2572 lines
128 KiB
Plaintext
2572 lines
128 KiB
Plaintext
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|| ||| |||| |||||| || |||| Your
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|||||| |||||| || || |||||| |||||| GEnieLamp Apple II
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|| |||||| || || |||||| RoundTable
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|| |||||| |||||||| |||||| RESOURCE!
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~ PROFILES: Kitchen Sink Software ~
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~ APPLE_TALK: Industry Standards ~
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~ JOE KOHN: Connections ~
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~ MESSAGE SPOTLIGHTS! ~
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\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\////////////////////////////////////
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GEnieLamp A2 ~ A T/TalkNET OnLine Publication ~ Vol.2, Issue 14
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""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
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Publisher.......................................T/TalkNET Publishing
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Editor-In-Chief........................................John Peters
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Editor.............................................Darrel Raines
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~ GEnieLamp IBM ~ GEnieLamp [PR]/TX2 ~ GEnieLamp ST ~ GEnieLamp A2 ~
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~ GEnieLamp MacPRO ~ GEnieLamp A2Pro ~ GEnieLamp Macintosh ~
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~ Member Of The Digital Publishing Association ~
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////////////////////////////////////\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\
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>>> WHAT'S HAPPENING IN THE APPLE II ROUNDTABLE? <<<
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""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
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~ May 1, 1993 ~
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FROM MY DESKTOP ......... [FRM] APPLE_TALK .............. [TAL]
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Notes From The Editor. Apple II Corner.
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HOT TOPICS .............. [HOT] A2 ODDS & ENDS .......... [ODD]
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Too Hot To Handle, Almost. Here & There.
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WHAT'S NEW .............. [WHA] THROUGH THE GRAPEVINE ... [THR]
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New and Improved. Rumors, Maybes and Mayhem.
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MESSAGE SPOTLIGHT ....... [MES] HUMOR ONLINE ............ [HUM]
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Word To The Wise. GEnie Fun & Games.
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TELETALK ONLINE ......... [TEL] THE MIGHTY QUINN ........ [QUI]
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Online Communications. Random Access.
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PROFILES ................ [PRO] REFLECTIONS ............. [REF]
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Who's Who On GEnie. Online Communications.
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CONNECTIONS ............. [CON] ASK DOCTOR BOB .......... [ASK]
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By Joe Kohn. Gotta Problem?
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CowTOONS! ............... [MOO] APPLE II ................ [AII]
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100% Lean. Apple II History, Part 12.
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LOG OFF ................. [LOG]
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GEnieLamp Information.
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[IDX]"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
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READING GEnieLamp GEnieLamp has incorporated a unique indexing
|
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""""""""""""""""" system to help make reading the magazine easier.
|
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To utilize this system, load GEnieLamp into any ASCII word processor
|
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or text editor. In the index you will find the following example:
|
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|
|||
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HUMOR ONLINE ............ [HUM]
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[*]GEnie Fun & Games.
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|
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To read this article, set your find or search command to [HUM]. If
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you want to scan all of the articles, search for [EOA]. [EOF] will take
|
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you to the last page, whereas [IDX] will bring you back to the index.
|
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|
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MESSAGE INFO To make it easy for you to respond to messages re-printed
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"""""""""""" here in GEnieLamp, you will find all the information you
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need immediately following the message. For example:
|
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(SMITH, CAT6, TOP1, MSG:58/M475)
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_____________| _____|__ _|___ |____ |_____________
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|Name of sender CATegory TOPic Msg.# Page number|
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In this example, to respond to Smith's message, log on to page
|
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475 enter the bulletin board and set CAT 6. Enter your REPly in TOPic 1.
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A message number that is surrounded by brackets indicates that this
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message is a "target" message and is referring to a "chain" of two
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or more messages that are following the same topic.
|
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ABOUT GEnie GEnie costs only $4.95 a month for unlimited evening and
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""""""""""" weekend access to more than 100 services including
|
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electronic mail, online encyclopedia, shopping, news, entertainment,
|
|||
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single-player games, multi-player chess and bulletin boards on leisure
|
|||
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and professional subjects. With many other services, including the
|
|||
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largest collection of files to download and the best online games, for
|
|||
|
only $6 per hour (non-prime-time/2400 baud). To sign up for GEnie
|
|||
|
service, call (with modem) 1-800-638-8369. Upon connection type HHH.
|
|||
|
Wait for the U#= prompt. Type: XTX99014,DIGIPUB and hit RETURN. The
|
|||
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system will then prompt you for your information. Need more information?
|
|||
|
Call GEnie's customer service line (voice) at 1-800-638-9636.
|
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""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
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////////////////////////////////////// GEnie_QWIK_QUOTE ////
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/ "Bring the Pepsi and we be doin' the Aladdin thang! ;-)" /
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////////////////////////////////////////// R.MARTIN22 ////
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[EOA]
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[FRM]//////////////////////////////
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FROM MY DESKTOP /
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/////////////////////////////////
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Notes From The Editor
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"""""""""""""""""""""
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By John Peters
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[GENIELAMP]
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CHANGES, CHANGES, CHANGES! Change is good, right? Well, I certainly
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"""""""""""""""""""""""""" hope so, 'cause there is a whole lot of
|
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changing going on here at GEnieLamp. I suppose the best place to start is
|
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the changes that have taken place on page 515, our home, the GEnieLamp
|
|||
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RoundTable. (Keep in mind that many of these changes are happening as I
|
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write this - the changes outlined below are subject to change!) First off,
|
|||
|
the RoundTable is no longer a RoundTable but just a single page. Here's
|
|||
|
the new menu you will find when on page 515:
|
|||
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|
|||
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GEnie GENIELAMP Page 515
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Computing on GEnie Newsletter
|
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1.[*]GEnieLamp IBM Magazine
|
|||
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2.[*]GEnieLamp Atari Magazine
|
|||
|
3.[*]GEnieLamp Mac Magazine
|
|||
|
4.[*]GEnieLamp MacPRO Magazine
|
|||
|
5.[*]GEnieLamp Apple II Magazine
|
|||
|
6.[*]GEnieLamp A2Pro Magazine
|
|||
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|
|||
|
7.[*]FEEDBACK to GEnieLamp
|
|||
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8. Digital Publishing RoundTable
|
|||
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|
|||
|
As you can see the bulletin board, libraries and information files are
|
|||
|
gone and all that is available is the GEnieLamp Magazines, Feedback and a
|
|||
|
gateway to the new DigiPub RoundTable. (More on that later.) On the
|
|||
|
negative side, this means that Aladdin no longer works on this page. This
|
|||
|
goes for previous GET THE LAMP scripts as well. On the positive side, our
|
|||
|
resident script writer, Jim Lubin has come up with a new Aladdin script
|
|||
|
which will be available in the DigiPub library as well as the Aladdin
|
|||
|
support RoundTables within the next couple of weeks.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
But The Big News Is... Now, instead of capturing GEnieLamp, you can
|
|||
|
"""""""""""""""""""""" DOWNLOAD the magazine. No more waiting through a
|
|||
|
long capture session! Just download GEnieLamp as you would any other file
|
|||
|
here on GEnie. (We recommend Zmodem for best results.) If you prefer the
|
|||
|
old method, just turn on your capture buffer and [L]ist the magazine to you
|
|||
|
computer. (Again, this is in the planning stage and may not be implemented
|
|||
|
in time for the May 1st issue release. However, the option to _download_
|
|||
|
GEnieLamp is coming RSN!)
|
|||
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|
|||
|
PLUS! Starting with this issue GEnieLamp Online Magazine is going to a
|
|||
|
""""" twice a month publishing schedule. Now you can get your favorite
|
|||
|
version of GEnieLamp (GEnieLamp ST, Mac, IBM and A2) on the 1st and the
|
|||
|
15th of every month.
|
|||
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|
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AND BEST OF ALL... ~ GEnieLamp IS STILL GEnie*Basic! ~
|
|||
|
""""""""""""""""""
|
|||
|
[*][*][*]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
WHY A NEW ROUNDTABLE? The GEnieLamp RoundTable was originally set up
|
|||
|
""""""""""""""""""""" primarily for the distribution of GEnieLamp
|
|||
|
Magazine. Our secondary purpose was to promote and distribute other online
|
|||
|
newsletters. But electronic publishing goes much deeper then just
|
|||
|
magazines and newsletters. Therefore, we came to the conclusion that the
|
|||
|
time has come for electronic publishing and hence, the Digital Publishing
|
|||
|
RoundTable came online.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The Digital RoundTable (or DigiPub for short) is a GEnie*Value RT here
|
|||
|
on GEnie for people who are interested in pursuing publication of their
|
|||
|
work electronically whether here on GEnie or via disk-based media. For
|
|||
|
those looking for online publications, the DigiPub library offers online
|
|||
|
magazines, newsletters, short-stories, poetry, informational text files and
|
|||
|
other various text oriented articles for downloading to your computer.
|
|||
|
Also available are writers' tools and 'Hyper-utilties' for text
|
|||
|
presentation on most computer systems. In the DigiPub bulletin board you
|
|||
|
can converse with people in the digital publishing industry, meet editors
|
|||
|
from some of the top electronic publications and get hints and tips on how
|
|||
|
to go about publishing your own digital online book. As an added bonus,
|
|||
|
the DigiPub RoundTable is the official online service for the Digital
|
|||
|
Publishing Association.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
(Whew!) Until next month...
