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- TidBITS#133/13-Jul-92
- =====================
-
- By popular request, this week brings you even more on neat
- Internet services, and the final word from Howard Hansen on
- Excel 4.0, along with an important warning about saving from
- Excel. For those of you with monstrous TIFF files, you might
- consider the new Pinnacle Micro 650 MB magneto-optical drive,
- but you also might read about what's wrong with Pinnacle's
- ads. Check out next week's issue for exciting new stuff!
-
- Copyright 1990-1992 Adam & Tonya Engst. Non-profit, non-commercial
- publications may reprint articles if full credit is given. Other
- publications please contact us. We do not guarantee the accuracy
- of articles. Publication, product, and company names may be
- registered trademarks of their companies. Disk subscriptions and
- back issues are available.
-
- For information send email to info@tidbits.com or ace@tidbits.com
- CIS: 72511,306 -- AppleLink: ace@tidbits.com@internet#
- AOL: Adam Engst -- Delphi: Adam_Engst -- BIX: TidBITS
- TidBITS -- 9301 Avondale Rd. NE Q1096 -- Redmond, WA 98052 USA
- -----------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Topics:
- MailBITS/13-Jul-92
- Gateways 1.5: More Internet
- Pinnacle Problems
- Excel 4.0 for the Mac III
- Excel 4.0 Comments
- Reviews/13-Jul-92
-
- [Archived as /info-mac/digest/tb/tidbits-133.etx; 30K]
-
-
- MailBITS/13-Jul-92
- ------------------
- Nigel Stanger writes: Here's Apple's original slogan. In fact,
- here's the relevant paragraph from West of Eden.
-
- They sold their product for the odd sum of $666.66 and
- identified themselves with a curiously romantic logo that
- showed Isaac Newton under an apple tree and sported a
- legend lifted from Wordsworth: "Newton... 'A Mind Forever
- Voyaging Through Strange Seas of Thought... Alone.'"
-
- The book itself is:
-
- Rose, Frank, "West of Eden: The End of Innocence at Apple
- Computer," Hutchinson 1989. ISBN 0-09-174118-1.
-
- Information from:
- Nigel Stanger -- STANGER@otago.ac.nz
-
-
- Nisus/Word Comment
- Mel Martinez writes: Matt Neuburg (in TidBITS#131) ignores a
- feature of Nisus that I consider one of the strongest reasons to
- switch to Nisus after using Word for so long: scrolling speed.
-
- While not quite as fast as a plain text editor, for a WYSIWYG
- editor, Nisus blazes through a document while Word crawls. This is
- especially true when the document includes graphics. I would put
- this under Matt's category "Moving around the document" and give a
- big nod to Nisus. Scrolling speed also affects the "Editing"
- category since a click-and-drag that results in a scroll is nearly
- twice as fast in Nisus as in Word.
-
- Matt also glosses over Nisus's better options for placing a
- graphic (behind, in front of, or embedded in the text) than Word
- due to Nisus's separate graphics layer.
-
- Information from:
- Mel Martinez -- mem@jhufos.pha.jhu.edu
-
-
- Gateways 1.5: More Internet
- ---------------------------
- It appears that I have hit a chord with my first article on the
- Internet. I don't wish to delve into the details, but several
- people have offered useful suggestions to that first article that I
- thought you would find interesting.
-
-
- Zen
- Prentice-Hall will soon release the second edition of a $22 book
- called "Zen and the Art of the Internet." The first edition of
- this book exists all over the place on the Internet in Unix-
- compressed PostScript form. You may not want to check out this
- file since getting it will be complicated for a number of reasons,
- including the fact that you will be dealing with a 450K file.
- However, to get instructions on how to receive the first edition,
- send email to <archive-server@cs.widener.edu> with the command
- "send zen hints" in the body of your message. You're on your own.
