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-
- List (Unformatted): USENET MAC DIGEST V4 #68
-
-
- Usenet Mac Digest Friday, May 27, 1988 Volume 4 : Issue 68
-
- Today's Topics:
- FullWrite Bug and Patch
- Re: Initialization Page
- Hooking up an HP 7585B plotter to a Mac
- Re: Mac on airplanes
- SE to Mac II floppy - More info
- Re: Brief overview of FullWrite (Re
- Re: Statistical Packages
- tax on mac
- How can you extend and add on to AppleTalk networks?
- TOPS on a Sun
- Apple II Emulation on Mac II
- Are there any color printer drivers?
- Re: Statistical Packages
- Re: tax on mac
- Re: Math Word Processing
- Re: REsolved: "There is nothing to choose" trouble
- Re: How can you extend and add on to AppleTalk networks?
- Re: REsolved: "There is nothing to choose" trouble
- Re: New LAYO
- Speed of Redraw in Drawing programs
- SuperMac XP150 drive ??
- Re: New LAYO
- Re: Mac on airplanes
- Getting means and standard deviations out of CricketGraph
- Re: SuperMac XP150 drive ??
- Re: How can you extend and add on to AppleTalk networks?
- Re: Anyone using pcl (clos) under Allegro Common Lisp?
- MPW has trouble with L O N G lines
- LightspeedC license
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- From: edmoy@violet.berkeley.edu
- Subject: FullWrite Bug and Patch
- Date: 20 May 88 00:20:42 GMT
- Organization: University of California, Berkeley
-
- When printing to a LaserWriter, FWP includes its own PostScript procset.
- While it works fine with a real LaserWriter on an AppleTalk network, if
- the printing is done through software that is sensitive to Adobe's
- document structuring convention (such as the CAP printer software), it
- fails. This is because the procset looks something like this:
-
- %%BeginProcSet (FullWriteProcSet) 1.0 1
- . . .
- %% End of FullWrite ProcSet
-
- Not having a matching %%EndProcSet command violates the structuring
- conventions.
-
- To fix this, go into ResEdit and open (a copy of) FullWrite. Open
- resource PREC, id = 103. Edit the last line from
-
- %% End of FullWrite ProcSet
-
- to
-
- %%EndProcSet for FullWrite
-
- (I left a space at the end of the line so that the modified PREC
- resource would have the same length.)
-
- For even stricter compliance, the last line should be just %%EndProcSet,
- and the %%BeginProcSet line should contain a colon after %%BeginProcSet.
- --
- Edward Moy
- Workstation Software Support Group
- University of California
- Berkeley, CA 94720
-
- edmoy@violet.Berkeley.EDU
- ucbvax!violet!edmoy
-
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: jcc@ut-emx.UUCP (J. Chris Cooley)
- Subject: Re: Initialization Page
- Date: 19 May 88 20:33:08 GMT
- Organization: The University of Texas at Austin, Austin, Texas
-
- > I have heard there is a way to keep the LaserWriter (and LW Plus?) from
- > printing out its initialization page when you first turn it on.
- > I heard this tip was given in Macworld June 87. (Which I don't have access
-
- Your sources were correct. The June 1987 issue of MacWorld details the
- way to do it. Because things were brain damaged back then, they tell
- you to hook MacTerminal to the LW and type the postscript code directly
- into the device. That may be well for some, but with the advent of
- postscript downloaders, this hassle is rendered obsolete.
-
- My favorite is "SendPS 1.21" by Adobe (available on
- sumex-aim.stanford.edu in the info-mac directory). There's also
- "Postscript Tool" by Helicon Designs, but it's not as good for
- downloading PS code--you have to type the CTRL-D yourself after it ships
- the code to the LW.
-
- Below are postscript code hacks I did (which were approved by our PS
- person here). Save each of these into text files and ship them to the
- laserwriter using a PS downloader. Don't "Print" from a word processor
- unless you change the font to PS Escape (if you have it and have read
- its documentation).
-
- There's no immediate effect, but the next time you turn the LW on, it
- won't be wasting that extra sheet and bit of toner. The "startuppage
- on" file is included in case someone is collecting those sheets for
- usage records (or if you want to see the page every now and then).
-
- ------------beginning of "startuppage on" --------------
- %!PS-Adobe-1.0
- serverdict begin 0 exitserver
- statusdict begin true setdostartpage end
- ----------------------end of file-------------------------
-
-
- ------------beginning of "startuppage off" --------------
- %!PS-Adobe-1.0
- serverdict begin 0 exitserver
- statusdict begin false setdostartpage end
- ----------------------end of file-------------------------
-
- > thanks,
- You're welcome.