|
|||
|
John Peters
|
|||
|
[GENIELAMP]
|
|||
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|
|||
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[*][*][*]
|
|||
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|
|||
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|
|||
|
,_____ ,_____
|
|||
|
(__ | (__ |
|
|||
|
|| | | | |
|
|||
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( \ ^| |^^^^^^^^^^| |
|
|||
|
/X ^^^ \
|
|||
|
( \,,,,,,
|
|||
|
<_=_________________________________>
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Title: Never Bite a Computer Mouse Lying in the Sink
|
|||
|
Medium: Phospor
|
|||
|
Artist: Rod Martin
|
|||
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|
|||
|
|
|||
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|
|||
|
[EOA]
|
|||
|
[TAL]//////////////////////////////
|
|||
|
APPLE_TALK /
|
|||
|
/////////////////////////////////
|
|||
|
Apple II Corner
|
|||
|
"""""""""""""""
|
|||
|
By Darrel Raines
|
|||
|
[D.RAINES]
|
|||
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|
|||
|
|
|||
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|
|||
|
INDUSTRY STANDARDS One of the secrets to becoming a happy computer owner
|
|||
|
"""""""""""""""""" is very simple: standardized components. I have
|
|||
|
learned that I go with industry standards whenever possible. This may
|
|||
|
sound obvious, but there is more to this than meets the eye.
|
|||
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|
|||
|
Since the Apple II (and for that matter, any computer platform) will
|
|||
|
not last forever, you have to have an eye toward the future. I am always
|
|||
|
trying to decide what hardware I should purchase based upon the ability of
|
|||
|
that hardware to function on more than one type of computer. I want to be
|
|||
|
able to take most of my equipment with me whenever I change computers. Or,
|
|||
|
more likely, when I purchase other computers to supplement my Apple IIgs.
|
|||
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|
|||
|
An example involves my hard drives. I decided some time ago to use an
|
|||
|
interface standard that works across the various platforms. Therefore, the
|
|||
|
SCSI interface was the only logical route to travel. These hard drives
|
|||
|
will work on Apple II's, Mac's, IBM's and the various clones, just to
|
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mention a few. I do not have to worry about the ability to use my mass
|
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storage devices on the new equipment I might purchase. The SCSI standard
|
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provides me that assurance.
|
|||
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|
|||
|
Another example: my laser printer is an Epson product that conforms
|
|||
|
to the Printer Control Language (PCL) defined by the industry standard
|
|||
|
Hewlett Packard (HP) LaserJet IIP. This standard insures that my printer
|
|||
|
will work on a number of computer systems. It also insures that the
|
|||
|
software I purchase will support the printer. (An Epson dot matrix
|
|||
|
emulation adds to the functionality of the printer.)
|
|||
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|
|||
|
At this point we can see one of two problem areas begin to arise: new
|
|||
|
standards that replace the old. HP has come out with a new printer, the
|
|||
|
LaserJet III printer and an updated PCL for that printer. If I want to
|
|||
|
stay up-to-date with the most current printer control language, I must buy
|
|||
|
a new printer that conforms to the new standard. When, and if, I make this
|
|||
|
change is dictated by my budget and the software I might purchase that
|
|||
|
needs this updated PCL. I have ignored the possibility of "buying a new
|
|||
|
toy" for the sake having the latest and greatest electronics.
|
|||
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|
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The other problem area is the choice of which standard to buy into.
|
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My laser printer will work as another case study. The HP PCL standard is
|
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not the only game in town. Adobe has created a Page Scripting language
|
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that they call PostScript. This standard is radically different than the
|
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HP PCL and has been around longer. A good case could be made for
|
|||
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purchasing a PostScript printer instead of the HP compatible. However,
|
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price of the final printer was a deciding factor for me (PostScript is
|
|||
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fairly expense to license from Adobe).
|
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|
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With these goals in mind, I have purchased computer hardware that can
|
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be used on my current system, other computers systems that I might want to
|
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hook up, and future systems that I may buy. The biggest pay-back for this
|
|||
|
planning will be immediately after purchasing a new computer platform. I
|
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|
will not have to buy new equipment for every peripheral I need to enjoyment
|
|||
|
of my computer. If this type of thinking has not been a factor for you in
|
|||
|
the past, why don't you give it some consideration. You might save some
|
|||
|
money over the long haul.
|
|||
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|
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[*][*][*]
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|||
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Look for a couple of graphic demo programs (from me) during the next
|
|||
|
month. I managed to find the time to shake off my programming rust and get
|
|||
|
two projects finished. One package relates to the mention I made last
|
|||
|
month of Eamon software for the Apple IIgs. Where do you think that you
|
|||
|
will see these uploads first: GEnie, of course! See you online.
|
|||
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|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
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[EOA]
|
|||
|
[HOT]//////////////////////////////
|
|||
|
HOT TOPICS /
|
|||
|
/////////////////////////////////
|
|||
|
Too Hot To Handle, Almost...
|
|||
|
""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
|
|||
|
By Darrel Raines
|
|||
|
[D.RAINES]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
>>> BULLETIN BOARD HOT SPOTS <<<
|
|||
|
""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[*] CAT2, TOP4 .............. Cries for help - hard to place questions
|
|||
|
[*] CAT11, TOP12 ............ HD questions from the uninitiated
|
|||
|
[*] CAT11, TOP16 ............ Removable Mass Storage Devices
|
|||
|
[*] CAT12, TOP8 ............. HP DeskJet and Other Inkjet Printers
|
|||
|
[*] CAT17, TOP6 ............. Ultra & UltraMacros for AppleWorks
|
|||
|
[*] CAT24, TOP2 ............. ProTERM 3.0
|
|||
|
[*] CAT29, TOP15 ............ Requests for GEM 5.0
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[*][*][*]
|
|||
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|
|||
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|
|||
|
DEGAUSSING DISKS I've had excellent results with a strong magnet I moved
|
|||
|
"""""""""""""""" over the disk cover of disks (either 3.5" or 5.25")
|
|||
|
which the GS refused to format, 'cause the Finder detected some conflicting
|
|||
|
data on them. This worked also at work on a MS-DOS clone and a Unix system.
|
|||
|
A friend with an Amiga does this regularly, 'cause the Amiga seems to be
|
|||
|
very picky about disks that are to be formatted.
|
|||
|
(U.HUTH, CAT11, TOP16, MSG:268/M645;1)
|
|||
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|
|||
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|
|||
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There is also a knack to using magnets (bulk erasers included).
|
|||
|
Start with the item right against the magnet and then move it in a circle
|
|||
|
against the magnet. Then (and this is _important_) slowly (that's slowly!)
|
|||
|
move the item away for the magnet while continuing to move it in a circle.
|
|||
|
Also always do this to both sides of the item. (I used to use a magnetic
|
|||
|
mount CB radio antenna, myself). -- HangTime [Script-Central] B-)> (Oh,
|
|||
|
how far do you move the item away? Full arms distance, especially if
|
|||
|
you're using a strong magnet like a bulk eraser)
|
|||
|
(A2.HANGTIME, CAT11, TOP16, MSG:328/M645;1)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[EOA]
|
|||
|
[ODD]//////////////////////////////
|
|||
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A2 ODDS & ENDS /
|
|||
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/////////////////////////////////
|
|||
|
Here & There
|
|||
|
""""""""""""
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
CONFUSING? Boy, I'll bet this is confusing people. :-)
|
|||
|
"""""""""" At 2400, the 800 line access costs $6 per hour, plus whatever
|
|||
|
else you'd normally pay. For a Basic Services bulletin board, that would
|
|||
|
be nothing, so you pay only the $6/hour that 800 use costs. For someplace
|
|||
|
like A2, which costs $6/hour, that would be added on, so it's $12/hour.
|
|||
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|
|||
|
At 9600, the 800 line is a real good deal because THERE IS NO
|
|||
|
SURCHARGE. It's a flat $18 per hour, period.
|
|||
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|
|||
|
For those who have 9600 and call long distance, or pay toll calls
|
|||
|
anyway, this is a really good deal.
|
|||
|
(A2.DEAN, CAT2, TOP4, MSG:165/M645;1)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
TECH TALK Uhhh...we spent some time with this years ago (it was written
|
|||
|
""""""""" up in A2- Central back in Feb. 1988, p. 4.3). The "Monochrome"
|
|||
|
setting only affects the composite output (the "RCA phono" style
|
|||
|
connector), not the RGB output (which is _always_ color). Selecting
|
|||
|
"Monochrome" forces the composite output to use gray-scale sans color.
