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Mac Magazin/MacEasy 27
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Mac Magazin and MacEasy Magazine CD - Issue 27.iso
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GST-TGhostDemo
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Torquemada's Ghost - Read Me
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1996-09-24
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TORQUEMADA'S GHOST - DemoWare release notes
This is a DemoWare version of Torquemada's Ghost. It is fully
functional, but is limited to 32 launches. We are releasing it in this
form so that new users of Torquemada or users of the FreeWare version
of Torquemada the Inquisitor can get a taste of the commercial
Torquemada's command set.
If you were a user of prior versions of Torquemada, your main concern
is likely to be: What has changed?
The Ghost is a scriptable Torquemada. While it can be used
interactively by Drag & Drop, its primary purpose is to allow
AppleEvent scripters to access Torquemada from their AppleScript or
Frontier scripts. Frontier scripter Eugene Barnes has lent us his
expertise by writing Frontier glue scripts for Torquemada's Ghost.
These scripts and their documentation can be found in the folder
"Torquemada’s Ghost Glue ƒ". The functions of Torquemada's Ghost are
described in the Torquemanual under the heading "TORQUEMADA'S GHOST".
The full Torquemanual is stored in the "Torquemada Explained" folder.
Commercial, legal and other pertinent notices...
As mentioned above, this is a DemoWare version of Torquemada's Ghost,
fully functional but limited to 32 launches. The full unrestricted
commercial release (including both Torquemada's Ghost and Torquemada
the Inquisitor) can be obtained from Greg Swann at:
1006 West Main Street, #101
Mesa, AZ 85201
Licenses are sold per machine, with a single license costing $50; 2-10
licenses are $45 each; and 11 or more licenses are $40 each. (Write me
if you want to negotiate an unlimited site license.)
I've thoughtfully (grin) provided a TeachText order form with this
archive. (Take note that this order form requires a PICT-aware version
of TeachText; use the version that came with your System software, or
open the file through some other PICT-aware software (such as
PhotoShop or MacDraw).)
Why is this version DemoWare? As with everything in my life, there is
philosophy here: I don't like crippled software. I don't think much of
ShareWare. And I almost never buy "a pig in a poke". In deciding on a
marketing scheme, I looked for something that would be most appealing
to _me_, were I in your shoes. This is what I've come up with: a fully
functional demo that lets you _find out_ if Torquemada's Ghost is a
useful tool in your working environment. If it is (and obviously _I_
think it will be), then pay me. If it isn't, then ditch it when it
starts to offer to make coupons for you as a full-time gig. A good
deal all around, I think: no guilt for you, no guilting for me; maybe
useful software for you, maybe useful money for me (grin).
Torquemada's Ghost, its source and executable code are Copyright (C)
1994 by Greg Swann. All rights are most emphatically reserved.
The unrestricted (non-DemoWare) version of Torquemada's Ghost is
licensed for use on one machine by the person who paid for it. If you
didn't pay for it, please do! I am one person, with a long-suffering
family, not Conglomerated MegaSoft (not to imply that there's any
virtue in ripping _them_ off!).
Torquemada's Ghost is delivered "as is", without any warranties,
expressed or implied. It is not warranted to be useful _to_ anyone,
_for_ anything, and in no wise am I to be held responsible for any
unfortunate consequences resulting from its use or misuse. And I
_hate_ having to say things like that. I do my best to write useful,
simple, elegant, bug-free solutions to difficult problems. If you take
it into your head that I represent your big chance to "strike it
rich", you will pay a lot in legal fees to discover that you have
miscalculated.
And: to those to whom the above disclaimers do not apply: forgive me
for having to make them. It's _you_ whom I'm working for, for pay or
for free. I appreciate your patronage and your support, and I wish we
all could just comb the others out of our hair...
(Hey, it's a real 'personal' software company! (grin))
About Greg Swann...
Okay, here's the deal: I'm not just a developer, I'm a user of
software as well. I make about half of my money doing Desktop
Publishing. In consequence, I have a pretty clear idea of how to focus
utilities designed to plug gaps in the functionality of major
applications. I am quite sure there are a _lot_ of developers brighter
than I am. But the evidence of experience suggests that few of them
have my advantage of living on both sides of the line, so to speak.
What does this mean?
First, it means that I have written a _lot_ of mission-critical
utilities in support of the software categories of interest to me:
file management, font management, automated text processing,
PostScript-processing, and automated DTP-software preparation. All but
four of these utilities are FreeWare (the exceptions being Mark My
Words and the three packages discussed below) and are available on
CompuServe (GO DTPForum, BROwse on 70640,1574) and other electronic
information services (including any service offering access to the
Arizona Macintosh User's Group BBS-In-A-Box CD-ROM).
Second, it means that if you are likewise interested in these software
categories, it behooves you to support my work. Fanmail is always
nice, of course, but remuneration is the sincerest form of flattery
(grin). Seriously: this is a business, even if a microscopically small
one. It has been worthwhile so far because the other things commanding
my attention have not been as lucrative. But that is changing (of
course, and obviously, _because_ of all the software). I can make a
_lot_ of money writing custom software for contracted clients. And I
can streamline my own production work without having to monkey-proof
and document my tools. So: if I am to keep doing this, I have to make
it pay. If you _want_ me to keep doing it, you have to pay me. It's
that simple.
