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- TidBITS#324/15-Apr-96
- =====================
-
- After a weekend that saw the beginning of spring weather and the
- end of the U.S. tax season, we bring you news on IBM possibly
- licensing the Mac OS, an intriguing report on the Pippin (which
- is shipping in Japan), information about the Macintosh version
- of WebLint, and the results of our reviews survey. The issue
- continues with an essay about Internet chain mail and the second
- part of Adam's article on Internet bookmark managers.
-
- This issue of TidBITS sponsored in part by:
- * APS Technologies -- 800/443-4199 -- <sales@apstech.com>
- Makers of hard drives, tape drives, and neat SCSI accessories.
- For APS price lists, email: <aps-prices@tidbits.com>
- * Northwest Nexus -- 206/455-3505 -- <http://www.halcyon.com/>
- Providing access to the global Internet. <info@halcyon.com>
- * Power Computing -- 800/375-7693 -- <info@powercc.com>
- Now shipping... The Award-Winning First MacOS Compatible!
- Press comments! <http://www.powercc.com/News/quotes.html>
- * America Online -- 800/827-6364 -- <http://www.aol.com/>
- The world's largest provider of online services.
- Give Back to the Net -- <http://www.aol.com/give/>
- * EarthLink Network -- 800/395-8425 -- <sales@earthlink.net>
- Providers of direct Internet access for Macintosh users.
- For eWorld refugees: no setup fee! <http://www.earthlink.net/>
- * DealBITS: New deals for Web authors & Webmasters! <-------- NEW!
- <http://www.tidbits.com/dealbits/> -- <dealbits@tidbits.com>
-
- Copyright 1990-1996 Adam & Tonya Engst. Details at end of issue.
- Information: <info@tidbits.com> Comments: <editors@tidbits.com>
- ---------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Topics:
- MailBITS/15-Apr-96
- TidBITS Reviews Listing Survey Results
- IBM Close to Licensing Mac OS?
- Pippin Appears
- Back on the Chain Gang
- ClearInk Ports WebLint to the Macintosh
- More Bookmarks than Books, Part II
-
- <ftp://ftp.tidbits.com/pub/tidbits/issues/1996/TidBITS#324_15-Apr-96.etx>
-
-
- MailBITS/15-Apr-96
- ------------------
- We're a little too tired to make much of this fact, but this issue
- of TidBITS marks our sixth anniversary of publication. We started
- publishing TidBITS each week in April of 1990, which makes us one
- of the longest running solely electronic publications. If you know
- of any regularly published, edited publication (mailing lists and
- digests don't count) that is solely electronic, started on the
- Internet before we did, and continues to publish today, please
- drop me a note with a pointer to it. [ACE]
-
-
- **TidBITS in Dutch** -- Check out the TidBITS home page for a link
- to the first translation of TidBITS (issue #322) into Dutch.
- However, Jan Vanderwegen <jan.vanderwegen@ping.be>, the
- coordinator of the Dutch translation team, tells me that they
- could use additional help. If you're interested in helping
- translate TidBITS into Dutch, drop Jan and me a note in email.
- With enough people on the translation team, it's easy to spread
- out the work load and make the translation process faster and
- easier for everyone. [ACE]
-
- <http://www.tidbits.com/>
-
-
- **Nagel to Head AT&T Labs** -- AT&T announced today Dave Nagel
- will leave his position as senior vice president at Apple Computer
- to become the first president of AT&T Labs. AT&T Labs, a new
- research organization formed around what used to be Bell
- Laboratories, includes about 2,000 staff members dealing with a
- wide range of software and communications technologies. Nagel most
- recently led Apple's worldwide research and development group;
- prior to that he headed up AppleSoft. [GD]
-
- <http://www.att.com/press/0496/960415.ala.html>
-
-
- **FreePPP 2.5 Beta Available** -- The FreePPP Group has released
- FreePPP 2.5b4, the first public beta of FreePPP 2.5. As usual, if
- your PPP connection works well, we don't recommend upgrading yet
- (why fix what isn't broken, especially with beta software?). The
- changes are significant, and most notably, an application called
- FreePPP Setup replaces the Config PPP control panel and its
- elderly interface. The extension is now called FreePPP instead of
- just PPP, differentiating it from MacPPP. The primary parts of the
- FreePPP package missing in this release are documentation, an
- Apple Guide, and some cosmetic interface changes. Be sure to read
- the Read Me file in the FreePPP Folder installed for you in the
- root directory of your startup drive. [ACE]
-
- <ftp://mirror.aol.com/pub/info-mac/comm/inet/conn/free-ppp-25b4.hqx>
-
-
- **New QTVR Tools and Developer Info** -- Finally showing motion
- with its much-touted QuickTime VR technology, Apple is
- distributing pre-release versions two new QTVR tools to assist
- authors with making QuickTime VR panoramas and objects from
- photographs or computer-generated images. Though these tools can't
- add hot spots or stitch together series of overlapping photos
- (these functions are still restricted to Apple's obtuse QuickTime
- VR Authoring Tools Suite), they're a good first step on the path
- toward letting real people make QuickTime VR movies.