-
-
- FAQ
- You may see this abbreviation strewn around the Internet in
- various places, and unless someone has explained it to you, it may
- not make much sense. FAQ stands for Frequently Asked Questions,
- and since the Internet grows at a rate of about 20% each month,
- people come into a discussion group late and miss a long
- thread about a particular question. The late-comer promptly asks
- the question again, and the process repeats itself. Enter FAQ
- lists. They take the most common questions and provide answers so
- that late-comers don't interrupt the ongoing conversations to ask
- about subjects that have been covered already.
-
- A recently created Usenet group includes a FAQ posting about
- the Mac, and it has been made available via FTP at
- <sumex-aim.stanford.edu> as...
-
- /info-mac/report/cmsf-faq.txt
-
- (and remember what I said in Gateways 1 in TidBITS#130 about the
- mirror sites and mailservers). The file is 55K, unfortunately, so
- it won't fit through the AppleLink gateway and America Online will
- truncate it to 27K.
-
-
- FAQ Table of Contents
-
- I. Introduction
- 1. What other information is available?
- 2. Posting Etiquette
- II. The Question of the Year:
- Why is my system using so much memory?
- III. FTP
- 1. Where can I FTP Macintosh software?
- 2. Can I get shareware by E-mail?
- 3. Where can I find Application X?
- 4. Can someone mail me Application X?
- 5. What is .bin? .hqx? .cpt? .image? .etc?
- IV. Viruses
- 1. Help! I have a virus!
- 2. Reporting new viruses
- V. Printing
- 1. How do I make a PostScript file?
- 2. How do I print a PostScript file?
- 3. Why won't my PostScript file print on my mainframe's
- printer?
- 4. Why are my PostScript files so big?
- 5. How can I print PostScript on a non-PostScript printer?
- 6. How do I make my ImageWriter II print in color?
- 7. Why doesn't PrintMonitor work with the ImageWriter?
- 8. Why did my document change when I printed it?
- VI. System Software
- 1. What is System 7 Tuneup? Do I need it?
- 2. Do I need System 7.01?
- 3. How can I get System 7.01 on 800K disks?
- 4. Why do my DA's disappear when I turn on MultiFinder?
- VII. DOS and the Mac
- 1. How can I move files between a Mac and a PC?
- 2. How can I translate files to a DOS format?
- 3. Should I buy SoftPC or a real PC?
- VIII. Security
- 1. How can I prevent users from changing the contents of a
- folder?
- 2. How can I password protect my Mac?
- IX. Hard Disks
- 1. Help! My folder disappeared!
- 2. Why can't I throw this folder away?
- X. Floppy Disks
- 1. Why can't my new Mac read my old Mac's floppy disks?
- 2. Can I turn a double-density disk into a high density
- disk by punching an extra hole in it?
- XI. Miscellaneous
- 1. How can I preview a PostScript file?
- 2. How do I edit a PostScript file?
- 3. What does System Error xxx mean?
- 4. How do I use a picture for my desktop?
- 5. How do I make a startup screen?
- 6. Can I replace the "Welcome to Macintosh" box with a
- picture?
- 7. What is AutoDoubler? Is it safe?
- 8. How does AutoDoubler compare to other compression
- products?
- 9. What's a good text editor for the Mac?
- 10. Where did my icons go?
-
-
- FTP Tips
- Andy Shepard writes: Your interesting article on gateways in
- TidBITS#130 prompted me to write a short note with a couple of
- further useful tidbits:
-
- * When you FTP to an archive site, you must enter a username and a
- password. _Almost exclusively_, the username is "anonymous" and
- the password is your email address, usually in the form
- mbasd@dlvh.daresbury.ac.uk (using my address as an example).
