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- TidBITS#155/07-Dec-92
- =====================
-
- Three reviews this week, one of an upgrade to the excellent Easy
- View browser for TidBITS and other text files, one of Aldus's
- powerful new IntelliDraw package, and one of Craig O'Donnell's
- bodacious book, Cool Mac Sounds. Short notes on Apple's massive
- order backlog, the missing Omega SANE, QuickTime 1.5, a
- potential problem with the Duos, and a conflict between XPress
- 3.0 and the HP DeskWriter 550C round out the issue. Look for
- game reviews next week!
-
-
- This issue of TidBITS sponsored in part by:
-
- * Nisus Software -- 800/922-2993 x305 -- paragon@weber.ucsd.edu
- For info on Nisus or QUED/M contact us. Updates now shipping!
-
- For detailed information on Nisus Software and their products,
- please send email to <sponsors@tidbits.com>. To receive all
- this information in one file, send email to <nisus-all@tidbits.com>.
-
- 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. Caveat lector. Publication, product, and company
- names may be registered trademarks of their companies. Disk
- subscriptions and back issues are available - email for details.
-
- 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/07-Dec-92
- Eternal Optimism
- Quick QuickTime Comments
- Omega SANE Apparently Gone
- Easy View 2.22
- IntelliDraw Review
- Sounding Off
- Reviews/07-Dec-92
-
- [Archived as /info-mac/digest/tb/tidbits-155.etx; 29K]
-
-
- MailBITS/07-Dec-92
- ------------------
- Please note that this is the last week Nisus Software is
- sponsoring TidBITS. If you want Nisus's files from our fileserver,
- snag them before 14-Dec-92. Once again, to get an index of
- individual files, send email to <sponsors@tidbits.com> and to
- receive all the files in one chunk, send email to
- <nisus-all@tidbits.com>. I hope you find the information
- useful - I certainly did.
-
-
- Duo Warning
- Murph Sewall passes on a tale of caution. "I recently heard of a
- Duo user whose daughter threw "something" (apparently the System
- Enabler extension) away. Oops! The Duo no longer will start up.
- Since there are no Duo Docks and no floppy adapters available, the
- only way to fix it at the moment is to mail the Duo back to
- Apple." [The moral of the story is to make frequent backups via
- File Sharing and be careful with things that might corrupt the
- System file until you have a Duo Dock, MiniDock, or floppy
- adapter. -Adam]
-
- Information from:
- Murph Sewall -- sewall@uconnvm.uconn.edu
-
-
- QuarkXPress and DeskWriter 550C
- Mark H Anbinder writes. "Those of you who are thinking about
- buying yourselves a gift of a Hewlett-Packard DeskWriter 550C this
- holiday season should first check your software arsenal. HP has
- recently discovered, with our help, an incompatibility between the
- DeskWriter 550C driver and QuarkXPress 3.0. Quark confirmed the
- problem and said testing showed the current version, XPress 3.1,
- is fully compatible."
-
- Information from:
- Mark H. Anbinder, Contributing Editor
-
-
- Eternal Optimism
- ----------------
- People drooling over new Macintosh models, or even some of the
- older Macs, may be frothing with frustration right now. Apple has
- massive backorders on a large number of models. The lack of supply
- has a number of reasons, including unexpected demand and downright
- poor planning on Apple's part. In Apple's defense, some backlog
- stems from inability to get parts, such as those low-yield,
- active-matrix screens.
-
- Luckily for Apple, they have no competition - if you want a Mac
- you'll wait. You're unlikely to buy a Windows machine, whereas
- PC-clone buyers would quickly jump ship to a competitor. If Apple
- plans to pump new models out every six months, they have to make
- the machines available. Otherwise customers see another form of
- vaporware, call it trickleware, because only a few lucky (or
- unlucky, depending on early quirks) souls manage to buy these
- machines.