-
- <http://qtvr.quicktime.apple.com/WhatsNew.htm>
-
- Perhaps more important than these tools, however, is new developer
- information on integrating QuickTime VR into applications, as well
- as behind-the-scenes motion on the forthcoming QuickTime VR 1.1.
- With luck, developers will be able to integrate QuickTime VR
- content and authoring into applications (like Poser, Director,
- SuperCard, and Bryce) more easily - and I can't imagine a Netscape
- plug-in is too far off. [GD]
-
- <http://dev.info.apple.com/technotes/tn1035.html>
- <http://dev.info.apple.com/technotes/tn1036.html>
-
-
- **AIMED Developers Consortium** -- A group of third party
- developers have formed the Association of Independent Macintosh
- Engineers and Developers (AIMED), a non-profit group dedicated to
- Macintosh software and hardware development. AIMED intends to
- evangelize the Mac to third-party hardware and software
- developers, and also provide feedback to Apple on issues that
- concern Mac programmers. [GD]
-
- <http://www.aimed.org/>
-
-
- TidBITS Reviews Listing Survey Results
- --------------------------------------
- by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
-
- For a few weeks in February, we held an informal survey to
- determine whether or not our readers thought the weekly listing of
- reviews in the main Mac magazines was useful. A few people
- mistakenly thought we were proposing to cease reviewing products
- in TidBITS - that was pure invention on their part. Every week for
- the last six years, the final article in TidBITS has been a
- listing of the reviews in MacWEEK, Macworld, MacUser, and other
- magazines. Starting with this issue, we will no longer be typing
- that information in and including it in TidBITS.
-
- Let me explain the rationale behind the decision, since it wasn't
- as cut and dried as we had thought it would be. The survey
- revealed that 70 percent of people voting (1,682 votes) felt we
- shouldn't bother with the reviews listing. That was a bit lower
- than I'd expected. The 714 votes that made up the remaining 30
- percent were significantly buoyed by 418 email entries, which
- wasn't surprising since people who can use the Web can read the
- full text of reviews in those magazines online. Those who only
- have email access to the Internet aren't so fortunate.
-
- Given those numbers, we set to thinking about the purpose of those
- review listings. Originally, the idea was to provide an index to
- the magazine reviews that users could easily search. With all the
- magazines now having Web sites, that original idea doesn't make as
- much sense. We were also concerned that by listing those reviews
- each week, we were in essence advertising for those magazines. It
- would be one thing if the act was often reciprocal, but TidBITS
- has only been mentioned in traditional magazines a handful of
- times over the past six years.
-
- We do recognize that some TidBITS readers have come up with other
- uses for the reviews listings, especially in countries where it
- often takes some time for the U.S. magazines to arrive. However,
- we could include many things in TidBITS that would be useful to
- some readers, and we must figure out which of those things are the
- best use of our time and the most interesting to us.
-
- The fact of the matter is that no creative thought goes into
- typing in reviews from the table of contents of a magazine, and by
- virtue of that fact, the reviews listing is less interesting to us
- than most other things we might want to do. Any trained monkey
- could do that typing, and we prefer to spend our time doing things
- that only we can do. (Working with someone else to enter all the
- reviews each week would require coordination work as well, and
- would still take up space that we would prefer to use for other
- purposes.) After all, we hope the skills and analysis that we
- bring to TidBITS is what makes reading TidBITS worthwhile.
-
- In the end, that's the main reason why we will no longer publish
- the reviews listing in TidBITS. We have to move forward and
- continue to focus on things that interest us, or else we risk
- losing interest in TidBITS entirely. The recent April Fools issue
- is a good example: putting out two issues of TidBITS on two
- consecutive days is a _lot_ of work, but it's so much fun to
- fabricate fantastic articles from thin air that it was worth the
- effort. We've always published TidBITS as much for ourselves as
- for everyone else, and that's why it's so important the act of
- publishing continue to be fulfilling for us as well as our
- readers.
