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- Path: sparky!uunet!mcsun!uknet!harrier.ukc.ac.uk!eagle.ukc.ac.uk!dl1
- From: dl1@ukc.ac.uk (Duncan Langford)
- Newsgroups: alt.cd-rom
- Subject: More Garbo (long!)
- Message-ID: <1400@eagle.ukc.ac.uk>
- Date: 31 Jul 92 08:39:29 GMT
- Sender: dl1@ukc.ac.uk
- Organization: Computing Lab, University of Kent at Canterbury, UK.
- Lines: 75
-
-
- I feel it would be useful - and hopefully not a waste of bandwidth - to show
- exactly what the Garbo CD-ROM actually SAYS in its introductory text files
- - all needing modification to display properly on a Mac!
-
- First, Walnut Creek instructions:
-
- > Most of the files on this disc are in zip, zoo, arc, or lzh format.
- > There are programs for extracting from these formats located in pc/arcers,
- > pc/arcutil and mac/arcers.
-
- > Some files are in tar or shar format. Programs for extracting tar and shar
- > files are in pc/unix/tar4dos.zoo, pc/unix/unshar.zip, mac/unix/tar.sit and
- > mac/unix/unshar.sit
-
- It was this file I spoke of as 'plain wrong' - I meant that a user anxious
- to use an application would not find 'programs for extracting' in
- 'mac/arcers'. Oh, they were /there/. But needing extraction. So only if
- the user could first extract the extractor, without help, could they use it.
-
- Which seemed silly?
-
- Would our confused user be helped by the original Garbo help file? Well,
- no, they probably wouldn't; partly because Garbo understandably assumes
- you're downloading via ftp, and partly because the text itself is a
- little confused :
-
- > FTP and GENERAL INFORMATION
- > ************************************
-
- > Files you find here are usually Stuffit-files (MacBinary files) (file
- > types .sit, .bin, .cpt and .sea are MacBinary, .zoo files are normal
- > binary and .shar files Unix shell archived files).
-
- > You need StuffIt to unpack .sit files and Compactor to unpack .cpt
- > files. Or use Extractor to unpack both. All these can be found in
- > mac/arcers dir. .sea files are Self-Extracting-Archives that is you
- > can run them (applications) and they extracts.
-
- > MacBinary is sort of concept that Mac OS likes the files to be. So
- > when these MacBinary files are trasferred as NORMAL BINARY the
- > resource and data forks are combined together somewhat dissimilar way
- > as what happens when transferring them as MacBinary. So when you
- > can't use MacBinary protocol REMEMBER USE BINARY.
-
- > But if you can't use MacBinary PROTOCOL when downloading these files
- > to your Mac you must use a PROGRAM called MacBinary to prepare the
- > .sit files for Stuffit. But you must use binary transfer in that case
- > too. You can find MacBinary program here in BinHex format, too. So
- > when you have downloaded the files as normal binary you must run them
- > also through this MacBinary program.
-
-
- This information is ALL the Mac purchaser of the Garbo CDROM gets. I'm not
- really surprised at subsequent problems... are you?
-
- I accept that this was a cheap CD, that the original archive was copied
- exactly, that goodwill positively oozed from the whole thing; good fellows,
- all, no question.
-
- But I'm still puzzled why Walnut Creek sent me a disk I couldn't use
- without decyphering, when any Mac user could have written a simple
- explanatory text file - and supplied an uncoded copy of a suitable
- decoding application, as well. Yes, I know - but I didn't /want/ my money
- back. Like most purchasers, I wanted a useable CD.
-
- I believe it is vitally important for the future of CD-ROM that disks are
- readily accessible, that new users are not discouraged by unnecessary
- technical bullshit, that suppliers spend a little time thinking about the
- people who will use their product.
-
- And I apologise - of course I apologise - for unwarranted slurs. I
- emphatically DON'T apologise for raising this issue.
-
- - duncan
-