<text>Update the summaries cards so that each card corresponds to a line in the summaries card list below.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>card</layer>
<id>10</id>
<text>Move your mouse over the area you are interested in. Help will appear.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>card</layer>
<id>11</id>
<text>The Return button will take you back to the card that this help is for.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>card</layer>
<id>12</id>
<text>This button gets a list of zones and enters it into the field below</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>card</layer>
<id>16</id>
<text>This is the list of zones to be searched. After the Update Zones above is pressed, each zone will correspond to a card.</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>card</layer>
<id>17</id>
<text>This is the number of zones found. It is filled in when the zones are listed</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>card</layer>
<id>18</id>
<text>This will make sure there is one card for every zone listed in the zone list below</text>
</content>
<content>
<layer>card</layer>
<id>19</id>
<text>This field forms a list of cards that contain various summaries. It only works if your zone names have some logical grouping. Each line contains two items separated by a comma. The second item is the string in common to all zones. The first is the name of that group</text>
</content>
<name></name>
<script></script>
</card>
card_6984.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE card PUBLIC "-//Apple, Inc.//DTD card V 2.0//EN" "" >
<text><span class="style1">f you just want to see what this stack does, set the zones you want to search on the Zone Lists card, click the Update Zones button and select Run in the menu. It will proceed to get info on all the zones you have asked for. This stack has developed over time as a tool that we use to generate metrics of what kind of Macs and in what numbers exist on our networks. It seems to work well enough to be quite useful.At present I am releasing it as a development version because I know of lots of things that can be improved if I get time. I also know that it seems to crash from time to time and I would love to know why. For this reason it presently makes a backup at the beginning of every pass so if you lose all your data, you can just go from the backup. (The original stack usually dies a horrible death)The help was a last minute throw on because I realized that without any help the stack may not make a heck of a lot of sense. Go easy on it and it will work.Parts of this stack were written by our summer high school student, Karim Sultan, who was just learning what a sort algorithm was. It was also originally written in Hypercard 1.2.5, so things could probably be improved now. It currently always uses Localtalk, ignoring the Network CDev. (The XCMDs used are based on Apples Hypercard AppleTalk Toolkit. The LocalTalk limiation is inherent to this toolkit. If someone has reworked these XCMDs please let me know)Thanks to Karim for all his hard hours of work on his summer term to create the first version of this stack (which this stack loosely resembles)This stack is provided "as is" without warranty of any kind. The entire risk as to the results and performance of this software and written material is assumed by you.This stack is provided free for your enjoyment but it remains copyright of Bell-Northern Research. You may not sell it. You may not distribute it without giving credit to the authors.If you find a bug and you seem to be able to reproduce it you are welcome to drop me note and I will fix it if I am given the opportunity.</span></text>