Path: utzoo!news-server.csri.toronto.edu!rutgers!ucsd!ucbvax!SUMEX-AIM.STANFORD.EDU!info-mac-request From: info-mac-request@SUMEX-AIM.STANFORD.EDU (The Moderators) Newsgroups: comp.sys.mac.digest Subject: Info-Mac Digest V9 #61 Message-ID: <9103120207.AA17434@sumex-aim.stanford.edu> Date: 12 Mar 91 02:07:02 GMT Sender: daemon@ucbvax.BERKELEY.EDU Reply-To: Info-Mac@sumex-aim.stanford.edu Organization: The Internet Lines: 459 Approved: info-mac@sumex-aim.stanford.edu Info-Mac Digest Mon, 11 Mar 91 Volume 9 : Issue 61 Today's Topics: [*] Cubist 1.0 [*] GIFconverter 2.2d5 [*] miniWRITER 1.61 [*] Summary of Mac programming education suggestions [*] The Beer Stacks DeskZap - new version? EPSF file type Error in menus Helpful shareware authors - an addition How to ftp .sit files? Hypercard 2.0 Hypertalk scripting books InfoMac Query MacDraw II 1.1v2 flakiness MacSnoop in sumex-aim Memory Manager Fx QUED/M 2.07->2.09 upgrade summary of responses to network tape backup query System 7 - getting started where is Mike O'Rourke? The Info-Mac newsgroup is moderated by Bill Lipa, Lance Nakata, and Jon Pugh. The Info-Mac archives are available (by using FTP, account anonymous, any password) in the info-mac directory on sumex-aim.stanford.edu [36.44.0.6]. Help files and indices are in /info-mac/help. Please send articles and binaries to info-mac@sumex-aim.stanford.edu. Send administrative mail to info-mac-request@sumex-aim.stanford.edu. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Date: 6 Mar 91 19:55 -0600 From: Alan Keahey Subject: [*] Cubist 1.0 Tired of MacII owners having all of the neat screen savers? This screen saving utility, which shows 3D objects bouncing around inside your Mac has been specially designed for owners of small screen Macintoshes. This program is freeware, so download it today, give it a spin, and enjoy! [Archived as /info-mac/util/cubist.hqx; 14K] ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 07 Mar 91 03:06:59 EST From: "Kirke B. Lawton" Subject: [*] GIFconverter 2.2d5 GIFConverter Copyright 1988-1991 Kevin A. Mitchell This is the newest version of GIFconverter, the shareware ($40.00) GIF viewer and a whole lot more. Works with mac pluses and newer. [Archived as /info-mac/art/gif/gif-converter-22d5.hqx; 233K] ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 06 Mar 91 11:13:53 GMT From: Michael Everson Subject: [*] miniWRITER 1.61 This is miniWRITER 1.61, which I just got from Maitreya Design. It should replace the version 1.6 which is now in the archives. Michael Everson [Archived as /info-mac/da/mini-writer-161.hqx; 113K] ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 7 Mar 91 09:50 PDT From: "An effective decay-preventing dentifrice when used in a program of daily oral hygiene." Subject: [*] Summary of Mac programming education suggestions Greetings, About a week ago, I requested information regarding Macintosh programming educational material. Specifically, I indicated that I have both the Meridian Ada compiler and Think C V4.0. The following is a summary of the responses I have received to date. I have removed the message headers and some salutation text. Thanks to all who replied. [Archived as /info-mac/report/learning-to-program.txt; 11K] ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 7 Mar 1991 22:07:50 EST From: IOCONNOR@sunrise.acs.syr.edu Subject: [*] The Beer Stacks Enclosed are the Beer stacks. It is a HC set of stacks which tells you everything you wanted to know about beer--including beer types, breweries and recipes. I did not write the stacks, am uploading them. They were written by Mark Stevens. Please see card three of the "Beer Stack" for shareware info. This is a compact pro self extracting archive. Enjoy! Keep on Mac'in. Kieran O'Connor IOCONNOR@SUNRISE (bitnet) [Archived as /info-mac/card/beer.hqx; 354K] ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 11 Mar 91 05:39:21 PDT From: REM@suwatson.stanford.edu Subject: DeskZap - new version? I am evaluating a shareware desk accessory by Bruce Tomlin called DeskZap. It's really handy, a kit of 13 nifty utilities such as view/change file attributes, create file, delete file, rename file, make folder, etc. But the version I have (1.3a8, 1986) has a bug whereby almost any time you are typing in a new filename (such as when creating or renaming) it takes about 4.5 seconds to echo each character. I can't currently find DeskZap on Sumex, nor anywhere in the Archie database, so I presume it's not in any archive anywhere on the InterNet. Does anybody happen to have a private copy which is a newer version than what I have, or does anybody know if Bruce Tomlin has an EMAILbox so that I could ask him myself conveniently? ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 11 Mar 91 11:21:13 EST From: dlandry@ncs.dnd.ca (Dominique Landry) Subject: EPSF file type Hello netters! I'd like to know what Mac applications will allow one to read EPSF formatted documents ...? Has this something to do with Poscript matters ...? Please reply to me directly ... Dominique Internet: dlandry@ncs.dnd.ca ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 11 Mar 91 09:42 CST From: TURNBULL@udlapvms.pue.udlap.mx Subject: Error in menus Hello netters, I'm posting this for someone else, I was asked if I knew what was going on, and as I did not I told him I would ask you all. ---------- When working on my Mac II with 4 MB of ram and 40HD with sistem 6.0.5 once in a while I get my menus and dialog box's wrong, all characters seem to pile up on the first making it imposible to read, this is kind of strange for it only ocurrs once in a while and never in the same spot twice that is to say that if I want it to happend, it doesn't and if I don't want it to happend it does. Is there anyone out there that has experience this? Please Help! ---------- If you can help on this please reply to: DIBARRA@UDLAPVMS.PUE.UDLAP.MX or DIBARRA@UDLAPVMS.BITNET Daniel Ibarra Universidad de las Americas Puebla Mexico Thanks!!!! ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 11 Mar 91 11:28:49 CST From: Graeme Forbes Subject: Helpful shareware authors - an addition A name to add to Murph Sewall's list of responsive shareware authors: Michael Libes, otherwise known as Luni or Lunarmobiscuit: Launch, Darkness. Regular updates online and responds to e-mail messages. Graeme Forbes ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 11 Mar 91 13:07:09 CST From: GR4486%SIUCVMB.BITNET@forsythe.stanford.edu (Jack Sun) Subject: How to ftp .sit files? Hi people, Can anybody tell me how to ftp files with .sit extension? Unlike those with .hqx, I have never succeeded in getting the .sit files. I use ftp from CMS system, then use PC TCP/ftp thing to get the file to a DOS floppy, and then do Text Translation with Apple-file-exchange. Any help is appreciated. Jack ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 11 Mar 91 14:52 GMT From: RJC6@vaxa.york.ac.uk Subject: Hypercard 2.0 Hypertalk scripting books I received 8 responses to my recent posting. Many thanks to those who responded. To summarise: Clear favourite was 'Hypercard 2.0: The Book" by Dan Winkler & Scott Kamins (ISBN 0-553-34737-3) US$29.95 , CAN$37.95 Comments about Winkler & Scotts book included... "this one stays on my desk, open, when I am scripting" "highly recommended" "my current reference" "very useful REFERENCE" (i.e. not a tutorial book) "awesome...has everything..." One repondent noted that there were some minor annoyances such as lack of page headers but this one emerged as the clear favourite. Other books mentioned were 'Cooking with Hypertalk 2.0' by Dan Winkler & Scott Knaster (ISBN 0-553-34738-1) US$39.95 disk included, the 'Hypertalk Language Reference' from Claris (especially its quick reference card) "Hypertalk Programing" by Dan Shafer has been upgraded to include Hypercard 2.0 and made, according to one respondent, "less of a reference (and) more of a tutorial". One person recommended Danny Goodman's book as the 'best of a bad lot'. Another said that Goodmans book provides a good overview of Hypercard generally and devotes about half of its 800+ pages to Hypertalk. 'The Complete Hypercard 2.0 Handbook, by Danny Goodman is published by Bantam books US$29.95 (3rd edition) ISBN 0-553-34893-0. Winkler & Scott and Winkler & Knaster also seem to be published by Bantam. APDA has a Hypercard 2.0 developers kit cataloged at US$200 but the respondent wasn't sure what was included in it. Richard Cox Psychology Dept York University, Heslington, York, UK ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 11 Mar 91 11:44:34 GMT From: Andrew Mayo (4) Subject: InfoMac Query Can anybody help me ?? This is my first attempt at writing an application on a Macintosh SE and I have 2 major problems concerning sound : 1) Having read the Sound Manager chapter in a working draft copy of Inside Macintosh V , I still haven't the faintest idea how to use internal Sound. I only want to generate simple 4 note chords. 