-
- > Greg Sorensen
- --
- J. Chris Cooley
- Univ. of Texas Comp. Center
- Austin, TX 78712
- 512/471-3241 x229
-
- {im4u,husc6,uunet}!ut-sally!ut-emx!jcc
-
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: fiatlux@ucscc.UCSC.EDU (David Vangerov)
- Subject: Hooking up an HP 7585B plotter to a Mac
- Date: 20 May 88 03:20:19 GMT
- Organization: University of California, Santa Cruz; CATS
-
- I'm told that this is possible, but I haven't been able to find out how
- to do this.
-
- We have an HP 7585B plotter (otherwise known as a Big-Bertha plotter) in
- the lab that I work. In this same lab we also have a bunch of
- micro-computers (IBM's and Mac's). We have had no trouble hooking up the
- IBM's to the plotter. What I want to do is hookup the Macs (or at least
- one of them, probably the Mac II) to the plotter as well. Now I know
- that this can be done since I've seen it be done and heard of it as
- well. What I want to know is how do I do this? According to HP they
- don't have a generic driver for the plotter and that software you use
- should come with a driver for it. So what I really want to know is what
- software packages out there support a plotter, specifically the HP
- 7585B. I want some software like MacDraw or MacDraft (or something along
- those lines).
-
- Mail me your replies and I'll summarize for the net if there is enough
- interest in this...
-
- Thanks a bunch...
- --
- +----------------------------------------------------------------------------+
- | David Vangerov |
- | Just your average Theater Arts major with a weird thing for computers |
- | fiatlux@ucscc.BITNET || fiatlux@ucscc.ucsc.EDU || ...!ucbvax!ucscc!fiatlux |
- +----------------------------------------------------------------------------+
-
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: mbk@hpsemc.HP.COM (Miles Kehoe)
- Subject: Re: Mac on airplanes
- Date: 19 May 88 17:57:07 GMT
- Organization: HP Technology Access Center, Cupertino, CA
-
- Concerning Macs on airplanes.... (or any other portable) some airports
- are beginning to want to see that your computer works before they allow
- you thru security. I guess the premise is 'If the thing works, there
- can't be a bomb planted in it'. I only meniton this because on a recent
- trip, I decided to bring along a Compaq at the last minute and, as
- usual, I tossed the power cable into my suitcase which I checked at the
- counter. By the time I got to security, I was not able to boot up my
- system and prove it to be a computer, so I had to argue with the
- security manager and finally open the darn thing up to let him
- 'visually' inspect it before I could go thru. So... no matter what... if
- you carry it along, bring it's power cable too!
-
- (I know... my Mac case has room for everything too.. just wanted to toss
- in the caveat, since not many airports have the right tools to open a
- mac)
-
- Miles
-
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: hunt@atse.dec.com (Phil Hunt)
- Subject: SE to Mac II floppy - More info
- Date: 20 May 88 17:32:45 GMT
- Organization: Digital Equipment Corporation
-
- I today called an Apple dealer who told me the Apple part number for a
- replacement internal Mac II floppy and an external SE floppy (The 'guts'
- of the external, the drive itself) are identical!
-
- Is there a wire to cut? A jumper to change? Anything???
-
- Why can't you take a MacSE external drive and rehouse it and use it in a
- MacII. It doesn't make sense. They are the same part number...
-
- Argggghhhhh!!!!
-
- Any knowledge on this subject or if someone was successful doing this
- would be appreciated.
- --
- Phil Hunt
- 603-884-4820
-
-
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: dorourke@polyslo.UUCP (David O'Rourke)
- Subject: Re: Brief overview of FullWrite (Re
- Date: 20 May 88 07:23:49 GMT
- Organization: Cal Poly State University -- San Luis Obispo
-
- In article <53839@sun.uucp> chuq@sun.UUCP (Chuq Von Rospach) writes:
- >I think this is being overly harsh.
-
- I apologize. SORRY. But to call WYSIWYG a failure was originally a
- little harh also. Anyway I was out of line and I apologize.
-
- >hardcore writer who types 100WPM or so. And when I'm writing, I dont' want
- > continues with a good argument for why WYSIWYG might not be desirerable.
-
- I have a couple of things to say about that.
-
- 1) You're right! Motorola we need 350 mhz 68060's like NOW!!!!!!!!!!!
- Then
- things might go fast.
-
- 2) You also suggested that you be able to turn off the repagination.
- Funny
- you should mention that, I sent a *LONG* bug report to Ann Arbor
- and also
- suggested that they make the automatic updating optional. You
- think
- a page break is bad, try using an index. I added a page and it
- took
- three min. to "Update the Document", well I have my autosave set
- for
- 2 min., so FWP would "Update the Document", and it would save,
- causing
- it to again "Update the Document", then it would save. Any
- Computer
- Science people recognize this loop?
- You can turn off the re-calculation in a spreadsheet to speed data
- entry, why not a word processor. If word 4.0 is going to win my
- aproval over FWP, then one of the many things it needs to have is a
- optional auto update feature.