|
|||
|
(This is the same effect as setting bit 7 of $C021 to "1".)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Apple IIe (and probably IIc) RGB interfaces normally support a tricky
|
|||
|
softswitch toggle to enable a "monochrome" mode. Unfortunately, the IIgs
|
|||
|
RGB interface doesn't support that protocol.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
There is a different register value (bit 5 of the IIgs Video Control
|
|||
|
Register at $C029) that can be set to force (both RGB and composite)
|
|||
|
graphics to monochrome while the double high-resolution graphics mode is
|
|||
|
engaged (Annunciator 3 is set "off"); this is how the original Apple II
|
|||
|
Desktop (a modification of MouseDesk) managed to get crisp monochrome
|
|||
|
graphics on the IIgs using the DHR screen. By setting that bit to "1" and
|
|||
|
kicking the screen back to 40-columns (with AN03 still off to simulate DHR
|
|||
|
activity, but setting 80- columns off by touching $C00C or issuing a
|
|||
|
control- Q to the 80- column firmware and letting it do it) you can get
|
|||
|
something that simulates mono high-res. (This trick was even mentioned in
|
|||
|
an Apple II Technical Note.)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Two "gotchas": First, if you change $C029, when you enter the Control
|
|||
|
Panel it will change back (the Control Panel remembers what it's supposed
|
|||
|
to be). That means manually toggling from something like "Visit Monitor"
|
|||
|
is hopeless. Second, enabling the 80-column firmware to simulate the
|
|||
|
"single- wide double high-res monochrome" mode will force you to use the
|
|||
|
alternate character set, which means no flashing characters (and make sure
|
|||
|
you use the right ASCII range for "inverse" characters or you'll see text
|
|||
|
as MouseText). If you're writing your own program, you can probably work
|
|||
|
around these. If you're using someone else's program, $50-$100 for a
|
|||
|
monochrome monitor (you can leave it hooked up at the same time as the RGB
|
|||
|
monitor) is probably the quickest road to sanity.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Incidentally, the green/purple "fringe" created by single vertical
|
|||
|
lines on the standard high-res screen on a color monitor is _normal_ and
|
|||
|
perfectly proper due to the way the color circuitry was originally designed
|
|||
|
on the Apple II. Remember the Apple II was one of the first personal
|
|||
|
computers using _any_ color, and the design had to carry through for
|
|||
|
compatibility reasons. (I'm always getting letters from people insisting
|
|||
|
I'm wrong and that this is "broken". It isn't; look up the original
|
|||
|
articles by Steve Wozniak in _Byte_ and Bob Bishop in _Apple Orchard_. :)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
If you have to have a vertical _white_ line, you have to plot it two
|
|||
|
pixels wide, effectively reducing the screen resolution to 140 across. This
|
|||
|
isn't usually enough to simulate high-res text, so high- res simulations of
|
|||
|
the text screen have color fringes. (Bishop's article explains this better
|
|||
|
than anything I've seen, and maybe the information needs to be paraphrased
|
|||
|
in _A2- Central_ someday. :)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
See, it's really easy to figure out. (NOT! :)
|
|||
|
(A2-CENTRAL, CAT2, TOP11, MSG:14/M645;1)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
TECH TALK II Your problem with out of memory errors in your program is
|
|||
|
"""""""""""" NOT a reflection of your 4 MB RAM IIgs (which seems massive
|
|||
|
enough) It is because when you are using Applesoft BASIC you are ACTUALLY
|
|||
|
running a 128K Apple IIe. To word it a different way: Inside your 4 MB
|
|||
|
Apple IIGS is a smaller box. In that box is an Apple IIe, 128K memory.
|
|||
|
Furthermore, inside that 128K Apple IIe is a 48K Apple II+, in a smaller
|
|||
|
box. Applesoft was designed in 1977 for that 48K computer, and it has NO
|
|||
|
IDEA that is REALLY running on a computer with 85 times the memory.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
With 48K memory, you've got 2K being used by the system for screen
|
|||
|
display, stack, and so on, plus 10.5K being used by BASIC.SYSTEM (in the
|
|||
|
upper part of that memory). That leaves 35.5K for programs, which does
|
|||
|
NOT take into account any space that might be needed by variables,
|
|||
|
strings, etc. And don't even THINK about hi-res graphics, which takes
|
|||
|
another 8K right out of the MIDDLE of your program (not a convenient
|
|||
|
place).
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
What are your options? Well, you COULD go back to DOS 3.3 and do the
|
|||
|
program from there (although I doubt it could be done from DOS 3.3 either,
|
|||
|
unless you are using a utility that moves DOS onto the "Language Card",
|
|||
|
which was the name for the extra 16K memory that II+ users could add to
|
|||
|
give them a 64K machine. That memory is built into the IIe, which you
|
|||
|
recall is what you are actually running on in this example). Using the
|
|||
|
DOS 3.3 Launcher (available here in the A2 Library) you could still have
|
|||
|
the program on a 3.5 disk and launch it from the Finder.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
OR, you could find the old Beagle Bros called "Extra K", which frees
|
|||
|
up the other 64K available in your 128K Apple IIe for use of your program
|
|||
|
(for variable and string storage). I am not sure, but I believe that
|
|||
|
Extra K may be here in the A2 Library as a freeware program.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
OR, you will have to segment your program, so that it is in smaller
|
|||
|
parts that link to each other as needed.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
OR, you could learn a IIGS-specific language, and write your program
|
|||
|
to run under that language. That kind of language would KNOW that it was
|
|||
|
running on a IIGS, and would be able to take advantage of the extra
|
|||
|
memory.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
If you need further help with this, there are many smart programmers
|
|||
|
in A2Pro that would be glad to explain this further.
|
|||
|
(S.WEYHRICH, CAT9, TOP9, MSG:64/M645;1)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
DRIVES, DRIVES, DRIVES You cannot format a SyQuest yourself.
|
|||
|
"""""""""""""""""""""" The floptical is different though. The drive can
|
|||
|
actually lay down a low level format, but it may be tricky if the disk was
|
|||
|
previously formatted. Read on.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The "optical" in floptical refers to the mechanism which the drive
|
|||
|
uses to align the magnetic r/w head between the servo tracks. The hundreds
|
|||
|
of servo tracks are "etched" into the media and are themselves impervious
|
|||
|
to magnetic fields. Open the shutter on one of your 21 meg diskettes and
|
|||
|
look closely at the bottom surface.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
However, magnetic tracks written are NOT impervious. By playing
|
|||
|
around with a diskette with different enclosures, cards, drivers etc, I
|
|||
|
managed to mess one up pretty well. A RamFast format would fail with an
|
|||
|
error every time. Thought I had ruined the diskette actually..
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
But it reminded me of Apple tape media, where if you screw it up just
|
|||
|
right, you can hopelessly confuse the drive as it tries to rely on invalid
|
|||
|
manufacturers track info. Also, without an erase head (like a streamer
|
|||
|
tape would use for example) the drive may have problems overwriting an
|
|||
|
existing format if there is not enough write current compared to the drive
|
|||
|
which originally formatted the media. Some of my GSTape users are very
|
|||
|
familiar with the problem.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The solution (as with the Apple tape) is to "bulk erase" the puppy
|
|||
|
and wipe it "completely" blank. (I recommend the video-tape eraser from
|
|||
|
Radio Shack which is more powerful and thorough than the cheaper one sold
|
|||
|
for audio cassettes.)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Then format it with the RamFAST utility program. Go into the SCSI
|
|||
|
util part and insert the disk. While the drive is spinning mindlessly,
|
|||
|
select format. It takes 25 minutes or so so be patient.
|
|||
|
(TGRAMS, CAT11, TOP16, MSG:309/M645;1)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
HEY, EASE UP A BIT! I think you're being a little hard on the good old
|
|||
|
""""""""""""""""""" IIe's! Bought mine in 1983, and it has yet to
|
|||
|
develop a single problem - in spite of having been dragged overseas (where
|
|||
|
it spent 5 years running on 50 Hz power) and back.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Installed a Vulcan internal HD 4-5 years ago along with an internal
|
|||
|
modem. All slots are full and it's running on an 8 MHz ZipChip. It's on 24
|
|||
|
hours a day except when I'm away for more than a couple of days or a power
|
|||
|
outage is imminent. The only additional cooling I use is a Kensington
|
|||
|
System Saver (which has also been running for 10 years).
|
|||
|
(S.LORD, CAT17, TOP4, MSG:98/M645;1)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
> I was trying to track down a minor problem I was having in AWorks 3.0
|
|||
|
> and noticed that one of the versions had Seg.00, Seg.AM. and Seg.XM, and
|
|||
|
> the other version didn't.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
These three segments and one other (SEG.RM) are used to tell
|
|||
|
AppleWorks what type of memory you have and how to use it. Only one of the
|
|||
|
four is actually needed for whatever machine you are using it on. Here is
|
|||
|
what you need for each type of machine.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
SEG.RM -> //GS memory segment
|
|||
|
SEG.00 -> //e or //c with 128k
|
|||
|
SEG.AM -> //e with larger memory card in aux slot
|
|||
|
a //c with extra memory will need one of these two, I don't know which
|
|||
|
SEG.XM -> //e using a standard slot memory card
|
|||
|
(B.MILYKO, CAT, TOP, MSG:/M645;1)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[EOA]
|
|||
|
[WHA]//////////////////////////////
|
|||
|
WHAT'S NEW? /
|
|||
|
/////////////////////////////////
|
|||
|
New and Improved
|
|||
|
""""""""""""""""
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
DOS 3.3 LAUNCHER I just got Dos 3.3 launcher which launches d3.3 files
|
|||
|
"""""""""""""""" from the finder or prodos 8 on a IIe\//c. It is one of
|
|||
|
the best utilities I've ever used. I can play Defender without having to
|
|||
|
reboot! (D.HAND4, CAT9, TOP16, MSG:35/M645;1)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
If there is still anybody who does not know:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
When it comes to IDE drives, the Turbo IDE Card is the ultimate hard
|
|||
|
disk controller for any IDE drive, including Vulcan, InnerDrive and
|
|||
|
OverDrive systems. Why? The Turbo IDE Card uses DMA to make IDE drives
|
|||
|
RAMFAST!! It is the only IDE controller for the Apple II that uses DMA.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
So if you feel your hard drive is a little bit too slow, consider
|
|||
|
upgrading your system with a Turbo IDE Card - don't throw away your IDE
|
|||
|
hard drive equipment and buy SCSI!
