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1992-12-09
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$$[0]
GENERAL
SETUP
SELECTORS
DIALOG BOXES
BUTTONS
TEXT WINDOWS
IMAGES
FILE TRANSFERS
#$[0]
$$[1]
ACCESS SCREEN
GETTING HELP
HELP WINDOW 1
HELP WINDOW 2
FILES & DIRECTORIES
DISCONNECTING
#$[1]
$$[2]
TERMINAL SETUP
ENTRY DESCRIPTION
USER ID/PASSWORD
BAUD RATE
COM PORT
CONNECT MEANS
PHONE #
DIALING METHOD
ADVANCED SETUP
SPEAKER ON/OFF
HARDWARE FLOW CONTROL
PORT BASE ADDRESS
PORT INTERRUPT
MODEM INIT STRING
X25 NETWORK MENU
X25 HOST/PASSWORD
TERMINAL SETUP 2
#$[2]
$$[3]
INTERNAL
APPLICATION
FILE
MOUSE CONTROL
SCROLL BARS
#$[3]
$$[4]
TIMED
BUTTONED
YES/NO
NO/YES
QUERY
#$[4]
$$[5]
GENERAL
FUNCTION KEY
ALPHA/NUMERIC
INVISIBLE
ZOOM
#$[5]
$$[6]
READ ONLY
READ/WRITE
NON-SCROLL R/W
LOCAL
MOUSE CONTROL
SCROLL BARS
#$[6]
$$[7]
GENERAL
MEMORY REQUIREMENTS
LOCAL
ZOOM
#$[7]
$$[8]
GENERAL
UPLOAD
DOWNLOAD
#$[8]
**[1][0]
ACCESS SCREEN
Upon Startup, the program will display
a screen consisting of a graphic
underneath a box with four buttons.
This is the ACCESS SCREEN where the
user can request to CONNECT or to QUIT
the network, ask for HELP or access the
TERMINAL SETUP screen.
**[1][1]
GETTING HELP
At any time, the user may access this
HELP program by pressing ALT-F1. A
menu will appear with one or more of
the following choices:
(H)elp
(Q)uit Terminal
(D)isconnect
To choose (H)elp, press H on your
keyboard, highlight that selection
and press ENTER or click on that
selection with your mouse pointer.
**[1][2]
HELP WINDOW 1
The HELP window has four buttons
with three boxes labeling the
buttons' functions above them.
The button below DONE will always
read ESC. Pushing the ESC key on
your keyboard allows you to exit
the HELP program.
When viewing the HELP PAGES after
making a menu selection, the buttons
below BROWSE will read PG UP and PG DN.
You may then use the PG UP and PG DN
keys on your keyboard to browse through
the screens of information related to
your HELP CATEGORY choice. When there
are no more screens available, you
will be returned to the menu.
**[1][3]
HELP WINDOW 2
The button below PREV MENU will read
HOME when you have the option of
returning to a previous menu. In this
case, press the HOME key on your
keyboard to exit the menu or HELP PAGE
you are viewing and return to the
previous menu.
When accessing HELP, you will be shown
a menu screen from which to choose a
HELP CATEGORY. After making your
selection, you will be shown a second
menu screen from which to choose a
HELP PAGE. This choice will take you
to a HELP PAGE of information. You may
use the PG UP and PG DOWN to view the
other HELP PAGES for the HELP CATEGORY
you have chosen.
**[1][4]
FILES AND DIRECTORIES
The network requires all of the files
from your access software program to
operate. DO NOT DELETE any files from
the directory on your hard drive that
contains the access software program
files.
**[1][5]
DISCONNECTING
At any time after CONNECT has been
selected, the user may press ALT-F1
to access a menu which allows them to
QUIT or DISCONNECT.
If for some reason, the connection
to the network has been lost after
a successful connection, ALT-F1 may
fail to do anything, so the user
should press ALT-END or CTRL-END
to cause a FORCED DISCONNECT.
#*[1]
**[2][0]
TERMINAL SETUP OPTIONS
When you select SETUP in the ACCESS
screen, a menu is shown:
(D)ONE
(S)ELECT DESIRED SETUP
(C)REATE NEW SETUP
(M)ODIFY SELECTED SETUP
(R)EMOVE SELECTED SETUP
The ENTRY DESCRIPTION or name of the
SETUP configuration that is currently
selected is shown in the box at the
top of the screen.
