1-Jul-93 2:01:24-GMT,41894;000000000000 Return-Path: Received: from SUMEX-AIM.Stanford.EDU by CAMIS.Stanford.EDU (4.1/inc-1.0) id AA20127; Wed, 30 Jun 93 19:01:22 PDT Full-Name: Info-Mac Moderator Received: by SUMEX-AIM.Stanford.EDU (4.1/inc-1.0) id AA23417; Wed, 30 Jun 93 18:41:55 PDT Message-Id: <9307010141.AA23417@SUMEX-AIM.Stanford.EDU> Date: Wed, 30 Jun 93 18:41:48 PDT From: The Moderators Reply-To: Info-Mac@sumex-aim.stanford.edu Subject: Info-Mac Digest V11 #132 To: info-mac-list@SUMEX-AIM.Stanford.EDU Info-Mac Digest Wed, 30 Jun 93 Volume 11 : Issue 132 Today's Topics: !DOs question... [Q] MacTCP in England -- how to get it? Acclerating an SE Yet again .. :) Centris and DECnet Color Exceptions FileMaker Pro Query Flip-flop button Floatfixer, what is this reappearing startup application (Q) Help! Need to modify aliases to point to new volume (Q) HP Laserjet 4 I-M CD-ROM (C) I-M Sexual Harassment (?) IIx not starting solved Inside Mac Books (C) JPark OS LW 8.0 and command key shortcuts? MacPPP v1.1.1 MacTCP 1.1.1 Microsoft focus (C) PageMaker4.2 timesaving tip Pecking order of the current macs (A) Photoshop & Photo Cd PixMap help... PostScript docs Powerbook 145b (a) (2 msgs) Re-Installing MacTCP (Q) Riccardo Ettore Snippet from usenet re: Centris and Quadra 'av' Thank you - Powerbook 145b (As) That D**m MS Word again...(gripe) Think twice before buying LaCie. Where's MacTCP 1.1.1 ? Word 5.1a: problem with styles (A) XLisp-Stat question The Info-Mac newsgroup is moderated by Bill Lipa and Gordon Watts. The Info-Mac archives are available (by using FTP, account anonymous, any password) in the info-mac directory on sumex-aim.stanford.edu [36.44.0.6]. Help files and indices are in /info-mac/help. Please send articles and binaries to info-mac@sumex-aim.stanford.edu. Send administrative mail to info-mac-request@sumex-aim.stanford.edu. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Date: Tue, 29 Jun 93 23:14:15 -0500 From: oehler@yar.cs.wisc.edu (Wonko the Sane) Subject: !DOs question... Does anyone know how I can contact the author of the Bang-DOS CLI application? I would like to know if his source code is available. While the idea of a CLI on the mac is, of course, absurd, I would like to incorporate some of those ideas into a personal programming project/devlopment utility (assuming I can get my appleevent act together sometime in the near future!) Thanks. Eric Oehler oehler@yar.cs.wisc.edu ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 30 Jun 1993 14:00:21 +0100 (BST) From: Charlie Stross Subject: [Q] MacTCP in England -- how to get it? Okay, I give in. This is weird; maybe you lot can help. I'm looking for a fresh copy of MacTCP. Lo, verily and forsooth, I've been using Eudora and the copy of MacTCP 1.1 licensed for use with it. This is no longer sufficient. I need MacTCP 1.1.1 or better for use with the WWW client for the Mac, according to the documentation. Where is MacTCP? Now, I should add that I'm based in the UK, not the US, so a certain level of difficulty is to be expected. Still: I started by phoning MacWarehouse. They'd never heard of it. Hints that it had been available from ADPA, had recently had its name changed to something like TCP Connection for Mac, etcetera, rang no bells. So the next step was to phone Apple. Apple (UK) are clueless. The best they could do was point me at a dealer who was selling a commercial telnet package which came bundled with MacTCP. _They_ were confused, too. Nobody seems to know how in hell you're supposed to get hold of MacTCP in England. Okay. Any advice is now solicited. I want to get hold of a recent copy of MacTCP, as legally as possible, as long as it can be done for not _too_ much money. (This is coming out of my own pocket.) How do I do it? What product code do I need, where can it be ordered? If it can't be obtained for love or money in Europe, are there any dealers in the US who (a) stock it, and (b) will ship it overseas? How much does it cost? And what's the latest version -- 1.1.1 or 2.0? Answers on the back of a postcard, please. Enquiring minds want to know. -- Charlie ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Charlie Stross is charless@scol.sco.com, charlie@antipope.demon.co.uk ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 29 Jun 93 18:32:26 PDT From: Kevin Purcell (Rho) Subject: Acclerating an SE Yet again .. :) Recently I got a cheap SE that I was thinking about accelerating if I could do it for a low cost, but I also may buy a Centris or LC III. I still like the Classic style Macs -- they are easier to transport than the component Macs, and my wife could still use it. OK, enough jabbering. Both MacUser and MacWorld had accelerator reviews in the same month! Also the prices dropped dramatically between starting the write up and doing the publication. Seems like the new Mac models and price reductions from Motorola helped. After looking at the models I though the Applied Engineering (AE) accelerators look pretty good. There are four for the SE: 1a. TransWarp SE 25Mhz -- 68030, 32 bits SIMMs on the card, w/FPU $185 1b. TransWarp SE 25Mhz -- 68030, 32 bits SIMMs on the card, w/FPU $309 1a. TransWarp SE 40Mhz -- 68030, 32 bits SIMMs on the card, FPU socket $259 1b. TransWarp SE 40Mhz -- 68030, 32 bits SIMMs on the card, w/FPU $389 The 40Mhz has two versions. One has 128K cache the other doesn't. The cached models cost another $110. Prices from Mac&PC USA 800 392 5818 (anyone have good/bad experiences with these people?). LLB in Bellevue, WA (800 848 8967) also have good prices but for me in Seattle add 8.2% sales tax. If anyone is using any of these I'd like to hear your comments, especially regarding speed/price ratio. Another good choice seems to be the Daystar Universal PowerCache. For my application its too expensive. Kevin Purcell a-kevinp@microsoft.com Co-chair of Seattle Mac dBug Developer's SIG "Just cmd/Z it" ------------------------------ Date: 30 Jun 1993 13:35:14 -0500 (CDT) From: Howard Ramagli Subject: Centris and DECnet We are having a problem getting a Centris 610 using the built-in ethernet port to talk DECnet. It will talk EtherTalk and TCP/IP just fine. The Centris is connected via 10baseT to a DECrepeater on a DECHub. Any help or suggestions would be greatly appreciated. Howard J. Ramagli Director, Information Services and Technology Lake Forest College INTERNET: ramagli@lfmail.lfc.edu APPLELINK:ramagli.h ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 30 Jun 93 17:42:28 EDT From: flypba@aol.com Subject: Color Exceptions Hi there... I was wondering if anyone has made/heard of a Control Panel which you can set different screen depths for different programs...much like the CDEVs which will automatically turn off the 68040 caches for incompatable programs. The reason why I ask, is because I have a lot of software which will not run unless you set the monitor bit depth to a certain value (usually 16 colors or 256 colors). So, if there was a Control Panel that would automatically reset the monitor's colors when you launched the application, it would save a lot of time, etc... Please respond to me @ FlyPBA@AOL.COM Thanks ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 30 Jun 1993 16:35:09 -0500 From: monty-hampton@uokhsc.edu (Monty Hampton) Subject: FileMaker Pro Query Anyone know how to select a default entry from a pop-up list (field) in FMP without writing a script. I'd be much obliged for any advice - including the details of any script (just thought there might be a simpler way). Please post or feel free to respond directly. Thanks. BTW - is there a FMP newsgroup or listserv? Monty E.M. Hampton, OUHSC College of Pharmacy & OKC DVAMC 921 NE 13th Street,Oklahoma City, OK 73104 (405) 270-1549 monty-hampton@uokhsc.edu ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 30 Jun 93 10:46:31 CDT From: Mack Willingham Subject: Flip-flop button Hello out there, I need to know if there is a way that I can write a script for a button that will create a flip-flop button.....i.e. on-off. The butt will have a name like off....then when the user clicks on it, the name will change to on. I could just have the icon of the button change, but would rather keep the same button, and change the name. TIA Mack ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 30 Jun 1993 12:54:29 -0500 From: psheldon@utdallas.edu Subject: Floatfixer, what is this reappearing startup application (Q) I keep on deleting this file that won't run under sys 7.1. I don't know where it comes from. It keeps on reappearing in the startup folder to give me an annoying message on startup. I tried changing its type to its creator from appl, that way it woulnd't know enough to run and fail to and send me an error dialogue box. Now it tells me it can't find its creator. Bugger. Any answers out there? It is a zero k file that has to keep telling me it is confused and ask for my OK. I can't boot up as I leave the room as it will hold things up. Help me with this one, please. ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 30 Jun 93 17:03:53 EST From: Scott Traurig Subject: Help! Need to modify aliases to point to new volume (Q) Hi Everyone, I had to move all my files to another server volume. Unfortunately, I have a folder containing around 25 aliases that reference memos by using a reference number as their name. The actual memos (WordPerfect files) are spread around many folders and have descriptive names. My file structure and path names are exactly the same except for the server name and volume. Is there any way to modify the aliases (with ResEdit or something) that would allow my to change the server and volume name in the path they reference? This is very important to me, since it is highly unlikely that I will be able to recreate this collection of aliases any other way. Thanks, Scott (traurig@ncavax.decnet.lockheed.com) ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 29 Jun 93 23:13:21 EDT From: Michel Lefrancois <4107LEFR@VM1.ulaval.ca> Subject: HP Laserjet 4 Is it possible to use the HP Laserjet 4 printer with a Mac without adding a Mac interface? Any good suggestions (e.g. GDT PowerPrint)? Michel