-
- * For the large base of UK Mac Users (and indeed other European
- countries), a better all-round site than the Swedish one you
- mentioned is at host <src.doc.ic.ac.uk>, which can be FTP'ed for
- simple file transfer, or you can logon for limited interactive use
- using "telnet src.doc.ic.ac.uk" (login="sources", no password) -
- the directory /tmp is writable. This site has archives of Mac, PC,
- UNIX, X, and Vax software and news. The Mac archive mirrors the
- umich archive as well as the sumex archive (in directories
- /mac/umich and /mac/sumex respectively). In addition there is even
- a mail-server facility, though I've never had to try this. The
- best UK/Euro archie site is nearby at <archie.doc.ic.ac.uk>
- (login="archie").
-
- * For people retrieving files from FTP-sites: you can save
- yourself a great deal of frustration if you remember that Unix
- (the operating system on most servers these days) is CaSe
- SeNsItIve!
-
- * Be respectful when using FTP - confine your time to out-of-hours
- periods - bear in mind the time differences across the Atlantic
- and Pacific!
-
- Information from:
- Andy Sheppard -- mbasd@dlvh.daresbury.ac.uk
-
-
- List o' Lists
- Jon Pugh writes to tell us about the List of Lists file: This file
- lists all the mailing lists you can subscribe to. Info-Mac is
- listed, and TidBITS should be. The file includes instructions on
- adding or updating your entry. The file is available via FTP from
- <ftp.nisc.sri.com> in the file
-
- netinfo/interest-groups.Z
-
- It is a compressed Unix text file. Use any Unix "uncompress"
- compatible command to expand it into a normal text file. For those
- of you not on Unix machines, make sure to download as binary and
- use MacCompress or Stuffit Deluxe to expand the file.
-
- Definitely a must-read file for anyone interested in electronic
- communications. It's 360K compressed and 879K uncompressed. Heavy,
- but worth it.
-
- Information from:
- Jon Pugh -- jpugh@apple.com
-
-
- Pinnacle Problems
- -----------------
- by Dave Platt -- dplatt@ntg.com
-
- Magneto-optical disks can be attractive storage devices for many
- applications. If you have massive amounts of data that you want to
- store, and if you tend to access large blocks of data sequentially
- (if you're reading or writing large files), they can be extremely
- cost-effective. However, due to its slower seek time, today's
- magneto-optical drive usually isn't seen as a suitable replacement
- for a Winchester-style (i.e. normal) magnetic disk.
-
- Most magneto-optical drives use a fairly massive read/write head,
- which contains both magnetic and optical components. The head
- assembly weighs more than the arm-and-head assembly on a
- Winchester drive, and it can't move across the disk as quickly. As
- a result, seek times for a typical magneto-optical drive are often
- several times slower than seeks on a Winchester drive of a similar
- capacity.
-
- In addition, most magneto-optical drives write data more slowly
- than they read it, because the laser must make two or more passes
- over the medium - one pass to erase the old bits, one pass to
- write the new ones, and (in some cases) one pass to verify the
- data. Once again, these drives are slower than Winchesters of
- similar capacity.
-
-
- Something new?
- The Pinnacle Micro PMO-650 has a two-page ad in the 25-May-92
- issue of MacWEEK which claims that this mechanism is a bird of a
- different color because its speed compares to that of a reasonably
- fast hard disk. However, further reading of the ad suggested that
- there is a bit of fast talking and clever verbiage taking place,
- and that the ad is at best misleading in its claims.
-
- The ad cites a "19 millisecond effective access time." There's a
- footnote bullet which states:
-
- Test Results performed with a 1/3 stroke plus latency over a
- 50 MB band width. A 1/3 stroke plus latency is the standard of
- measurement in the optical storage industry.
-
- Well, this may be true, but if you try to compare this "19
- millisecond" figure to the equivalent figure for a similarly-sized
- Winchester hard disk, you will be comparing apples and oranges and
- may be disappointed.
-
- The catch is the "50 MB band width" clause. This means that
- Pinnacle has benchmarked their drive by performing seeks over a 50
- MB band on the medium, which is only 50 MB out of the 325 MB on
- one side of the platter! In other words, Pinnacle Micro has based
- their "1/3 stroke" on the assumption that a "full stroke" covers
- less than a sixth of the data area on the platter!