-
-
- IBM Close to Licensing Mac OS?
- ------------------------------
- by Geoff Duncan <geoff@tidbits.com>
-
- Last week, reports began circulating that IBM's Microelectronics
- Division was close to an agreement with Apple to license the Mac
- OS. The agreement would reportedly allow IBM (in its role as one
- of the primary manufacturers of the PowerPC chip) to sublicense
- the Mac OS to PowerPC chip buyers. Unlike Apple licensee Motorola
- (see TidBITS-315_), IBM apparently does not plan to manufacture
- its own Mac clones.
-
- Undoubtedly a shot in the arm for Apple, this agreement would also
- make good on IBM's long-stated intentions to license the Mac OS.
- However, many analysts quickly pointed out the agreement would be
- more favorable for Apple if IBM were agreeing to make its own
- Macintosh clones. As it stands, IBM is casting an eye towards its
- future PowerPC Platform (PPCP) machines, which will be able to run
- Mac OS, Windows NT, NetWare, AIX, or Solaris. (See TidBITS-304_.)
- Licensing the Mac OS lets IBM offer more operating systems choices
- to motherboard and systems manufacturers buying CPU chips from
- IBM. Presently, however, manufacturers wanting to make Mac clones
- would have to execute a separate hardware licensing agreement with
- Apple.
-
- If this agreement is finalized, the immediate benefits aren't all
- that clear, though it has interesting future possibilities once
- PPCP machines are on the market. Apple plans to release its own
- PPCP Macintoshes, and though estimates vary, these machines should
- appear is late in 1996 or possibly in early 1997 to coincide with
- the anticipated release of Copland, the next major revision of the
- Mac OS.
-
-
- Pippin Appears
- --------------
- by Brent Bossom <jp000035@jp.interramp.com>
-
- The Pippin-platform "Atmark" developed by Apple and Bandai is now
- on display and for sale in Japan. But you can't just drop into
- your local computer store and pick one up; you'll have to either
- place an order at a designated dealer or call a toll-free number
- (something Bandai inexplicably calls a "Digital Distribution
- System"). A unit will then be shipped directly to your home.
-
- The Atmark is configured just as it has been reported by others: a
- PowerPC 603 (66 MHz) CPU, internal quad-speed CD-ROM drive, 14.4
- Kbps external modem, 6 MB RAM (expandable to 14 MB), a game
- controller, and ports for connecting a television, monitor and
- other peripherals. The list price has been set at 68,000 yen, or
- about $635. The price includes four CD-ROMs: Internet Kit (which
- includes Netscape Navigator and other Internet software), TVWorks
- (an integrated email, word processing, and drawing package), and a
- two others with interface software for a computer service called
- Franky Online.
-
- Bandai plans to release a number of peripherals in June. These
- include a keyboard with a handwriting input tablet and pen (it
- looks like a small, white PowerBook and is priced at 9,800 yen), a
- floppy drive that sits under the Atmark (12,000 yen), RAM
- expansion cards (2, 4, or 6 MB - no prices have been set), a
- printer, and various cables for connecting Atmark accessories to a
- Macintosh (or vice versa). A 28.8 Kbps modem is also said to be in
- the works.
-
- Bandai advertises over 100 software titles are for sale now or
- under development, and the titles run the gamut from games and
- horoscope software to quasi-reference materials ("World's Diving
- Spots") and interactive music videos. Though some are priced as
- low as 3,800 yen, most average 6,800 yen (about $65). Bandai has
- also established an online service for Pippin Atmark users,
- providing access to Internet services for 2,000 yen a month (for
- up to 10 hours of use).
-
- More information on Pippin Atmark is available (mostly in
- Japanese) from Bandai's web site.
-
- <http://www.bdec.co.jp/>
-
-
- Back on the Chain Gang
- ----------------------
- by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
-
- I've had it. I'm sick of receiving chain mail. I'm sure many of
- you have received these bits of oozing Internet abuse as well,
- ranging from the Good Times Virus hoax (it _is_ a complete hoax,
- folks, and the damage it causes stems purely from being
- redistributed in email) to the latest petition for a worthy cause.
- Chain mail, if you're unfamiliar with the term, includes _any_
- message that asks you to forward it on to a bunch of your friends,
- leaving the exhortation to continue the forwarding intact. The
- topic of the message doesn't matter - chain mail of any sort is an
- abuse of the Internet and of your fellow Internet citizens.