Lefrancois Agriculture Canada Departement des sciences animales Universite Laval 4107LEFR@vm1.ulaval.ca ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 29 Jun 93 22:40:59 EDT From: "Allan M. Bloom" Subject: I-M CD-ROM (C) Folks, this is a shameless plug in favor of the Info-Mac CD-ROM (II) from Pacific HiTech. I didn't order the first version (last year's), and it was with a bit of trepidation that I ordered the new one from Cliff this month. I mean, why get a static CD-ROM when I have access to the latest and greatest in real time? I justified it for Goodwife Bloom. Leslye is pretty much alone with her Mac, and she has no access to the goodies at sumex-aim. I figured she'd find the thing useful. And I could page thru the thing at my leisure, seeing what stuff is there, without hogging the internet connection. Leslye has indeed found I-M useful (Gee, what a surprise!) and decided to copy all the graphics images to a 3.5" M/O disk, so she can tell the Color It! program to make each image's icon a thumbnail of the picture. Makes it easy to see what's there without opening the file. I wouldn't have thought of that. And I really truly hope that 3.5" M/O disk prices come down soon. Leslye's great ideas for them are killing me. But I digress. I had mostly done what I thought I'd do -- check out odd programs and extensions that I wouldn't otherwise have taken the time to download. But today those fine folk at Tech's network services decided to knock down ethernet in our building for an hour to swap out equipment, I had the I-M CD-ROM in the office, and I did some further exploring. Yes, I knew the disc has On Location indices. I don't have On Location. I may get it. But the marvelously exciting thing was finding EasyView indices for the I-M digests. Here was something on the CD-ROM that I could not get from my fairly vanilla internet access. Well I could, but I've never gone to the bother. If for no other reason than HD space is limited, and I don't keep the stuff. Certainly not a year's worth. EasyView is magic. It makes scanning the I-M digests (thru Apr 93) a joy. Three windows. Top left is each issue of I-M. Top right is the table of contents for the issue hilited in upper left. Bottom is the article that corresponds to the hilited entry in the upper right. Oh wow! And there is a "search" function (unfortunately case sensitive) built in. I do believe I've died and gone to heaven. As far as I'm concerned, that feature alone is worth the fifty bucks for the CD-ROM. EasyView indices are also available for Adam Engst's "Tidbits" and for Murph Sewall's late and very lamented "Vaporware." Now if I can get the thing away from Leslye... All told, Cliff did good. All the sumex-aim files are expanded. You don't need anything but a CD-ROM drive to use them. I'm sometimes frustrated by the direct result of that expansion. Each sumex-aim file is pretty much a folder on the CD-ROM -- all the files in the original hqx (which may be a grand total of one) plus the accompanying abstract (whatever the file's submitter cared to say about it at the time). It can be a bit of a bore, opening the folder, then opening the file, then backing up and opening the next folder. Et cetera. No, I don't know how it could have been done better. Nonetheless, let me highly recommend the I-M CD-ROM to y'all. I am truly impressed. Maybe I'm just easily impressed. Al Bloom, Virginia Tech ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 30 Jun 93 19:36:36 EDT From: "Allan M. Bloom" Subject: I-M Sexual Harassment (?) The June 30 "Chronicle of Higher Education" (page A17) has a brief article saying that women seeking relief from a male-dominated society will not find it on computer networks. The authors of a recent book from Chambana (Need I say more?) conclude that "sexual harassment is also widespread, forcing many women to endure obscenities, personal attacks, and offensive images circulated in electronic mail." The upshot is "Our task is clear. We need to create, electronically, a cyberspace of our own that fosters women's communication and scholarship." OK, I grant that I'm an n-DWEM (near-Dead White European-derived Male), so I probably wouldn't recognize sexual harassment if it walked up and introduced itself. And I grant that I've limited experience in this cold world. But I am curious. I'd like to ask the women on this forum if they have seen denigration, sexual harassment, whatever. Do we need a separate I-M (Women) to foster womens' communication and scholarship? Or whatever? Gee, I hope not. I admit to not seeing much merit in the Chambana book, but then I would not have thought we were much racist, either. I do, however, recall a Japanese-American last year who objected that MS/Word came up with Nazi as an alternative to Nisei in spell checking. Or something like that. A bunch of us kidded him for being silly. Others apparently sent him some really nasty mail. Had he not copied it to the group, we'd not have known that there were any brain-dead skinheads among the I-M folk. I am sad to say that there is no requirement for