2) It would also be desirable to interface my application to MIDI, I have a copy of MIDI Management tools (version 2) by APDG, however I am programming in the THINK Pascal environment ( by Symantec) and I cannot get THINK Pascal to access the MIDI routines. I have tried writing several interface routines with absolutely no sucess. Can anybody please help me. Deadlines are getting close and I am desparate. Any help would be very gratefully accepted. ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 11 Mar 91 15:48:09 PST From: jeffrey@electron.jpl.nasa.gov (Jeff Chang) Subject: MacDraw II 1.1v2 flakiness Has anyone noticed MacDraw II 1.1v2 crashing alot? When I run Multifinder with MS Word 4.0B and either try to open or print a MacDraw file from the Finder, I end up in MacsBug. Opening crashes maybe 1/10 tries, printing >From the Finder crashes maybe 4/10 tries. This happens sometimes when Printer Monitor is running as well. The confusing thing is that I have been running pretty much the same System and Init set for the last year, and this has only been flaky the last 3 months. I've tried to run as lean a set of inits as I can. Configuration: Mac Plus 2.5Meg System 6.0.3 Finder 6.1 Print Monitor 1.3 MacsBug 5.4 Macintalk MacDraw II 1.1v2 (allocated 900K) MS Word 4.0B (allocated 1024K) init cdev 3.0 Gatekeeper Aid 1.1 Gatekeeper 1.1.1 Moire 3.00 Responder 1.1.1 Disinfectant Init 2.4 Please respond directly to me. Thanks in advance! Jeff Chang jeffrey@sun1.jpl.nasa.gov ------------------------------ Date: 11 Mar 91 13:39:16 GMT From: hoepfner@heawk1.gsfc.nasa.gov (Patrick Hoepfner) Subject: MacSnoop in sumex-aim I just FTPed MacSnoop from sumex-aim and it appears to be some kind of demoware but I am not certain. Inside the program it claims to be the demo version but the documentation says it has to be labeled "MacSnoop.D" to run. The other bit of confusion revolves around the documentation itself. It appears to have some problems. It refers to "deprotecting the files" and also refers to MacPassword. What gives? Is the documentaion messed up or does MacSnoop really have anything to do with MacPassword? ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 11 Mar 91 14:29:44 +0000 From: lempens%BDILUC01.BITNET@forsythe.stanford.edu Subject: Memory Manager Fx Hi there, I recently upgraded my old MACII to a MACIIFx. In the info-mac's was spoken of a bug in the memory manager ROM. It seems to me that I notice also that decrease of speed sometimes. There was a solution with a init called "MMinit". I heared rumors that AppleComputer does not recomm ended the use of this init becose of diskcraches with loss of data/information. Is there anybody who can help or give information about this problem? Thanks, Rik Lempens (LEMPENS@BDILUC01.bitnet) ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 11 Mar 91 13:40 EST From: Bob Beason Subject: QUED/M 2.07->2.09 upgrade I just tried to upgrade QUED/M using the upgrade posted in the archives, but the script would not recognize the program. I tried putting it in the same folder as the upgrade script, but it never appeared in the File Open box. Did anyone else have the same problem? Is there some special trick with QUED/M? I've used the PUP utility before with no trouble. Bob Beason beason@geneseo.bitnet ------------------------------ Date: 11 Mar 91 18:08:00 EST From: "MICHAEL R. ROMAN" Subject: summary of responses to network tape backup query There were 4 responses to my post about network backup for Macs, plus Duane Small's summary of a similar request he made to comp.mac.sys.apps newsgroups. His was about backup to floppies. He reports responses from: "6 users of Fastback II (including one of the people who developed it), 6 users of Disk Fit, and 4 users of Redux. (People reporting on two packages are counted twice). I also received 4 recommendations for Retrospect and 1 for NetStream." I will include Duane's results concerning Retrospect, FastBack II and NetStream, since they are the only programs that I'm sure will support network backup to a 4mm tape. I will also comment on Tecmar's QT Backup. Retrospect Remote: 6 positive responses. Comments: (the first from Duane's summary) "Retrospect users were the most enthusiastic of my respondents." "I can't say enough good things about the product or the support"; "I HATED the earlier versions of retrospect. The latest release addresses most of my original complaints. The interface is still a little hard to understand at