you can't rename your hard disk you are probably
- using filesharing, which prevents renaming so that the network doesn't get
- confused. Turn off filesharing to rename your hard disk. If filesharing isn't
- on, use FileTyper to clear the disk's 'nameLocked or isSystem' field.]
-
-
- --IN LIST VIEW IN THE FINDER, MY MODULES SAY THEY ARE '<a particular module>
- documents'! (4.1)
- Congratulations on spotting the 'bundle bit' problem early - see (4.0). That
- particular module has (or, in the past, had) its 'bundle bit' set, and if you
- were to rebuild your desktop you could lose your AD icons. Check the bundle bit,
- as detailed above. If you want 'After Dark document' back, you'll have to
- rebuild your desktop once you've cleared that bundle bit - although you may want
- to check all your other modules for set bundle bits first, to save you finding
- another module with a set bundle bit and having to rebuild the desktop files
- again.
-
- If you have Twilight Zone, the AD control panel will look like a blank document
- and your AD modules will become TZ modules, so that double-clicking on a module
- launches it in a TZ window. If you rebuild your desktop, they'll look like TZ
- documents. This is normal behaviour - remove TZ and rebuild the desktop to
- revert everything to standard AD.
-
-
-
- AFTER DARK CRASHES MY MACHINE! (5.0)
- No. If you are running the latest version of AD - see (1.0) - it's almost
- certainly an individual module rather than the AD control panel itself. This
- section deals with AD modules known to crash AD. AD modules known to crash DS at
- DS 4's release, other than these, are given in the DS information in (0.1). If
- other modules that only crash DS become known (i.e. if you tell me about them),
- DS will get its own section.
-
- First, are you running the latest version of AD? If not, try updating a copy
- with the free updater detailed in (1.0), and see if the problem goes away. This
- is likely to solve the 'AD doesn't work at all on my setup!' problem.
-
- If you are already running the latest version, are you using a just-released Mac
- or just-released System? If so, an update may be in the works - just email BS.
- If not, is the problem with a specific module, and can you isolate it by trying
- out different modules? Is SystemIQ enabled? If not, is there a specific reason
- why not? Things generally run better with SystemIQ on, and the SystemIQ setting
- can affect some systems.
-
- If the problem is with a module written by BS, well and good, provided that the
- module is NOT the RANDOMIZER or MULTIMODULE. Email them about it - the address
- is below.
- [They request that mail from the Internet is sent to brklysystm@aol.com]
-
- If the module is from a third party (shareware/freeware) and you cannot find a
- later version anywhere, mail or email the author of the module about the
- problem.
-
- If you are having trouble with the MULTIMODULE OR RANDOMIZER, you need to track
- the problem down. A large number of third-party modules don't work well under
- these, often causing crashes, and giving AD an undeserved reputation for
- crashing in the process. If you ARE NOT running any third-party modules under
- the MultiModule or Randomizer, you can grumble at BS. If you ARE, look at the
- list below to see if the problem has been encountered. Look around the net for a
- later (bug-fixed) version of the module. See if writing to the author of the
- module helps. Try out each After Dark module in turn under these so that you
- know EXACTLY what causes the problem.
-
- When trying out a new AD module, try it as the only module selected in the
- Randomizer, and see how well it behaves. If you use the Randomizer a lot, this
- is an easy way of spotting problem modules before they crash your machine and
- lose you work. Most modules that crash under the MultiModule or Randomizer will
- do so immediately they are selected - no waiting around needed.
-
- To see if any modules you already have cause problems under the Randomizer,
- select the Randomizer module, set the delay to ten seconds, select 'in order',
- select Choose... and press the All button to choose All modules. [If you do not
- see an All button, you need to update your copy of AD - see (1.0)]. Close AD, go
- into screensave, and watch to see which modules crash your Mac, usually as the
- module starts. Reboot [by control-command-power, or the interrupt switch on
- older Macs - Macsbug will let you recover from the crash smoothly, but AD will
- usually be disabled until restart], remove the badly-written module, and repeat
- until there are no crashes. (If you use Have-a-Blast or Off the Air, see below.)