anything functioning above the cerebellum in order to subscribe to this list. Please, women. If you've been subjected to the kind of crap described in the Chambana book, bring it out in the open. Those people cannot stand the light of day. Copy their crap back to I-M in toto. It'll go a long way toward at least shutting them up. If you haven't seen that crap, also let us know. There is far too much of this "victim" stuff going around, mostly coming from folk who profit from claiming victimhood. Al Bloom, Virginia Tech ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 29 Jun 93 20:56:17 -0500 From: spectre@uiuc.edu (Ian Chai) Subject: IIx not starting solved A few weeks ago, I sent a message saying that my IIx woudln't start up. It turned out to be a dead battery, and so I got a new one from Nite Owl, those folks that sell the "slide on" batteries for the Apple IIGS (my pseudo-mom has a GS which is how I got their number). That did the trick. Thanks, everyone who helped. God bless & happy hacking, Ian ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 30 Jun 1993 13:15:18 +0000 From: hpj@cxa.daresbury.ac.uk Subject: Inside Mac Books (C) Someone asked for a summary of the IM books >> I am looking for some specific information in Inside Macintosh. I >> was wondering if anyone could tell me what the topic of each of the >> volumes is? And was told the following... >From: Govind@UTXVM.CC.UTEXAS.EDU >Subject: Inside macintosh volumes (A) >...... >If you don't care about supporting 68000 and 68020 and anything less >than System 7, volume VI will suffice. (Most of the info in Vols. I-IV >has been superceeded anyway.) >Btw, all current info (including Tech. Notes) have now been combined >into 1 volume, available on-line. The printed version is supposed to be >out any time now (or may be its been published already). >Cheers- Shekhar Govind govind@utxvm.cc.utexas.edu I'm sorry but I think you may be getting suspect advice here. Although a lot of the information in Volumes I to III,such as the file Manager, have been superceeded. There is still a hell of a lot that hasn't! For example the chapter on Quickdraw or the resource Manager or the Dialog Manager or the List Manager in Volume IV. If you want to write Mac programs and need to do it for system 7.0 too you STILL NEED ALL SIX VOLUMES! Or you could get the new series which is rationalised into topics. If you are just starting out then volumes I and IV contain enough to get you going. Peter Hardman hpj@cxa.dl.ac.uk ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 30 Jun 93 09:04:30 -0400 From: Bill Barnett-Interdepartmental Facilities Subject: JPark OS Gregory Jewett writes: >Just my $0.02 worth. Anyone watch the credits to figure out who/what did >the major computer animation and graphics in the movie?! Those were all done on an SGI. A demo (of the complex layout) is currently running at our exhibition "The Dinosaurs of Jurassic Park" which also deals with the scientific accuracies/inaccuracies of the film. -Bill Barnett (barnett@amnh.org) (American Museum of Natural History) ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 30 Jun 93 17:36:54 EDT From: Mark A. Saper Subject: LW 8.0 and command key shortcuts? I haven't been keeping up-to-date about all of the LW 8.0 comments, but I've recently installed the version from ftp.apple.com on both a Centris 650/LWIINT and IIsi/LWNTR. Some things have gone backwards. Bringing up the print dialog box is significantly slower. Secondly there is no command key to select manual printing. Yes, I'm lazy. I'd rather use a key rather than the mouse any day. There is a command key to select File or Printer. Any suggestions how to deal with this? Thanks Dr. Mark A. Saper saper@umich.edu ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 30 Jun 1993 10:29:14 -0400 From: "Larry J. Blunk" Subject: MacPPP v1.1.1 > Has anyone compiled the sources using ThinkC v6? I get "out of memory" > at the link stage. I've tried increasing the partition for the project > manager but that doesn't seem to help. > > George > -- I haven't gotten Think C 6.0 yet, so I haven't been able to try it personally. I haven't had any reports of anyone else trying it either. I'm not sure why it would get an "out of memory" error. It's not that big of a project. -Larry ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 30 Jun 1993 10:43:27 +0000 From: Graham Allsopp Subject: MacTCP 1.1.1 >You *must* use MacTCP 1.1.1 with System 7.x MacTCP 1.1 works fine with System 7.1 on our LCII Graham ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 30 Jun 93 3:27:46 PDT From: Brian R. Gaeke Subject: Microsoft focus (C) >>you can see for yourself that the current Microsoft programs are dogs >>on low-end hardware > >Personally, I don't find Word 5.1 uncomfortably slow on a Mac II/LC. >Slow it is, but not much slower than other software. I have used Word 5.1a on a Classic--it's really not that bad. Considering that Classics run just about everything at some degree of slowness, that is. However, '030 and '040 machines definitely help Microsoft's products. >>My conclusion (just to stick with the thread): Buy what you want to >>buy, but examine Microsoft's products and the competition carefully. > >I regard this as a fair paraphrasing of my conclusions. I think the notion >of boycotting Microsoft because they allegedly don't know how to write some >decent software is pure wishful thinking. Notice how much whining follows >every time someone points out a flaw or shortcoming in soAnd when someone >claims that _unreleased_ MS stuff is flawed, people immediately jump onto >the claim as proof of their own preconceptions, no matter how tenuous the >evidence. Microsoft has been churning out powerful, easy-to-use software for the Mac since (1984? 