For more information about this
screen, choose TERMINAL SETUP
OPTIONS 2 from this menu or PAGE DOWN
to the end of this section.
**[2][1]
ENTRY DESCRIPTION
This field is used to name the setup
configuration.
The name should be unique. You may
wish to include the baud speed and
other information, so you will be
able to recognize it in the TERMINAL
SETUP directory.
To cancel any changes to this field,
press ESC before moving to another field.
**[2][2]
USER ID/PASSWORD
The USER ID and PASSWORD may be
saved in SETUP. If both entries are
not saved here, you will be asked for
each when you choose CONNECT.
For your security, the password is
shown on the screen as a sequence of *
characters. However, if both the USER
ID and PASSWORD are saved on the SETUP
screen, anyone can access the network
from your computer, so we recommend
that you leave one or the other blank.
To change either entry, backspace the
existing entry and type the new entry.
To cancel any changes to this field,
press ESC before moving to another
field.
**[2][3]
BAUD RATE
The terminal currently supports two
data transmission speeds, 2400 bps and
9600 bps. You must choose the speed
that is appropriate for your modem.
To do this, click on or select the
baud speed button with the up and down
arrows and press the ENTER key.
A menu will appear. Select the
appropriate rate or press ESC to leave
it as shown on the button.
**[2][4]
COM PORT
Enter the number of the serial port
to which your modem is connected or
the serial port number of your
internal modem.
Ports COM1 through COM4 are
supported by this program.
If your computer does not follow the
standard base address and interrupt
conventions, you should use the
ADVANCED SETUP features to configure
them for your port.
To change an existing entry, you must
backspace. To cancel any changes to
this field, press ESC once before
moving to another field.
**[2][5]
CONNECT MEANS
Clicking the mouse pointer on or
pressing the ENTER key while this
button is highlighted will display
the following menu:
DIRECT DIAL
DIAL X25 NETWORK
NULL MODEM
DIRECT DIAL dials directly into the
Host computer. This option is not
available on all services.
DIAL X25 NETWORK dials into a packet
switching node and allows you to use
the access phone numbers in the
directory sent with your software.
NULL MODEM is only used for in house
network development.
**[2][6]
PHONE #
Enter the number for your modem speed
and city from the phone directory
provided with your software.
If you have Call Waiting, consult your
local telephone directory for how to
disable it. To create a pause for a
second dial tone, enter one or two
commas in the dialing sequence. (With
a HAYES 'AT' compatible modem, 1 comma
will give you a 1 second delay.)
Enter the dialing sequence (up to 26
characters) with or without hyphens.
To cancel any changes to this field,
press ESC before moving to another
field.
**[2][7]
DIALING METHOD
Clicking the mouse pointer on or
pressing the ENTER key while this
button is highlighted will toggle
the dialing method between PULSE
and TONE.
Choose TONE unless your area does not
support touch tone dialing.
The Button indicates the current
dialing method.
**[2][8]
ADVANCED SETUP/X25 INFO SETUP
Clicking the mouse pointer on or
pressing the ENTER key while this
button is highlighted will toggle the
setup display to show or hide the
advanced setup prompts:
SPEAKER (ON/OFF)
HARDWARE FLOW CONTROL (ON/OFF)
BASE ADDRESS
INTERRUPT (4,3,5,2)
MODEM INIT STRING
If your CONNECT MEANS is DIAL X25
NETWORK, the following display will
be shown when the display listed
above is hidden:
X25 NETWORK
X25 HOST, ID
X25 PASSWORD
**[2][9]
SPEAKER ON/OFF
Clicking the mouse pointer on or
pressing the ENTER key while this
button is highlighted will toggle the
modem's speaker mode between OFF and
ON. Speaker ON allows you to hear
your modem dial.
The Button indicates the current
speaker mode.
**[2][A]
HARDWARE FLOW CONTROL
Clicking the mouse pointer on or
Pressing the ENTER key while this
button is highlighted will toggle the
hardware flow control method between
ON and OFF.
