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- TidBITS#71/08-Jul-91
- ====================
-
- 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
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-
- For more information send electronic mail to info@tidbits.uucp or
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- TidBITS -- 9301 Avondale Rd. NE Q1096 -- Redmond, WA 98052 USA
- -----------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Topics:
- MailBITS/08-Jul-91
- SevenBITS/08-Jul-91
- Dirtier ROMs
- Mac to Unix Backup
- Reviews/08-Jul-91
-
-
- MailBITS/08-Jul-91
- ------------------
- For those of you struggling with MaxAppleZoom's recent demise, yet
- more hope exists. Bob Boonstra came up with a patch that he's
- found to work with both version 1.3 and 1.3.1 of MaxAppleZoom. It
- requires a disk editor and a little technical knowledge, but is
- cleaner than the other solutions. He writes, "After further
- investigation, the following appears to be a more complete fix for
- the bug (time bomb) in MaxAppleZoom. The patch does not require an
- INIT and does not require changing the date. At least, it works
- for me, on version 1.3 and 1.31, with dates out as far as I
- checked (1999)."
-
-
- For MAZ 1.3:
- INIT 1 offset 572: change 02EA 3000 002C 65AE 43FA 0352
- to 02EA 3000 002C 4E71 43FA 0352
- INIT 1 offset 5CE: change 02EA 3000 002C 65AE 43FA 02DA
- to 02EA 3000 002C 4E71 43FA 02DA
- cdev -4064 offset C48: change 02EA 3000 002C 65AE 1428 0004
- to 02EA 3000 002C 4E71 1428 0004
- cdev -4064 offset CD0: change 02EA 3000 002C 65B0 5213
- to 02EA 3000 002C 4E71 5213
-
-
- For MAZ 1.31:
- INIT 1 offset 570: change 02EA 3000 002C 65AE 43FA 0340
- to 02EA 3000 002C 4E71 43FA 0340
- INIT 1 offset 5CC: change 02EA 3000 002C 65AE 43FA 02C8
- to 02EA 3000 002C 4E71 43FA 02C8
- cdev -4064 offset C46: change 02EA 3000 002C 65AE 1428 0004
- to 02EA 3000 002C 4E71 1428 0004
- cdev -4064 offset CCE: change 02EA 3000 002C 65B0 5213
- to 02EA 3000 002C 4E71 5213
-
- "The patch substitutes a NOP for a conditional branch that follows
- each of three CMP2 range checks. The value being checked, and the
- range checked against, are computed by code so obscure (clever?)
- that I don't know exactly what is being bypassed, or why it was
- there, but it works for me. In each case, the patches to the INIT
- prevents MAZ from not loading, while the patch to the cdev
- prevents the Control Panel device from being disabled. Thanks to
- Nobu Toge for pointing out the problem with the cdev, and to Scott
- E. Lasley for sending me version 1.31."
-
- TidBITS is available in many places online, but until recently has
- not appeared on Delphi. Luckily for all of us, Mike Martin has
- graciously volunteered to upload each week's issue to Delphi for
- me (there' s a limit to how much I can do online personally). So
- for those of you on Delphi who haven't seen TidBITS before,
- welcome, and I hope you enjoy it. I'm sure Mike will forward
- limited mail back to me via America Online, so if you have
- comments or suggestions, please feel free to send them along (just
- don't swamp him with mail - I'm sure he's got better things to do
- than play mailman). Thanks for all your help, Mike! Now are we
- missing any other online services? How about BIX, the BYTE
- Information Exchange? Does anyone out there use BIX?
-
- Although TidBITS is available in many electronic hideaways, it is
- no longer available in ForumLink on America Online, simply because
- ForumLink is no longer there. It was dissolved recently, and
- although I don't know exactly why yet, I suspect it simply wasn't
- getting enough traffic. Unlike most everything on the Internet,
- AOL has to turn a profit, and if an area is unpopular, then it's
- not helping make money. We're trying to find a new place for
- TidBITS on America Online, but in the meantime, you can find new
- issues in the HyperCard library there. If you want to help our
- search for a new spot on AOL, send mail to me at Adam Engst and to
- Tim Barwick (AFP TimB). He's the person who decided to drop
- ForumLink. Ideally we could get a specific TidBITS section where
- everything would be available and where each issue would appear
- quickly.