5?) and until I find that the competition is way ahead of MS, I think I will stick with them. People, I have noticed, tend to jump on Microsoft too much. Just because they spawned MS-DOS and Windows doesn't mean that they are Evil. -- Brian Gaeke, The Dimensional Gate Company Internet E-Mail: brg@cerf.net ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 30 Jun 1993 15:10:47 -0400 (EDT) From: MUENCH@SERVAX.FIU.EDU (FIRST CLASS EMAIL) Subject: PageMaker4.2 timesaving tip If you use PM4.2 lots, this tip will certainly make your day! You can toggle between the pointer tool (the arrow) and any other tool you used LAST by holding down the COMMAND key and pressing the SPACE BAR to toggle you from the text tool to the pointer. This is great if you have a large screen and hate to schlepp up to the darn tool box just to position that little bit of text you just set. --Luis ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 30 Jun 93 01:41:33 EDT From: ac303@freenet.buffalo.edu (Robert E. Winston) Subject: Pecking order of the current macs (A) > Does anyone have a list of what macs are available, and how > they compare to each other? I'm interested in what chip is > used for the CPU, clock speed, how many expansion slots, the > maximum amount of memory that can be plugged in, other > features of the machine, and ballpark price. How do the new > machines due out (high-end and low-end Cyclone, Tempest, and > RISC based PowerPC 601) fit into the picture? In the Info-mac/info/hdwr/ directory at Sumex: /info/hdwr/mac-ibm-compare-184.txt /info/hdwr/mac-model-list-93-03.txt /info/hdwr/mac-types-6a.tx /info/hdwr/mac-video-chart.hqx ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 30 Jun 93 14:30:36 CEST From: Carlo Viviani Subject: Photoshop & Photo Cd Hi everybody, does anyboty on the net know the name and the directory where it's stored the Photoshop plug-in that allows to import Photo-CD files? I know it's on ftp.adobe.com, but I don't know exactly where and its name. Thanks, Carlo ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 30 Jun 93 15:09:50 -0400 From: David P. Rea Subject: PixMap help... Hello... I've got a Mac programming problem and someone suggested I send some email here, so here goes: I've written a Mandelbrot program using Think C, and of course every time I need to update my window (from covering it up or something) I don't really want to redraw it, so whenever my window get a deactivate message, I do a CopyBits and buffer the whole thing. Then, when I do an update, I just copy it back again. I specifically do not want to do the drawing to the GWorld and CopyBits to the window, because I want the user to see the image emerge, and doing a CopyBits for each change would be too slow. Here's the problem. I'm doing it in gray scale (I have a PowerBook), but when I update, the grays all change to different shades in the updated regions. My plugging in an external monitor, I finally figured out what was happening; somehow the GWorld was turning my grays into colors, either when I did a save CopyBits or a restore CopyBits (or both??). Nobody seems to know what is happening. Any suggestions? -- David Rea reada@media.mit.edu (By the way, I'm not on the info-mac mailing list, so if anyone could respond to me directly I would greatly appreciate it. Also, I'm totally new to Mac programming and to C, so please don't make any assumptions about my technical competence, unless they're really abysmmal assumptions). ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 30 Jun 1993 10:53:14 -0400 From: "Larry J. Blunk" Subject: PostScript docs The PostScript version of the documentation for MacPPP has been fixed and placed back on merit.edu. It is available as macppp.ps.Z and macppp.ps.hqx. ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 30 Jun 1993 10:35:24 -0600 From: johna@utmdacc.mda.uth.tmc.edu (John Antolak) Subject: Powerbook 145b (a) >Date: Tue, 29 Jun 1993 09:41:28 -0500 (EST) >From: 00bkpickeril@leo.bsuvc.bsu.edu >Subject: Powerbook 145b (a) > >ABRODY@VAX.CLARKU.EDU asks: >>What is the difference between the 145 and the 145b Powerbooks, i.e. >>speed grayscale etc...? >>I haven't seen any publication yet mentioning the 145b other than the >>advertisements in local newspapers. > >The only difference is that apple is not including the external >microphone and the system software. Sounds like a great deal IMHO. >(Macweek 6.07.93) The 4MB Powerbook 145B (yes, uppercase) also has 4MB of memory soldered to the memory daughterboard (rather than 2MB plus 2MB expansion card in the 145), which means that you don't have to waste a 2MB memory board if you decide to upgrade the memory. If I remember right, MacWorld said that the system disks were on option, if the user really wanted the disks. A simple backup program is included for the user to back up the system to floppy after purchase. The rationale is that most users would be purchasing the 145B as a second Mac, and probably could do without the system disks. MacWorld's review was also fairly favorable, especially considering the price. John A. Antolak Internet: johna@utmdacc.mda.uth.tmc.edu Radiation Physics UT MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, TX 77030 ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 30 Jun 1993 11:30:53 -0500 (EST) From: 00bkpickeril@leo.bsuvc.bsu.edu Subject: PowerBook 145B (a) >>>ABRODY@VAX.CLARKU.EDU asks: >>>What is the difference between the 145 and the 145b Powerbooks, i.e. >>>speed grayscale etc...? >>>I haven't seen any publication yet mentioning the 145b other than the >>>advertisements in local newspapers. >> >>The only difference is that apple is not including the external >>microphone and the system software. Sounds like a great deal IMHO. >>(Macweek 6.07.93) John A. Antolak said >The 4MB Powerbook 145B (yes, uppercase) also has 4MB of memory soldered to >the memory daughterboard (rather than 2MB plus 2MB expansion card in the >145), which means that you don't have to waste a 2MB memory board if you >decide to upgrade the memory. If I remember right, MacWorld said that the >system disks were on option, if the user really wanted the disks. A simple >backup program is included for the user to back up the system to floppy >after purchase. The rationale is that most users would be purchasing the >145B as a second Mac, and probably could do without the system disks. >MacWorld's review was also fairly favorable, especially considering the >price. Right. That is an important difference--read it earlier but in my haste to reply, I forgot all about it. The MacWeek article also mentions that some 3rd party PB145 RAM cards may have to be "reworked" to fit the PB145B. --Brian Pickerill <00bkpickeril@leo.bsuvc.bsu.edu> ------------------------------ Date: 30 Jun 1993 09:29:53 -0500 From: "Scott Bresnahan" Subject: Re-Installing MacTCP (Q) Re-Installing MacTCP (Q) What is the minimum work necessary to install a new version of MacTCP in a computer? The problem: we are changing our IP subnet mask. I'd like to simply hand out correct copies of MacTCP. Unfortunately, just putting the new file into your system folder and restarting doesn't seem to do the trick. I've determined that if you restart with INITs off, trash MacTCP DNR, MacTCP Prep, and MacTCP, and THEN drag the new MacTCP in and restart, it seems to do the right thing. Is it really necessary to do all that, or can I get away with less? Please reply directly to me. Thanks. --Scott TERC Internet: Scott_Bresnahan@terc.edu ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 30 Jun 93 12:50:27 -0400 From: "Keith E Gatling" Subject: Riccardo Ettore Does anyone know how I can contact Riccardo Ettore, author of Sound Manager Package, over the Internet? I have a question for him about volume prices, but suspect that snail mail to Belgium might take a bit too long. The READ ME file for SMP gave addresses at CompuServ and AOL, but I have no idea how to get there from here. Can anyone help me? keg * kgatling@mailbox.syr.edu I've got plenty of opinions. Just ask my wife! * ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 30 Jun 1993 14:35:44 -0800 From: bylsma@unixg.ubc.ca (Dieder B.) Subject: Snippet from usenet re: Centris and Quadra 'av' > >Tue Jun 15 20:06:19 1993 >Message : #7301993 From: Brian Kendig >Address : bskendig@netcom.com >Group : Usenet.comp.sys.mac.announce >Subject : Preview info about the Centris 660av and the Quadra 840av > >Msg-ID: >Posted: 15 Jun 1993 16:02:24 -05 > >Org. : Starfleet Headquarters: San Francisco > > >MacWeek (14 June 1993) has some specific preview information about two >new Macs due out in September. They're powerful stuff! Keep in mind >that this information is by no means definite, except in that it's >definitely subject to change. And it's not official, either; >everything here could be wrong. That having been said... > >Both new systems will include built-in digital video (in/out 16-bit >color, NTSC, and PAL, as either composite or S-video) and 32-bit >digital signal processors (AT&T 3210 DSP, for voice recognition / >synthesis and 16-bit sound at up to 48kHz sampling). They also >include a faster DMA bus architecture and a high-speed serial port >("GeoPort", which can use the DSP to emulate a 14.4Kbps modem). They >will come with Ethernet and offer optional CD-ROM drives and 500Mb >hard drives. They use 2Mb ROMs, and will include Casper voice recognition. > >The Macintosh Centris 660av ("Tempest") looks like a Centris 