Flow control prevents the terminal from
writing to the modem faster than it can
transmit. Hardware flow control ON
should be used for baud rates of 9600
and up. Hardware Flow Control should
be OFF for most 2400 bps modems.
**[2][B]
PORT BASE ADDRESS
For most PC compatibles, the port
BASE ADDRESS is properly setup for the
COM PORT you have entered and should
not need to be changed.
Clicking the mouse pointer on or
pressing the ENTER key while this
button is highlighted will show a menu
of address choices.
If the required address is not shown,
choose the USER option and enter the
required HEXIDECIMAL address.
**[2][C]
PORT INTERRUPT
For most PC compatibles, the port
INTERRUPT is properly setup for the
COM PORT you have entered and should
not need to be changed.
If you need to change the setup
value, enter 4,3,2 or 5.
To cancel any changes to this field,
press ESC once before moving to another
field.
**[2][D]
MODEM INIT STRING
Most 2400 bps modems require no entry.
If you have problems connecting, when
the MODEM INIT CMD is blank, enter a
single '?' (question mark) for a menu
of modems and their command strings.
If your modem is not listed, consult
your modem manual for the commands
that will: set DTR to normal, set
carrier detect to normal, turn error
correction off (including MNP and
V.32), turn data compression off,
turn hardware flow control off
for 2400 bps and on for 9600 bps.
To cancel changes to this field, press
ESC before moving to another field.
**[2][E]
X25 NETWORK MENU
Clicking the mouse pointer on or
pressing the ENTER key while this
button is highlighted will show a
menu of available X25 Networks.
Consult your Access Phone Directory
for the correct choice.
**[2][F]
X25 HOST/PASSWORD
The X25 HOST, ID and X25 PASSWORD are
preprogrammed into SETUP for you. If,
for any reason, these entries are
changed, please call Customer Service
for assistance.
For your security, the X25 PASSWORD is
shown on screen as a sequence of '*'
characters.
To cancel any changes to this field,
press ESC once before moving to another
field.
**[2][G]
TERMINAL SETUP 2
* (D)ONE will take you back to the ACCESS
SCREEN
* (S)ELECT DESIRED SETUP allows you to
choose which of your existing setup
screens you will use to access the
service.
* (C)REATE NEW SETUP allows you to create
a new setup screen.
* (M)ODIFY SELECTED SETUP allows you to
change the setup configuration named
in the box at the top of this screen.
* (R)EMOVE SELECTED SETUP allows you to
delete the setup configuration named in
the box at the top of this screen. If
you select (R)EMOVE SELECTED SETUP, you
will be asked whether you wish to
remove the entry or not.
#*[2]
**[3][0]
INTERNAL SELECTORS
The terminal program uses several
selectors or menus to allow you
to setup and operate the program.
When a menu listing is shown, you
may use the UP/DOWN or PG UP/PG DN
cursor keys to move to the desired
choice and press ENTER to make the
selection. Press CTRL-BREAK or
ESC to cancel the selection.
**[3][1]
APPLICATION SELECTORS
A particular service may use one or
more selectors or menus. Some of
these stay on the screen at all times
while others are cleared after the
selection is made.
When a menu listing is shown, you
may use the UP/DOWN or PG UP/PG DN
cursor keys to move to the desired
choice and press ENTER to make the
selection or press CTRL-BREAK or
ESC to cancel the selection.
Press TAB to move forward and SHIFT
TAB to move backward to the previous
object (i.e. button, text box.)
**[3][2]
FILE SELECTORS
When transferring files, you may be
shown a selector or menu of
filenames that allows you to choose
a drive/path/filename.
When a menu listing is shown, you
may use the UP/DOWN or PG UP/PG DN
cursor keys to move to the desired
choice and press ENTER to make the
selection or press CTRL-BREAK or
ESC to cancel the selection.
These selectors also have a prompt-
line, which allows you to type in
a new DRIVE:PATH\FILENAME or change
the search mask.
**[3][3]
MOUSE CONTROL IN SELECTOR
The mouse may be used in any selector
for the following:
SELECT OPTION - click on the option.