-
- We've received a list of Macintoshes that Apple expects to be in
- good supply through the end of the year. If something is NOT on
- this list, then figure that your chances of buying one within the
- next month are slim. The PowerBooks and Duos in particular will be
- in limited supply. The optimism in providing a list of available
- products is interesting (or perhaps merely desperation mixed with
- frustration, since Apple loses big bucks by not having products
- available during December). More interesting for those who want a
- machine in stock is that you may get a special deal on these
- models since Apple wants to sell in-stock machines rather than
- take orders for trickleware.
-
- Macintosh LC II 4/floppy w/256K VRAM
- Macintosh LC II 4/40 w/keyboard
- Macintosh LC II 4/40 w/keyboard (System 6)
- Macintosh LC II 4/80 w/VRAM but no keyboard
- Macintosh LC II 4/160 w/VRAM but no keyboard
- Macintosh IIsi 3/40
- Macintosh IIsi 5/80
- Macintosh IIsi 5/160
- Macintosh IIci 5/SuperDrive (w/cache)
- Macintosh IIci 5/80 (w/cache)
- Macintosh IIci 5/230 (w/cache)
- Macintosh IIvx 4/230
- Macintosh Quadra 700 4/SuperDrive
- Macintosh Quadra 700 4/80
- Macintosh Quadra 700 4/230
- Macintosh Quadra 700 4/400
- LaserWriter NTR
- LaserWriter IIf
- LaserWriter IIg
-
- Information from:
- Pythaeus
-
- Related articles:
- MacWEEK -- 07-Dec-92, Vol. 6, #43, pg. 1
-
-
- Quick QuickTime Comments
- ------------------------
- by John Baxter -- jwbaxter@halcyon.com
-
- According to Gary Woodcock and Casey King writing in "develop"
- issue 12, the Component Manager has migrated from QuickTime to
- System 7.1, although it's still present in QuickTime 1.5 so that
- QuickTime can use it on older Systems. Components can be used
- independently of QuickTime starting with System 7.1. This provides
- a new way to do plug-in code and will be faster than Apple events.
-
- The QuickTime-aware scrapbook which comes with QuickTime 1.5 still
- leaves stranded 'alis' (alias) records in the Scrapbook file when
- you paste a movie (or movie segment) into the scrapbook and later
- delete it. The buggy QuickTime-aware beta Scrapbook which came
- with QuickTime 1.0 did the same thing. I'm surprised it wasn't
- fixed. This isn't a major problem, since 'alis' objects are fairly
- small, and you only notice them in ResEdit, but it's annoying.
-
- Users should also avoid copying a piece of a movie from a movie
- file on a removable volume and pasting it into the QuickTime-aware
- Scrapbook. If you do this, and the Scrapbook wishes to display the
- "frame" containing the movie, it will harass you to mount the
- needed volume. That's particularly annoying if you close the
- scrapbook with a movie as the current scrapbook frame, dismount
- the movie's volume, then later reopen the Scrapbook. That sequence
- led to the first time I've had my Mac eject a CD-ROM and ask for a
- different one. If you must copy movie snippets into the scrapbook
- from removable volumes, I suggest that you put them towards the
- end of the scrapbook and remember to select some other scrapbook
- frame before closing the scrapbook. The movies then won't trip you
- up as often. However, it is good, not bad, that the Scrapbook
- pastes movies by reference rather than by copying the whole
- thing... a few movies would quickly eat up the whole startup disk.
-
- Apple says that movie playback performance from CD-ROM is much
- better in QuickTime 1.5 than in 1.0. They are NOT kidding... the
- difference is dramatic. On my IIci, I no longer feel the need to
- copy the movie from CD to hard disk before playing it. And that's
- with old movies, not ones compressed with QuickTime 1.5 's better
- compressor. Admittedly, some movies from the QuickTime 1.0 CD that
- recommend playing from a hard disk don't play correctly under
- QuickTime 1.5, although that may also be related to my old Apple
- CD drive.
