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- TidBITS#96/25-Nov-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
- of articles. Publication, product, and company names may be
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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/25-Nov-91
- TidBITS Schedule
- School Software
- SCSI Plugging
- Reviews/25-Nov-91
-
-
- MailBITS/25-Nov-91
- ------------------
- This is important! The refund for MODE32 from Apple ends on 31-
- Dec-91, so if you haven't sent in for your $100 refund, you should
- send your original disk to Apple at the following address. If you
- wait too long, too bad on you. You could return the disk, get your
- refund and buy a share or two of Apple stock. That way you can
- continue supporting Apple without passing up your $100.
-
- Apple Computer, Inc.
- Customer Assistance Center, MS-73P
- 20525 Mariani Avenue
- Cupertino, CA 95014
-
- Mark Nagata commented on our recent SFDIaloger comparison (in
- TidBITS#93). He mentioned that some utilities, at least the
- CEToolbox/DiskTop combination and Suitcase II (for DA launching)
- remember the last folder used and put you in that folder no matter
- where the application or DA launched may reside. That's true, and
- it's an extremely helpful feature of these utilities. We didn't
- include them in the review, because the way they modify the
- SFDialog is completely transparent to the user (and because we
- hadn't thought of them). The only other comment we received came
- from Edward Reid, who mentioned that some of Super Boomerang's
- controls must be accessed from the Control Panel, whereas others
- are available in the SFDialog. That split can be a little
- confusing at times, and we forgot about it because once you set
- the Control Panel, you're unlikely to go back there all that
- often.
-
- Povl H. Pedersen writes: "You can make your copy of Nisus read
- MacWrite II files (I can even read DOS WordPerfect 5.0 files and a
- lot more). If you keep the option key pressed while selecting
- Open... Nisus will use the Claris XTND technology if it is
- installed. And the good news is that there is a XTND Developer
- package available at ftp.apple.com that includes XTND and filters
- for MacWrite **and** MacWrite II. It's in the /dts/mac/tools/xtnd
- directory, but it's big, about 520K. The XTND file must be in a
- folder named 'Claris' inside the System Folder, and all
- translators goes into the 'Claris Translators' folder inside the
- 'Claris' folder." [This trick works in 3.06; I can't comment on
- previous versions. I think more translators are available from
- third parties like DataViz.]
-
- In the "Oops" department this week, we've heard that Microsoft
- sent out a letter about upgrading Word to a bunch of customers.
- This letter listed an 800 number that people could call, but the
- number listed goes to a consultant who's a tad displeased to be
- receiving a lot of calls from Word users, especially since he pays
- for every call. It sounds like a Freudian slip for a company that
- has eschewed toll-free support for so long.
-
- Information from:
- Mark Nagata -- nagata@kurims.kyoto-u.ac.jp
- Povl H. Pedersen -- ECO861771@ecostat.aau.dk
- Edward Reid -- ed@titipu.meta.com
-
-
- TidBITS Schedule
- ----------------
- As many of you who have been reading TidBITS for some time know,
- we've been working on some heavy-duty vaporware - the promised new
- format. I hate making the same excuses over and over again, so
- I've decided to set the record straight.
-
- TidBITS#100, which will be the first issue of 1992, will be issued
- in the new structure enhanced text format (called "setext," but if
- anyone has a better suggestion let us know). If everything works
- out as I hope, that will be a special issue covering the new
- format, and it will include an extremely cool application designed
- by myself and Doug Davenport of SNAP Technologies in Ithaca, NY
- (Doug is doing 99% of the programming - I just did some of the
- ResEdit stuff). That browser will take over for the current brain-
- damaged stack and will provide far more power in terms of
- searching and selecting articles of interest. The TidBITS issues
- will be much smaller, needless to say, and will be easier to break
- up. In a truly ideal world, we would also include a HyperCard
- utility for converting your current TidBITS Archive into a text
- format that the browser will import, along with a utility for
- creating your own setexts and a new HyperCard stack for those
- people who wish to continue using HyperCard. In the issue would be
- specs on the new format (which will be completely and totally
- open) so anyone can write an application or macro on any computer
- platform to import and export files in the setext format.
-
- You may have noticed a certain amount of waffling in the above
- grandiose promises. That's because like the text in TidBITS each
- week, all of this comes to you courtesy of several volunteers, one
- of whom is currently in the throes of massive hardware failures.
- These programs and utilities have been star-crossed from the very
- start, it seems, running afoul of two or three complete and utter
- hard drive crashes (one without a backup of the last few days of
- important work), a dead Mac that has yet to be replaced, and a
- nasty illness. But despite all of this bad luck, the new format
- has been far too long in the making, so TidBITS#100 will be a text
- file if I have to hand-code it myself. I hope to have some complex
- Nisus macros do the job for me instead, but if not, too bad on me.