-
- Removing modules that crash your Mac is a VERY good idea - although YOU may know
- not to use them under MultiModule or Randomizer, other users won't, and you know
- they'll fiddle with the AD settings...
-
- If you must keep particularly impressive 'bad' modules around, a neat trick with
- AD 2.0x under System 7 is to make aliases of the offending modules. Keep the
- 'bad' modules in another folder, and their aliases with the other modules in the
- AD Files folder. AD can then see the aliased modules, but Randomizer and
- MultiModule can't, and crashes are avoided. [Until someone 'tidies up' your
- 'unnecessary' aliases, of course... removing the bad modules is better.]
-
- [If your Mac is generally crash-prone, for whatever reason, you should install
- Macsbug 6.2.2 (except on Centris 610s and other FPU-less '040 Macs, which have a
- special 680LC40 version of Macsbug - both are on ftp.apple.com in
- /dts/mac/tools/macsbug), which will allow you to exit from most crashes (type
- 'es') without needing to restart, or to smoothly restart without minutes of
- disk-checking (type 'rs'). Shut down by typing 'g power'. The only downside to
- Macsbug is that any 'Type x error' will put you into Macsbug, needing 'es' to
- continue, making the Mac less idiot-proof. Don't worry about it - that's just
- Macsbug doing its job. Macsbug is not an extension - it lives loose in the
- System Folder, not in the Extensions folder - and it won't cause extension
- clashes - it just highlights the ones you already have, and allows you to work
- around them. And, with its white screen, it makes Randomizer crashes noticeable
- as soon as they happen. Good for troubleshooting.]
-
- AND IF THE ABOVE ADVICE IS NOT ENOUGH...
- If you have encountered *specific* problems with a module NOT mentioned in this
- FAQ, please let me know by email (and, if possible, include a binhexed copy of
- the module so I can try it out) and I'll update this list for others to share in
- your knowledge. Ditto for updates to the modules here - I'm not omniscient, and
- may have missed a bug-fix or two.
-
- DO NOT simply email me with a long list of modules you're using (many of which
- are mentioned here already), say vaguely that your Mac crashes under Randomizer,
- and ask for my advice. You won't get it - that's what this FAQ is for, and I
- don't repeat myself. Self-help is the key here. Use the information provided
- here to discover WHY it crashes, and then eliminate the source(s) of the
- crashing. If it still crashes or you discover something new, THEN email me.
-
-
- --MODULES THAT DON'T WORK UNDER MULTIMODULE AND RANDOMIZER (5.1)
- This list has been compiled from information mostly obtained by running AD along
- with lots of other extensions on single-screen internal-video Mac IIsi and LC
- setups that have run Systems 7.0 through to 7.1. AD 2.0t to x were used.
- Although some modules do have problems with large or multiple-monitor setups,
- detailed information is lacking, since I can't test for it. (Anyone want to
- supply a list of 'problem' modules for unusual multiple/large monitor setups?)
- Ditto for modules that may have '040 cache problems.
-
- This list details modules that 'work fine' EXCEPT when run under MultiModule or
- Randomizer (or both - I currently runs Randomizer, randomizing a lot of modules
- every fifteen minutes, in parallel with Dan Walkowski's PowerDown, which shuts
- off an unused Mac, under MultiModule. This catches more problem modules than
- most - your mileage may vary, and you may not encounter some of these problems
- on your set-up, particularly if you are using a Classic or Plus.) [Some modules
- misbehave under MultiModule only under very specific conditions - size of
- allocated area, covered or not, system setup - and a list of these is
- impossible. Troubleshooting MultiModule settings is left as an exercise for the
- reader.]
-
- Modules whose latest versions worked fine when this FAQ began, but whose earlier
- versions didn't, are not listed here, as that would entail a full version
- history report of every AD module in existence! (Modules that have had problems
- corrected during the history of this FAQ are, however, mentioned for
- completeness, under the heading of the latest version known. Go and get it.) If
- the module you are having a problem with is not mentioned here, see if a later
- version is available. If not, contact the author of the module about the
- problem, and please let me know, too.