-
-
- Omega SANE Apparently Gone
- --------------------------
- Those of you who want every last drop of performance may be
- interested to know that System 7.1 may run slower than 7.0.1 on
- certain Macs - notably the IIci and later machines that have an
- FPU (floating point unit, also known as a math coprocessor). This
- stems from the removal in System 7.1 of the Omega SANE (Standard
- Apple Numeric Environment), a "scary hack" included only in System
- 7.0.1 that increases speed by bypassing certain routines.
- Apparently, Apple removed the Omega SANE routines from System 7.1
- to improve future compatibility with the RISC-based PowerPC
- platform that will differ significantly from the 680x0-based
- Macintosh platform.
-
-
- BYTE results
- by Tom Thompson, BYTE Senior Tech Editor at Large
-
- To confirm rumors that Apple removed Omega SANE from System 7.1,
- the BYTE Lab ran its low-level benchmark tests on a Mac IIci
- configured to run either version of the Mac OS. You'll recall that
- Omega SANE does some scary patching that lets Mac applications
- bypass most of the Trap Dispatcher when making calls to the SANE
- library. By eliminating the Trap Dispatcher's overhead, floating-
- point performance improves dramatically on Macs equipped with
- FPUs. With Omega SANE removed, expect the floating-point
- performance on these Macs to drop.
-
- The IIci had System 7.0.1 with Tune-Up 1.1.1 loaded on an internal
- drive, and System 7.1 from the October Developer's CD loaded on an
- external drive. Either OS could be run by changing the Startup
- Disk Control Panel setting. The Shift key was held down at boot
- time to prevent Extension and Control Panel INIT code from
- loading. These results come from a beta version of a new set of
- Mac low-level benchmarks being written at BYTE. The FPU tests use
- SANE calls exclusively to do computations.
-
- The CPU benchmark times are included as a "sanity check" on the
- computer and the OS. The Matrix and Sort times are higher, because
- they also use math functions. Interestingly, the Move Byte test
- posts a slower time, even though the test simply moves data
- strings about in memory. (No, I don't have an explanation for
- that.)
-
- As you can see from the results in the table, floating-point
- performance is definitely lower under System 7.1. We can conclude
- that Omega SANE is absent.
-
-
- System 7.0.1* System 7.1
- CPU tests
- Matrix 11.15 11.86
- Move Byte 51.57 52.55
- Move Word 26.94 26.93
- Move Longword 14.65 14.65
- Sieve 5.16 5.17
- Sort 6.17 6.25
-
- FPU tests
- Math 32.39 81.78
- Sin(x) 9.68 40.54
- e^x 9.95 54.48
-
-
- System: Mac IIci with 8 MB RAM, 80 MB hard disk, and equipped with
- SuperMac Thunder/24 display board and monitor. Times are in
- seconds. AppleTalk was off, and Extensions/Control Panels were not
- loaded.
-
- Information from:
- Tom Thompson -- tomt@bytepb.byte.com
-
-
- Other machines
- [back to me again... -Adam]
-
- In an independent look into the performance differences between
- System 7.0.1 and System 7.1, Mel Martinez collected Speedometer
- reports from various Mac models - the LC, the IIci, the PowerBook
- 170, and the Quadra 700. Here are Math results from Mel's report,
- which he posted in full on <sumex-aim.stanford.edu> as:
-
- info-mac/report/sys71_vs_70_speed.txt
-
-
- System 7.0.1* System 7.1
- Machine
- Macintosh LC 4.115 4.125
- Macintosh IIci 19.848 10.153
- PowerBook 170 22.456 22.162
- Quadra 700 100.918 102.203
-
- A Macintosh Classic is 1.0, so each number shows how that machine
- compares to a Classic. Note that the LC has no FPU at all.
-
- Interestingly, although the IIci's numbers bear out Tom's results,
- neither the Quadra 700 nor the PowerBook 170 were affected. Tom
- confirmed that the Quadra line has Omega SANE in its ROMs, but we
- hadn't previously heard about the 170. I wonder if the IIfx falls
- in the same category as the IIci?