-
- 3) If you're **REALLY** interested it just getting the D*MN words in
- then
- I suggest that you use a text editor. I sympathise with your
- complaints
- and if I really just want to blaze on the keyboard I use a text
- editor
- than does almost NO formatting, then read it into the WP of my
- choice.
- Bit of a hack, but it works, and I don't lose my train of thought.
-
- Thankyou for your comments, and again I apologize.
-
-
- --
- David M. O'Rourke
-
- Disclaimer: I don't represent the school. All opinions are mine!
-
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: 6029334@pucc.Princeton.EDU (Robert G. Trevor)
- Subject: Re: Statistical Packages
- Date: 20 May 88 13:28:57 GMT
- Organization: Princeton University, NJ
-
- In article <1988May19.182607.21352@gpu.utcs.toronto.edu>,
- heath@gpu.utcs.toronto.edu (Todd Heatherton) writes:
-
- >
- >
- >Does anyone know of a powerful statistics program for the Mac, which
- >also conforms to the Mac interface. I know that Statview 512+ is a
-
- I have Beta version of RATS for the Macintosh. Although a little buggy,
- especially if you want to use the built in compiler, its a very powerful
- and useful package. They are working hard to remove remaining bugs -
- you can get beta now with free upgrade to commercially relaesed version,
- or wait for finished version. Tech support is good (they sent me new
- beta when I found bugs in previous version), and the built-in procedures
- are very robust. RATS has a good name amongst
- economists/econometricians, and is available in mainframe, IBM-PC
- versions as well as source licence for M68020 work-station systems.
- Main draw-back commercially is the user-interface (it shows its
- bloodline); then that shouldn't worry people who are using high-powered
- stats routines anyway. Facilities are mainly for linear models (although
- has some non-linear routines and they are adding more); they include
- time series (time and frequency domain), forecasting (static/dynamic,
- deterministic/stochastic), multiple regression, 2SLS, 3SLS, SUR, NLLS,
- logit, probit, Kalman filter, a (presently buggy) structured programming
- language (including matrix language) and much more. (+ BBS for new
- procedures) If this sounds like a rave - it is. I make my living from
- using such packages. RATS is one of the best. Only GAUSS beats it, but
- (SIGH) thats not yet available for the MAC. (They claim the're about to
- hire a programmer to start porting it, and that it will be available in
- the Fall - pigs can fly too.) Contact: VAR Econometrics
- PO Box 1818
- Evanston, IL 60204-1818
- Ph: (312) 864-8772
- --
- Rob Trevor
- MaBell: (609) 452-4051
- Bitnet: 6029334@PUCC
- UseNet: 6029334@PUCC.Princeton.Edu
-
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: wong@alberta.UUCP (Brian Wong)
- Subject: tax on mac
- Date: 20 May 88 17:20:15 GMT
- Organization: U. of Alberta, Edmonton, AB
-
- i like to bring a mac to usa (LA to be exact) from canada. when i
- return, i might leave the mac to my brother. will the custom tax me? how
- much? anybody has opinion / experience on this?
-
- brian
-
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: mmccann@hubcap.UUCP (Mike McCann)
- Subject: How can you extend and add on to AppleTalk networks?
- Date: 20 May 88 21:08:12 GMT
- Organization: Clemson University, Clemson, SC
-
- How can I extend an AppleTalk network so that it is longer than 1000
- feet? I also want to put more than 32 devices on the network, can this
- be done? If you have any suggestions, please send them to me along with
- company names, addresses and phone numbers for the hardware I need.
-
- Thanks,
- --
- Mike McCann Internet = mmccann@hubcap.clemson.edu
- Poole Computer Center (Box P-11) UUCP = hubcap!mmccann
- Clemson University Bitnet = mmccann@clemson.bitnet
- Clemson, S.C. 29634
-
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: sorensen@hstbme.mit.edu (A. Gregory Sorensen)
- Subject: TOPS on a Sun
- Date: 20 May 88 23:15:52 GMT
- Organization: Massachusetts Institute of Technology
-
- Another question from the neophyte:
-
- Our lab has a MacII next to a Sun4...and we're interested in getting
- them to share data in just a crude way -- copying files from one to the
- other, sharing a printer -- no heavy duty network database application
- or anything. We figure TOPS would be the logical choice, as Sun makes
- it...so...
-
- Anyone with *experience* with this stuff? Is it worth it? Better
- options? Which port on the back of the Sun? And other relevant answers
- would be appreciated.
-
- Thanks,
-
- Greg Sorensen
-
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: thomas@eleazar.dartmouth.edu (Thomas Summerall)
- Subject: Apple II Emulation on Mac II
- Date: 20 May 88 07:01:17 GMT
- Organization: Dartmouth College, Hanover, NH
-
- Why hasn't someone written an Apple II or IIgs emulator for the Mac II?