-
-
- MULTIMODULE AND RANDOMIZER
- If you use these, make sure you have the latest revision of AD. Versions earlier
- than 2.0w would crash if MultiModule included Randomizer and Randomizer included
- MultiModule in their selections, whenever the Randomizer tried to run the
- MultiModule which was already running. (Say 'recursion', people.) 2.0w and later
- detect this and add incredibly useful 'All' and 'None' buttons to the Randomizer
- [but still no support for my extended keyboard's extra cursor-control keys,
- unlike the control panel itself.]
-
-
- THIRD-PARTY MODULES WITH RANDOMIZER
- And now, the third-party list, in alphabetical order:
-
- Balloons - BugByte, Inc, 1991
- A very large (340K) module that advertises a HyperCard stack on tying balloons
- into knots to make figures and demonstrates some shapes with accompanying sound
- effects. Does not run under Randomizer, claiming that not enough memory is
- available. Does not appear to crash.
-
- Bat Signal 1.1 - subversive software (subversive@aol.com)
- A Spotlight-like module, but using the Bat Signal, and with the coolest about
- box yet. There are at least two pre-1.0 versions of this module in existence
- with no version numbers - one of those didn't work under Randomizer. Replace
- with 1.1. Well worth seeing, *especially* for the about box. Bat Signal Returns
- is under development.
-
- Blackboard 1.0 - Mark Malamud and Susan Hautala (markmal@microsoft.com
- 73760.1275@compuserve.com FullMoon@applelink.apple.com)
- Pupil drawing on a chalkboard - either punishment or equations. 0.9 won't run
- under Randomizer, claiming not enough memory. Doesn't appear to crash. 1.0 is
- said to work correctly, but is only available with the 'Art of Darkness'
- book/disk package mentioned in (1.5). Mark says that a shareware 2.0 will be
- released late in 1993.
-
- Cards - Chris Christensen (no email address given)
- Puts playing cards at random places on the screen. Refuses to run under
- Randomizer, claiming 'Bouncing Ball: Sorry, there is not enough memory.' (and
- showing its code origins. At 225K, it's obese, too - the Klondike 5.1 game takes
- under 100K, and you can PLAY that.) Does not appear to crash.
-
- Chomp! - BS (brklysystm@aol.com)
- This was one of the original modules for the original AD. Bites are taken out of
- the screen with a chomping sound. Causes the System 7 Finder to quit when run
- under Randomizer with AD v2. No longer supported by BS and should probably be
- trashed. Although other modules from the same era, like TacTiles and Shapes,
- seem to work fine, treat them with caution.
-
- EarthSplash 1.1 - Chuan Y. Fu (tron@ux1.cso.uiuc.edu)
- (Previously Earthbounce). Unstable under Randomizer - seen to crash in
- _MakeRGBPat. The author says he's working on an update.
-
- Faces in the Dark 1.0 - Geoffrey Hutchison (no email address)
- Draws b/w face doodles. Occasionally 'freezes' under Randomizer - cmd-opt-esc
- recovers to Finder.
-
- Frect 1.0 - Adam Miller (AMILLER@YaleVM.YCC.Yale.edu)
- Produces 'fractal rectangles'. Causes the System 7 Finder to quit when run under
- Randomizer.
-
- Gates Does Windows 1.0.2 - Robert Gibson, Mark Simmons
- (72511.345@compuserve.com, 72511.256@compuserve.com)
- Bill Gates appears as a window cleaner. Very large and impressive, but 1.0.1
- crashed under Randomizer as it runs out of memory. Version 1.0.2 fixes this
- crashing, but behaves oddly on some systems under Randomizer. This module is a
- 'ZiffNet exclusive', so it can't be put on ftp sites. You'll have to ask someone
- for it.
-
- HolisticSofa 0.94 - Alan Keahey (tkeahey@cs.indiana.edu or GEnie: A.Keahey)
- This module explores the sofa-on-stairs problem detailed in Douglas Adam's 'Dirk
- Gently's Holistic Detective Agency'. It crashes under the Randomizer on most
- newer Macs. The author wrote it on a Plus, which it didn't crash on, and can't
- duplicate the problem. Another Plus owner has reported crashing under
- Randomizer. Also available as a standalone screensaver.