-
- The practical upshot of this message is that you can depend on
- TidBITS#100 appearing in text format, but I may not be able to
- ship the associated utilities and programs along with it. They
- will follow as soon as possible if they miss the initial ship
- date. However, since our the setext format is completely human-
- readable while still retaining internal structure and typography,
- unlike Microsoft's RTF format, which is almost completely
- unreadable, you will be able to read TidBITS in whatever program
- you desire. I suspect many people will scan through the issue in a
- newsreader or in their email program on whatever platform they use
- to connect to the nets. For those of you who wish to keep the
- issues for later reference (about half, if the numbers from last
- year's survey are any indication), I'd recommend downloading the
- file and reading it in Nisus or TeachText or any other program
- that can open a TEXT file. If you wish to create your own
- database, try either Eastgate Systems's excellent hypertext
- editor, Storyspace, or the textbase ThoughtPattern from Bananafish
- Software. Both should be able to import and split up the issues
- into their component articles. I'm sure most normal database
- programs could do the job too.
-
- I'm sure that many of you will wish to create your own special
- programs, stacks, and shells to read and store TidBITS as you
- specifically want. I've received tons of suggestions and numerous
- enhanced versions of the current stack over the last year and a
- half, and I doubt that tide will slow down. This time, however,
- I'd like to ask that you do not send me a copy of your program
- until you've seen and included support for the setext format
- (which will take care of special character substitution, word
- wrapping, typographical styles, multiple user-defined fonts,
- etc.). At that point, I'd love to see anything you've got, no
- matter what platform it runs on, be it Macintosh, DOS PC, Windows
- PC, Unix, Emacs, NeXT, or whatnot. As a matter of fact, I hope to
- see lots of different readers popping up as the boundless
- creativity and energy of the network community comes into play. If
- space and bandwidth permit, I will also make _all_ of the good
- readers available on the fileserver for anyone to request.
-
- Speaking of the fileserver at fileserver@tidbits.halcyon.com,
- thanks to all of you who've sent in listings of local bulletin
- boards that carry TidBITS. The file is now up on the server with
- the Subject: line keyword "bbs" (without the quotes, of course).
- So far we've got six boards listed, and I hear about more every
- day. That file will continue to change as I add listings, so I've
- created a new file, called "news" that notes any changes on the
- fileserver (along with the effective date) and includes the latest
- news about TidBITS in general. Do remember that those of you on
- CompuServe can send mail to the fileserver using the following
- address format:
-
- >INTERNET:fileserver@tidbits.uucp
-
- and people on AppleLink can try this address format:
-
- fileserver@tidbits.uucp@internet#
-
- Those of you on America Online, GEnie, Delphi, and stand-alone
- bulletin board systems will have to lobby with the administrators
- of those services for a gateway to the Internet. I doubt Prodigy
- would even want TidBITS anywhere near it.
-
- The more astute among you will have noticed that this is
- TidBITS#96, and I've promised that TidBITS#100 will be the first
- issue in 1992. That means that I will be taking a couple of weeks
- off here and there in what is left of 1991 to make the numbers
- work out. For starters, there will be no issue for 02-Dec-91 since
- it closely follows the US holiday of Thanksgiving and I have some
- serious cooking to do. 09-Dec-91 and 16-Dec-91 will probably come
- out as usual, and I'm working on a special issue that covers tips,
- tricks, trivia, and heavy duty power user hacks relating to System
- 7. After those two weekly issues and that special issue, I'll be
- taking some time off for Christmas and to rest up. Oh, if you're
- counting, we would have to hit 104 issues by the first week in
- April of 1992 to average one issue per week over the last two
- years. At the rate we're going now, we should make that number in
- mid-January, well ahead of that schedule.
-
- As always, thank you for your continued enthusiasm and moral
- support.
-
- Cheers... Adam C. Engst, TidBITS Editor
-
-
- School Software
- ---------------
- by Kieran O'Connor
-
- I'm a high school teacher in Cortland, N.Y. One of the things I
- use my Mac for is to help me do my grading, and to help me prepare
- things for class. Two programs my school has bought upon my
- recommendation are Grade Machine, by Misty City Software, and
- CrossMaster, by Focus Development Corp. I'll talk about each of
- them briefly.
-
- Grade Machine by
- Misty City Software
- 10921 129th Place
- Kirkland, WA 98033
- 206/828-3107
- 71571.607@compuserve.com
-
- Price: 79.95, coupon price 69.95 (you can also get this price by
- mentioning an ad in Teacher Magazine). Department and school
- licenses are available and are based on staff size.
-
- I've used three grade managing programs: Apple's freebie which
- comes bundled with "Educator's HyperCard," Teacher's Rollbook from
- Current Class Productions, and Misty City's Grade Machine. I have
- found that Grade Machine has the most versatility and produces the
- best reports.