-
- This is particularly significant, because this drive uses a split
- optic design. Drives of this sort can perform short seeks quite
- quickly (they usually move a tracking mirror using a light voice-
- coil mechanism) but slow down on long seeks (the entire laser
- assembly must be moved). By restricting their seek-time tests to a
- 50 MB band, Pinnacle may have skewed the results of the test in
- their favor since a larger percentage of the seeks can be
- performed using the fast-seek mechanism than would be possible in
- a full-disk-surface seek test.
-
-
- Checking out the facts
- I called Pinnacle's 800 number, asked for information about the
- drive, and spoke with a representative for about five minutes. I
- asked a number of questions and got the following responses
- (summarized, not quoted exactly):
-
- * Am I correct in assuming that the seek tests are being performed
- across only one 50 MB band out of the 325 MB on the platter
- surface? [Yes]
-
- * Most Winchester disks have their "effective access time" based
- on a typical mix of seeks over the full disk capacity, do they
- not? [Yes, I believe so.]
-
- * Then I can't really make an apples-and-apples comparison between
- a Winchester disk and the PMO-650 based on your quoted access
- time, can I? [Well, you can't really compare the two technologies,
- because hard disks have multiple heads and optical drives have
- only one.]
-
- * But that's the kind of comparison your ad tries to make, isn't
- it? [Yes]
-
- * The ad notes that "A 1/3 stroke plus latency is the standard of
- measurement in the optical storage industry," and I understand
- that this sort of measurement is fairly typical in the Winchester
- disk industry as well. [Yes, I believe that's correct]
-
- * Do you know of any other vendors of optical disks who quote an
- average seek time based on a test which limits the full stroke to
- only a small fraction of the platter capacity? [Offhand, no, I
- can't think of any.]
-
-
- Another opinion
- A couple of weeks after this, I spoke with a representative of a
- company which makes high-performance caching controllers for
- magneto-optical disks. I described the Pinnacle benchmark as it
- had been advertised, and asked him what he thought of it. His
- response was to the effect of "That's nonsense." (he used a much
- stronger word than "nonsense") He told me that he considered
- Pinnacle's claim to be harmful to the magneto-optical disk
- industry, because it created false expectations about the
- performance of that sort of drive. He hadn't heard of any other
- vendor which printed benchmarks based on a 50 MB band of the disk
- and was skeptical about the whole concept of trying to compare
- Winchester and magneto-optical disks through any sort of
- standardized benchmark.
-
-
- It's actually a pretty hot drive
- It may sound from all of this as if I'm entirely negative about
- the PMO-650 drive. Actually, I'm not. There are some other facts
- about the drive which may - and probably do - allow it to
- outperform similar mechanisms by a substantial margin.
-
- The drive controller has a large cache - 4 MB. According to
- Pinnacle representatives, the cache management firmware is quite
- sophisticated - it supports read-ahead, write-behind, and a number
- of different media-access algorithms. As a result, the drive can
- frequently "service" one request from the host computer while
- writing out the data from previous requests to the media in an
- orderly fashion. In addition, the drive has a respectable
- sustained transfer rate - 1.3 MB/second on a Mac IIfx, 1.5
- MB/second on a Quadra 900. That's quite a bit faster than either
- of the two Winchester disks I own.
-
-
- My conclusions?
- On the positive side: for an optical mechanism, this drive is
- probably faster than most. If you're doing the sorts of jobs for
- which magneto-optical disks are often suggested - for example,
- working with big 24-bit TIFF files - you'd probably be quite happy
- with this drive.
-
- On the negative side: if you're expecting this drive to behave as
- well as a good Winchester, under a broad set of conditions, you
- may be disappointed. Test it yourself, if you're considering it
- for a performance-intensive application and don't trust Pinnacle's
- quoted performance figures unless you're satisfied that their test
- conditions match up with your intended usage of the disk.