-
- Although the IIci benchmarks seem alarming, keep in mind that in
- normal use you probably won't notice much difference. The FPU
- comes into play only with math-intensive applications such as
- spreadsheet work, math packages like Mathematica and DataDesk, and
- engineering applications such as simulations and CAD. Adobe
- Photoshop also uses the FPU, at least when you start manipulating
- images, especially with filters. Most common applications probably
- won't use the sort of mathematical functions internally that hit
- the FPU.
-
- Information from:
- Dieder Bylsma -- bylsma@unixg.ubc.ca
- Mel Martinez -- mem@jhufos.pha.jhu.edu
-
-
- Easy View 2.22
- --------------
- Akif Eyler recently released Easy View 2.22, a nice upgrade from
- version 2.1. Easy View 2.22 is a free program that indexes text
- files located in the same folder as the index document, and then
- allows you to browse and search through the set of files. Since
- Easy View supports the setext format we use for TidBITS, it is
- ideal for browsing through back issues. Easy View's unusual method
- of indexing the files (rather than creating its own data file
- containing all the text) means you get quick access to the files,
- a small index document, and no chance of being able to damage or
- modify one of the original files.
-
- Foremost among Easy View's new features is the ability to deal
- with more types of structured text files, most notably CompuServe
- Navigator archives, basic Internet email (Easy View works well
- with mailboxes created by ICE Engineering's uAccess UUCP mail
- program), and even RICEMAIL NOTEBOOKs for those of you still using
- CMS machines.
-
- If you want to index a file type not included with Easy View, you
- can define your own, although it's not a trivial process, and you
- may have to ask Akif for help. Still, the capability is there.
-
- Another functional addition to the program is simple printing,
- although I must admit to not having used this yet. I seldom print
- and prefer to keep things online - that's why I like Easy View in
- the first place! Akif also added a "Set Bookmark" command to the
- Navigation menu to make it easy to flip to another place.
-
- Although Easy View hasn't changed its look much, Akif improved its
- interface and appearance. First, you can now resize the panes that
- hold the issue names, article names, and article text fields with
- the mouse, as you would expect in a Macintosh application. Second,
- you can modify the font and size of the text via new Font and Size
- menus.
-
- Easy View 2.22 may not appear to be a tremendous upgrade, but the
- ability to deal with more file formats makes it a must-have
- upgrade for everyone who used Easy View 2.1. And, at $0.00, the
- price is right. Once again, thanks to Akif for a job well done!
-
- Last week, I distributed the file to the Internet (at sumex in the
- /apps directory), CompuServe (in MACAPP) ZiffNet/Mac (in
- ZMC:DOWNTECH), and America Online (in the Macintosh Hardware Forum
- file libraries [MHW]). Please feel free to redistribute to other
- sites so everyone can upgrade.
-
- Information from:
- Akif Eyler -- eyler@trbilun.bitnet
-
-
- IntelliDraw Review
- ------------------
- by Richard Lim, Bristol University, UK -- RTL@siva.bris.ac.uk
-
- The world is full of symmetry, so all students of elementary
- mathematics are rightly told. It is also full of connections, as
- anyone can discover (if they didn't know already) by doing a few
- perspective drawings and changing the viewing point - connected
- objects clearly must remain so .
-
- The folks at Silicon "SuperPaint" Beach Software took these two
- facts to heart in designing the centerpiece tools of Aldus's
- much-touted new drawing package, IntelliDraw ($200 discounted).
- It's an indication of Aldus's esteem for the Symmetrigon and
- Connectigon tools that they've gone to the trouble of trademarking
- them. The Symmetrigon allows fast creation of objects with
- specified mirror or radial symmetries - it easily draws seven-
- pointed stars or fancy pinwheels and lets you spin them around!