-
- Shawn Barnhart writes, "In TidBITS#69/01-Jul-91 you go on at
- length about using Macs for video conferencing, lamenting the
- current state of A/V compression and decompression. There has been
- considerable discussion in rec.video.satellite over the past six
- months or so of a new satellite TV service called SkyPix that is
- supposed to provide 50 or so channels off of one satellite
- transponder via some pretty tricky video compression. Supposedly
- it's high-quality digital video, but evidently fast motion scenes
- give the compression hardware a bit of headache, resulting in
- jittery video. But it would seem like the _ideal_ technology for
- video conferencing, where as you said in TidBITS, most of what you
- see is a talking head. With this kind of technology you could use
- just one satellite transponder and get 25 or so simultaneous video
- conferences."
-
- John Norstad writes, "Disinfectant 2.5.1 is a new release of our
- free Macintosh anti-viral utility. Version 2.5.1 corrects an error
- in the version 2.5 INIT which caused some programs (e.g.,
- CompuServe Navigator) to crash on Macs using the Motorola 68000
- processor (the 512KE, Plus, SE, Classic, and Portable.) Version
- 2.5.1 also corrects an error in the 2.5 program which could, at
- least in theory, cause crashes or hangs during program startup or
- when you try to do a scan. We apologize to everybody for the
- inconvenience caused by these errors in the 2.5 release. The
- errors are serious, and we strongly urge all Disinfectant users to
- obtain the new version 2.5.1."
-
- Information from:
- Bob Boonstra -- jrb@mbunix.mitre.org
- Mike Martin -- CWSoldier at AOL
- Shawn Barnhart -- sbarnhar@mailbox.mail.umn.edu
- John Norstad -- j-norstad@nwu.edu
-
-
- SevenBITS/08-Jul-91
- -------------------
- A few weeks ago I talked briefly about Chris Derossi's
- Hierarchical Apple Menu (HAM) and some of its competitors-to-be.
- In the meantime I've heard some more information. Apparently,
- there's some possibility that HAM will be built into a future
- version of System 7, which accounts for the fact that Chris hasn't
- released it yet. No word what the interface folks at Apple will
- decide, but I'd like to see it sometime soon. On a related note,
- apparently a pre-release version of Connectix's SuperMenu was
- leaked to the public. Magic Apple, as it's called, has quickly
- made the rounds of the Internet, appearing in Europe as well as
- the US. According to author Fred Hollander, Magic Apple has some
- bugs and isn't the sort of thing you want to run regularly.
- SuperMenu will be commercial software, included with the System
- 7-savvy HandOff II 2.2, so if you have a copy of Magic Apple,
- please delete it and wait for the stable release of SuperMenu.
- Fred also promises that there will be many more features in
- SuperMenu and HandOff II, so there will be incentive to buy the
- final version. Current plans call for all registered users of
- HandOff II to receive a free upgrade, so if you already have
- HandOff II, you're all set.
-
- If you like to have all sorts of information at hand and you have
- the disk space to support your habit, you might check out a
- FileMaker II database created by Kathryn Turpin on America Online.
- Kathryn collected and edited all messages (other than the obvious
- drivel) pertaining to System 7 that she could find on AOL from
- 10-May-91 to 13-Jun-91. Kathryn edited down the 7 MB of raw
- material to 1049 records comprising about 2.6 MB. It is stored in
- a self-extracting Compact Pro archive and takes about 125 minutes
- to download, I presume at 2400 bips. Kathryn said that she will
- probably continue her work collecting information on System 7 and
- in August will upload an update to the database covering messages
- after 13-Jun-91. It will include updated compatibility information
- and possibly even extracts from magazine articles. So if you have
- FileMaker II or Pro and want to collect information on System 7,
- here's a good way to get started.
-
- Connectix -- 800/950-5880
-
- Information from:
- Fred Hollander -- F.Hollander@applelink.apple.com.