-
- Caveat emptor, folks. There are lies, damned lies, and benchmarks.
- There is also advertising. In my opinion, Pinnacle did a bad
- thing. They chose to print an ad which makes a misleading
- comparison, and they made statements in the ad which are
- unsupported by the facts. Somebody in their organization, their
- advertising firm, or both, deserves to get sacked for trying to
- pull a scam like this.
-
- It's a shame, really. It looks as if Pinnacle Micro has developed
- a nice product, and has good reason to be proud of the PMO-650.
- I'm not sure I'd be willing to buy anything from Pinnacle Micro,
- though, as I'm not confident that I can trust them.
-
- Pinnacle Micro -- 800/553-7070 -- 714/727-3300
-
-
- Excel 4.0 for the Mac III
- -------------------------
- by Howard Hansen
-
- [Here we have the final part of Howard's review, folks. This time
- we'll look at some of the interface and output enhancements in
- Excel 4.0 and hear about Howard's few gripes and overall
- impressions. -Adam]
-
-
- Custom Worksheet
- Geneva. Blecch! While I imagine I would enjoy the city, I don't
- like the font. Nor does my LaserWriter. So why does Excel still
- use Geneva as its default font? I don't know, but finally
- Microsoft has provided us with a semi-appropriate work around.
-
- In Excel 3.0, Microsoft introduced the Excel Startup Folder. Excel
- does something with everything you put in this folder. You put an
- add-in macro in, Excel loads that add-in. With worksheets or macro
- sheets, Excel opens them automatically. If you save a file as a
- template, that template will appear in the File New dialog box as
- an option. If you create a template and call it "Worksheet", Excel
- will replace the standard, stupid Geneva-font worksheet it creates
- by default with a copy of the template you specify. I have saved
- myself untold formatting hours simply by doing this.
-
-
- Split & Freeze Panes
- Since spreadsheet users often want to look at tons of data, Excel
- has always had a way to split a worksheet window into multiple
- "panes," and then freeze those panes into place. This way, you can
- still see your column labels at the top of your screen as you
- scroll down a long list. In the old days, you had to carefully
- grab the "split box" next to each scroll bar, drag the split where
- you want it, then choose freeze panes. Frankly, most users found
- the whole procedure pretty confusing and easy to screw up. Excel
- 4.0 comes to the rescue by changing the way the pane controls
- work.
-
- The pane controls have migrated from the Options menu to the
- Window menu - a more intuitive place, I think. To split and freeze
- the panes, you scroll the window so the column and row headings
- you want to stay put show at the top and left of the screen, then
- select the cell in the upper left corner of the range you want to
- scroll. Choose Freeze Panes and bang, Excel does everything for
- you.
-
-
- Views
- Many of us have worksheets with more than one reporting area. If
- you do, you know the difficulty of jumping from place to place on
- the worksheet. With the Views add-in, you can name different
- reports and jump to them quickly. Unfortunately, this add-in works
- so slowly, I can't stand to use it!
-
-
- Zooming
- Although the Zoom command does not come from an add-in, it works
- too much like they just bolted it on. How about adding the Claris-
- standard zoom buttons to the scroll bars? Aesthetics aside, I do
- find it wonderful to zoom out and see the "map" of a worksheet, or
- zoom in to comfortably work with columns of seven point numbers.
-
-
- Printing Changes
- When he showed Excel 4.0 to dBUG (Seattle's Mac user group),
- Excel's product manager admitted "Excel 3.0 had the Yugo of
- headers and footers." Well, Excel 4.0 has the Hyundai of headers
- and footers.
-
- With the new version, you don't have to remember the formatting
- codes (&p for page number, &f for file name, etc.) - you can
- choose them from pop-up menus in a sub-dialog within the Page
- Setup dialog box. When you select "Date" from the list, Excel
- inserts a WYSI_N_WYG code - &D! Although you can now have
- multi-line headers or footers, you still can't move the header
- or footer from a half an inch from the top or bottom of the page,
- nor can you have different headers and footers for the first page
- of a document.