610. >It's also built like a 610 inside: it will offer one 7-inch NuBus slot >(that requires an adapter card), space for two internal SCSI drives, >and 4Mb memory (expandable to 68Mb). It will also use a 68LC040 >processor (the '040 without its built-in math coprocessor, like the >610), but it will run at 25MHz (the 610 is 20MHz). Prices for a 660av >with an 80Mb hard drive will probably start at $2,300. > >The Macintosh Quadra 840av ("Cyclone") looks like a Quadra 800. It >will run on a 40-MHz 68040, offer three NuBus slots, and hold three >SCSI devices internally. Its base configuration will have 8Mb memory >(using 60ns chips; expandable to 128Mb) and a 230Mb hard drive. Its >VRAM can be upgraded to 2Mb for 24-bit color on a 21" monitor. Its >base configuration will probably start at $4,200. > >I don't know any more about these systems than what's here, so please >don't email me asking for more information! > >-- >_/_/_/ Brian Kendig Je ne suis fait comme aucun >/_/_/ bskendig@netcom.com de ceux que j'ai vus; j'ose croire >_/_/ n'etre fait comme aucun de ceux qui existent. > / The meaning of life Si je ne vaux pas mieux, au moins je suis autre. > / is that it ends. -- Rousseau > ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 30 Jun 1993 00:16 EST From: DON'T PANIC Subject: Thank you - Powerbook 145b (As) Dear Netters, Thanks to all that responded. Apparently the 145b is a "stripped down" 145, only to the extent of no Microphone, and "No Internal System Software?"?? Hope this helps, anyone else looking for an answer. Sincerely, ABRODY@VAX.CLARKU.EDU ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 30 Jun 93 10:23:37 EDT From: "Mel Martinez" Subject: That D**m MS Word again...(gripe) Ok, I realize that the subject is kinda strong but I am pretty irritated about this at the moment. Although I have a specific instance of the following problem in mind (the Eudora distribution), the problem occurs often enough to warrant a general appeal. My appeal: To posters of documents to archive sites, whether they are reports, essays, MANUALS, or whatever, PLEASE OH PLEASE OH PUH - LEEEZZE do NOT distribute documents in MicroSoft Word FAST SAVE format!!!! Not only is this format a stupid, innefficient (as far as space savings) and dangerous way to save data in, it is also nearly impossible for other word processors to read in. Please note, I do not want to flame the people who post these files as they are generally doing a service by posting them. The problem really is that MicroSoft even makes use of this awful format and THEN to make it worse makes it the DEFAULT save format! Please, before you post a file for general distribution to the net, make sure at a minimum that you convert it to normal MS WORD format. Even better, use MicroSoft's RTF format as this is actually one of the better, more transportable formats around. Even better, though not space efficient include a plain-text format version or just use plain text in the first place, if graphics and fonts are not really necessary. Please, show some awareness that others do not use MicroSoft products. Note #1 - You will doing YOURSELF a favor by permanently turning 'Fast Save' OFF as it is not a very secure way of saving data (It is very hard, if not impossible, to recover data from a damaged 'fast-save' file.). It also uses more disk space. Note #2 - If you really need fonts and graphics but want your file to definitely be readable by anything as text at a minimum, use TeachText format or Nisus format which both store plain ascii text in the data fork (readable by ANYTHING) and stick other stuff separately in the resource fork. Okay, now a request: Could someone who has the manuals for Eudora v1.3.1 please save them in a readable format and send me a copy? I would be mucho grateful! Thanks, Mel Martinez The Johns Hopkins University Dept. of Physics mem@pha.jhu.edu ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 30 Jun 1993 17:44:15 From: "" Subject: Think twice before buying LaCie. ======================================================================== I recently bought LaCie's Silverscanner II through mail order (Airborne Express delivered) to use with my Mac and I have to say I am mostly unhappy with that "company". Namely, a couple of days after placing the order (June 24) I called them long distance (international calls from Greece to the US cost approx $2.5 a minute) to make sure they had shipped. Well, after letting me wait and wait on the phone, they came back only to tell me they...didn't know!! The very same thing happened a few hours later when I called back, but this time they said that they located my order, the scanner wasn't sent, but they promised they would send in a week. The funniest part is that the scanner had already been sent (!), which gives me the right not only to assume that chaos dominates in that company, but also that they are telling lies to customers, since their promise was exactly that. Anyway, after paying another $100 or so over the phone (indeed, if they want to do international business, shouldn't they