- Michael Costello -- costello@stx.uucp
- Kathryn Turpin -- KathrynT at AOL
-
-
- Dirtier ROMs
- ------------
- For some time after I coordinated the NewROMs petition there was
- no response at all. Henry Norr of MacWEEK said that he thought the
- issue was dead until Apple issued a statement, and the only other
- mention that our letter received came from Bob Cringely of
- InfoWorld. In the last few days I've heard some more interesting
- news, though it doesn't necessarily mean anything in terms of
- getting new ROMs.
-
- A few days ago I got a call from David Burmaster, a consultant
- based in Cambridge, MA. He was irate about the problem of the
- dirty ROMs and had gone so far as to send a letter to John Sculley
- threatening a lawsuit. What interested me about his situation was
- that Apple responded by saying that he could jolly well go out,
- buy MODE32 from Connectix, and shut up. OK, so I doubt that Apple
- actually worded it like that, but David was upset enough that it
- might have been. We can see that Apple now officially recommends
- MODE32. David checked with his lawyer to see what kind of chances
- he had at winning a suit against Apple for misrepresenting the
- abilities of the Mac II, IIx, IIcx, and SE/30. His lawyer said
- that although he thought he could prove the misrepresentation in
- court, it would take 18 to 24 months to get a court date and a
- minimum of $5000 in legal fees to file. That's the first educated
- legal opinion I've heard on the issue, and it's interesting that
- it does put Apple in the wrong. David decided not to sue since it
- made no financial sense and since Apple Legal is not a group you
- want to tangle with unnecessarily.
-
- A day or so later, I received another call (I normally get a lot
- of email, but not too many telephone calls, so all this surprised
- me), this time from Roy MacDonald of Connectix. He'd heard from a
- MODE32 beta tester that I would be a good person to put on the
- press list, so he called and asked me if I'd like a copy of MODE32
- to work with. Mark H. Anbinder has already done a mini-review of
- MODE32, but I'm never one to turn down software to test. I haven't
- been using it for all that long, but it seems to work just fine. I
- can't ask for virtual memory over 16 MB since I don't have that
- much disk space available, but I do plan to clear up some more
- space eventually. I'll keep people posted on my experiences with
- MODE32. Thanks, Connectix!
-
- A number of people have wondered why Apple couldn't just build the
- 32-bit cleanliness into System 7, as they did with A/UX. I've
- heard that the 32-bit cleanliness worked a bit like virtual memory
- under System 6. Someone at Apple said to the engineers, "How about
- putting virtual memory in System 6?" and the engineers said,
- "Can't be done." In January of 1989, Connectix introduced Virtual
- 1.0. So when work started on System 7 and virtual memory was
- included, someone said, "How about 32-bit cleanliness, so users
- can use lots of memory and virtual memory on those older
- machines?" Once again the reply came back, "Can't be done in
- System 7. A/UX is a different OS." Once again, several months
- later, the wizards at Connectix came out with MODE32. Hmm,
- starting to see a pattern here? Actually I doubt Apple will let
- such an obvious gap happen again, if only to save face. Next time
- somebody asks one of those questions, the answer will be, "Is
- tomorrow soon enough?"
-
- Lots of rumors have floated by about how Apple has some 32-bit
- clean ROMs based on the IIfx ROMs or the IIsi ROMs, or something
- like that. I've now heard that those rumors were true, though the
- details are still to be completely discovered. Apparently, some
- people poking around at Apple found a couple of boxes labeled "Mr.
- Clean" and inside the boxes were a bunch of 32-bit clean ROMs.
- These ROMs were never a product, are not a product, and may never
- be a product, but when they were made, Apple distributed them to
- developers who used machines with dirty ROMs and who needed to
- test their code on the 32-bit clean ROMs. Essentially then, it
- sounds like these clean ROMs got caught in some sort of
- marketing/administrative snafu and ended up in a closet instead of
- on a production line and in all of our hot little hands. Humph!
-
- Information from:
- Roy MacDonald -- connectix@applelink.apple.com
- Pythaeus
- David Burmaster
-
-
- Mac to Unix Backup
- ------------------
- In this day of limited resources, I especially enjoy hacking
- together strange combinations of equipment to cover for an
- expensive solution. Back when I worked for Cornell as a student
- supervisor, we had a real problem with backups. Most of our Macs
- were public and didn't have hard drives, but a couple of servers
- had hard drives, and the operators' Macs were similarly equipped.