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
More details about the Turbo IDE Card you can get in the A2 library on
|
|||
|
GEnie:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
TURBO.IDE.BXY a description of the Turbo IDE Card
|
|||
|
TURBO.NEWS.BXY Turbo IDE Card supports !!any!! Vulcan drive
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The Turbo IDE Card is available from
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
SHH SYSTEME Dipl. Ing. Joachim Lange
|
|||
|
Schoenstrasse 80a
|
|||
|
DE-8000 Muenchen 90
|
|||
|
Germany
|
|||
|
GEnie: J.LANGE7
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
new address, valid on June, 1. 1993
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
SHH SYSTEME Dipl. Ing. Joachim Lange
|
|||
|
Bergstrasse 95
|
|||
|
DE-8035 Stockdorf
|
|||
|
Germany
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
!**********************************************************!
|
|||
|
! "We make IDE Hard Drives RAMFast !!" !
|
|||
|
! "We make Vulcan Hard Drives RAMFast !!" !
|
|||
|
!**********************************************************!
|
|||
|
(J.LANGE7, CAT21, TOP6, MSG:5/M645;1)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[EOA]
|
|||
|
[THR]//////////////////////////////
|
|||
|
THORUGH THE GRAPEVINE... /
|
|||
|
/////////////////////////////////
|
|||
|
Rumors, Maybes and Mayhem
|
|||
|
"""""""""""""""""""""""""
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
\/\/ell, GSHK was _going_ to be commercial.... ][ think I mentioned it
|
|||
|
"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""" before, but: When the
|
|||
|
programs that pack files are commercial, changing the format is beneficial
|
|||
|
to the people that make/sell them, as people need to keep buying the
|
|||
|
updated versions to unpack the changed format. Even when they're
|
|||
|
NONcommercial the programmers have few scruples about changing the format,
|
|||
|
as they figure "well, anyone can download the latest version, so it
|
|||
|
doesn't matter." It may not matter to the computer format that the program
|
|||
|
was written for, but it does matter to all others. Also, think about
|
|||
|
this: if the programmers keep updating the formats, then people need to
|
|||
|
keep downloading the latest versions of the programs, which actually makes
|
|||
|
the online services happy. It's like selling appliances or cars. If you
|
|||
|
sell a customer one that never breaks, they're never going to need to buy
|
|||
|
a new one from you again. You'll have to rely on only the allure of
|
|||
|
having the "latest and greatest" for people to buy new models.
|
|||
|
(A2.LUNATIC, CAT2, TOP17, MSG:18/M645;1)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
>>>>> R.VAWTER wrote: That sure sounds like a great deal, Diff!!! I
|
|||
|
""""" will weemail you now!
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
>>>>> S.WEYHRICH [ Historian ] wrote: Diff, I'm glad he's going to
|
|||
|
""""" weemail YOU and not ME...
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
>>>>> R.DIFFLEY [Diff] wrote: Right! I'm a little nervous about this
|
|||
|
""""" new form of E-Mail, so I'm being real careful <grin>.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
BTW, this guy hasn't responded to my _E-Mail_ \-: Anyone know this
|
|||
|
guy? "Come out, come out, where ever you are!"
|
|||
|
(various authors, CAT4, TOP5, MSG:84-86/M645;1)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[EOA]
|
|||
|
[MES]//////////////////////////////
|
|||
|
MESSAGE SPOTLIGHT /
|
|||
|
/////////////////////////////////
|
|||
|
Word To The Wise
|
|||
|
""""""""""""""""
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Category 24 Topic 11
|
|||
|
Message 3 Fri Apr 02, 1993
|
|||
|
A2.DEAN [II Infinitum] at 20:29 EST
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
A couple of tips -
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
On GEnie, use a line width of 78 instead of 80. You won't be able to
|
|||
|
tell the difference, but, many people use this width. Thus, if your
|
|||
|
messages are sent with a line width of 80, some lines will wind up wrapped
|
|||
|
improperly, as in the case with the following part from Jerry's message
|
|||
|
above, which looked like this on my end:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
How to:
|
|||
|
<> Log on automtically, read mail if it exists, go to favorite areas, read
|
|||
|
the posts of interest there and log off with just a couple of
|
|||
|
keystrokes.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
But which he probably meant to look something like this:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
How to:
|
|||
|
<> Log on automtically, read mail if it exists, go to favorite areas,
|
|||
|
read the posts of interest there and log off with just a couple of
|
|||
|
keystrokes.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
I thus strongly recommend setting to a "Send length" of 78 or less (75
|
|||
|
if you want to be really conservative - some graphical based programs,
|
|||
|
especially those on smaller Macs, can't quite manage 80 columns readably).
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Also, much as I hate to admit it, GEnie is a fairly slow system at
|
|||
|
times. Therefore, I strongly advise using a Protocol Speed setting of
|
|||
|
"Slow" instead of "Medium" or "Fast."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
I recommend using everything else Jerry recommended. :-)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[*][*][*]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Here's a tip not everyone knows for making sending stuff to GEnie
|
|||
|
easier:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Go to the GEnie setup menu (just type SETUP at any page-numbered menu
|
|||
|
prompt) and set up GEnie to use a "prompt character" of ASCII 62 instead of
|
|||
|
63. This will substitute a greater-than for a question mark at most of
|
|||
|
GEnie's prompts - i.e. "P 645?" will be "P 645>".
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
THEN, you can do something really neat. You can set up a text file
|
|||
|
to do everything for you, such as in the following way:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
M645;1
|
|||
|
SET 24
|
|||
|
REP 11
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Hi Jerry! Nice to see you giving people these handy tips for using GEnie!
|
|||
|
ProTerm is awesome. Keep up the good work!
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Dean Esmay
|
|||
|
*S
|
|||
|
SET 29
|
|||
|
REP 5
|
|||
|
To heck with you GEM users, I can do it all within ProTerm!
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Dean Esmay
|
|||
|
*S
|
|||
|
BRO NOR
|
|||
|
BYE
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
....and so on.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
I put a space in front of everything here to prevent GEnie from
|
|||
|
getting confused by the "*S" at the start of some of those lines - normally
|
|||
|
you wouldn't do that.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
See, with GEnie set to send a prompt character of greather-than
|
|||
|
instead of a question mark, that makes EVERY line start with a ">". So if
|
|||
|
you set ProTerm to watch for a ">" prompt, then you can set up text files
|
|||
|
with any string of commands or text you want.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
So if you just know the GEnie commands you want, you can set up a
|
|||
|
text file to do lots of stuff for you. In fact, programs like GEM and
|
|||
|
CoPilot use this very trick to do a lot of GEnie work automatically. :-)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
By the way, in case you didn't know, BRO NOR means BROwse NOReply, so
|
|||
|
if you type BRO NOR, it will get all new messages without stopping between
|
|||
|
topics or categories - it'll just go VOOM like a rocket and grab everything
|
|||
|
new. You can also do a BRO CAT NOR if you just want to do that on one
|
|||
|
category. ;-)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
So the text file above, if you started to send it to GEnie from
|
|||
|
anywhere on GEnie, would jump to page 645 (A2) and select option #1 (enter
|
|||
|
the bulletin board), SET to category 24 and reply to Cat 11, put in that
|
|||
|
message and save it, then SET to 29 and reply to Topic 5, then would get a
|
|||
|
list of all new messages in the bulletin board, then log off.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Then you could read all the new messages in your scrollback buffer
|
|||
|
(if you have enough memory) and use the ProTerm editor to clip out, quote,
|
|||
|
and respond to anything you want, building your text file the same way.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
This is just one way of doing things.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[*][*][*]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
While on GEnie, do you spend most of your time downloading files?
|
|||
|
If so, you may be missing out some excellent information in the Bulletin
|
|||
|
Board area. The messages listed above only scratch the surface of
|
|||
|
what's available and waiting for you in the bulletin board area.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
If you are serious about your AII, the GEnieLamp staff strongly
|
|||
|
urge you to give the bulletin board area a try. There are literally
|
|||
|
thousands of messages posted from people like you from all over the
|
|||
|
world.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[EOA]
|
|||
|
[HUM]//////////////////////////////
|
|||
|
HUMOR ONLINE /
|
|||
|
/////////////////////////////////
|
|||
|
GEnie Fun And Games
|
|||
|
"""""""""""""""""""
|
|||
|
By Cliff Allen
|
|||
|
[C.ALLEN17]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
>>> ANNOUNCING THE "LIRPA 1" <<<
|
|||
|
""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
|
|||
|
~ The ultimate platter balancer and bit bucket! ~
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
I am not quite sure if I am going to explain this correctly, but just
|
|||
|
for grins, here it goes. When you store information on a disk, does the
|
|||
|
disk increase in weight? Another way of looking at it, on a piece of blank
|
|||
|
paper, you write something. The substance from the pencil leaves marks,
|
|||
|
which in turn increases the weight of the piece of paper by a very small
|
|||
|
detectable amount. When you erase the writing, the paper now regains its'
|
|||
|
original weight, but look at the erased substance - a combination of eraser
|
|||
|
and writing material.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Now, think about the computer disks. Initially, the disk contains
|
|||
|
nothing but 0's (not magnetized). When you store something on disks, it
|
|||
|
becomes a combination of 1's and 0's (not magnetized). Because nothing
|
|||
|
made of different or magnetized materials weighs the same, it would imply
|
|||
|
that a disk full of that the software 1's weigh different than one full of
|
|||
|
0's. Could this explain the reason that retrieving information from a full
|
|||
|
hard disk takes longer - not only does it have to find the information but
|
|||
|
that the disk is spinning undetectably slower due to the increase increase
|
|||
|
in weight.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Is it possible that the software to make information contiguous on
|
|||
|
drives balances the platter? Software that I have can do this in two
|
|||
|
modes: [1] for reading (placing "IS IT POSSIBLE THAT SOFTWARE information
|
|||
|
closer to the center TO MAKE INFORMATION CONTIGUOUS of the disk so the head
|
|||
|
doesn't ON DRIVES BALANCES THE have to move so far to read) or PLATTER?"
|
|||
|
[2] for writing (placing the information on the outer rim of the disk so
|
|||
|
the head doesn't have to move far to write new data).