In many ways, retail software is simpler. You pay or you don't play,
and no one has any illusions. The difference is, the developer needs a
_much_ larger capital commitment, and he needs to surround himself
with babbling morons in suits who might - just possibly - be good for
something other than chuckling about football. Electronically
distributed software gets around that trap, but introduces the problem
exposed here: the ambiguity of the sales transaction results in a lot
of prostrate begging by developers. I don't beg, but I don't work for
free except on my own terms for my own good reasons.
There are three possible "futures" for authors of electronically
distributed software. 1. The rewards do not justify the effort, so the
author goes and plays tennis or something. 2. The author produces
software as an after-work hobby and continues to do so more or less
irrespective of user-response (some of the best and worst FreeWare
comes out of this category). 3. The author's growing reputation
results in him getting more contracted custom programming work, worth
more money, to the point that he no longer has time to produce
electronically distributed software.
It is the last that is happening to me, and this is why you need to
support my work, if you want it to continue. I'll do all right whether
I'm working on problems that confront you or on the problems of some
corporation. But: if you are using software by me that has a
commercial version (and all of them are discussed here), and if you
want me to _continue_ thinking about your problems, rather than the
problems of Consolidated MediCalc - you know what to do...
These are my commercial programs:
XP8 - a very intelligent file filter that cleans up and makes the
filthiest text QuarkXPress-ready. Among many other features, it offers
DOS-file reformatting, financial-text clean-up, garbage disposal,
typographic quality enhancement, and the best quote conversion we know
of. The ShareWare version of XP8 (v1.0.0) can be found on CIS, GO
DTPForum, Library 5, under the name XP8.SEA. It is also included on
the distribution disk for the unrestricted version of Torquemada's
Ghost. The current commercial version is v1.0.6 and offers a great
many enhancements over the ShareWare version.
Torquemada The Inquisitor - batch global search and replace software
with wildcards, pattern matching, string substitution, et very cetera.
With Drag & Drop under System 7, you can run up to 640 searches on up
to 128 files in one batch. Features the most intelligent
case-conversion we know of. The most-recent FreeWare version (1.1.0)
can be found on CIS, GO DTPForum, Library 5, under the name
TORQUE.SEA. The commercial version is included on the distribution
disk for the unrestricted version of Torquemada's Ghost. The current
commercial version is 1.3.0, offering a great many enhancements,
including new "wildthings" and a _lot_ of new User Interface power.
Shane the Plane 2.0.0 - file and font attribute editing utility.
Interactively or in Drag & Drop batches, permits you to change the
Creator/Type of files, their created/modified dates and times, a host
of significant Finder flags, plus a lot more. Makes files
invisible/visible, makes fonts behave like files by removing their
BNDL resources, batch "pastes" custom icons, intelligently renames
and/or "slugs" files, et very cetera. A demonstration version (fully
functional but limited to 32 launches) can be found on CIS, GO
DTPForum, Library 12, under the name SPDEMO.SEA.
Mark My Words - a very elaborate MS-Word binary to XPress Tags text
filter. It eats Word 4.0, 5.0 or 5.1 files, interactively or by Drag &
Drop, and converts the binary to QuarkXPress tagged text. You can
elect to include or omit any feature of Word's styling, and many
features can be converted from their WP-like form to their DTP-like
form (e.g., underscoring to italic). With Em Software's Xtags
Xtension, picture and text boxes (including Word's tables) can be
retained. A demonstration version (fully functional but limited to 32
launches) can be found in Library 12, under the name MMWDEM.SEA.
Bureaucrat - order-form generating software for the customers of
PostScript imaging services. Makes extensive use of Drag & Drop and
User Interfacing technology to make creating a new order form as
painless as possible for the end-user. You select the folder
containing your job and Drag & Drop it on Bureaucrat. The software
sifts through that folder and any others nested beneath it looking for
files. Each file it finds it interrogates for document, picture, font
and color information. Imaging details particular to the job must be
specified, but everything is organized to make even this little bit of
work as fast and painless as possible. The upshot is that the "form"
is 80% done after the Drag & Drop, with the balance being quick and
easy. A fully-functional specimen copy of Bureaucrat can be found in
Library 5 under the name B-CRAT.SEA.
(While I've vectored all the files toward CIS, my primary haunt, they
are also available on other services, and on any BBS which has the
most recent version of AMUG's BBS-In-A-Box CD-ROM on line.)
Bureaucrat is sold on sliding-scale terms, depending upon how much
customization is done to make your unique version. Please write to us
for a specimen copy of Bureaucrat and its full documentation.
Shane the Plane 2.0.0 is sold on these terms: (US)$40 each, per
license. Two to 10 licenses are $35 each, and 11 or more are $30
each.
Mark My Words, XP8 and Torquemada are each sold under these terms:
(US)$50 each, per license. Two to 10 licenses are $45 each, and 11 or
more are $40 each. These three programs will eventually be rolled into
a stand-alone text editor cum word processor currently in design with
the working name "MyEditor". You will be entitled to a 25% discount on
the price of the MyEditor, when it is released, for each of these
utilities you have purchased and registered. In other words, if you
own XP8, your discount will be 25%. If you own XP8 and Torquemada, it
will be 50%. And if you own all three, you will be entitled to a 75%
discount. (This discount does not apply to Shane the Plane, which is
establishing its own upgrade path.)
If you want to buy any or all of these programs, send a check or
money order* to:
Greg Swann
1006 West Main Street, #101
Mesa, AZ 85201
*Outside the U.S., you may send cash at your own risk, if exchange
issues make that expedient.