-
- I don't know what happened, but chain mail has been clanking into
- my mailbox more frequently than ever before. First, the Good Times
- Virus hoax monopolized the discussion on the Apple Internet Users
- mailing list for a few days, then I got a copy of the standard
- "you'll have bad luck unless..." message and its raunchier "you'll
- have bad luck in bed unless..." cousin. They were followed by
- chain mail messages encouraging me to support PBS (Public
- Broadcasting Service) and NPR (National Public Radio). Finally, I
- received a number of copies of a chain mail prank that hoped to
- result in tons of people sending a copy of the Bill of Rights to
- President Clinton's email address on the same day. That prank also
- appeared in some of the Apple Internet lists that Chuq von Rospach
- runs, and he unsubscribed the person who submitted it from all the
- lists within minutes of seeing the message, since chain mail is an
- express violation of the charter of those lists.
-
- What's so wrong with chain mail that I'm ranting about it in this
- article? Why is it cause to be blackballed from mailing lists?
- Why, if you send it to me, will I give you one warning and after
- that report you to your postmaster with the recommendation that
- your account be revoked?
-
- Have you ever played the game where you hypothetically place a
- penny on the lower left corner of a checkerboard, then double the
- number of pennies on each square, moving left to right and up each
- row? The second square contains two pennies, the third four, the
- fourth eight, the fifth sixteen, and so on. I say hypothetical
- game, because by the last square, you've amassed a vast fortune.
-
- Chain mail has the potential to grow even more quickly. If one
- person starts a piece of chain mail, they're unlikely to just send
- it to two other people, and each of those people (if they're
- sufficiently gullible to forward it on at all) are also unlikely
- to limit themselves to just two other people each. Many of us have
- tens of people in our address books, and some people probably have
- over a hundred people to whom they could send such trash. My
- impression is that most of the chain mail messages I see have
- about 25 people in the header, and if that impression is both real
- and continued at every generation, you can see how chain mail
- could grow exponentially and significantly slow down delivery of
- all other mail, as the many mail servers on the Internet struggle
- to process millions of copies of the same message.
-
- I'm sure there are technical solutions to the problem, and if it
- continues to get worse, someone will implement them, much as
- people invented cancelbots to cancel spam postings on Usenet. We
- shouldn't let it get that far though, since chain mail is not a
- technical problem. It's a societal problem, and by participating
- in it you allow someone else to exploit you for their purposes.
- Even worse, you help them exploit even more people, wasting more
- time, disk space, and money than before. It's bad enough to be a
- victim, but it's worse to become an accessory.
-
- So, if you receive chain mail of any sort, don't forward it on.
- Delete it immediately and break the chain before it has a chance
- to enslave others. I also always send back a short note (a piece
- of boilerplate text these days) telling the original sender what
- they've done wrong and asking them never to repeat the mistake.
- Perhaps we can put an end to chain mail by refusing to participate
- and by educating those who are either gullible or don't yet see
- the error of their ways.
-
-
- ClearInk Ports WebLint to the Macintosh
- ---------------------------------------
- by Jon S. Stevens <jon@clearink.com>
-
- Creating basic HTML pages is easy, but creating pages that comply
- with HTML specifications is not. Everybody makes mistakes and not
- everybody knows all the rules. Have you ever forgotten to add that
- </BODY> tag to the bottom of a page? Did you know that the <TITLE>
- </TITLE> tag pair should be enveloped in the <HEAD> </HEAD> tag
- pair? This is where WebLint steps in. WebLint, a syntax checker
- for HTML, can parse your pages for any problems and then - for
- each mistake that it finds - report the line number of the mistake
- and what it thinks the problem might be. WebLint does not modify
- documents, so after you see a report, you must manually correct
- the problems.
-
- The freeware MacWebLint brings the Unix Perl version of WebLint to
- the Macintosh with the help of MacPerl 5 by Matthias Ulrich
- Neeracher. To use MacWebLint, you must have a copy of the freeware
- MacPerl 5 on your hard disk. Once both MacPerl and MacWebLint are
- installed, all you do is drop files or an entire folder of files
- on the MacWebLint icon. MacWebLint responds by creating a text
- file report and placing that file in the same folder as
- MacWebLint. You can download MacPerl and MacWebLint from the URL
- below.