-
- One thing that I looked for in a grading program was the ability
- to separate my grades into different categories, tests, quizzes,
- and homework, for instance, and then have the program calculate
- grades based on a weight that I give to each category. Grade
- Machine does this. It also allows me to give a weight to any
- assignment within a category, so that I can count any assignment
- at a higher weight than another. Teacher's Rollbook 2.2 and
- Educator's HyperCard do not do this, perhaps because these
- programs are not written by teachers.
-
- You put each class into its own file. Then when you want to print
- out reports, you choose a "style" for that particular report. The
- "styles" are essentially a report template - they do not alter the
- class file in any way but only manipulate the data for printing.
- For example, I have three styles: bulletin board style, individual
- style and report card style. The bulletin board style prints a
- report with all grades for all assignments. It prints sideways,
- and only includes ID numbers, no names. I post this in my class
- each Monday. The individual style prints a report for the student
- to look at with his/her parents. It lists all assignments and the
- associated grade, and also includes category and overall grade.
- The report card style is for my use. It prints category grades for
- all the kids, and also prints a class average and final grade for
- each student.
-
- Grade Machine will also print out attendance charts with the
- students names and a blank grid listing the days of the week for
- about 8 weeks. It can be used to keep track of attendance.
- Attendance is not kept with the class file, but is done separately
- on paper. I have used a program called Teacher's Rollbook which
- includes an attendance feature. However I find this to be some
- useless since I don't, nor do many other teachers, have a computer
- at my desk. This attendance sheet could also be used to manually
- record grades for later entry into the Mac. It provides a nice
- grid with the kids names and small boxes for each student.
-
- I find Grade Machine to be very helpful. I can print reports for
- any student or parent who asks for one. The styles allow me to
- keep a "setup" for each type of report I like to print, so I don't
- have to constantly change this every time I use it. This program
- will work for college professors, as well as high school teachers.
- You specify the grading scale to use, whether it be letter
- (A,B,C,D,F), grade point (3.0, 4.0, etc.) or just out of 100 like
- most high schools do.
-
- Misty City's customer service is excellent. I called them on
- Easter expecting to have to leave a message. The guy who wrote the
- program answered and basted his turkey as he spoke with me about a
- question I had. Our school bought a department license for $130,
- and there are school licenses available too. Misty City also has
- IBM and Apple II versions of the program if you are at a mixed
- platform site as is the case at many schools.
-
- I give it 7.5 penguins. I think the program is easy to use and
- fairly well arranged. It does take a little digging to figure out
- how to get at some of the more "sexy" features. It will give a lot
- of information if you want it: class averages, standard
- deviations, graphs of just about anything and more info than you
- might even need.
-
- The second program I am reviewing is CrossMaster, by Focus
- Development.
-
- Focus Development
- 903 SW 43rd St. #202
- Fargo, N.D. 58103
-
- Price: $79.00
-
- This program will do two things: allow you to write crossword
- puzzles, and allow you to solve them on the Mac. I generally use
- them for the former and not the latter.
-
- I use all my crossword puzzles for the kids I teach. I have eighth
- graders and they eat them up! I take questions from material I've
- covered and then put them into a crossword puzzle. About thirty
- questions will take the kids 40 minute to do. I often make puzzles
- for test review.
-
- To create a crossword puzzle, you enter clues and answers into
- CrossMaster's editor. After entering all the words you tell the
- program to generate the puzzle, a task which takes about 3
- seconds. You can also have the program read a word list from any
- word processor, as long as it was saved as a text file.
-
- A puzzle can be anywhere from five to thirty rows, and five to
- thirty columns. The program allows you set many things such as the
- location of the puzzle on the printed page, the number of clue
- columns, the font for clues, the shading of the puzzle, the name
- of the title and many other items.
-
- If you are the sort that just likes to solve the puzzles right
- away, you can solve puzzles on the screen, without having to print
- out a hard copy. The program will optionally beep if you put in
- the wrong word. I tend not to use this because I prepare puzzles
- for class and I don't have a Mac for each student! :-)
-
- I've found one big drawback to this program. Some of the fonts are
- set to Geneva, especially the title fonts. I use a Hewlett-Packard
- DeskWriter, and since Geneva is not one of the resident fonts, it
- doesn't print out well. [Though TrueType might help here. -Adam]
- Overall I find it easy to use and easy to customize your puzzles
- so that they look good.
-
- There is a page layout feature which allows you to set a bunch of
- things. You can set the positioning of the puzzle grid on the page
- - top, bottom, center, top-left, top-right - etc. You can also
- tell the program how many rows of clues you want. I usually play
- with a bunch of combinations of clue columns to try to get the
- puzzle on one page so I don't have to duplicate extra pages for
- the kids. If you have too many clues, it will put them on a second
- page.
