Path: utzoo!utgpu!jarvis.csri.toronto.edu!mailrus!tut.cis.ohio-state.edu!rutgers!bellcore!faline!thumper!pff From: pff@thumper.bellcore.com (Peter Ferris) Newsgroups: comp.sys.mac Subject: Color/Non-Color Mac Logo at Start-up - What duz it mean?! *SOLVED!?* Message-ID: <1549@thumper.bellcore.com> Date: 2 May 89 13:48:55 GMT Organization: Bell Communications Research Lines: 86 Greetings, Thanks to the MANY people that responded to my "non-color Mac logo" query. I greatly appreciate the time that the many people responding took to reply. The "Grand Prize Winner" was the following entry: From ric@arizona.edu Mon May 1 23:40:24 1989 Date: Mon, 1 May 89 20:38:54 MST From: "Ric Anderson" To: pff@thumper.bellcore.com Subject: Re: Color/Non-Color Mac Logo at Start-up - What duz it mean?! News-Path: arizona!noao!ncar!boulder!sunybcs!rutgers!bellcore!faline!thumper!pff References: <1546@thumper.bellcore.com> Status: R Pete: Quit playing with the Shift key!!!!!!!!! (or bag Easy Access). Reference Page 166-169 of the Macintosh System Software User's Guide: If the Easy Access module is present in your system folder, (it looks like a classic mac with a wheel chair on the screen), then pushing the shift key 5 times turns easy-access on or off. If EA is on, it puts a small "U" looking icon on the right edge of the menu bar. The icon can turn solid or grow an arrow depending on what modifiers (like command or option) are active. Drag Easy Access out of the system folder to the trash, empty the trash and reboot if you want to be rid of it forever. If you upgraded to 6.0.x using the MINIMAL mac-ii script, it doesn't copy in the color icon to the system file to save disk space. Pasting in the cicn resource from another system file, or re-installing using the standard mac-ii script should fix the B/W startup icon; assuming you monitor is set for color :-) Hope this helps, Ric Ric Anderson Bitnet: Ric@Arizrvax Member of the Technical Staff Internet: ric@cs.arizona.edu Department of Computer Science AT&T: (602) 621-4048 University of Arizona Tucson, Arizona 85721 ---- As you can see, Ric hit both nails on the head(s)! I CONFESS!!! I <> run the Installer for the MINIMAL II system... my gaff! I was missing the 6.0.3 disc ("MAXIMAL" ?!) at the instant I needed it so I used the "MINIMAL" installation. To clarify something: the Easy Access problem was on one machine (WORK). All other problems relate to my HOME machine (of course!). HOWEVER, I still don't know why I'm getting fairly frequent bombs. There doesn't seem to be any special rhyme or reason to it. Not always repeatable, eg; "Whenever I do...", etc. Again, this is in a Mac IIX, w/ 8MB. YAP (Yet Another Problem): This probably isn't related (or IS it?!): I'm having a devil of a time copying files from floppy to my HD. Using the usual finder level "select & drag" method results in some files (usually the smallest of the bunch) getting copied, but the bigger files die - I get a "Error writing file -- (Disk Error)" with a "Continue" or "Cancel" button selection. The above verbage is approximate, but should ring a Bell(R) with the Mac gurus in the audience. Watching the "meter" (the little 'How much has been copied so far' display - the error occurs at the instant it stops reading the big file and before it begins writing it to the HD (or IMMEDIATELY after it TRIES to write it). I feel both of my internal floppies are working (both are relatively new and clean, can boot software, read / write files, etc; just a problem copying FROM the floppy TO the HD. Could be the HD I s'pose :-<. Yet, using MacTools or almost any other copy program seems to work BETTER but NOT perfectly. In other words, I have a higher success rate using a utility copy then a finder copy. Running drive diags (SUM, 1stAid, etc;) all say the drive is alive and well). In light of all the other problems, I guess I need to re-install the "MAXIMAL" system, and see what problems that cures. Ya know, it ain't a good week for computing!! As always, insert your favorite thanks lines here! E-mail works best... Regards, Pete pff@thumper.bellcore.com