- The Connectigon, used in conjunction with a variety of line
- connector elements, enables you to draw one face of a three-
- dimensional object and attach the other faces to the edges of the
- first. You can stretch or slant the resulting drawing to your
- heart's content - what started out as a cube might become the
- Empire State Building, but all faces remain correctly connected.
-
- IntelliDraw would be worth it for these ground-breaking tools
- alone; in fact I reckon it will soon be hard to imagine how older
- drawing packages felt complete without them. Not content with this
- achievement, Silicon Beach threw in not only the standard plethora
- of full-featured drawing tools but also a great deal of
- convenience and intuition as well. For instance, arcs created with
- the arc tool flip between detached curves and pie wedges at a
- double-click. A double-click on most other objects toggles between
- the so-called reshape and resize modes, so you can adjust the
- contours of an object one minute and rescale it the next. Keyboard
- modifiers also enable you to switch actions effortlessly. Holding
- Command down when clicking with one of the polygon tools produces
- a curve rather than a corner, while holding Shift down in the
- Object menu allows you to move objects by one layer rather than
- right to the front or back.
-
- The program looks and feels like a typical Aldus product, much
- like PageMaker or FreeHand - it initially presents you with a
- scalable page view and a set of floating palettes. If you like 3-D
- buttons, look elsewhere, but IntelliDraw's tool palette has at
- least been colored, making the tools look more inviting than the
- weedy ones in Canvas 3. Silicon Beach, conscious of the fact that
- IntelliDraw's new tools and features require some explanation,
- thoughtfully provided an Info palette, a movable window that
- automatically displays the excellent and comprehensive balloon
- help messages provided. The Fills palette is impressively easy to
- edit - if you liked the rainbow gradients in MacDraw Pro, rest
- assured you can do all those things here. The Lines palette allows
- the creation of lines with varying thicknesses, continuities
- (unbroken, dotted, dotted and dashed, you name it) and endpoints
- (arrows and assorted lumpy terminations are child's play).
-
- While these and other palettes make life considerably easier for
- the budding and experienced artist alike, one of IntelliDraw's
- most convenient features has to be its automatic alignment
- capabilities. With Auto Align on, guidelines magically pop into
- view when the centers or edges of objects are properly lined up,
- so you can plop everything neatly into place alongside or centered
- on one another. Having achieved the arrangement you want, you can
- keep everything that way using another feature called,
- unsurprisingly, Keep Aligned. It all works very well, and the
- manual provides well-thought-out exercises designed to help you
- master the basics of the program quickly.
-
- IntelliDraw's talent for symmetry, connectivity, and alignment
- means it will be especially useful to technical or scientific
- illustrators. To underline this point, Silicon Beach included a
- feature with which you create libraries of frequently-used symbols
- and objects - electronic circuitry quickly springs to mind as a
- potential application.
-
- If this gives the impression that IntelliDraw is the easiest and
- most powerful drawing package ever, well, it isn't quite that.
- While anyone with basic Macintosh competence will be up and
- running with IntelliDraw in no time, its sheer wealth of features
- (I haven't even touched on slide shows, charting, and simple
- animation) mean that you often have more than one way of doing
- things, and it's not always clear which is the most efficient. To
- put it another way, power and complexity often go hand-in-hand,
- and mastering as opposed to just coping with IntelliDraw requires
- effort. Neither are IntelliDraw's capabilities limitless. For
- example, I found it impossible to do a convincing solid cylinder
- using the Connectigon. It was the curved surface of the cylinder
- that caused me grief - if the cylinder is upright then this
- surface takes the form of two vertical lines for the sides and two
- half-oval curves at the top and bottom. Since the Connectigon is
- essentially a connected polygon tool (hence the name), and since
- ovals are effectively infinitely-many-sided polygons, you have no
- choice but to approximate the curved top and bottom edges of the
- cylinder using bezier curves. While you can make a reasonable stab
- at this, the result will not stretch accurately.
-
- This isn't to gainsay IntelliDraw's power. It's sufficiently
- capable that although IntelliDraw does not attempt to supplant
- FreeHand's PostScript capabilities, it will prove to be more than
- just a smart sidekick.
