MeanScreen 7.0 is a screen saver extension (INIT) and control panel (CDEV) which replaces MeanScreen 1.0 as the latest version.
7.0??!!?!!!
Yes, MeanScreen has been through at least that many incarnations -- aren't you glad I didn't release all of them? However, the 7.0 is symbolic because MeanScreen is now fully compatible and well behaved under System 7.
WHAT DOES IT ALL MEAN?
Don't waste your time searching for some significance in the name MeanScreen. It was a no-brain choice for a difficult-to-name piece of software.
Drag MeanScreen to your system folder. (If you have System 7.0, your Mac will respond with "Control panels need to be stored in the Control Panels folder or they may not work properly. Put 'MeanScreen 7.0' into the Control Panels folder?" Choose Okay.)
If you have System 7, double click on the MeanScreen 7.0 icon and its control panel will appear (otherwise open the Control Panels desk accessory and choose MeanScreen 7.0 from the scrolling list.) You should see something similar to the figure below:
Ê
If you want MeanScreen to be enabled (I assume you do or we are both wasting our time), make sure that the Enable MeanScreen option is checked.
If you want HotSpots to be available, make sure that the Enable HotSpots option is checked. When enabled, HotSpots will allow you to instantly activate the screensaver by placing the mouse in the extreme upper-right corner of your desktop, and to prevent it from activating indefinitely by placing the mouse in the lower-right corner. If the mouse is placed in the "prevent" position, the pointer will become a minus sign.
You can tell MeanScreen how long the system should remain idle before it activates by either: (a) typing a value in the "Minutes idle before activate" field, or (b) using the mini-arrows to change this value. The range of values available is 1-99.
When you have MeanScreen configured the way you want it, restart your Macintosh. One of the icons that appears during the restart process should be the MeanScreen extension icon. Note: If MeanScreen is disabled, this icon will contain a circle with a slash (GhostBusters style). Remember that any time you change MeanScreen's configuration, you must restart your Mac before the changes will take effect.
Once the screensaver activates, all that is necessary to bring back your screen is mouse movement, a mouse click, or a keypress.
MY [HUMBLE] TESTIMONIAL
I use MeanScreen religiously. A screensaver is vital to any Mac user and this one is extremely well-mannered. It lacks the frills of After Darkª or other commercial offerings, but what it lacks it makes up for in reliability. MeanScreen has NEVER caused a crash on my Mac and has never conflicted with any other init or application. By contrast, After Dark crashed while using ResEdit only minutes after I began using it and trashed a precious file -- I never used it again.
FREEWARE
MeanScreen is free and may be distributed freely. (Just don't remove any of the copyright notices and always include this documentation file with it.)
Any comments for this author are appreciated and I can be reached at:
America Online ... JohnB42414
-OR-
US Postal Service: John Butler
2061 Vinton Avenue
Memphis, Tennessee 38104
(Note: If I am a long time in responding or --gasp-- don't respond at all, please be understanding and remember that this is FREEware and my compensated duties (job) must receive first priority.)
REVISION HISTORY
4/92
MeanScreen 1.0. Truly quick and dirty.
12/92
MeanScreen 7.0. Much less "mean" than 1.0. Control panel, HotSpots, variable idle time, and startup icons were added. An elusive bug which resulted in the Finder unceremoniously rearranging your desktop under System 7 (not harmful, just annoying) was finally hunted down, tortured and killed (may it rest in peace).
ALSO FROM JOHN BUTLER
Macman ... a game with its roots in the arcade classic PAC-MAN
Classic 3.0 Try it, my largest and most celebrated shareware effort to date.
EInfo 1.0 ... a quick and dirty utility to edit type and creator codes on
HFS or MFS files. (You may want to wait, a System 7 update is on the
way soon.)
BaseCalc 1.0 ... a quick and dirty mini-application to convert 32-bit
numbers between binary, decimal, and hex
(Apple says in the age of System 7.0, don't write any more