-
- Kablooie 1.0 - Adam Miller and Jakub Buchowski (AMILLER@YaleVM.YCC.Yale.edu)
- A customisable fireworks module for AD - just what it needs to get one over on
- Pyro!'s main selling point [DS has a fireworks module]. Puts up 'Kablooie:'
- running under the Randomizer and nothing else. Adam Miller knows of the problem,
- but no fix has appeared.
-
- Kings Cross Coke 1.0 - John Rotenstein (PO Box 165, Double Bay NSW 2028,
- AUSTRALIA)
- Shows logos and illuminates them as if they were flashing/cycling neon signs.
- Includes a scrapbook feature to choose images from. Has memory problems -
- crashes under Randomizer and MultiModule, and is pretty flaky on its own,
- especially when cutting and pasting in the scrapbook. Spectacular, but risky.
-
- Millions of Colors 0.5 - Guy Rice (Mark Hatle, SLP@VAX1.Mankato.MSUS.EDU)
- Bands of colour. Doesn't work under MultiModule. Email will be passed on by Mark
- Hatle. Package includes source code - anyone want to fix it?
-
- Nebulae 1.0 - Bryan & Lisa Gibson-Winge (Compuserve: 72677,3222)
- Complains of not enough memory to run under MultiModule or Randomizer. Doesn't
- appear to crash.
-
- Off The Air 1.0 - Guy Rice (Mark Hatle, SLP@VAX1.Mankato.MSUS.EDU)
- Simulates a noisy television channel after the station has gone off air. Under
- Randomizer changing modules every few minutes, causes a crash a few modules
- AFTER it has run. (Trashing memory? Finding this one took ages.) The 'Set
- Monitor Depth' feature is bad ju-ju and can also crash the Mac. Email will be
- passed on by Mark Hatle.
-
- Punkin Patch - Steve Henck (no email address given)
- A 'Halloween' module. Cute graphics. Won't run under Randomizer, claiming not
- enough memory for off-screen graphics. Doesn't appear to crash.
-
- Rrrring! - Steve Henck (no email address given)
- Assorted deaths to ringing telephones. Cute graphics. Won't run under
- Randomizer, putting up 'Randomizer:'. Doesn't appear to crash.
-
- Shredded Crystals - BS (brklysystm@aol.com)
- This was one of the original modules for the original AD. Jagged shapes appear
- on screen. Causes the System 7 Finder to quit when run under Randomizer with AD
- v2. No longer supported by BS, and should probably be trashed. Although other
- modules from the same era, like TacTiles and Shapes, seem to work fine, treat
- them with caution.
-
- Sparkler 1.0 - Mike Wessler
- Pixels explode off the screen. Crashes under Randomizer. [Not to be confused
- with the catherine-wheel-like Sparklers 1.0, by Frank Kubin, which works fine
- under both MultiModule and Randomizer.]
-
- TerrainMaker 2.0 - Adam Miller and Jakub Buchowski (AMILLER@YaleVM.YCC.Yale.edu)
- Reported as just saying 'Randomizer:' under Randomizer on an unusual video setup
- - a IIcx with PCPC Nubus card and 19" monitor. Appears to work fine on standard
- video setups.
-
- VectorBalls 1.0 - Mark Adams, Maverick Software
- (Maverick.sft@Applelink.Apple.com MarkA38@aol.com)
- Very impressive bouncing sets of crystal-lattice-like 3D balls. Crashes under
- Randomizer and MultiModule. The author claims the crash occurs in a ROM routine
- he calls, and is not sure why. With the crashing fixed, and a 'Random Shapes'
- option, this module would be a must-have.
- Reported as being included in the NowFun! screensaver - version unknown.
-
-
- --MODULES WITH OTHER KNOWN PROBLEMS (5.2)
- In alphabetical order:
-
- Have a Blast 1.0.1 - Alan Goates, Otherware (agoates@nyx.cs.du.edu)
- 1.0 could crash on wake (moving the mouse or Randomizer choosing another module)
- if 'Repair Damage' was chosen. 1.0.1 fixes this.
-
- Hopper 1.0.1 - Rob Snevely, Wild Nobility Productions
- Under later versions of AD, this module only displays its generated pattern in
- the bottom-right quadrant of the screen. [It uses the whole screen under DS,
- though. Very strange. Anyone have an email address for these guys?]
