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- TidBITS#59/AccessPC
- ===================
-
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- -----------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Topics:
- AccessPC Details
- AccessPC Introduction
- AccessPC Installation
- Using AccessPC
- AccessPC Documentation
- AccessPC Problems
-
-
- AccessPC Details
- ----------------
-
- AccessPC 1.0
-
- Insignia Solutions, Inc.
- 254 San Geronimo Way
- Sunnyvale, CA 94086
- 408/522-7600
- 408/848-7677
- 408/733-9541 (fax)
- D1437, UK0032 at AppleLink
-
-
- Rating:
- 8 Penguins out of a possible 10
-
-
- Summary:
- AccessPC is a single purpose utility that sits in the background
- and allows you to mount MS-DOS disks on the Macintosh desktop
- (assuming of course, that you have a drive that can read and write
- MS-DOS disks). AccessPC is about as transparent as possible and is
- much faster than DOS Mounter 1.0. You even get the extra bonus of
- being able to mount SoftPC hard disk documents as volumes, which
- makes for much easier transfer of files in and out.
-
-
- User Evaluation: (on a scale of 0 to 10)
- Number of responses: 2
- Ease of installation: 7
- Ease of learning: 9
- Ease of use: 8
- Power & usefulness: 7
- Documentation: 6
- Technical support: 4
- Overall evaluation: 7
-
-
- Price and Availability:
- AccessPC is widely available from dealers and mail order firms and
- is sold by MacConnection for $82 (note that we quote the
- MacConnection price in recognition of its industry-leading efforts
- to use ecologically-conscious packaging and its overall excellent
- service).
-
-
- Reviewer:
- Adam C. Engst, TidBITS Editor
-
-
- AccessPC Introduction
- ---------------------
- Apple has always boasted of the SuperDrive's ability to read and
- write both Mac and MS-DOS disks. Apple's propagandizing statements
- fail to mention that you have to use Apple File Exchange, a
- relatively obnoxious, Font/DA Mover-like program, to access the
- MS-DOS files. In normal operation, the SuperDrive rejects all
- MS-DOS disks. I'm sure that some rabid Mac users have modified the
- standard message from the staid "This is not a Macintosh disk.
- Eject or Initialize?" to "This disk is unclean. Convert it to the
- holy format?"
-
- Those of us who don't feel quite so chauvinistic about our
- computers and who actually talk to people who use MS-DOS machines
- can use a couple of different utilities to see MS-DOS disks on our
- desktops, just like any Mac disk. Dayna (the people who gave us
- the DaynaFile, which also has DOS-disk mounting capabilities) made
- the first of these utilities, DOS Mounter. DOS Mounter wasn't
- perfect, by any means, since it had to write a Desktop file to the
- floppy disk, which meant that you couldn't use locked DOS disks
- with it, or any copy protected disks, or any disks that had
- installation schemes that "know" which files are on the disk and
- become confused if any others show up. You get the idea, DOS
- Mounter was slow and irritating to use. Insignia Solutions, the
- people who came up with the elegant hack SoftPC, wrote AccessPC to
- compete with DOS Mounter. AccessPC circumvents most of DOS
- Mounter's limitations and adds a few features to boot. To be fair,
- Dayna just released DOS Mounter 2.0, which supposedly addresses
- all of version 1.0's limitations and provides better competition
- for AccessPC. We haven't compared DOS Mounter 2.0 yet, but
- hopefully we will at some future time.