-
- IntelliDraw requires at least a 68020 processor and 2.3 MB of
- memory. It imports and exports PICT and EPS files and imports TIFF
- and text files. However the current version of IntelliDraw behaves
- in an unorthodox way when saving PICT files. If you import a PICT
- that contains a bitmapped image as opposed to objects, and save
- this as another PICT, you will most likely see a huge increase in
- file size. For example, a 100K screen dump turned into a 1 MB PICT
- file when saved from IntelliDraw, with no changes made! A source
- who has had contact with Aldus says this behavior arises because
- IntelliDraw also saves its own representation of the bitmap. This
- "feature" will become an option in a future upgrade. Polyglot
- artists (there must be some!) should also be warned that
- IntelliDraw does not appear to fully support the System 7.0 Script
- Manager; I have no idea how it would cope with WorldScript. While
- we're on the subject, IntelliDraw does not support QuickTime.
-
- IntelliDraw does support 24-bit color in RGB, CMYK, and HSB color
- systems and offers complete file interchange with its Windows
- counterpart, for whatever that's worth. It ships with a whopping
- 5.7 MB worth of well-constructed sample art and templates. Initial
- copies also include an instructional video and a colorful but
- fragile reference card.
-
- Others have expressed concern with IntelliDraw's speed, but it
- runs fine on my humble LC. Overall it seems somewhat faster than
- the more-expensive MacDraw Slow, sorry, Pro and offers much more
- functionality. Part of the concern may stem from the fact that
- IntelliDraw does things that no other graphics programs attempt,
- such as Auto Align, and indiscriminate use of certain features can
- significantly degrade performance, which is true in many powerful
- programs.
-
- Whether you're trying to discover latent artistic talent, or
- you're a professional who needs to refine and streamline drawing
- tasks, IntelliDraw is for you. Perhaps the best endorsement that I
- can make is that if you can only have one draw package on your
- Mac, IntelliDraw is a serious contender.
-
- [Richard Lim welcomes comments on this review, as well as on any
- Mac-related matters, at <RTL@siva.bris.ac.uk>.]
-
- Aldus Consumer Division
- 9770 Carroll Center Rd., Suite J
- San Diego, CA 92126-4551
- 619/695-6956 ext. 5302
- 619/695-7902 (fax)
- sbs.mktg@applelink.apple.com
-
-
- Sounding Off
- ------------
- by Tonya Engst, TidBITS Editor
-
- It's too bad more Macintosh users don't know how to play with
- sounds, because manipulating sounds using the Macintosh, while it
- may not help your company rake in the profits, can provide hours
- of entertainment, not to mention the occasional practical joke.
- Back in the old days I shared a student office with five other
- Cornellians and one Mac Plus. Two colleagues were named Dave, so
- we had fun rigging the Mac to beep, "I'm sorry Dave, I'm afraid I
- can't do that." Later we set up the Mac to say, "Stop smoking,
- Patti," but that's a different story. At any rate, Craig
- O'Donnell's Cool Mac Sounds ($19.95, Hayden Books, ISBN 0-672-
- 48253-0) offers a welcome introduction to Macintosh sounds.
-
- Craig lives in the world of sounds, and his book has an informal
- yet knowledgeable tone to it, as though he sat down one rainy
- Sunday afternoon and knocked off most of the rough draft. He has a
- fun way of succinctly expressing complicated topics: "In Resource
- City, resources are urbanites. Sound resources congregate inside
- structures - applications, stacks, and files. They're a busy
- bunch: When the System calls, resources respond, shoveling data
- bytes to the speaker to create a... sound."
-
- Cool Mac Sounds comes with a high-density floppy disk that
- contains sounds and software to get you started. Some of the
- software lets you work directly with the sounds; other programs
- use the sounds in various ways (like an alarm program). Craig
- explains how to use all of the software on the disk and how to use
- some software not included on the disk.