ALL get an international toll-free number, like Citibank Visa does?) the scanner came to me broken on the cover. Now, this is probably due to poor handling on the part of Airborne Express or some idiot in the customs here, looking for drugs or something in...scanners (!), but I still need to stress the fact that LaCie REFUSED to have the scanner fixed or even looked at! Sure it may not be their fault if the scanner was received damaged, but aren't they responsible for the courier they use? Shouldn't they have the merchandise insurred? Even dealers, like BottomLine and others, take FULL responsibility and they REPLACE a damaged machine (they even pay for the roundtrip!) and a company that claims to be big and trustworthy like LaCie doesn't? In anyway, it might be better this way...I will give another $1,300 to buy Hewlett-Packard IIc (which I should have done in the first place...) but I least I know NEVER to buy anything from LaCie again. Even the mechanism is not their's, it is Epson's and if they claim to have the best software around...guess again: the manual that comes with the scanner is A TOTAL JOKE! Suffices to say that it devotes 5-6 lines to a topic like color correction and the advanced controls of the scanner, that are the ones that, above all, CALL for documentation...!! Yes, of course, they say the owner's guide is preliminary, but when they will release the new one? After the scanner is around for a year or so? Or maybe they did, but the sent me the old one? If anybody knows, please let me know... this would DEFINITELY constitute an illegal act of discrimination against me, and I would know how to proceed >From that point on, believe me...! It must be the first time in my life I see a company with such an untrustworthy, irresponsible and unproffesional management. Personally, I will, of course, pursue the matter further, just to make sure they won't be laughing behind my back with the $2,000 they took away >From me. I am a professional and NEEDED this scanner.... International business is a tough business, and only serious companies, that also use serious couriers should stay on to compete. The attitude "you bought something from me, now get lost" has been rejected long ago, along with the companies that are based on it. Niko Sahtaridis Thessaloniki, GREECE ------------------------------ Date: 30 Jun 1993 08:55:49 -0600 (MDT) From: RITCHIE Subject: Where's MacTCP 1.1.1 ? Greetings from the High Plains, Can someone please point me at a specific FTP site and directory that contains MacTCP 1.1.1 ? I have looked around briefly and have had no luck, and my current system is driving me crazy. By the way, I made a query quite a while ago for any other users of TelNet 2.5, an Asante ethernet card, and a VAX mainframe. I have heard nothing from Asante, except a nice "please be patient while we consider your problem...". A systems engr at Apple suggested dumping the network software that came with the Asante card and using the stuff that came with system 7.0.1 AND MacTCP 1.1.1. A local fellow here suggested upping to 7.1 and MacTCP1.1.1 . Either way, all I need now is the MacTCP, though I am marginally confident that it will solve my constant system crashes. Thanks in advance - Please send info directly to me: Ritchie Boyd University of Wyoming - Center for Teaching Excellence Internet: ritchie@uwyo.edu ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 30 Jun 1993 19:44:56 +0100 From: tsvetkova@news.rferl.org (Alexei Tsvetkov) Subject: Word 5.1a: problem with styles (A) giacanelli@vs3te4.bo.infn.it writes: >When I apply a style on a paragraph in the middle of the document everything >is OK. When I apply a style on the LAST paragraph of the document two things >happen: > >1) The Mac beeps >2) A window appears saying "FORMATTING TOO COMPLEX" (translated from italian) >3) The style is applied on the paragrah anyway. You may call it a bug or a feature. Word stores all formatting info in the last paragraph. Unless somebody has a better advice, the way out is to treat the last paragraph with a special caution. Alexei Tsvetkov (tsvetkova@rferl.org) Munich ------------------------------ Date: 30 Jun 1993 08:40:27 +0100 (MET) From: EICKHOFF@dornier.de Subject: XLisp-Stat question Hi Netters, According to the online help in the XLISP-Stat Lisp system (recently posted to the archives) a functionality is provided to call external C or FORTRAN procedures from within Lisp. From the documentation alone I was not able to figure out how such call can be achieved. Does anyone have an example how to call a C or FORTRAN procedure from the XLISP- Stat system on the Mac? Alternatively does anybody know how to call XLISP procedures from a C or FORTRAN program? How is such a coupling created? XLisp is an interpreted Lisp and a C or Fortran program would be a compiled routine. Do I have to get the sourcecode of XLisp, recompile it and link the external C routines to the XLisp executable? Thanks for advice Jens (eickhoff@fn.dornier.de) ------------------------------ End of Info-Mac Digest ******************************