- We seemingly had a negative hardware budget but floppy-based
- backups were simply too much work.
-
- Cornell has a fiber backbone (which is actually more complimentary
- than it initially sounds :-)) so all of these Macs could easily
- connect to the various mainframes. What I wanted to do, but never
- managed to get the time nor the approval for, was to set up some
- kind of automatic backup scheme whereby the Mac would upload all
- its files to an account on one of the mainframes, and once up on
- the mainframe, all the files would be included in the automatic
- tape backups. I'd decided on using one of Cornell's Vaxen because
- binary files uploaded to the IBM mainframe came back down intact
- but missing the type and creator, not something you'd want to
- recreate by hand. But, like many of my brainstorms (OK, so maybe
- that's pushing it, but it was more than braindrizzle), the scheme
- fell by the wayside, never to be implemented. The mainframe folks
- probably would have hated me for it anyway.
-
- Obviously someone at the University of Utah had the same idea, but
- being slightly brighter than I, decided to implement it with Unix
- machines and custom software. Succinctly named Dump (in the spirit
- of Unix, they probably wanted to call it du, but that's taken
- already), the program is a small MultiFinder program that talks to
- the Unix client programs (also supplied in source code) that
- actually perform the backups and restores. The Mac program
- synchronizes the Mac's clock to the Unix machines clock, and you
- can do full and incremental backups to whatever tape drive or
- other backup media you have for the Unix machine. The Macintosh
- program uses TCP, so you do need MacTCP from Apple (available from
- APDA) for this to work. If you've got the necessary network anyway
- but not MacTCP, you should probably get it because it provides
- useful services and works with programs such as NCSA Telnet,
- HyperFTP, and various NNTP servers.
-
- Since many implementations of Unix require a recompile for a
- program to work, the Unix client programs come only in source
- code. This also allows sites with complex backup needs to modify
- the code for their own purposes. Although the code is specifically
- designed for Unix, and the scripts that manage the backups are
- Unix shell scripts, you could theoretically write your own client
- programs on a non-Unix host that supports TCP/IP.
-
- Considering what this product will do for you, the price is quite
- reasonable at $200 for an educational site and $250 for all other
- sites. An educational site is a single campus, and all other sites
- are considered to be a single location or mailing address. As I
- said before, you do need MacTCP, along with a Mac running
- MultiFinder under System 6.0 or newer (I don't know what the
- compatibility status of MacTCP is with System 7 currently, but I
- know there are some problems and an upgrade is planned). You also
- get User, Installation, and Protocol Documentation, which is good,
- since I have the feeling that this set of programs requires a good
- bit of customization, for which documentation is essential.
-
- For general information and a copy of the license agreement
- contact:
-
- Loretta Cruse
- University of Utah
- Center for Software Science
- 3190 Merrill Engineering Building
- Salt Lake City, UT 84112
- 801/581-5017
- FAX: 801/581-5843
- cruse@cs.utah.edu
-
- For technical information, contact:
-
- Brian Sturgill
- 801/581-5591
- brian@cs.utah.edu
-
- APDA -- 800/282-2732 US -- 800/637-0029 CAN
- 408/562-3910 others
- APDA@applelink.apple.com
-
- Information from:
- Brian Sturgill -- brian%harpo@hellgate.utah.edu
-
-
- Reviews/08-Jul-91
- -----------------
-
- * InfoWorld
- High Speed Modems, pg. 51
- Hayes Ultra 96
- Intel 9600EX
- Microcom QX/4232hs
- Motorola Codex 3260
- NEC N9635E
- Practical Modem 9600SA
- Prometheus ProModem Ultima
- UDS Fastalk MarFeb-42 bis
- USR Courier V.32bis
- Motorola Altair, pg. 60
- Seiko Label Printer Plus, pg. 61
- Avery Personal Label Printer, pg. 61
- dBase IV Runtime Plus, pg. 61
-
- References:
- InfoWorld -- 01-Jul-91, Vol. 13, #26
-
-
- ..
-
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