- I have seen one for the Mac that was compatible enough with the Apple II
- to run Choplifter. It had two problems: speed, memory, and lack of
- color. It seems like such an emulator on the Mac II would solve all of
- those problems. This would give Mac II owners access to software like
- color games that are so chronically lacking.
-
- I was always amazed at the quality of game programs that came out for
- the II series considering the limited and obscurely-implemented graphics
- that were available before the gs. It seems that current game software
- for the Macs are just scratching the surface of the abilities of the
- machines, while the games for the II, like Choplifter or Dino Eggs,
- squeezed out every possible effect...Only Dark Castle can compare to
- some of the better Apple II games.
-
- So, it seems like such an emulation program would make quite a bit of
- money if someone were willing to put in the time. (If only I had the
- time and skill...)
- --
- ==============================================================================
- Thomas Summerall
- H.B. 3445 -- Dartmouth College
- Hanover, NH 03755
- thomas@eleazar.dartmouth.edu
- ==============================================================================
-
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: korfhage@CS.UCLA.EDU
- Subject: Are there any color printer drivers?
- Date: 19 May 88 23:38:43 GMT
- Organization: UCLA Computer Science Department
-
-
- We would like to print color from our Mac IIs. Are there any device
- drivers in existence? Printers of interest are a Calcomp Plotmaster,
- Xerox 4020 (or whatever their color printer is numbered), and an Okimate
- 20.
- Thanks for any information.
-
- Willard Korfhage
-
- ARPA : korfhage@cs.ucla.edu
- UUCP : {ucbvax,ihnp4,randvax,trwrb!trwspp,ism780}!ucla-cs!korfhage
-
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: g451252772ea@deneb.ucdavis.edu (0040;0000009857;0;327;142;)
- Subject: Re: Statistical Packages
- Date: 21 May 88 02:48:28 GMT
- Organization: University of California, Davis
-
- The current version of Systat is impressive. Still only 'user-cordial'
- to use Wilkenson's own phrase, but much improved over 2.x (up to 3.1
- now).
-
- I also use StatView and like its interface much better.
-
- Systat is a citable, professional tool. Yes I've earned a few dollars
- reporting bugs (one stat, one trivial) in it, but I liked the rapid
- feedback Wilkenson gave.
-
- For anova, there's some non-commercial stuff- GANOVA, from UCLA, comes
- to mind. The MGLH program in systat is still limited by it's memory
- allocation to small designs when unequal-n repeated measures & such are
- set up. Sigh- the regression approximation used in GANOVA works much
- better in those cases.
-
- good luck.
- --
- Ron Goldthwaite / UC Davis, Psychology and Animal Behavior
- 'Economics is a branch of ethics, pretending to be a science;
- ethology is a science, pretending relevance to ethics.'
-
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: ow@beach.cis.ufl.edu (Olwen Wee)
- Subject: Re: tax on mac
- Date: 21 May 88 14:35:16 GMT
- Organization: UF CIS Department
-
- In article <1313@pembina.UUCP> wong@alberta.UUCP (Brian Wong) writes:
- >i like to bring a mac to usa (LA to be exact) from canada.
- >when i return, i might leave the mac to my brother.
- >will the custom tax me?
-
- I have brought a mac from Singapore, and there was no problem, basically
- because the mac is made in the US. If you had brought in an apple, it
- would be a different case. -- Olwen Wee
-
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: drc@dbase.UUCP (Dennis Cohen)
- Subject: Re: Math Word Processing
- Date: 20 May 88 17:57:52 GMT
- Organization: Ashton Tate Development Center Glendale Cal.
-
- In article <380@thunder.UUCP>, raday@thunder.UUCP (Alan Day) writes:
- > (1) multiple (adjustable?) levels of sub- and super-scripts. The
- > adjustment might be necessary if the default settings are not
- > correct as in Word. (Anyone know how to FEdit these values for
- > Word? The workarounds that I know are very time consuming and
- > unnatural.)
- FullWrite already seems to provide this capability by allowing you to
- raise or lower selected text in 1 pixel increments. While this probably
- doesn't satisfy the request in all its generality, it would seem that it
- answers the majority of those requests.
-
- >
- > (2) Intuitive CHARACTER overstrike capability (LaserAuthor used
- > COMMAND-backspace between the characters). This would allow writing
- > e.g. NOT less than, and x sub i super j in paragraph text easily.
- While a more intuitive approach is definitely needed, the same result
- can be achieved in FullWrite by using the kerning control that is
- provided. While the more common case needs a better metaphor, this does
- provide extra flexibility.
-
- >
- > (3) a general wish would be macros and command-key assignment
- > (which means the programme must not gobble up all possible
- > assignments for obscure power user capabilities. Are you listening
- > Word?)
- I use QuicKeys for this sort of thing and never actually desired much in
- the way of macros beyond what it provides. Since QK overrides the
- program's use, it is seldom a problem.
- >
- > Does anyone know of a WP package with these minor :-) abilities?