-
- The book starts with the basics: installing Arrgh - which makes
- random screaming noises, and MacPuke - the Mac makes retching
- noises when ejecting disks, though this didn't work with my
- PowerBook 100 floppy drive. Once you pass this juvenile stuff (a
- necessary phase, perhaps) Craig moves on to extensions that use
- sounds in some way, and continues on until he fulfils the early
- promise that the reader will "know enough to work creatively with
- sounds in HyperCard and to prepare sound clips to use in Apple's
- new QuickTime." (If you were wondering, Craig assumes you use
- System 6.0.7, 6.0.8, 7.0, or 7.0.1.)
-
- Craig explains the basic technical details about sound - wave
- forms, the difference between digital and analog, what you need to
- know about sampling, voltage, kilohertz, and the like. Craig tells
- it like it is with easily understood explanations and advice like,
- "Only dweebs call it digitized sound. Graphics are digitized -
- sounds are sampled. Got it? Good."
-
- Cool Mac Sounds has a chapter packed with information about what
- kinds of sounds the different Macintosh models put out, whether
- their internal speakers do mono or stereo sound, and how to attach
- each and every Macintosh (before Oct-92 Macs) to an external
- speaker and to headphones, complete with Radio Shack part numbers.
- Craig also briefly reviews several speakers that might be useful
- with the Macintosh. This information is hard to find, so those
- who need it will be glad for it.
-
- After providing sound tips and talking about more sophisticated
- software, Cool Mac Sounds winds down with "Cool Solutions to
- Uncool Problems." This chapter offers solutions to problems such
- as being unable to play System 7 sounds when double-clicking them;
- getting error -230 when opening the Sound CDEV; the Plus, SE, and
- Classic buzzing "like a bandsaw" when playing long sounds; and why
- the PowerBook makes a snapping sound. If you want to know the
- answers, you'll have to buy the book.
-
- Cool Mac Sounds is mandatory reading for any Macintosh user who
- always knew the Mac was supposed to be more fun than "other"
- computers, but never quite figured out why. It's also mandatory
- reading for anyone working the floor of an Apple dealership since
- sounds are one of the coolest parts of the Mac. For those of us
- who have figured out why the Macintosh is fun but never figured
- out the basic subtleties of using sounds, the book is definitely
- recommended. Cool Mac Sounds could also be used as a terrific
- textbook. Although some chapters aren't appropriate, I see a class
- of sixth graders having a blast with much of the software and
- ideas in the book.
-
- Hayden Books -- 800/428-5331 (orders) -- 317/573-2500
- 317/573-2583 (fax)
-
- Information from:
- Craig O'Donnell -- 72511.240@compuserve.com
-
-
- Reviews/07-Dec-92
- -----------------
-
- * MacUser -- Jan-93
- Microsoft Works 3.0 -- pg. 50
- cc:Mail 2.0 -- pg. 52
- Morph 1.0 -- pg. 54
- LetterPerfect 2.1 -- pg. 55
- MacroMind Director 3.1 -- pg. 56
- MacDraw Pro 1.5 -- pg. 58
- Canon CJ10 -- pg. 61
- CA-Cricket Graph III 4.0 -- pg. 72
- Special Delivery 1.0 -- pg. 76
- Numeric Keypad -- pg. 83
- NoteBook KeyPad -- pg. 83
- PowerPad -- pg. 83
- FastTrack Schedule -- pg. 83
- Headline Harry and the Great Paper Race -- pg. 85
- Shiva LanRover/L -- pg. 85
- Sixteen Inch Color Monitors -- pg. 104
- (too many to list)
- Network Rendering Programs -- pg. 130
- BackBurner
- RenderPro
- DreamNet
- OCR Software -- pg. 152
- (too many to list)
- 600-dpi Printers -- pg. 186
- LexMark IBM LaserPrinter 10A
- NewGen TurboPS/660
- Xante Accel-a-Writer 8000
-
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