-
- <ftp://sparc.clearink.com/pub/mac/>
-
- [As Jon explained it when I asked, "ClearInk provides services
- associated with marketing products and maintaining a presence in
- cyberspace, including HTML programming and back-end scripting,
- pinpointing and capitalizing on strategic areas of the Internet
- for executing innovative programs, and installing and/or
- maintaining systems to perpetuate these programs." That sounds
- like a lot of work, and one thing Jon did to help was to port
- WebLint to the Macintosh. ClearInk has made the port publicly
- available; Jon says its partly as a way for ClearInk to
- "contribute back to the Net for all that we have received." -
- Tonya]
-
- <http://www.clearink.com/>
-
-
- More Bookmarks than Books, Part II
- ----------------------------------
- by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
-
- This article is the second part of my look at bookmark management
- utilities. In TidBITS-323_ last week, I looked at utilities that
- offer their own interfaces. This week I'm changing gears and
- investigating bookmark managers that rely on the Finder to
- organize, categorize, and search through your bookmarks. A few
- additional programs have straggled in since last week, so look for
- the third part of this article in the next issue of TidBITS,
- covering everything I missed in the first two parts.
-
-
- **CyberFinder 2.0** -- Aladdin Systems' $30 CyberFinder control
- panel (with a 15-day fully functional demo) is completely
- integrated into the Finder, so your bookmarks appear to be files
- in Finder windows. CyberFinder can create "libraries" that look
- like folders in the Finder, and you can store bookmarks for all
- the common URL schemes in these libraries. Creating new bookmarks
- is a matter of either grabbing a URL from any application with a
- user-defined hot key, or pressing Shift and choosing New Bookmark
- from the Finder's File menu. Replacing Shift with Control toggles
- that item to New Library. You launch URLs by double-clicking the
- bookmarks in the Finder, or by selecting a URL in any application
- and pressing another user-defined hot key. The actual URL is
- accessible if you select the bookmark and choose Get Info from the
- Finder's File menu.
-
- CyberFinder's power is undeniable, since it piggybacks on the
- Finder's sorting and searching capabilities, and there are some
- nice touches, such as opening bookmark files from a variety of Web
- browsers as libraries (which makes moving to CyberFinder easier).
- CyberFinder's ease of use is very good, but it also inherits the
- Finder's clunkiness. In addition, some utilities, like Now Menus,
- don't see CyberFinder libraries as Macintosh folders, although I
- circumvent that problem by storing bookmarks in true folders
- rather than libraries, trading the larger file size of individual
- files in the Finder for the flexibility offered by Now Menus.
- CyberFinder has two notable problems: its bookmarks aren't
- available unless the control panel is loaded (but see URL Clerk
- below), and it can't grab the <TITLE> tag from a Web page if
- you're snagging a URL from a Web browser. Overall, however,
- CyberFinder is my pick for the best and most flexible of the
- bookmark managers.
-
- <http://www.aladdinsys.com/cfintro.htm>
-
-
- **DropURL** -- Perhaps the simplest of the bookmark utilities that
- rely on the Finder for their database work, Peter Marks's
- <peterm@jolt.mpx.com.au> free DropURL 1.1 uses Internet Config to
- launch a URL listed in the first line of a text file dropped on
- DropURL. If you change the creator of the text file to "DURL" (a
- utility to do this is included), you can double-click the file to
- launch its URL. Only the first line is used, so any additional
- lines are available for comments or descriptions. DropURL has no
- capabilities for easily capturing URLs or creating these text
- files - that's all up to you.
-
- <ftp://ftp.tidbits.com/pub/tidbits/tisk/inet/drop-url-11.hqx>
-
-
- **Duke of URL** -- Although it uses the Finder for all database
- work, the postcardware Duke of URL 1.0 is unique in a number of
- ways. It works only with Netscape and saves a URL launcher of the
- current Netscape page as a mini AppleScript application. You must
- activate Duke of URL manually by launching it for each page you
- wish to record, and it's quite slow to work, both in saving URLs
- and launching them. In part because it relies on the Finder and
- AppleScript, Duke of URL ends up not being particularly usable in
- comparison to many other options.
-
- <http://www.kei.com/duke-of-url/>
-
-
- **NetSnagger** -- Rod Morehead's free NetSnagger 1.1b3 sports only
- two features. It lets you create Launchers, which are NetSnagger
- files you can double-click in the Finder in order to launch the
- URL associated with them. It also lets you create Draggers, which
- are NetSnagger windows that facilitate retrieval of files stored
- at Info-Mac and UMich mirror sites. You open a Dragger window to a
- specific mirror, then drag the partial URL to a file (say, from an
- Info-Mac Digest) into that window. NetSnagger works with Internet
- Config to retrieve the file, or, if you're using a Launcher, to
- launch the appropriate URL with your preferred Web browser.