-
- Movies 'til Dawn 1.01 - BS (brklysystm@aol.com)
- 1.01 works with all versions of QT, unlike 1.0, which stopped working with QT
- 1.5. Get 1.01 and trash 1.0.
- Playing movies is pointless for a screensaver, since it may save your screen,
- but kills your hard disk through overwork and keeps your CPU running at full
- speed - important on a portable. If you MUST play movies, make sure you have QT
- 1.6.1 (far less disk access and memory is used than with 1.5 or earlier) .
- Also look at Movies in the Dark 1.0 by Maurice Volaski or the OURA QT (say each
- letter!) movie player 1.0d2 module by Laurence d'Oliveiro. (There's also a
- Bouncing Movie module, but it's a quick hack that no longer works. Trash it and
- get one of the others.)
- Note that Slide Show 2.1 (with 2.0x or later) can display QT JPEG-compressed
- PICT files, which is far more useful than playing movies. (Slide Show 2.0 or
- earlier will hang on the second screensave if a QT JPEG is used.) If you DO use
- JPEG pictures with Slide Show 2.1, remember that pictures are uncompressed with
- a blank all-colours-are-black screen. AD will not wake until QT has finished
- decompressing the picture, so you may spend time staring at a black screen. If
- you have the password feature enabled, you may have to type the password blind,
- and then wait for QT to finish decompressing the picture.
- [And you know about QT's 'Startup Movie' feature, right?]
-
- Paw-Paw 1.3b3 - Aaron Barnet (c2mxbar@fre.fsu.umd.edu)
- Version 1.2b had known memory problems, most visible when running with Microsoft
- Excel or Word (like a lot of Mac software - blame Microsoft's un-Mac programming
- methods). Get Paw-Paw 1.3b3 (on sumex-aim.stanford.edu) which fixes these
- problems, and trash 1.2b.
-
- PowerDown 1.1 - Dan Walkowski (walkowsk@cs.uiuc.edu)
- Shuts off an unattended Mac after a pre-set time. Ideal for Macs with full
- 'soft' power on and off. (DS 4 users can get the same functionality with
- Fabrizio Oddone's DarkShutdown 1.1.1 DS module.)
- Running PowerDown in parallel with Randomizer under MultiModule with the AD
- files folder on the Desktop so that AutoDoubler 1.0.7i could compress it (whew!)
- led to extra copies of the modules running when PowerDown shuts down being put
- in an AutoDoubler Temporary Items folder. There was no crash or other undue
- behaviour. Telling AutoDoubler not to compress PowerDown, Randomizer and
- MultiModule prevented this from happening - AutoDoubler always puts copies of
- compressed files open at shutdown in the Items folder These modules were running
- at shutdown, and weren't closed properly.
- [If you are using PowerDown, look at the Okey-Dokey 1.01 control panel from the
- same author, which presses the default button in a dialog after a pre-set time.
- This allows you to have open documents in most applications saved automatically
- on shutdown, which would otherwise stop at the first dialog. DarkShutdown
- handles this itself.]
-
- Virex-D (MAD 1.0) - BS (brklysystm@aol.com)
- Virex-D, one of the MAD 1.0 modules, was an advertisement for the commercial
- Virex virus-killer. As the D indicates, Virex-D DETECTS viruses - it does not
- remove viruses or repair damage caused by viruses. Virex-D has not been updated
- recently and is no longer distributed with MAD 1.0a. It SHOULD NOT be used for
- virus protection. It wears your disk unnecessarily, too.
- Use the freeware Disinfectant application (version 3.2 as I write) and
- Gatekeeper system extension (version 1.2.8 as I write), available from all good
- Mac-support ftp sites, to combat Mac viruses
- A commercial package is not a requirement for protection from viruses. Remember
- that the few Mac viruses in existence are mostly benign and are very rarely seen
- - this is not something to even think about if you have an up-to-date
- virus-killer, and Disinfectant and Gatekeeper are far more than adequate, not to
- mention completely free. [Read the excellent Disinfectant on-line help for more
- information.]