-
-
- AccessPC Installation
- ---------------------
- AccessPC ships on a single disk with five items, only two of which
- need to be installed by dragging to your System Folder and
- restarting. Those two items are the "~AccessPC" cdev and its
- associated document "~AccessPC Data." I presume that the tildes
- sit in front of the file names to make them sort together, and so
- that the cdev runs after most other INITs and cdevs. On my system,
- only the @Disinfectant INIT runs after AccessPC. The third item on
- the disk is a small HyperCard 1.2.x stack that talks a little
- about the process of assigning icons to DOS files with certain
- extensions and then gives 13 examples of common DOS extensions and
- the appropriate Mac file creators and types. Then there are two
- folders, "PRACTICE" and "Other." "Other" holds three alternate
- versions of the ~AccessPC Data file for people who use MacWrite
- II, Wingz, or the Ashton-Tate suite of Macintosh programs,
- FullWrite, Full Impact, and dBMac. If you fall into one of those
- three categories, Insignia recommends using the appropriate
- ~AccessPC Data file instead of the default one, which is set for
- Microsoft Word and Excel users. Insignia doesn't say what to do if
- you use MacWrite II for your word processor, Wingz for your
- spreadsheet and dBMac for your database. Other than the last one,
- it's not all that unlikely a situation. My impression is that the
- only difference between the different data files is that they have
- different preset extension mappings, so don't worry about it too
- much. The "PRACTICE" folder contains four documents, an MS-DOS
- Word file, an MS-DOS Word style file, an MS-DOS WordPerfect file,
- and a Lotus 1-2-3 worksheet file. They are used in the tutorial
- chapter on how to assign Macintosh icons to DOS files with certain
- extensions. If you're wondering, they merely have some examples of
- how formatting isn't lost if you have the proper program on the
- Mac, along with a short blurb on how wonderful AccessPC is. What
- did you expect?
-
- As I said before, installation is remarkably simple, simply drag
- two files to the System Folder and reboot. I haven't noticed any
- conflicts at all, although Insignia recommends renaming CD-ROM
- drivers to load after AccessPC if they cause problems. The Errata
- sheet that accompanies the manual says not to rename the
- "~AccessPC" file itself though, but instead to prefix the
- offending INIT's name with a tilde, which should cause the INIT to
- alphabetize after AccessPC.
-
-
- Using AccessPC
- --------------
- I tested AccessPC with a Kennect Drive 2.4 and Rapport as well as
- an Apple SuperDrive. Besides those two drives, AccessPC supports
- an external SuperDrive, the Kennect Drive 360 and Drive 1200, the
- 3.5" and 5.25" external DaynaFile drives, the PLI TurboFloppy 1.4,
- and the Outbound Portable with the FDHD-compatible drive. In
- addition, a Mac equipped with Rapport can read, but not write DOS
- disks in an internal 800K drive, and AccessPC does work with this
- combination as well. It does not work with non-floppy drives such
- as the Iomega Bernoulli series or any of the SyQuest removable
- cartridge hard drives. Can't have everything yet.
-
- The controls for AccessPC are located in the Control Panel,
- reasonably enough. The AccessPC controls have three basic
- components. The first section, at the top of the Control Panel
- window, contains a scrolling list (at least it scrolls if it needs
- to) of the DOS file extensions and their associated Macintosh
- mappings. For those who don't use DOS much, the extension is the
- three letters that follow the period after the eight character
- file name. So in the file MYFILE.DOC, MYFILE is the file name and
- DOC is the extension. Not all DOS files have extensions, but it's
- good practice to use them and some programs assign them
- automatically. AccessPC allows you two ways of assigning a
- Macintosh mapping to any given DOS extension. If you are a power
- user (or wish to be), you can unlock the text input boxes for
- creator and type and type the correct four letter codes in
- yourself. Normal people will just click the "Mac App..." button,
- select the right application, and then select the correct document
- type from the pop-up list of possible document types. The process
- is extremely painless and well-done.
-
- The second set of controls are merely two check boxes, one labeled
- "Save Mac Info to Disk," and the other labeled "Format Support."
- The first option is extremely useful because it allows you to
- either save Macintosh information on the DOS disk or not,
- depending on what's most appropriate. For instance, if you have to
- work on a locked or copy protected disk, you obviously don't want
- to save the Mac information on that disk. However, if you have a
- normal DOS disk and want your files to retain their icons and
- positions in the windows and all that jazz, then you have to save
- the Mac information on that disk. There are two other side effects
- to not saving the Macintosh information to the disk. First,
- resource forks aren't copied, so even data files that have
- resource forks will lose them. Applications are completely
- crippled. Second, the file names are changed to become legal DOS
- file names, which can make them pretty unreadable. Of course,
- normal DOS file names are often unreadable even when people assign
- the names, so we can't censure AccessPC on that account. If you
- don't want to prevent all Mac information from being written to
- the disk, you can hold the Option key when you click on the check
- box, at which point AccessPC will present you with the choices
- broken down. You have the option of selecting or not selecting
- each of three check boxes, the first called "Finder information,"
- the second called "Resource forks," and the last called "Desktop
- file." If you want to save the icon colors and locations as well
- as the Macintosh file names, check the first box. If you want to
- save the Mac resource forks, check the second box. And if you want
- to save the icons related to each file, check the final box.