-
- I give it 7.5 penguins. I've used CrossWord Magic, a competing
- product, a few times and I would rate CrossMaster higher for two
- reasons. The most important reason is that you can do a lot of the
- layout features with CrossMaster that you can't do with Crossword
- Magic. You also can't set the puzzle grid size in Crossword Magic
- as you can with CrossMaster. This is important because it allows
- you to make really nice puzzles where a lot of the answers
- intersect. Crossword Magic sets the size and sometimes the puzzles
- come out one answer on the left, and one answer on the right,
- instead of a nice compact puzzle.
-
- On a final note, the Grade Machine developer will accept purchase
- orders from school districts, while the CrossMaster developer will
- not.
-
- Information from:
- Kieran O'Connor -- oconnor@snycorva.bitnet
-
-
- SCSI Plugging
- -------------
- The indefatigable Murph Sewall passed on these bits of information
- about connecting SCSI devices when the power is on (don't do it!).
-
- In response to my question about the risk of connecting or
- disconnecting a SCSI device without bothering to shut down, one
- person says they've done it from time to time and had a fuse blow
- once, possibly as a consequence. Another person said they
- disconnected an externally-terminated Ethernet SCSI device and had
- an immediate loss of hard drive response until shutting down
- (which took five minutes) and restarting. Four people were pretty
- sure it's a bad idea without really knowing why.
-
- I did get one pretty good explanation which has convinced me to
- stop switching ADB devices around on live Macs as well. I asked
- Doug Larrick if I could pass what he told me along, and he said I
- could as long as everyone understands: "I speak not for my
- employer. All I have said here is from my own personal experience
- and knowledge of electrical and computer engineering (hey, that
- _is_ what my degree is in :-) ); it is not the "official word" on
- anything."
-
- Herewith, the "unofficial word" from Doug Larrick:
-
- RS-232 [although of course, the Mac uses RS-422] has spoiled so
- many people it's amazing. That standard was designed specifically
- so that you could hook all the wires together at both ends and not
- hurt anything, with the consequence that you can connect and
- disconnect those cables at will with all the equipment powered on.
-
- SCSI and the ADB are different beasts, however. Damage can occur
- when you make and break the connections. What typically happens is
- that the pins make contact at different times, and electricity
- flows the wrong way in some circuits on one end or the other,
- blowing them out. The worst-case scenario is that the reference
- power lines get connected last, so all the receivers get fried.
-
- [Editor's note: If I remember correctly, frying the ADB, which
- some have done and others can't believe is possible, results in
- having to replace the motherboard unless you have a local wizard
- who can do component-level repair. I personally have plugged and
- unplugged ADB devices with the Mac on, but I don't generally
- recommend the practice. -Adam]
-
- Now granted, there's some leeway here (it's heat that does the
- damage, and it takes a while for the heat to build up to the
- damage point), and I've been successful in occasionally
- transferring ADB devices around, but I wouldn't try it with SCSI -
- too many pins to try to connect all at once, too much potential
- for expensive damage. I did manage to fry a Sun keyboard by
- unplugging it and plugging it back in.
-
- Dave Platt adds, "If you accidentally short the TERMPWR line to
- ground, when connecting or disconnecting a live SCSI cable, you
- will blow a fuse in each device which is providing terminator
- power. If this happens, external terminators will no longer
- function."
-
- Information from:
- Doug Larrick -- larrick@cadsys.enet.dec.com
- Dave Platt -- dplatt@ntg.com
- Murph Sewall -- SEWALL@UCONNVM.UCONN.EDU
-
-
- Reviews/25-Nov-91
- -----------------
-
- * MacWEEK 05-Nov-91
- Hewlett-Packard ScanJet IIc, pg. 45
- Oracle Card for Macintosh, pg. 45
- CoStar LabelWriter II, pg. 46
- SwivelArt, pg. 50
- DB/Write, pg. 51
-
- * MacWEEK 12-Nov-91
- Apple OneScanner and Ofoto, pg. 49
- DayMaker, pg. 49
- Shiva NetModem/E, pg. 50
- Aldus SuperPaint 3.0, pg. 54
- netOctopus, pg. 55
-
- * MacWEEK 19-Nov-91
- Apple Quadra 700 & 900, pg. 53
- Apple LaserWriter IIf & IIg, pg. 53
- Print Central, pg. 55
- PacerForum, pg. 56
- PSI COMstation 4, pg. 56
-
- References:
- MacWEEK -- 05-Nov-91, Vol. 5, #38
- MacWEEK -- 12-Nov-91, Vol. 5, #39
- MacWEEK -- 19-Nov-91, Vol. 5, #40
-
-
- ..
-
- This text is encoded in the setext format. Please send email to
- <info@tidbits.uucp> or contact us at one of the above addresses
- to learn how to get more information on the setext format.
-