- Creating Launchers and Draggers is a bit clumsy, but using them is
- relatively easy. All sorting and searching of Launchers relies on
- the Finder, and although it's nowhere near as useful or elegant as
- CyberFinder, NetSnagger is an application and it's free.
-
- <http://rampages.onramp.net/~rmore/netsnagger.html>
-
-
- **URL Clerk** -- The freeware URL Clerk 1.1 <jeffp@dorsai.org>
- offers a few features not found in other Finder-using bookmark
- launchers. URLs (one per file) are stored in text files URL Clerk
- can create for you if you drop an appropriate text file or
- clipping file onto the included Bookmarker application. Another
- option lets URL Clerk convert text or clipping files automatically
- to its bookmark format after launching them. It can launch
- CyberFinder bookmarks, which might be handy if you normally use
- CyberFinder but don't have it loaded. Unfortunately, as with many
- of the Finder-based bookmark managers, there's no easy way to
- create URL Clerk bookmark files - you must do it manually in one
- of a few different ways. Double-clicking any URL Clerk bookmark
- launches URL Clerk, which in turn launches the URL in the Internet
- Config-specified helper application. URL Clerk is simple, but ends
- up being so simple that it's mostly useful to CyberFinder users.
-
- <ftp://ftp.tidbits.com/pub/tidbits/tisk/inet/url-clerk-11.hqx>
-
-
- **Web ShortCuts** -- WhollyMac's $18 (with a 15-day trial) Web
- ShortCuts 1.0 relies on the Finder for all of its searching,
- sorting, and organizing. Its main claim to fame is that it lets
- you create an icon for the Finder file that holds a URL. Creating
- the icon is as simple as selecting something onscreen, although
- the entire process requires copying a URL, switching to Web
- ShortCuts, choosing New from the File menu, pasting in the URL,
- clicking the Clip Image button, selecting an image to turn into an
- icon, clicking the Save As button, and finally naming and saving
- the file in a Standard File dialog. Launching a URL is far easier
- - you can either double-click it or, if you're running Netscape,
- you can simply drag the icon from the Finder into the Netscape
- window. Despite the clever icon grabbing feature, Web ShortCuts
- just doesn't seem sufficiently easy, nor does it offer much over
- free programs like NetSnagger.
-
- <http://www.whollymac.com/wholymac.html#Web ShortCuts>
-
-
- **My Pick** -- I'm slightly surprised by my final choice of
- bookmark managers. Despite the fact I feel increasingly hampered
- by the Finder, after testing all of the bookmark managers I've
- looked at for these articles, I settled on Aladdin's CyberFinder,
- although I use it in a specific manner. I created a Web URLs
- folder, and using Now Menus, gave it an icon in my menubar so it's
- available all the time. Within that folder, I created yet more
- folders, including one called Unfiled URLs, and I set CyberFinder
- to save all snagged URLs to that folder. When I capture a new URL,
- I immediately open the Unfiled URLs folder from my iconic Web URLs
- menu. I then name the file appropriately, and using the feature of
- Now Menus that lets you drag files into a hierarchical folder that
- Now Menus has created, move the bookmark into the appropriate
- folder. I also keep a To Check Out folder toggled open within the
- Unfiled URLs folder, so if I grab a URL quickly without knowing if
- it will be worth keeping, I stuff it in the To Check Out folder
- for later perusal. Even better, since I can use Now Menus to
- assign keyboard shortcuts to menu items, I can now go to Yahoo or
- Alta Vista or a couple of other sites with a press of a key, no
- matter what I'm doing. Although the Finder can be slow and clumsy,
- CyberFinder turned out to be the best solution for me.
-
- To be complete, I also like Casey Fleser's ClipFiler FKEY, since
- it's a great way to stuff random bits of text into a SimpleText
- file. I haven't quite decided if I plan to use ClipFiler or
- WebArranger for this task, since after Matt Neuburg's article
- about WebArranger in TidBITS-313_, Tonya and I sat down and
- figured out more about how WebArranger works (and it's very cool,
- if you can get past the massive confusions). Another possibility
- is a future version of MailKeeper, if it makes it easier to
- recategorize text and generally improves the interface.
-
- Tune in next week for a grab-bag of the various programs that
- escaped my notice the first time around, along with a few
- additional tips and techniques.
-
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