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
It might be possible to prove my my initial statement that 1's cause
|
|||
|
an increase in disk weight by moving all data to the outer edge, and use
|
|||
|
sensitive equipment to detect any increase in momentum in the rotating
|
|||
|
disk. I am presently building such a device that not only detects the
|
|||
|
slowing down of rotation, but will compensate by increasing platter speed
|
|||
|
if needed, because I firmly believe that a majority of hard disk crashes
|
|||
|
are caused by this uneven weighting of stored information.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Once I have completed this, I will be tracking down another much
|
|||
|
needed problem. Does magnetism just disappear? Now that I've pretty much
|
|||
|
proved that magnetized objects weight more than non magnetized, and that
|
|||
|
matter cannot be created or destroyed, where does the magnetism go when it
|
|||
|
becomes unmagnetized?
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
While working on a mobile radar system, I found that the twystron
|
|||
|
transmitter tube (power output of a klystron and the bandwidth of the TWT
|
|||
|
tube) had what was called a VAC ION pump. It's purpose in life was to pull
|
|||
|
electrons that for some reason have strayed from the center flow and stuck
|
|||
|
the walls of the tube. The VAC ION pump was like a vacuum cleaner that
|
|||
|
attracted these stray electrons and gave them a path to ground, so that
|
|||
|
they would not become a hindrance to the concentrated electron beam that
|
|||
|
eventually produces the RF energy needed by the radar system. I apologize
|
|||
|
for straying, but I needed to produce some substantiating evidence to prove
|
|||
|
my next point.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
A 0 bit weighs nothing, and a 1 bit weighs a little more than nothing.
|
|||
|
When you replace a 1 with a 0, where does the 1 go? I think I have found
|
|||
|
out. While looking through the schematics of several computer systems, I
|
|||
|
came across a couple of ICs with obscure labeling. Looking through an IC
|
|||
|
Master book, these ICs pinned out to be compact RAM storage. In effect,
|
|||
|
these ICs are spare bit storage. When data is entered into the computer,
|
|||
|
if a 1 is needed, the MMU (memory management unit) first checks the bit
|
|||
|
storage chip, if empty it will bring one in from outside circuits. The
|
|||
|
term, computer glitch is so common that it is just accepted. My theory is
|
|||
|
that the bit storage chip is full and the unstored 1 causes these glitches.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The device that I'm building and testing at present will be modified
|
|||
|
to contain additional bit storage. Look for this much needed and
|
|||
|
revolutionary device at the BLUE RIDGE ATARIFEST in July. Y'all Come! Ask
|
|||
|
for the ********** LIRPA 1 **********
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The ultimate platter balancer and bit bucket!
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[EOA]
|
|||
|
[TEL]//////////////////////////////
|
|||
|
TELETALK ONLINE /
|
|||
|
/////////////////////////////////
|
|||
|
Online Communications
|
|||
|
"""""""""""""""""""""
|
|||
|
By Al Fasoldt
|
|||
|
[A.FASOLDT]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
>>> ILLITERACY OF HOMONYMS <<<
|
|||
|
""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
|
|||
|
Copyright 1993 by Al Fasoldt. All rights reserved.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
A new kind of illiteracy is sweeping the country.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
To give it a proper name, it's the illiteracy of homonyms - words that
|
|||
|
sound the same as other words but are spelled differently. Some say it's
|
|||
|
caused by the proliferation of spelling checkers used on computers, but
|
|||
|
that's not the full story.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
You see, most spelling checkers are abysmally dumb. They don't know
|
|||
|
the difference between "bear" and "bare," or "do" and "dew." All that most
|
|||
|
spelling checkers know is that "do" is spelled just as correctly as "dew"
|
|||
|
is.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
And that's where the disaster comes in.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Combine a bad speller (human variety) with a bad software program that
|
|||
|
can't distinguish between the appropriate word and the one that is just
|
|||
|
plain ludicrous, and you have the seeds of the new illiteracy.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
A poem posted on the Internet, a worldwide computer network, shows
|
|||
|
what I mean. Here it is:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"Spellbound"
|
|||
|
by Pennye Harper
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
I have a spelling checker;
|
|||
|
It came with my PC.
|
|||
|
It plainly marks four my revue
|
|||
|
Mistakes I cannot sea.
|
|||
|
I've run this poem threw it;
|
|||
|
I'm sure your pleased too no.
|
|||
|
It's letter-perfect in it's weigh.
|
|||
|
My checker tolled me sew.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
I've brought this problem up with other writers, and many of them say
|
|||
|
the current reliance on spelling checkers has made most of us lazy. Instead
|
|||
|
of looking up (and learning) a word we don't know how to spell, we just
|
|||
|
keep typing away, confident that the spelling checker will catch our
|
|||
|
mistakes.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
This is probably true. But I look at it another way. Spelling is
|
|||
|
supposed to be taught in school long before students do much writing on
|
|||
|
PCs, so I don't think spelling checkers are to blame if we can't spell; I
|
|||
|
think these brainless software programs are simply showing how poorly we
|
|||
|
were taught at an early age.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
I say "we" so that you don't get the impression that I am just talking
|
|||
|
about kids. Adults have this homonymic affliction, too.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The other day, a distinguished publisher of how-to books sent me a
|
|||
|
review copy of a book by a respected author. In the back of the book, he
|
|||
|
explained how he had done most of the work on the book himself - even
|
|||
|
producing the book's pages, ready for the publisher's press, on his own
|
|||
|
desktop-publishing software and laser printer.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
I hadn't read past Page 11 when I saw his first gaffe.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"Press the brake key," the book said.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
There were other mistakes just like that throughout the book.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
I had better things to do than wade through that sort of illiteracy,
|
|||
|
so I put on the breaks and went back to my keybored. The book went into the
|
|||
|
trash.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[EOA]
|
|||
|
[QUI]//////////////////////////////
|
|||
|
THE MIGHTY QUINN /
|
|||
|
/////////////////////////////////
|
|||
|
Random Access
|
|||
|
"""""""""""""
|
|||
|
By Mark Quinn
|
|||
|
[NEWSIE]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"A Whole Buncha Milliseconds with Mark"
|
|||
|
by Mark Quinn, DOA
|
|||
|
GEnie address: NEWSIE
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"When he sits around the computer, he really sits _around_ the
|
|||
|
computer."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
That sentence pretty much describes me. I'll admit it: I've tortured
|
|||
|
my culinary sensibilities with McWendy's not-so-haute cuisine with the
|
|||
|
worst of them. Richard Simmons would be aghast at the sight of my daily
|
|||
|
repast.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
While I'm baring my ASCII: I'm 6'5" (not 6'5" through, by the way,
|
|||
|
but the jury is out as long as the light inside the refrigerator isn't)
|
|||
|
tall, and when I was in high school and attended family gatherings, distant
|
|||
|
male relatives would always ask me if I played football.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
People have stopped asking me that. Instead they'll say something on
|
|||
|
the order of "I've got a cousin about your size. Where do you buy your
|
|||
|
clothes?". My father will take a close look at me and fade into a story
|
|||
|
about someone he vaguely knew ten years ago who died in bed after about
|
|||
|
nine heart attacks after they had quintuple- bypass surgery, the result
|
|||
|
requiring bashing a gaping hole in the roof of the poor deceased person's
|
|||
|
house, the services of a crane operator, a carpenter, and a large flatbed
|
|||
|
truck with a "Wide Load" sign fluttering in the breeze on its rear.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
I really shouldn't trivialize my plight and the plight of many others
|
|||
|
who are ruled by their food. Then again, no one else should -- but does
|
|||
|
that stop every dumbarse from recycling tired fat jokes for the burning
|
|||
|
ears of overweight targets, waddling down the main aisles of KMarts across
|
|||
|
the country? I've felt their dull barbs for most of my life, and my main
|
|||
|
recourse is humor. My main course is a double cheeseburger with the works,
|
|||
|
but my main recourse is humor.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
I haven't always been obese. When I was 14 years old, I starved,
|
|||
|
bicycled, and exercised my excess weight into temporary oblivion. I was
|
|||
|
amazed at the easy way I became 'popular' with the jocks. One of them
|
|||
|
asked me how I did it, and seemed quite surprised when I said, "I don't eat
|
|||
|
anymore. I'm a one-serving kinda guy."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Then summer vacation came, and my weight slowly began to return --
|
|||
|
along with the stares and the jokes. I can remember sitting in our living
|
|||
|
room and scarfing down one peanut butter sandwich after another. Why?
|
|||
|
I've often thought that I was so afraid of living up to everyone's
|
|||
|
expectations that I took the easy way out: my old protective coloration.
|
|||
|
I doubt it. The answer was that I was on the wrong kind of diet.
|
|||
|
Starvation diets hardly ever work, as I've since been told.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
So why don't I "buck up" and lose the weight again, the right way this
|
|||
|
time? Hmm . . . here's the answer: I'm waiting for R. Simmons to
|
|||
|
acknowledge my existence by selling his once-controversial "Deal-a-Meal"
|
|||
|
package, long ago adapted for use on PCs, on the QVC shopping network.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Then some rotund hacker will give in and write a "cheat program" for
|
|||
|
it, and I'll be able to eat all the chocolate cake and Haagen Daz (now in
|
|||
|
version 6.0, I believe) I want.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Can you imagine the calls he'd get on the tech support line?
|
|||
|
"Richard, this is Wanda. My husband got so desperate last night that he
|
|||
|
ate the Deal-a-Meal disk, and wouldn't give me a byte. It was a
|
|||
|
high-density disk, so he said he felt pretty full after it went down. Now
|
|||
|
we have no program. Then he said he had some of the wallpaper in our
|
|||
|
bedroom with ranch dressing, and swore it was delicious. What do I
|
|||
|
doooo?!"