- >
-
- As you see from the above, FullWrite Professional does a pretty fair job
- of meeting your requests (although it is not necessarily obvious that
- the capa- bility is present) and the addition of QuicKeys makes it a
- very well-rounded environment.
- --
- Dennis Cohen
- Ashton-Tate Macintosh Division
- dBASE Mac Development Team
- --------------------------
- Disclaimer: Opinions expressed above are those of the author.
-
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: dorourke@polyslo.UUCP (David O'Rourke)
- Subject: Re: REsolved: "There is nothing to choose" trouble
- Date: 21 May 88 07:52:38 GMT
- Organization: Cal Poly State University -- San Luis Obispo
-
- In article <440011@hpdstma.HP.COM> dave@hpdstma.HP.COM (Dave Waller)
- writes:
- >There should be a file in your system folder similar to the notepad file that
- >contains information about what you have chosen with the chooser. This is why
- >replacing all the laserwriter stuff and the system and finder doesn't seem
- >to help-- the file that contains chooser specific stuff is still there! If
- >you blow this file away, things should be alright. Note also that this file
- >may be invisible, so you will need ResEdit or something like that to
- >manipulate it.
-
- Well Apple's Documenation was no help what so ever in this case. I
- had to look it up in "Macintosh Programming Secrets" by Scott Knaster.
- The chooser does not manipulate a file, but it changes a resource in the
- system file. 'STR ' -8192 will contain the name of the currently
- selected printer. After retrieving that name from the string you can
- then open the file of the same name and rumage around inside it to find
- out additional information about the printer. Mr. Knaster gives a very
- good description of how to do this and I recommend the book highly.
- The nothing to choose problem might result if the choose is smart
- enough to look and see if the system file is locked, hence not allowing
- any modifications to be made. Since it has to store the current printer
- name in the system file, if it is locked it can't do this, so it might
- give up with the error message you saw.
- Hope this helps!!!
-
- --
- David M. O'Rourke
-
- Disclaimer: I don't represent the school. All opinions are mine!
-
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: dorourke@polyslo.UUCP (David O'Rourke)
- Subject: Re: How can you extend and add on to AppleTalk networks?
- Date: 21 May 88 09:29:01 GMT
- Organization: Cal Poly State University -- San Luis Obispo
-
- In article <1677@hubcap.UUCP> mmccann@hubcap.UUCP (Mike McCann) writes:
- >How can I extend an AppleTalk network so that it is longer than 1000
- >feet?
-
- I have not used it. But I've heard good things about the Tops
- repeater from Tops. It boosts the signal so that it can travel farther.
- {Anybody who has a better description is welcome to clean up my
- description}. I don't know cost, or distribution, but I do remember
- some net mail about it 6 months ago. Seems everyone liked it pretty
- well.
- The other option is switching to phone net connector and standard
- telephone wire. They claim 3000 feet before needing a repeater.
-
- >I also want to put more than 32 devices on the network, can this
- >be done?
-
- Yes and No. It is possible to put more than 32 nodes on an
- Appletalk network, but due to the limited bandwidth and the way
- Appletalk works the performance starts degrading significantly after
- that point {I've found this to be true after only 20}. But Apple Does
- have a solution. Appletalk supports Zones, this allows you to break up
- your network into "sections" of smaller sub networks, they can still
- commuicate with each other, but each zone's local traffic doesn't
- interfere with other zones local traffic. Shiva and Hayes both make an
- AppleTalk bridge which is what's required to do this. I also seem to
- remember Tops offering a bridge also, but I'm not as sure as I am about
- Shiva and Hayes.
- Breaking Large AppleTalk networks into zones makes good
- administrative sence, support easier, and increases the local
- performance of both networks. I would look into setting up Zones, rather
- than triing to make one large network. It also makes it easier to add
- nodes in the future because each zone has the full number of nodes
- possible, and you can have Lots of different zones if you're willing to
- shell out the bucks for the bridges. AppleTalk allows 2^16 zones, I
- doubt anyone would really want to test that limit, but you get the idea,
- 4 or 5 zones wouldn't be that hard to come up with, and Appletalk can
- definatly handle it.
- Hope this helps, any questions can be sent to me directly, or via
- net news.
-
- --
- David M. O'Rourke
-
- Disclaimer: I don't represent the school. All opinions are mine!
-
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: chow@batcomputer.tn.cornell.edu (Christopher Chow)
- Subject: Re: REsolved: "There is nothing to choose" trouble
- Date: 21 May 88 20:09:50 GMT
- Organization: Cornell Theory Center, Cornell University, Ithaca NY
-
- In article <2780@polyslo.UUCP> dorourke@polyslo.UUCP (David O'Rourke)
- writes:
-
- >The chooser
- >does not manipulate a file, but it changes a resource in the system file.