-
- VoiceWaker 1.07 - Alessandro Levi Montalcini (Fricci@Polito.IT)
- This module works with a microphone to wake up a Mac when you shout at it. (A
- neat trick - just say 'Wake up!' and pretend you own an av :-) All versions
- seen, including 1.07, crash the Mac on screensave if a Global Village Teleport
- ADB modem is in use and the Teleport menu is present. 1.07 is reported as being
- included in the NowFun! screensaver.
-
-
-
- EXTENSION INCOMPATIBILITIES (6.0)
- There are few extension, INIT or control panel conflicts with AD - most problems
- originate with badly-written AD modules, listed above. DS conflicts are listed
- in (0.1).
-
-
- --KNOWN INCOMPATIBILITIES WITH AFTER DARK (6.1)
- In alphabetical order (well, there are only three I know of):
-
- Attention 1.02 (piovanel@ghost.dsi.unimi.it)
- This control panel allows you to select a sound other than the
- presently-selected 'beep' sound for notification alerts.
- 1.0 prevented AD from sleeping if 'Always Audible' was selected and had minor
- incompatibilities with CarpetBag.
- 1.01 and 1.02 fix this, but may cause crashes with the new StyleWriter II
- driver's beep-after-printing feature. Use with caution.
-
- MacWrite Pro (Claris)
- There are reports that AD cannot automatically sleep when the first release of
- MacWrite Pro has a document open. Speculation is that MacWrite Pro is doing
- background processing when not being typed into.
- You can still select the 'sleep' corner to activate AD. MacWrite Pro is now at
- 1.0v4 - has this been fixed?
-
- TouchBase Pro (After Hours Software)
- TouchBase Pro 2.0 won't let After Dark sleep if it is running, either in
- foreground or background. After Hours say that this is fixed in 2.0.1.
-
-
-
- MODULE NAME CHANGES AND SIMILARITIES (7.0)
- Over the years, a number of AD modules have changed their names to avoid being
- confused with other products. Also, some modules out there have similar names,
- but are not related. This should help clear all that up.
-
- --THE NAME HAS CHANGED (7.1)
- Names on the left are old -> changed to names on the right. Look out for the new
- AD modules, and trash the old ones once you've got their replacements. Listed in
- alphabetical order of the old names.
-
- EarthBounce 1.0 -> EarthSplash 1.1
- Has Randomizer problems. See above.
-
- MacTabloid 2.0 -> Headlines 1.0.1
- MacTabloid 2.0 is a third-party hack of Headlines 1.0.1 by K. K. Farbesokani
- (starscape@genie.geis.com). The size of its word database appears to give it
- problems Headlines does not have. MacTabloid runs out of memory under Randomizer
- - the memory requirements do not appear to have been adjusted upwards for the
- larger database. Avoid it - Headlines 1.0.1 is the latest, most stable,
- official, version.
-
- Mandelbrot -> Fractals 1.33
- Alessandro Levi Montalcini's 'Mandelbrot' underwent a name change when Hoffman
- and Hartshorne's 'Mandelbrot' module appeared as part of the MAD package. It's
- now the shareware Fractals 1.33, and is a full-fledged configurable fractal
- generator, whereas MAD's commercial 'Mandelbrot' just shows you the set and some
- expanded detail. A later version of Fractals is reported as being included in
- the NowFun! screensaver.
-
- Wallpaper 1.0 -> Mathos (no version, Oct. 1, 92 given in about box, but released
- May, 93)
- Generates fractal 'wallpaper' patterns. Name changed to avoid confusion with
- Thought I Could's 'Wallpaper' desktop-pattern utility. (I'm a fan of Desktop
- Textures 2.1, on sumex, myself.) A number of versions of Wallpaper were released
- without version numbers and as versions 1.0 - with and without a separate
- coprocessor-only Wallpaper881 module - so upgrading to Mathos or Mathos881 (they
- are in one archive) will solve your 'what version is this?' problem for now.
-
-
- --NOT TO BE CONFUSED (7.2)
- These AD modules have similar names, but are different!