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"Hang on, Wanda. (Lapsing into some sort of high-pitched shriek.)
|
|||
|
'Help me, Wanda, help-help me Wanda'. We'll send you a backup. About the
|
|||
|
wallpaper, ask your husband to send me a sample of it and if it's good
|
|||
|
enough, I'll put it in my cookbook."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Now that my TV, VCR, and cassette deck have fallen to Sir
|
|||
|
Richard, so far, only my computer remains unsoiled. There's a TV in the
|
|||
|
computer room, though. But there is also a way out.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
". . . I hold the fork", Simmons reads, racking up another fifty
|
|||
|
or so sales.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"And I hold the remote control," I say.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[EOA]
|
|||
|
[PRO]//////////////////////////////
|
|||
|
PROFILES /
|
|||
|
/////////////////////////////////
|
|||
|
Who's Who In Apple II
|
|||
|
"""""""""""""""""""""
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
>>> WHO'S WHO <<<
|
|||
|
"""""""""""""""""
|
|||
|
~ GEnieLamp Profile: Kitchen Sink Software ~
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Prefatory note: Kitchen Sink Software is a partnership currently
|
|||
|
owned by Guy Forsythe, Cindy Forsythe and Eric Bush. Most of the
|
|||
|
following questions have been answered by Guy, the founder of the
|
|||
|
company.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[*][*][*]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
GEnieLamp> Guy, can you tell us a little of how you first became
|
|||
|
""""""""" interested in the Apple II?
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Kitchen Sink Software> In 1983 I was (and still am) a Drafting teacher.
|
|||
|
""""""""""""""""""""" I wanted to introduce computer-assisted design,
|
|||
|
CAD, in my classes at the local high school. I saw some computer things
|
|||
|
being done by teachers at a professional conference and decided I needed to
|
|||
|
start learning. I had just finished building my new home and was ready for
|
|||
|
a fresh challenge. The computer teacher at the high school had just gotten
|
|||
|
a lab of Apple //e's and offered a short in-service in computer
|
|||
|
programming. I took it. We learned a few simple commands and that was
|
|||
|
about it. I checked the Applesoft manual out of the library and started
|
|||
|
reading it during my hall duty. It seemed logical and easy to do. A
|
|||
|
friend of my wife Cindy had purchased an Apple //+ with one drive and an
|
|||
|
Okidata printer. That was a $2700 system. In those days you could buy a
|
|||
|
good late model used car for that kind of money! She tried programming but
|
|||
|
it just didn't "take" with her so she loaned me the computer over the
|
|||
|
summer of 1983. I wrote a few programs. Nothing over a few hundred lines
|
|||
|
and none of them did anything of any significance.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
GEnieLamp> When and how did you decide to start Kitchen Sink Software?
|
|||
|
""""""""" What was your company's first software product?
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Kitchen Sink Software> The next school year I looked into buying a CAD
|
|||
|
""""""""""""""""""""" system. I bought an architectural design program
|
|||
|
that is still popular today. It had no scale to the printout. You could
|
|||
|
design a house, but it was a fantasy house that could not be built. So I
|
|||
|
sent it back and tried a Versawriter. It was a graphic tablet with
|
|||
|
software. It was a darned good product in its day. I found a way to
|
|||
|
measure when using the Versawriter that allowed me to get accurate scale
|
|||
|
printouts on an Epson MX-100 printer using Graphtrix software to dump the
|
|||
|
hires screen to the printer. It was workable but in the winter of 1984 I
|
|||
|
started writing a program that would teach true CAD in the classroom. In
|
|||
|
the spring I bought an unenhanced //e and really sweat over all the extra
|
|||
|
money I put out for the full 128k and duodisk (that duodisk STILL
|
|||
|
duplicates hundreds of disks each year). I called it CADDRAW.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
In the late spring I called a Drafting supply company that supplies
|
|||
|
schools and has an excellent reputation. They wanted to take a look, so
|
|||
|
Cindy and I packed up the computer and drove 50 miles to the supplier.
|
|||
|
They weren't interested at first but called us back the next week and we
|
|||
|
gave another demo. This time the said they would sell it and make it their
|
|||
|
big new product in the Fall when school starts. They were doing nothing
|
|||
|
with software at that time, and were scared of venturing into the field.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
They wanted me to handle the publishing because of their initial fear.
|
|||
|
I just wanted royalties but decided to publish it. CADDRAW ended up being
|
|||
|
10% of their total sales the first year. We made good money and they
|
|||
|
expanded their customer base as CADDRAW brought them new customers for
|
|||
|
traditional supplies too. They are still out biggest dealer. CADDRAW
|
|||
|
became the number one program in the schools for teaching CAD. The major
|
|||
|
press didn't think much of it though, so we didn't get good reviews. It
|
|||
|
was a bit crude since it was my first real program. But, it was the only
|
|||
|
program of the time that gave accurate scale drawings on a dot matrix
|
|||
|
printer. As a professional designer, that was far more important to me.
|
|||
|
The other programs were slightly "slicker" in appearance but the output was
|
|||
|
worthless.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
GEnieLamp> At some time in the company's early history you teamed up
|
|||
|
""""""""" with Jerry Kindall, who recently became editor-in-chief of
|
|||
|
"II Alive," the new bi-monthly magazine published by Quality Computers.
|
|||
|
How did Jerry come to work for Kitchen Sink Software?
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Kitchen Sink Software> I saw Jerry writing letters to Open Apple (now
|
|||
|
""""""""""""""""""""" A2-Central). He seemed to really know ProDOS. I
|
|||
|
had started AccuDraw in DOS 3.3 but wanted to go ProDOS with it. But
|
|||
|
BASIC.SYSTEM is such a memory hog. Jerry lived in a suburb of Columbus
|
|||
|
exactly across town from Westerville where I am. So I looked up Jerry in
|
|||
|
the phone book. I found a Kindall in Grove City, but not Jerry. Turned
|
|||
|
out he was a student at the local 2 year college. He and I both had an
|
|||
|
interest in writing a compact shell to link Applesoft with ProDOS. He was
|
|||
|
selling paint at Sears part time. I offered him slightly more than Sears
|
|||
|
and he went for it. He started on a compact DOS shell. He kept saying
|
|||
|
things like "With just 28 more bytes I can add a rename command." The next
|
|||
|
thing you know, we had MicroDot. Then he started writing graphic assembler
|
|||
|
routines for AccuDraw. Then he graduated and got a real job at Quality.
|
|||
|
CADDRAW was starting to fade badly so I could not afford to pay him anymore
|
|||
|
so it all worked out the best for both of us that Quality wanted him.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
GEnieLamp> When did Eric Bush come on board at Kitchen Sink Software? And
|
|||
|
""""""""" what programming projects has Eric worked on for the company?
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Kitchen Sink Software> Eric was my student teacher in 1988. He had never
|
|||
|
""""""""""""""""""""" worked on an Apple before, but he learned fast.
|
|||
|
I told him what I thought a good grade book program should be and a year
|
|||
|
later he showed up with Amazing Window. A year later it went into
|
|||
|
production, Eric and I became friends and he helped do a million little
|
|||
|
things for AccuDraw and other projects like "Kick Start" and "Routines Vol.
|
|||
|
I," just because he thought it was fun. This past January Eric finally got
|
|||
|
paid. He now owns 1/3 of Kitchen Sink. He still doesn't make anything,
|
|||
|
but now I can call him anytime or have him help with a mass mailing and
|
|||
|
have no guilt feelings. :)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
GEnieLamp> Your two flagship products, the AccuDraw CAD (computer-
|
|||
|
""""""""" assisted design) program, and the Amazing Window grade book
|
|||
|
program, are marketed to schools. Do you use these programs in the classes
|
|||
|
that you yourself teach? Can you briefly describe how AccuDraw is
|
|||
|
different from other Apple II CAD programs on the market? How is Amazing
|
|||
|
Window different?