- >'STR ' -8192 will contain the name of the currently selected printer. After
-
-
- I hope this feature is fixed in a later system distribution: Having the
- choose change the system file is bad -- if you choose a different
- printer then the system file is has been modified, which means that the
- next time you do a hard disk backup the system file needs to be backed
- up. A stripped down system is still a big file!
-
- Christopher Chow
- --
- /---------------------------------------------------------------------------\
- | Internet: chow@tcgould.tn.cornell.edu (128.84.248.35 or 128.84.253.35) |
- | Usenet: ...{uw-beaver|ihnp4|decvax|vax135}!cornell!batcomputer!chow |
- | Bitnet: chow@crnlthry.bitnet |
- | Phone: 1-607-253-6699 Address: 7122 N. Campus 7, Ithaca, NY 14853 |
- | Delphi: chow2 PAN: chow |
- \---------------------------------------------------------------------------/
-
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: gelphman@adobe.COM (David Gelphman)
- Subject: Re: New LAYO
- Date: 21 May 88 21:29:42 GMT
- Organization: Adobe Systems Incorporated, Mountain View
-
- In article <6591@cit-vax.Caltech.Edu> wetter@tybalt.caltech.edu.UUCP
- (Pierce T. Wetter) writes:
- >
- ...
- >change it by hand. SURPRISE, there's some new bits/fields. For instance,
- >there's now, sort style, color style, and max # of windows. What gives?
- > What do the new fields do?
- >Pierce WEtter
- >
- >P.S. I really need to know this, especially color style as all of my icons have
-
- >changed to solid black.
-
- I played around with ResEdit 1.2d1 which shows you the extra bits
- in the LAYO resource of the Finder. I found that there is a new bit
- which is labelled 'Title Click'. It is set to 0 by default. If you set
- it to 1, then you can double click in the title bar of any FINDER window
- and the folder directly above it in the disk hierarchy will be opened
- and brought to the front. If that folder is already open, its window
- will be brought to the front.
- The Max # of windows evidently allows you to up the maximum number of
- windows the finder will allow you to have open at once. (seems obvious)
- As far as Color Style, I haven't played much with that but did find
- that setting it to 1 (default is zero) made all the folders and icons
- black.
- The extra bits are labelled: Use Phys Icon Title Click Copy Inherit
- New Fold Inherit
-
- Ideas as to the rest of these?
- --
- David Gelphman
- Adobe Systems, Inc.
-
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: tomc@mntgfx.mentor.com (Tom Carstensen)
- Subject: Speed of Redraw in Drawing programs
- Date: 19 May 88 20:06:01 GMT
- Organization: Mentor Graphics Corporation, Beaverton Oregon
-
- Well, I've had a chance to test most of the commercially available
- drawing software programs for the Mac, to see if any are better for
- drawing electronic schematics than MacDraw. Basically, NO.
-
- MacDraw far out runs the other drawing program I test in terms of speed
- of redrawing a drawing. With schematics, and the like, there are
- usually thousands of objects to draw. MacDraw is somewhat slow at
- redrawing them, but all of the other drawing programs are slower.
- Here's my summary:
-
- Aldus FreeHand Great drawing program, still slower
- Canvas VERY VERY VERY Slow !!!
- Cricket Draw Decent drawing program, but somewhat
- slower on the redraw
- SuperPaint It was slower, and not really suited
- to drawing schematic diagrams
-
- If MacDraw beats all of these in speed, and MacDraw II it supposed to be
- many, many times faster the MacDraw, it looks like MacDraw II could be
- an awesome program!
-
- MacDraw, which has been around from the beginning, still outruns the
- latest and greatest drawing programs in speed !!
- --
- :------------------------------------------------------------:
- : Tom Carstensen Usenet: tomc@mntgfx.MENTOR.COM :
- : Mentor Graphics Delphi: CARSTENSEN :
- : GEnie: CARSTENSEN :
- : :
- : . . . Ah, what I wouldn't give to be spat at in the :
- : face. I used to lay awake at night dreaming of :
- : being spat at in the face. :
- : - Monty Python (Life of Brian) :
- :------------------------------------------------------------:
-
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: rterry@hpcupt1.HP.COM (Ray Terry)
- Subject: SuperMac XP150 drive ??
- Date: 22 May 88 01:41:47 GMT
- Organization: Hewlett Packard, Cupertino
-
-
- Does anyone out there has signficant experience with (therefore a
- reaction to the new(er) SuperMac XP150 (external hard disk drive)). I
- hear that it is good, fast, but expensive.
-
- I'd be interested in hearing from anyone with that can tell me about
- their actual experience in using the drive... I'm currently using the
- old DataFrame 20 and the newer XP60 (on a Mac Plus w/2.5 meg) had have
- found both to be pretty solid with only fair support from SuperMac.
-
- Any and all comments are welcome. As usually, I summarize and post a
- reply at a later date.
-
- Thanks.