- Needless to say, checking all three is the same as check the "Save
- Mac Info to Disk" button on the main Control Panel screen. The
- Macintosh info features can be toggled at any time and take effect
- as soon as you mount a new disk.
-
- Insignia provided the "Format Support" button because some drives,
- most notably those from Kennect, already have the ability to
- format MS-DOS disks. If you allow AccessPC to format disks on one
- of these drives, you merely get an initial dialog box from
- AccessPC asking whether you want Mac or MS-DOS format, and no
- matter which you click, the Kennect dialog allowing all possible
- options comes up immediately thereafter. I haven't tested this
- carefully, but it seems that formatting a disk with AccessPC's
- format support installed is slower than just allowing the Drive
- 2.4 and Rapport to do it. In any case, if you have the Kennect
- drives, it's best to shut off AccessPC's format support so you
- don't have to answer an additional dialog box each time you want
- to format a disk of any sort. The format support can be toggled at
- any time but requires a restart for new settings to take effect.
-
- The final set of controls available from the Control Panel allow
- you to mount the SoftPC hard disk documents as disks on the
- desktop. If you used SoftPC heavily and wished to keep all your
- DOS files in the SoftPC hard disk (which I don't, since SoftPC
- very nicely allows me to define a Macintosh folder as an E: disk),
- this could be extremely useful. As it is though, it won't even let
- me mount my one SoftPC hard disk as a volume because it has more
- than two or three fragments. Oh, well, maybe I'll defragment with
- Silverlining later and try again. Insignia thoughtfully added this
- feature, though it's not a reason to buy AccessPC.
-
-
- AccessPC Documentation
- ----------------------
- The manual is short but helpful and generally well-written. I
- didn't notice any errors and Insignia provided a short index. I'm
- glad Insignia included the Errata sheet, because it explained a
- few things that the manual glossed over or had changed since
- Insignia printed the manual. Probably the best thing that I can
- say about the manual was that I haven't looked at it until today,
- over a month after I installed AccessPC. I didn't run into
- anything strange or unpleasant while using AccessPC that required
- explanation from the manual.
-
-
- AccessPC Problems
- -----------------
- As a matter of fact, I've only had a single problem with AccessPC
- since I've started using it. It surprised me, because I couldn't
- figure out why it should have happened. While I was writing this
- review, the Mac crashed (I lost only a few words, thanks to Nisus)
- and when it came back up, even though AccessPC seemed to load
- fine, when I selected it in the Control Panel, it said that it
- wasn't loaded and I needed to restart. I did so again, and it came
- back to life. Luckily, despite a number of other crashes, this
- hasn't happened again. Strange.
-
- My only other request goes to Insignia's marketing elves. AccessPC
- performs absolutely no file translations, which isn't particularly
- in its scope. However, I suspect that a fair number of people who
- buy AccessPC will want to do some file format translation as well,
- so it would be ideal if Insignia could strike a deal with
- MacLinkPlus/PC or one of the other file translation programs - a
- bundle or some sort of discount if you own one and buy the other.
-
- Overall, you won't go wrong with AccessPC. If you regularly work
- with DOS disks, using AccessPC is far easier than mucking around
- with Apple File Exchange. It's fast (one person said he thought it
- was about 10 times faster than DOS Mounter 1.0 and I can vouch for
- the fact that it performs a lot faster than the DaynaFile),
- integrates DOS disks into the Mac environment with a minimum of
- setup and fuss, formats DOS disks from the Finder, and requires no
- weekly maintenance.
-
-
- ..
-
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