-
- Other printing changes include an add-in macro called "Print
- Report" which allows you to set up different ranges to print on a
- worksheet (for instance your financial worksheet might have an
- income statement, a balance sheet, and a transaction report). With
- the Print Report command, you can print all or some of those
- reports at once.
-
- Microsoft has also added two new features to the Page Setup dialog
- box. The first allows you to change the order in which the pages
- print - either top to bottom or left to right. The second lets you
- tell Excel to reduce or enlarge the worksheet to fit onto any
- number of pages wide and tall. For instance, you can make a large
- report print on one page, or tell Excel to print it three pages
- wide by one tall.
-
- Microsoft has simplified specifying print titles (rows and/or
- columns which appear at the top and left of all pages when you
- print the worksheet). Rather than forcing you to select the entire
- rows and/or the entire columns you want for titles, the dialog now
- lets you simply click on the rows or columns you want for titles,
- which is much simpler.
-
- Finally, the macro language will now control all page setup
- options, including page orientation!
-
-
- Suggestions for Using Excel 4.0
- The standard toolbar has many which you may not use. Take them off
- and replace them with tools you need. Many tools do double duty;
- for instance, shift-clicking on the increase font size tool will
- decrease the font size. Other changes I've made to the standard
- toolbar include replacing the print tool with Print Preview,
- adding the zoom out tool (shift-click on it to zoom in), removing
- the left justification tool (Excel left-justifies by default), and
- adding outlining tools.
-
-
- Documentation and Support
- I have mixed feelings about the documentation. The Mac and Windows
- versions work so similarly that Microsoft has merged the two sets
- of documentation. This works well for those who use both
- platforms, so they get a side-by-side explanation of the few
- differences. While Microsoft has included many figures, and the
- explanations stick much more to practical how and why topics than
- in the past, you will find few screen shots in the text. Not only
- do they not show you the dialog boxes, but they also don't list
- all of the options and what they mean. I find it comforting to see
- the dialog box next to the text - it allows me to orient myself
- better.
-
- That said, I have to admit that the new on-line help system makes
- up for and explains the choices they made with the documentation.
- You will find almost all of the detail you expect from the manual
- in the online help system. If get confused about just about any
- feature, Excel's help system will give you the information you
- need. First, almost every dialog box now has a help button. When
- you click it, Excel brings up help for that particular topic. If
- you want to know what each of the choices in the Display Options
- dialog do, you won't find the detail in the manual, but the help
- system patiently explains all.
-
- You can copy text from the help system onto the clipboard as well
- as printing it. You can add your own notes to all help topics, and
- set bookmarks for places you go on a regular basis.
-
- Under System 7, Microsoft supports balloon help, but only for
- windows, menus, and toolbars. I'd really like to see it work in
- individual dialog boxes so I could easily find out what this or
- that checkbox means.
-
-
- Wish List
- Although I wholeheartedly endorse what Microsoft has done with
- Excel 4.0, they still need to fix some annoying, persistent
- problems with the program. I'd especially like to see:
-
- * Better headers and footers. Let's move the headers and footers,
- make them WYSIWYG, and turn them off selectively.
-
- * Embedded Macros. Let's create buttons and tools with macros
- embedded, so they don't have to rely on a separate macro sheet.
-
- * Cooler Wizards. How about a wizard which allows you to create
- financial reports - income statements, balance sheets, etc.?
-
-
- Conclusions
- In this three-part review, I still haven't discussed all of the
- new features in Excel 4.0, but I think I've hit most of the
- important ones. If you own Excel, should you upgrade? If you have
- enough free space on your hard disk as well as at least 4 MB of
- RAM, I think you should. If you don't own Excel, should you buy
- it? I hate to foster monopolism, but I think any Mac user who
- doesn't have a significant reason to use some other spreadsheet
- should choose Excel.