- --
- Ray Terry
- rterry%hpda@hplabs.hp.com
-
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: alan@Apple.COM (Alan Mimms)
- Subject: Re: New LAYO
- Date: 22 May 88 20:07:52 GMT
- Organization: Apple Computer Inc, Cupertino, CA
-
- In fiddling around, I discovered that the "Use Phys Icon" bit makes the
- icon for the floppies on SEs be a picture of an SE with an arrow
- pointing to the drive floppy is mounted in.
-
- I haven't tried asking the folks who wrote the code. (Perhaps someone
- in Apple would do so and post the results?) Consequently, I am not an
- authority to be trusted. This information is NOT coming from Apple
- Computer, it's coming from ME. (Is that enough disclaimer?)
-
- alan
-
- --
- Alan Mimms My opinions are generally
- Communications Products Group pretty worthless, but
- Apple Computer they *are* my own...
- ...it's so simple that only a child can do it! -- Tom Lehrer, "New Math"
-
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: clive@drutx.ATT.COM (Clive Steward)
- Subject: Re: Mac on airplanes
- Date: 13 May 88 01:42:49 GMT
- Organization: resident visitor
-
- >From article <884@bucket.UUCP>, by martyl@bucket.UUCP:
- >
- > The Mac will fit with plenty of room under the seats of an L-1011 as there
- > really isn't an overhead bin. TWA didn't even flinch when I brought it on.
- >
-
- Don't know that this is such a good idea.
-
- Last night I read an article in .risks about a newly common injury on
- airplanes -- descriptions of victims concussed to the point of partial
- one-side paralysis, etc., from being hit by portable computers dropping
- out of the overhead bins.
-
- I'm sure that even before the article, I wouldn't want to sit under one.
-
-
- Clive Steward
-
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: roy@phri.UUCP (Roy Smith)
- Subject: Getting means and standard deviations out of CricketGraph
- Date: 22 May 88 20:36:05 GMT
- Organization: Public Health Research Institute, NYC, NY
-
-
- Does anybody know how to get mean and standard deviation from
- CrickGraph? You can do Z-scores which CricketGraph defines as (X -
- Mean) / Standard_Deviation; it obviously calculates the mean and s.d.
- but the damn program won't let you see them!
-
- What I really want to do is this: I've got some data sets with several
- observations of Y for each X. I'd like to take the data in the first 4
- columns below and generate (as opposed to calculating myself and
- entering) the last 2 columns, then do a line plot of X vs. Yavg using
- sd-Y for Y error bars.
-
- X Y1 Y2 Y3 Yavg sd-Y
-
- 1 10 10 12 10.67 1.155
- 2 20 25 22 22.33 2.517
- 3 31 32 30 31.00 1.000
-
- A similarly useful thing to do would be to get the range of the Ys and
- use that for the error bars. Should I break down and admit that this is
- out of CricketGraph's league and get a real spreadsheet? Another useful
- thing would be to have non-symmetric error bars (as in "IBM closed at
- 14-1/2 with a high of 14-7/8 and a low of 14-3/8"). Any way to make
- CricketGraph do that?
- --
- Roy Smith, System Administrator
- Public Health Research Institute
- 455 First Avenue, New York, NY 10016
- {allegra,philabs,cmcl2,rutgers}!phri!roy -or- phri!roy@uunet.uu.net
-
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: kaufman@polya.Stanford.EDU (Marc T. Kaufman)
- Subject: Re: SuperMac XP150 drive ??
- Date: 23 May 88 04:22:07 GMT
- Organization: Stanford University
-
- In article <6150020@hpcupt1.HP.COM> rterry@hpcupt1.HP.COM (Ray Terry)
- writes:
-
- >Does anyone out there has signficant experience with (therefore a reaction
- >to the new(er) SuperMac XP150 (external hard disk drive)). I hear that it
- >is good, fast, but expensive.
-
- Yes, and yes, and yes. There are only two problems with it in my
- application: 1) it comes up too slowly, so that if there is also an
- internal disk, the internal always gets recognized (if you strap the AC
- power to a single switch). Thus, I have to turn it on first, and give it
- 15-20 seconds to spin up before I boot the Mac.
-
- 2) It's boot sector cannot handle A/UX partitions... so that you can't
- run it in partitioned mode with both A/UX and Mac OS [they are working
- on a fix for this one].
-
- Marc Kaufman (kaufman@polya.stanford.edu)
-
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: stew@endor.harvard.edu (Stew Rubenstein)
- Subject: Re: How can you extend and add on to AppleTalk networks?
- Date: 23 May 88 06:05:51 GMT
- Organization: Aiken Computation Lab Harvard, Cambridge, MA
-
- Farallon's PhoneNet can be up to 4000 feet of 22 gauge twisted pair. You
- can go longer by installing a Repeater or StarController. Both are
- available from Farallon. I believe you'll still be limited to 32
- devices per network. Farallon Computing Inc., 2150 Kittredge, Berkeley,
- CA 94704 415-849-2331.