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Kitchen Sink Software> I use both programs in my classes along with the
|
|||
|
""""""""""""""""""""" CNC Trainer (which is a G-Code editor and machine
|
|||
|
driver for teaching Computer Numerical Control programming - for you tech
|
|||
|
types). Eric used them in his classrooms also along with Robot Assembly
|
|||
|
Lab.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
AccuDraw is different because it works much like a paint or draw
|
|||
|
program rather than like a traditional CAD system so it is easier to work
|
|||
|
with. It is the only Apple // product ever produced that gives you
|
|||
|
accurate scale drawings in every scale there is on every dot matrix printer
|
|||
|
made. And it runs on a 128k //e (a must in the education market). It will
|
|||
|
do cut with rotated pastes, use Apple IIGS screen fonts (font file length
|
|||
|
maximum is 6k), standard Applesoft shape tables (though our own AccuSymbols
|
|||
|
are far more efficient and draw up to 20x faster than hires shapes) and
|
|||
|
Eric's most incredible circle routine.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
It will "grow" an elliptical arc in real time on a 1 megahertz //e.
|
|||
|
It does regular polygons, ellipses of any degree and all of the above
|
|||
|
rotated to any angle! You can do it faster than you can figure out all the
|
|||
|
parameters of what I just said. It also lets you use any symbol as a paint
|
|||
|
brush. It has fill routines that are accurate to common scales. It will
|
|||
|
make printouts up to 6 x 8 FEET ( Yes, feet) at 72 dots-per-inch (DPI) on a
|
|||
|
standard 8 inch wide dot matrix printer. It will make a poster of any
|
|||
|
screen. It can import standard hires screens. The measurement readout is
|
|||
|
decimal based and is constantly updated as you move the cursor. No
|
|||
|
counting grid lines or ruler lines on two edges. The X, Y, True Length
|
|||
|
distance and angle from horizontal are right together so you see them all
|
|||
|
at once. Just press "m" and the 0,0 point changes to the current cursor
|
|||
|
location. There is much more.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Amazing Window is THE best grade book program. It is a spreadsheet
|
|||
|
with two windows. One window shows student names and the other shows the
|
|||
|
corresponding grades. It displays 10 names and ten grades for each name at
|
|||
|
a time. The current student name and current grade are both highlighted so
|
|||
|
there is no doubt which name you are on. At the top of the screen, the
|
|||
|
current assignment name, point value and weighted area are displayed. You
|
|||
|
can get a spreadsheet type printout or ten other printouts. The most
|
|||
|
popular is the work sheet. It is a temporary grade book for storing a
|
|||
|
weeks worth of grades and attendance. I use them the first few weeks of
|
|||
|
the year while kids are changing schedules.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
When Cindy Field (from A+/Incider) reviewed Amazing Window she gave me
|
|||
|
a call. One of her comments was that she was amazed at how fast the
|
|||
|
spreadsheet scrolled and displayed all the information too. It is a credit
|
|||
|
to Eric's programming skill. Cindy thought her Apple IIGS might still be
|
|||
|
in the fast mode when it was actually in the slow mode. It is just that
|
|||
|
Eric's code is so fast.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
You never hear about Robot Assembly Lab but last year it was our
|
|||
|
number one program. It is simple enough for 5th graders to use and
|
|||
|
interesting enough for high schoolers to use. You design robots based on
|
|||
|
customer specifications using the 64 components available. Cost is a
|
|||
|
factor and you earn commissions. It is our biggest seller to dealers.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
GEnieLamp> Just recently Kitchen Sink Software obtained the distribution
|
|||
|
""""""""" rights to OmniPrint, an ImageWriter II printer utility. How
|
|||
|
did this arrangement come about? What do you think are the most useful
|
|||
|
features of OmniPrint?
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Kitchen Sink Software> When Randy Brandt (creator of TimeOut UltraMacros
|
|||
|
""""""""""""""""""""" and other gems) first showed me OmniPrint in the
|
|||
|
wee hours at the Kansasfest summer conference, in 1991, I told him I could
|
|||
|
sell a hoot load. He said he'd give me a good dealer price if we could
|
|||
|
just come to agreement on what a hoot load is in real numbers. We
|
|||
|
negotiated and concluded it was a whole Byte (256). I love Apple //
|
|||
|
people! They are never to busy to waste a bunch of time having fun!
|
|||
|
Skipping all the details of why, we are now the publishers of OmniPrint.
|
|||
|
The changes we have made to the package are that it now runs on a 128k //e
|
|||
|
with 5.25" drives. (OmniPrint does require AppleWorks 3.0.) It also now
|
|||
|
includes a printed manual and two great "cheat sheets." We also put a
|
|||
|
couple more sample files on the disk. The work we did to get it to this
|
|||
|
point is why Randy let us take over publishing it. The features I use the
|
|||
|
most are the borders, the double-high fonts and the ability to change
|
|||
|
Characters Per Inch and fonts mid-line.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Also, I use OmniPrint to set the ImageWriter II to the best print mode
|
|||
|
instead of pushing the buttons on the ImageWriter. Math teachers will love
|
|||
|
the math symbols. Foreign language teachers will like the fact that you
|
|||
|
get ALL the ImageWriter II foreign characters. GEnie folks will like the
|
|||
|
ability to print Mousetext as well as all the features. And what's really
|
|||
|
neat is that it prints out at text speed. If you have a color ribbon, you
|
|||
|
can change colors anywhere in the document you want and as often as you
|
|||
|
want. Note, though, that OmniPrint work only with the AppleWorks word
|
|||
|
processing module.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
GEnieLamp> What is your wife Cindy's role in running Kitchen Sink
|
|||
|
""""""""" Software?
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Kitchen Sink Software> Cindy does the real work. She puts together the
|
|||
|
""""""""""""""""""""" software packages, shipping, invoicing. She does
|
|||
|
all the day to day operations as well as keep me on the straight and
|
|||
|
narrow. She makes sure our programs and instructions are understandable by
|
|||
|
real people and not just us weirdos.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
GEnieLamp> From what I understand your partner, Eric Bush, recently
|
|||
|
""""""""" finished his masters degree. Was this a masters in
|
|||
|
education or a masters in computer science? Will Eric be staying on at
|
|||
|
Kitchen Sink?
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Kitchen Sink Software> Eric has to stay. Since he is part owner he comes
|
|||
|
""""""""""""""""""""" under the heading of "Slaves cannot quit." :)
|
|||
|
I'll let him tell you about his Master's.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
GEnieLamp> Eric, can you tell us a little about the subject of your
|
|||
|
""""""""" master's thesis? Are you currently teaching full-time?
|
|||
|
Doing any computer programming work outside of Kitchen Sink Software?
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Kitchen Sink Software> My thesis was titled "Considerations for the
|
|||
|
""""""""""""""""""""" Development of Educational Computer Software".
|
|||
|
In using software, I saw programs that were written by programmers that had
|
|||
|
no teaching background. I saw programs that were written by teachers with
|
|||
|
no programming background. A model was presented in my thesis to allow
|
|||
|
programmers to see what should be included from an education standpoint and
|
|||
|
to allow teachers to see what should be included from a programming
|
|||
|
standpoint.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
I taught in the public schools for three years before returning to The
|
|||
|
Ohio State University to pursue my Master's degree. I completed my
|
|||
|
Master's in Education in December of 1992. I am currently involved with a
|
|||
|
national clearinghouse for science and mathematics related instructional
|
|||
|
materials. The clearinghouse collects, abstracts, and makes available
|
|||
|
instructional materials for the K-12 teacher. These materials will
|
|||
|
include, software, kits, videos, filmstrips, and any other kind of media
|
|||
|
you can think of. My position relates to creating relational databases
|
|||
|
that can be accessed across a network and providing the catalog records
|
|||
|
that can be searched on-line.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
My position at the clearinghouse allows me to do some applications
|
|||
|
programming, but it is mostly software setup and database development. I
|
|||
|
do most of my programming (Apple II) between 6:00 pm and 12:00 am (with
|
|||
|
some nights a little later than that).
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
GEnieLamp> Eric, can you tell us about your hobbies and interests? What
|
|||
|
""""""""" would you like to do more of if you had the time?
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Kitchen Sink Software> My biggest hobby is of course computer
|
|||
|
""""""""""""""""""""" programming. But, when I am not programming, I
|
|||
|
enjoy working on my father's farm (which is about 4,500 acres). I am
|
|||
|
currently refurbishing two antique reel type lawn mowers which I hope to
|
|||
|
use to maintain the yard in the house that my wife (Cheryl) and I purchased
|
|||
|
in October, 1992. Electricity is a hobby that has come in quite handy with
|
|||
|
the new house. Adding lights, switches, phones, etc. where I want them has
|
|||
|
been an enjoyable pastime.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
GEnieLamp> Many software publishing companies that started out with the
|
|||
|
""""""""" Apple II are moving to cross-platform development for future
|
|||
|
software products. Is it possible that Kitchen Sink Software may be
|
|||
|
releasing any Mac or IBM products in the future?
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Kitchen Sink Software> We already have a product for both. It is called
|
|||
|
""""""""""""""""""""" Streamlined CNC. It is for writing G-Code program
|
|||
|
for CNC vertical mills. Any product we develop in the future will be
|
|||
|
across all platforms. In the education market, there simply is no choice
|
|||
|
any more. Eric is the MAC person. He has already started a total re-write
|
|||
|
of our Robot Assembly Lab for the MAC. I am doing the Apple version. And
|
|||
|
we have a third person doing the IBM version for royalties (that means
|
|||
|
he'll actually make some money!). We do have an Apple // specific program
|
|||
|
in the works and an IBM specific program in the works. Sadly, I expect the
|
|||
|
IBM program to be the best revenue generator. But if it makes money, we
|
|||
|
can afford to keep developing for the Apple. I guess I am an Apple //
|
|||
|
groupie. Note that we are 8-bit people and we still think that the //e
|
|||
|
still holds up compared to the others for the type of applications that
|
|||
|
most people need or want. I am sitting next to my MAC Centris 610 as I use
|
|||
|
AppleWorks to type this in.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
GEnieLamp> Kitchen Sink Software has attended three out of the four
|
|||
|
""""""""" summer KansasFest conferences organized by Resource Central.
|
|||
|
Can you share a few words about your view of Resource Central and their
|
|||
|
work? Are you planning on making a presentation again at this summer's
|
|||
|
conference?