first..."; "Retrospect is very easy to use..." This program is also recommended in MacWorld (12/89 and 11/90 issues). NetStream+Jetstream: 2 positive, 1 negative response. Comments: "highly recommended"; (and one from Duane's summary) "...I should mention that I have since received one message from a *very* disgruntled ex-NetStream user who complained of many bugs and poor vendor support". This program is also recommended in MacWorld (12/89 and 11/90 issues). FastBack II: 7 responses. Comments: "I am greatly pleased." (the rest from Duane's summary) "It is also the only one that got really negative comments: unreliable backups (may have been disk problems rather than software problems); difficulties with the backup set if the backup is cancelled in the middle and then restarted; and either mild dislike or utter detestation of its interface" and "One user (not the developer) said the package was "very intuitive" as well as powerful and flexible." and "Fastback II is apparently the fastest of the three I mentioned in my original note, and the only one that significantly compresses data." QT Backup: This is recommended in the 12/89 and 11/90 issues of MacWorld. I called Tecmar; the woman I talked to said she would send me a demo copy of the program. All I ever got was some literature on backup on PC's and Novell networks, and some stuff about their tapedrives which mention their software, but don't go into a whole lot of detail. Also, I talked to some people who own Amigas and they said that Tecmar dropped their Amiga support because they could not sell enough stuff to Amiga users. Not too nice for the people who bought their stuff, I suppose... QT Backup looks like a real nice program; I wish I could give it a try, but my time is limited. General comments: Patrick Hoepfner gave some good advice: "You should look first for software that does the job that you need THEN find out what tape drives the software supports." He also observed (correctly) that 4mm drives are easier on their tapes than their 8mm counterparts. Those considerations, and the fact that my data will currently fit on one 4mm tape led me to decide on 4mm as the way to go for me. Hopefully, 4mm drives will be able to write more than 1.4GB before the amount of data on my network will expand past that limit. Even if that doesn't happen, 2 4mm tapes won't take up much room... My three finalists are: Retrospect Remote, NetStream, and QT Backup. I will probably rule out QT Backup based on support considerations. Netstream (by PCPC) looks promising; I've used PCPC's HFS Backup 3.0 and was well satisfied by that product. Also, the response from users and MacWorld was positive except for one disgruntled ex-user. Retrospect Remote is probably what I will go with, based on the enthusiasm I see from the users and from MacWorld, and based on the fact that it looks like it will be least expensive solution to my problem. ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 11 Mar 91 11:34:34 CST From: Graeme Forbes Subject: System 7 - getting started Now that System 7 is due in mid-May I suppose I will be unable to resist installing it fairly quickly, even tho' I expect lots of problems with unclean applications I can't live without. Since I have 30meg free on my 80-meg hard disk my inclination is to create a 10/15 meg partition and install S7 in the partition so that a simple change of startup volume and restart will get me back to 6.0.7 when necessary. Does anyone have any views about this strategy? I am aware that Apple recommends against two systems on the same disk, even if in different volumes. I am also aware of a distinction between "hard" and "soft" partitioning, but don't know what it means (for the former, you take a meat cleaver to your hard disk?). What's the best software for partitioning (I already have MultiPartition, which came with DiskExpress, and Partition, which came with MacTools Deluxe)? Thanks in advance for advice. I'll summarize to the net. Graeme Forbes Bitnet: PL0BALF@TCSVM Internet: PL0BALF@VM.TCS.TULANE.EDU ------------------------------ Date: 11 Mar 91 18:10:00 EST From: "MICHAEL R. ROMAN" Subject: where is Mike O'Rourke? I tried to send the shareware fee to Mike O'Rourke for Unity 3.1; the post office returned the letter I sent to him. Apparently, the address listed in the program is no longer valid. Where are you, Mike? Mike Roman, mikero@lns61.tn.cornell.edu ------------------------------ End of Info-Mac Digest ******************************