- --
- Stew Rubenstein
- Cambridge Scientific Computing, Inc.
- UUCPnet: seismo!harvard!rubenstein CompuServe: 76525,421
- Internet: rubenstein@harvard.harvard.edu MCIMail: CSC
-
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: gz@spt.entity.com (Gail Zacharias)
- Subject: Re: Anyone using pcl (clos) under Allegro Common Lisp?
- Date: 19 May 88 21:41:56 GMT
- Organization: A Kindof Entity, Cambridge, MA
-
- In article <3978@zodiac.UUCP> mcconnel@ads.com (Chris McConnell) writes:
- >PCL is fairly portable. I plan to bring it up in Allegro in the next
- >month. If you accept the most generic implementation, it should
- >already run in Allegro. (In fact, it may even have optimizations
- >already since Allegro is really Franz and it already runs in Franz.)
-
- First, let me clear up something here. I believe the original question
- was about Allegro CL for the Mac (which is really Coral Common Lisp) not
- about Allegro CL for Unix (which is really Franz Extended Common Lisp).
- Franz conditionalizations would certainly not work in Coral or vice
- versa. The two implementations have nothing in common aside from the
- name they're being marketed under, and some marketing person deserves an
- eternity in hell for causing this confusion.
-
- Secondly, PCL has already been brought up under Coral Common Lisp, with
- all the usual optimizations that PCL allows for. See the "coral-low"
- file that comes with PCL.
-
- Finally, regarding the original question - Object Lisp in CCL is not
- very efficient as native object systems go, but it IS a native
- implementation and is faster than PCL. So you won't speed up your code
- in the short term by going to PCL. However, in the longer term, Coral
- will provide a native implementation of CLOS, which should be more
- efficient than Object Lisp (and in any case, Object Lisp will get even
- less efficient since we'll probably re-implement it as a compatibility
- package on top of CLOS). So whether you decide to switch now depends on
- the relative importance of short-term vs long-term to you... One
- possibility is to stay with Object Lisp but adapt a coding style which
- doesn't take advantage of its special features, so as to make future
- conversion easier (e.g. maintain a strict distinction between classes
- and instances, don't create new instance variables on the fly, etc.).
-
- -- gz@entity.com ...!mit-eddie!gz
- Now let's all repeat the non-conformist oath.
-
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: newbery@rata.vuw.ac.nz (Michael Newbery)
- Subject: MPW has trouble with L O N G lines
- Date: 18 May 88 21:00:22 GMT
- Organization: Computing Serv. Ctr, Victoria Uni., Wellington, New Zealand
-
- I imagine a few of you have discovered this but I just thought I'd raise
- it in case Apple feels like fixing it.
-
- MPW does not like very long lines. As example, try editing a
- Postscript<n> file created by Clover-F when that file has an Adobe
- downloaded font. MPW tries to display a line several kB long and a LONG
- pause ensues. It doesn't crash, it just takes time.
-
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: jwhitnell@cup.portal.com
- Subject: LightspeedC license
- Date: 19 May 88 19:48:38 GMT
- Organization: The Portal System (TM)
-
- Came across this on Compuserve and I thought I'd pass it on.
-
- #: 9641 S6/Lightspeed C
- 19-May-88 06:57:44
- Sb: #9639-Copyright notice
- Fm: Stephen Z. Stein 71500,3326
- To: Gary Kato 76074,1020
-
- Gary -
- Our license agreement requires the citation of THINK Technologies'
- copyright if you use any library code for which we provide source. (This
- means the C libraries: stdio, unix, storage, etc. and ONLY those
- libraries. You need not cite our copyright for using MacTraps.) We
- feel this is necessary to protect our rights to that source code in the
- event that a software author might publish a product that incorporated
- the library code without protecting her or his copyright (for instance,
- in a "freeware" type of product). We do not wish the library code to
- become "public domain".
- Because of this, we will amend this section of the licensing
- agreement for software authors that agree to copyright their work and
- defend that copyright if it is challenged. In this case, we will not
- require a notice in the about box or on the disk label - only a notice
- in the manual, if there is a manual.
- We have a form for this agreement. To obtain the form, please write
- to:
- LSC License Agreement Waiver
- Symantec Corp. THINK Technologies Div.
- 135 South Road
- Bedford, MA 01730
-
- - Steve Stein, Symantec/THINK
- --
- Jerry Whitnell
- jwhitnell@cup.portal.com
- ...!sun!cup.portal.com!jwhitnell
-
- ------------------------------
-
- End of Usenet Mac Digest
- ************************
-
- ACTION> bye
- NAKMAN off at 18-JUN-1988 17:08:55
- Session time: 115 minutes.
-
-
- Thanks for using DELPHI!
-
-
-
- network: call cleared by request
-