SCROLL UP - click on the arrow at
the top of the scroll bar.
SCROLL DOWN - click on the arrow at
the bottom of the scroll box.
PAGE UP - click above the box in
the scroll bar.
PAGE DN - click below box in
the scroll bar.
RE-POSITION - drag the box in the
scroll bar.
**[3][4]
SCROLL BARS IN SELECTORS
If a selector has a scroll bar shown
with it, the position box indicates
the cursor's position within the list
of selections for that menu.
If the scroll bar's bottom arrow has a
'+' on it, this means that additional
selections are available and will be
loaded a block at a time as you cursor,
page down or drag the position box.
If you drag the position box all the
way to the bottom and it remains at the
bottom, you will be shown the end of
the list.
#*[3]
**[4][0]
TIMED DIALOG BOX
An informative message appears for a
period of three seconds before this
dialog box is cleared.
No user interaction is required or
allowed.
**[4][1]
BUTTONED DIALOG BOX
This is an informative message that
must be acknowledged by the user
clicking on the ENTER button on the
screen or pressing on the ENTER key
on the keyboard.
**[4][2]
YES/NO DIALOG BOX
A box will appear with a question
that requires a YES or NO response.
The default response is highlighted
and in this case is YES.
The user must click on either the YES
or NO Button on the screen or press
'Y' or 'N' or ENTER (to select the
default) on the keyboard.
The LEFT or RIGHT cursor keys or the
TAB or SHIFT TAB keys may be used to
change the default.
**[4][3]
NO/YES DIALOG BOX
A box will appear with a question
that requires a YES or NO response.
The default response is highlighted
and in this case is NO.
The user must click on either the YES
or NO Button on the screen or press
'Y' or 'N' or ENTER (to select the
default) on the keyboard.
The LEFT or RIGHT cursor keys or the
TAB or SHIFT TAB keys may be used to
change the default.
**[4][4]
QUERY DIALOG BOX
The user is prompted to type a text
response and then press ENTER. The
response may be up to 80 characters
in length.
#*[4]
**[5][0]
GENERAL BUTTON INFORMATION
When a button is shown, it may be
blank or contain a character, number,
word or the name of a keyboard key.
Buttons may be selected by clicking
on them with the mouse pointer,
pressing the corresponding keyboard
key or tabbing to highlight the button,
then pressing ENTER. If a button is
blank, it can only be selected by
clicking on it or TABBING to it and
pressing ENTER.
When a button is highlighted, it will
have a border drawn around it.
**[5][1]
FUNCTION KEY BUTTONS
These buttons can always be selected
by pressing the associated
F1-F12 or HOME, END, ENTER key.
**[5][2]
ALPHA/NUMERIC BUTTONS
These buttons contain a letter or
number. They are blank whenever
a TEXT or SELECTOR application
window is active.
To select a blank button, the user
must click on the button or TAB to
the button and press ENTER.
Otherwise, the user may press the
keyboard key that corresponds to what
is written on the button to select
it.
**[5][3]
INVISIBLE BUTTONS
These buttons do not appear like
visible buttons, but appear briefly
as a dotted line around the area they
define.
Invisible buttons allow the creation
of special hidden program functions
by the network developers.
Users will not need to select invisible
buttons but may become aware of them
when TABBING from object to object.
**[5][4]
ZOOM
Some Images may have a ZOOM button
displayed on the screen. If the user
clicks on a ZOOM button, the terminal
will save the screen and enlarge the
image to full screen. The original
screen can be restored by clicking
the left mouse button or pressing
ENTER.
#*[5]
**[6][0]
READ ONLY TEXT WINDOWS
These windows contain informative text,
and can not be modified. They may be
selected only if they are scrollable.