-
- As I said in the first part, I feel like I work significantly more
- efficiently with Excel 4.0 than I did with Excel 3.0. As the
- feature lists get longer, I find myself wondering, "what more can
- they possibly put into a spreadsheet?" That question reminds me of
- a common sentiment from a few years back: "Why on earth would
- anyone need more than 64K of RAM?"
-
- Microsoft Customer Service -- 800/426-9400
-
- Information from:
- Howard Hansen, The Oasis Group -- HHansen@aol.com
- 206/282-6255
-
-
- Excel 4.0 Comments
- ------------------
- You would think that with three parts spread out over a month, we
- would have covered Excel 4.0 sufficiently. However, as a testament
- to the product's added complexity and flexibility, we've received
- two comments about it in the past few weeks, one good, one bad.
-
-
- Object model
- First, the good news. Jon Pugh wrote to tell us to be sure to
- mention the fact that Excel 4.0 is perhaps the first major program
- to be fully Apple event and AppleScript aware. Excel 4.0 supports
- the object model, and for those of you using UserLand Frontier or
- pre-release versions of AppleScript, you can do essentially
- everything in the program via Apple events. This is, of course,
- wonderful news that also fits in the "so what?" category until
- enough other programs are similarly full-featured and AppleScript
- eventually ships. In the meantime, Frontier can do some pretty
- amazing things, and along with a hack from Steve Zellers of
- Berkeley Systems, you can even have a Scripts menu in your Finder
- that contains Frontier scripts. Frontier must be running as well,
- but with sufficient RAM to hold both apps at the same time you
- could control Excel (or any of the other Apple event-aware
- applications like PageMaker) from a Finder menu, which would be
- pretty neat.
-
-
- Workbook bugs
- Now, the bad news. Andy J. Williams writes to tell us about a
- serious bug with workbooks in Excel 4.0:
-
- I just had a disaster that taught me a valuable lesson about Excel
- 4.0's Workbook feature. File this under "Don't let this happen to
- you."
-
- The scenario: I have five spreadsheets and one macro sheet bound
- together in a workbook. At the bottom of the screen for each page
- of the workbook is a "control panel" of five buttons each leading
- to the other sheets (referencing macros on the macro sheet).
-
- I went to save the workbook. Just after saving the first of the
- six documents my machine crashed.
-
- After restarting the workbook was trashed. Only the first sheet
- was visible or usable. Using the standard forward/backward page
- buttons I can go between the index page and that one sheet. No
- others are visible. Clicking on my control panel of buttons
- produces a system crash.
-
- I spoke with someone at Microsoft Tech Support, and I surmise that
- Excel is completely rebuilding the workbook up from scratch rather
- than changing the existing workbook. Thus, any crash while saving
- will ensure that there is NO copy anywhere around except the one
- that was in memory, in the process of being written. This is a
- wonderfully unsafe way to do things.
-
- So, my advice is: always backup workbooks BEFORE starting work. [A
- clever macro programmer could probably whip something up to do
- this automatically, and it would be a piece of cake to do in
- Frontier. -Adam]
-
- Information from:
- Jon Pugh -- jpugh@apple.com
- Andy J. Williams -- AndyJW@dartmouth.edu
-
-
- Reviews/13-Jul-92
- -----------------
-
- * MacUser -- Aug-92
- Magic -- pg. 52
- PowerPlay for the Macintosh -- pg. 54
- SwivelMan & ShowPlace/MacRenderMan -- pg. 58
- Think C 5 & CMaster -- pg. 60
- In Control -- pg. 61
- Ofoto -- pg. 72
- Video F/X -- pg. 74
- CA-Cricket Draw III -- pg. 76
- Persuasion 2.1 -- pg. 81
- Easy Alarms -- pg. 81
- Rise of the Dragon -- pg. 81
- Retriever II -- pg. 83
- 4D Draw -- pg. 83
- Autosynchronous Monitors -- pg. 158
- (too many to list)
-
-
- ..
-
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