home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
Text File | 1994-09-25 | 2.7 KB | 55 lines | [TEXT/ttxt] |
- MacDOS Review
- Greg Kearney, Howard Publications - USA (Q1 1994)
-
- Many of us who use Macintosh computers were attracted to them because of
- the user interface. The Icons and menus that made the Macintosh easy to use
- allowed us to find new uses for the computer and, in many cases, provided
- some users with the first ability to use any computer.
-
- Before the Mac there were command line driven computers. The best known of
- the lot is the MS-DOS computer. In a command line interface you type in
- commands like: cd A: to swich to the A drive. While most Mac users would
- wonder why anyone would ever want to go back to the "bad old days", DOS
- does have a place.
-
- MacDOS by the Austrailian firm Rainbow Hill, puts the DOS interface onto
- the Mac. At first one might ask why? There are several good uses for MacDOS
- however.
-
- As the Mac file system has grown, it has become more and more difficult to
- manage it. At one time we needed only to worry about floppy disks that held
- 400 kilobytes. Now we have hard disks with gigabytes of data. Because
- MacDOS can run batch files, you could say: find all of the MWTemp files that
- Microsoft Word leave about your hard disks. MacDOS also supports piping
- which is one of the better featuers of DOS or UNIX systems. This means that
- you can take the result of one command and apply it to another. MacDOS could
- for examples throw out all the MWTemp files it finds.
-
- Another area where MacDOS works well is for people who are very accustomed to
- MS-DOS computers but are now confronted with using the Mac. MacDOS could
- smooth the way.
-
- A final area which is very small is in the blind using the Berkeley Systems
- outSpoken product. While outSpoken works well with many software products,
- the blind find using the Macintosh Finder to be very difficult. MacDOS
- solves the problem of moving and deleting files with a clean interface
- which has been well documented in braille for the blind.
-
- A few things need to be done to MacDOS to make it better. It sould be
- AppleScript aware (scriptable, recordable, etc.) And it needs to be able to
- use the volume (disk) names. As it stands, the volume access is the most
- difficult part of the program to master.
-
- If you have the need to do batch file work, such as moving or deleting big
- groups of files, or you just like command line interfaces, MacDOS is the
- best solution I have found. It sticks very close to the original and has a
- robust command language. It works but never gets in the way of the Mac. You
- can switch in and out of MacDOS and the Finder.
-
- MacDOS has yet to find a US distributor and inquiries should be made to
- Rainbow Hill.
-
- © 1994, Howard Publications, All rights reserved.
- Reproduced with permission from Greg Kearney, Howard Publications, April 1994.
- Modification or further reproduction of this document prohibited.
-