-
- Lines by Charles Clarke, LineCA 1.0.1 by WildMan Software, Quantum Lines by
- Scott Berfield and Roaming Lines 1.1c by David Bau
- Lines simply fills the screen with coloured lines, LineCA is a scrolling
- one-dimensional Life-like cellular automata generator, Quantum Lines is
- bouncing twisting pattern, and Roaming Lines is a variation on Berkeley's String
- Theory with some neat options.
-
- Maze (the first version) 1.0 by David Bau, and (Calico) Maze 1.1.1 by Richard
- Lesh.
- Two different maze builders/solvers. Bau's Maze lacks colour, but has an
- interesting maze-drawing method. Calico Maze has more colour and more choice of
- maze sizes than the very similar MAD Snake module, and is well worth a look as
- the 'definitive' Maze module.
-
- Messages by BS, and Random Messages 1.0 by Paul Russell
- Two modules that choose a string from a message-list and display it on screen.
- MAD includes the polished Say What?, but the out-and-out-winner has to be
- Headlines 1.0.1 by Jamie McCarthy, which, like the unix spew it's based on,
- generates hilarious random headlines from a topical database.
-
- Sparkler 1.0 by Mike Wessler, and Sparklers 1.0 by Frank Kubin
- Sparkler has Randomizer problems. See above. Two totally different modules and
- effects.
-
-
-
- 8.0 MODULE REQUESTS
- Right, this is the part where you send in your neat ideas for screensaver
- modules, in the hope that someone will turn them into reality. Requested are:
-
- An oscillogram display of the sound level coming in the mic input port - known
- to be possible, as VoiceWaker modulates the brightness level accordingly. A
- module similar to the WaveWindow application would be nice.
- A frequency spectrum of same.
- A SoundTracker MOD file player, ideally incorporating the above.
- (Tracker/ProTracker-playing code is readily available. Star Trek includes a
- straightforward sound and SoundEdit-playing module.)
- Exact copies of the default screensavers supplied with Windows, so that Macs can
- lurk better in PC-dominated offices.
- Exact copies of the Sun screensavers, so Macs can pretend to be workstations.
- A screensaver that creates realistic-looking Finder windows with icons, and has
- the mouse pointer doing operations, so that you can claim that your Mac is
- working even when you are not.
- Tetris.
- A GIF picture viewer. Slide Show does PICTs and JPEGs (with QuickTime) but not
- GIFs. (the commercial ScreenSavor has been reported as doing this.)
- A 'starfield' module that simulates Doppler shift, which neither Star Trek,
- 'Warp Factor' or 'Warp!' do.
- A neko or gegi-type module featuring puppies, not kittens.
-
- And fixes to all the still-buggy modules listed above, of course. Please...
-
-
-
- DISCLAIMER AND LEGAL-WEASELLING
- --COPYRIGHT
- This work is Copyright (C) 1993 by Lloyd Wood. Permission is hereby granted to
- distribute this unmodified document provided that no fee in excess of normal
- on-line charges is required for such distribution. Permission is NOT granted to
- services who charge and make a profit for information or for access (e.g.
- variable download rates depending upon download speed, or a standing charge), as
- this is in excess of normal on-line charges. Such services wishing to distribute
- this FAQ must negotiate a suitable fee with me first for my services.
-
- Portions of this document may be extracted and quoted free of charge and without
- necessity of citation in normal on-line communication provided only that said
- quotes are not represented as the correspondent's original work. Permission for
- quotation of this document in printed material and edited on-line communication
- (such as the Info-Mac Digest and TidBITS) is given subject to normal citation
- procedures (i.e. I demand an attribution or credit).
-
- I DO NOT PERMIT DISTRIBUTION ON CD-ROM, DISKS FOR SALE (e.g. SHAREWARE
- CATALOGUES OR MAGAZINE COVER DISKS) OR ANY OTHER STORAGE MEDIUM UNLESS I RECEIVE
- A COPY OF THE CD-ROM, DISK, OR STORAGE MEDIUM UPON WHICH THIS WORK APPEARS. (I
- wouldn't mind an Info-Mac disk or two :-)
-
-
- --DISCLAIMER
- I do my best to ensure that information contained in this document is current
- and accurate, but I can accept no responsibility for actions resulting from
- information contained herein. This document is provided as is and with no
- warranty of any kind.
-
- END.
-
-
-