The following keys are available:
UP/DOWN ARROW..Scrolls text
PG UP/PG DN....Pages text up/down
ESC........... Done, no navigation
TAB............Done, select next object
SHIFT TAB......Done, select previous
object
**[6][1]
READ / WRITE TEXT WINDOWS
These windows allow the user to read
and enter or modify text. In addition
to the keys available to READ-ONLY TEXT
WINDOWS, the following are available:
LEFT ARROW - move left on line
RIGHT ARROW - move right on line
HOME - move to first column on line
END - move past last column on line
DEL - delete current character
BACKSP - delete previous character
ENTER - break line/insert line
ESC - done, cancel changes
TAB - done, keep changes, move
forward
SHIFT TAB - Done, keep changes, move
backward
**[6][2]
NON-SCROLLING READ/WRITE TEXT WINDOWS
These "boxes" allow the user to read and
enter or modify text. All of the keys
that work in the READ ONLY and READ/WRITE
windows perform the same operations here.
In addition, you may press ENTER to verify
and save the information in the text box
you are working in and move to the next
text box.
Press PG UP for more information about
READ/WRITE and READ ONLY text windows.
**[6][3]
LOCAL TEXT WINDOWS
These are READ-ONLY or READ-WRITE
text windows where the text shown
comes from a file on the user's PC.
They can be edited and then the updated
text can be saved to a file on the
user's PC.
This feature is not available on all
networks.
**[6][4]
MOUSE CONTROL IN TEXT WINDOWS
The mouse may be used in any text
window for the following:
SELECT OPTION - click on the option.
SCROLL UP - click on the arrow at
the top of the scroll bar.
SCROLL DOWN - click on the arrow at
the bottom of the scroll box.
PAGE UP - click above the box in
the scroll bar.
PAGE DN - click below box in
the scroll bar.
RE-POSITION - drag the box in the
scroll bar.
**[6][5]
TEXT WINDOW SCROLL BARS
If a text window has a scroll bar shown
with it, the position box indicates the
cursor's position within the total
number of lines of text.
If the scroll bar's bottom arrow has a
'+' on it, this means that additional
text is available and will be sent
a block at a time by using the cursor
or PG DN keys or by dragging the
position box.
When the new block is received, the
position box will move back up to show
where the user is within the text box
that was just loaded.
#*[6]
**[7][0]
IMAGES
Photographic images may be transmitted
from the host or may come from a file
stored in the access software on your
computer.
Because images are large, a PERCENT
COMPLETE BAR is shown while an image is
being transmitted. The user may cancel
an image transfer with CTRL-BREAK while
the PERCENT COMPLETE BAR is shown.
**[7][1]
IMAGE MEMORY REQUIREMENTS
Images require a lot of memory to be
decompressed. If you frequently get
INSUFFICIENT MEMORY FOR IMAGE errors,
unload resident programs and/or use
MS-DOS 5.0 or DR DOS 6.0 to load DOS
and drivers into HIGH MEMORY.
If you are not familiar with these
terms, consult your local computer
dealer for help with this.
**[7][2]
LOCAL IMAGES
The network can store and use image
files on your computer's hard drive.
These files will have a file
extension of '.FIF', '.PCX', '.PCC',
or '.POE'
DO NOT delete any image files.
**[7][3]
ZOOMED IMAGES
Some Images may have a ZOOM
button displayed on the screen. If
the user clicks on a ZOOM button, the
terminal will enlarge the image to
full screen.
The original screen can be restored
by clicking the left mouse button or
pressing ENTER.
#*[7]
**[8][0]
FILE TRANSFERS GENERAL INFO
During File Transfers, you may be
shown a FILE SELECTOR, or a DIALOG BOX
that requires you to define the path
and filename of a downloaded or
uploaded file.
For most file transfers, a PERCENT
COMPLETE BAR is shown. The user may
cancel a file transfer by pressing
CTRL-BREAK while the PERCENT COMPLETE
BAR is shown.
**[8][1]
UPLOAD
Wherever there is an UPLOAD button,
you may load a file from your
computer onto the service.
If the host does not provide a
TERMINAL FILENAME, the user is
shown a FILE SELECTOR from which
to choose the file to send.
**[8][2]
DOWNLOAD
Wherever there is a DOWNLOAD button,
you can transfer a file from the
service to your computer. The
service will define a path and file
name with the option for the user to
say YES or NO. If NO, a dialog box
will appear for the user to define
the filename and path.
If the filename is found on the
user's computer, they will be asked
whether to overwrite it. If there
is not enough room on the drive
defined by the filename, the
download will fail and the user
must select another drive.
#*[8]