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Kitchen Sink Software> Jerry Kindall went to the first KansasFest when he
|
|||
|
""""""""""""""""""""" was working for us. Eric and I have gone
|
|||
|
together to every conference since then. We both presented at the last two
|
|||
|
conferences, and our presentations were well attended. We seemed to be the
|
|||
|
major 8-bit presenters there. We will be submitting proposals to Resource
|
|||
|
Central to present again at this upcoming summer's conference.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Eric and I both like teaching to people who really want to learn
|
|||
|
something. Which is so refreshing compared to the public school classroom.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
I think of Resource Central as the glue that is holding together what
|
|||
|
is left of the Apple // world. They carry on the old Apple // hacker
|
|||
|
atmosphere that Beagle Bros started. And Kansasfest itself... It is as
|
|||
|
good as going to the National Model Railroading Convention. Now that may
|
|||
|
not mean much to most of you, but these are the only two places I ever go
|
|||
|
overnight without my wife and I AM FAITHFUL to her.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
GEnieLamp> For reference purposes, kindly list the Apple II software
|
|||
|
""""""""" products that Kitchen Sink Software distributes - - - along
|
|||
|
with their prices and how to reach you.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Kitchen Sink Software> Call us at 1-800-235-2205 or 614-891-2111
|
|||
|
"""""""""""""""""""""
|
|||
|
Kitchen Sink Software, Inc.
|
|||
|
903 Knebworth ct.
|
|||
|
Westerville, OH 43081 USA
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
I try to be by the phone from 3:30 to 5:30 E.T weekdays. If I don't
|
|||
|
answer the phone you will either get Cindy or the answering machine.
|
|||
|
Please leave a message. We WILL call you back.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
We publish a newsletter 2 to 3 times a year called "Creativity
|
|||
|
Update." It is oriented toward our education market but has general
|
|||
|
computer information and, of course, all of our products. Call for a free
|
|||
|
copy. We send one out with every inquiry. But to get onto our regular
|
|||
|
mailing list for two years you have to purchase a product direct or through
|
|||
|
a dealer or send us $2.00 for two year subscription.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
A note on dealers. Naturally, we make more profit on a direct sale,
|
|||
|
but frankly, dealers provide volume because of exposure in their catalogs.
|
|||
|
We have found it extremely difficult to get dealers outside of education.
|
|||
|
Call your dealer and insist they order it in for you. We will be happy to
|
|||
|
give them a good discount. We want them to find out that they can make
|
|||
|
money carrying our products. They won't know if they don't hear from
|
|||
|
customers.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Products (Apple //e except as noted):
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
AccuDraw Electronics $ 99.95
|
|||
|
AccuDraw Floor Plan $ 99.95
|
|||
|
AccuDraw Floor Plan and Electronics $ 138.90
|
|||
|
AccuDraw Floor Plan network version $ 299.95
|
|||
|
(you can add the second module later for $39.95)
|
|||
|
Amazing Window Gradesheet $ 49.95
|
|||
|
Amazing Window Gradesheet building license $1.50 per teacher
|
|||
|
Amazing Median Gradesheet - same as Amazing Window 1/4" Scale Exterior
|
|||
|
Elevation Symbols for AccuDraw $ 24.95
|
|||
|
1/2" Scale Kitchen Symbols for Accudraw $ 39.95
|
|||
|
Robot Assembly Lab $ 49.95
|
|||
|
Robot Assembly Lab pack for 6 computers $ 99.95
|
|||
|
Bridge Builder $ 58.95
|
|||
|
Bridge Builder Lab pack for entire building $ 118.95
|
|||
|
Bridge Builder IBM $ 98.95 Lab Pack/5 disks IBM $347.95
|
|||
|
MicroDot $ 29.95
|
|||
|
Kick Start $ 9.95
|
|||
|
Routines Vol. I $ 9.95
|
|||
|
CNC Trainer $ 69.95
|
|||
|
Bridgeport Mill Driver $ 39.95
|
|||
|
Dyna Mill Post Processor and Driver $ 39.95
|
|||
|
CNC Trainer with building license $ 149.95
|
|||
|
Streamlined CNC MAC or IBM $199.95
|
|||
|
Streamlined CNC with building license MAC or IBM $399.95
|
|||
|
Getting Started in G-Code book $ 5.00
|
|||
|
OmniPrint $ 49.95
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Shipping is $3.00 anywhere in the lower 48 states.
|
|||
|
8.00 for Canada, AK and HI
|
|||
|
Actual Cost every place else.
|
|||
|
$5.00 extra for COD
|
|||
|
Overnight or 2nd day air UPS: Actual cost
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
We take checks, money orders, purchase orders, Visa,
|
|||
|
Mastercard, or COD.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[EOA]
|
|||
|
[REF]//////////////////////////////
|
|||
|
REFLECTIONS /
|
|||
|
/////////////////////////////////
|
|||
|
Online Communications
|
|||
|
"""""""""""""""""""""
|
|||
|
By Phil Shapiro
|
|||
|
[P.SHAPRIO1]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
>>> ONLINE EDITING <<<
|
|||
|
""""""""""""""""""""""
|
|||
|
~ Polishing the Written Word ~
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
In ages past the written word served principally as a means of
|
|||
|
communication. In this information age, the written word is increasingly
|
|||
|
becoming an economic commodity in its own right. But unlike tangible
|
|||
|
economic commodities, information commodities have the capability of
|
|||
|
bearing greatly enhanced value if they have first passed through the hands
|
|||
|
of an eagle-eyed editor.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Chances are that in the not too distant future every professional,
|
|||
|
regardless of trade, will spend upwards of two to three hours each day
|
|||
|
writing. When a person's livelihood depends on the clarity of his or her
|
|||
|
written expression, you can be sure that person will give thought to making
|
|||
|
use of editing services.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Enter online editing. When it absolutely positively has to be edited
|
|||
|
before tomorrow morning, you can't beat electronic mail for speed, price,
|
|||
|
and convenience.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
To be sure, the fax machine has great potential as an editing tool.
|
|||
|
Editor's comments can be scribbled in the margins, or can be penciled in
|
|||
|
right above the offending text. But faxes take time to send. For a simple
|
|||
|
editing job, fax machines could work well. But if multiple drafts need to
|
|||
|
be sent back and forth, electronic mail works out to be both faster and
|
|||
|
cheaper.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The Pricing of Editing Services The pricing of online editing services
|
|||
|
""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""" is likely to be pegged to the
|
|||
|
time-sensitive nature of the editing job. Prose that can wait a whole week
|
|||
|
to be edited will likely be priced at a substantially lower rate than prose
|
|||
|
that needs to be edited before tomorrow morning. Premium rates will apply
|
|||
|
to prose that needs to be edited before the end of the next hour. Some
|
|||
|
editing services may even offer live, while-you-wait, online editing.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
It's interesting to spend a little time thinking about the pricing of
|
|||
|
online editing services. Of what economic value would it be to a lawyer to
|
|||
|
make sure his or her legal brief is clear, concise, and free of
|
|||
|
embarrassing grammatical mistakes? Would the value be $75? $150 $350?
|
|||
|
$500?
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
If you're not sure how to answer this question, consider asking a
|
|||
|
defendant in a criminal trial how much he or she values his or her freedom.
|
|||
|
Ask a doctor accused of malpractice how much he or she values retaining his
|
|||
|
or her medical license. Ask a large corporation how much it values being
|
|||
|
exonerated of tort liability.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Naturally, the value of an editing service may vary depending on the
|
|||
|
particular circumstances facing the author on that particular day. But
|
|||
|
it's quite conceivable that a professional worker may be willing to pay
|
|||
|
$200 or more to have an hour's worth of online interactive editing. When
|
|||
|
the stakes are really high, the value of an online editing service could
|
|||
|
rise to the $800 to $1000 level for two to three hours of late-night,
|
|||
|
while-you-wait editing.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Online Editing in the Academic World Thinking along the same lines, how
|
|||
|
"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""" much would it be worth for a
|
|||
|
college student to have his or her English, history, or social studies
|
|||
|
paper looked over by an editor's eyes? How much would an Ivy League
|
|||
|
pre-med value getting an "A" over a "B" on an important term paper?
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
This, of course, raises some thorny ethical issues. How can a
|
|||
|
professor be sure that a student's writing has not been entirely re-written
|
|||
|
by a fee-based online editing service? The best counter-argument to this
|
|||
|
concern is that the ethical problems of "student originality" have always
|
|||
|
been a concern on campuses. The fact that a student makes use of an online
|
|||
|
editing service does not itself imply that an abuse of that editing service
|
|||
|
has taken place.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Already steps are being taken on some campuses to verify the
|
|||
|
originality of student writings. College students of the 1990's should not
|
|||
|
be surprised, then, to have professors asking them to hand in rough drafts
|
|||
|
along with their finished papers.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Online Editing Conventions As online editing becomes a more accepted
|
|||
|
"""""""""""""""""""""""""" practice, online editing conventions will
|
|||
|
surely become more commonplace. Instead of re-sending an entire edited
|
|||
|
manuscript back to an author, many editors will favor sending just the
|
|||
|
suggested modifications.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
For instance, text to be deleted could be enclosed in square brackets.
|
|||
|
["To be or not to be; that is the thing I've been thinking about a lot
|
|||
|
lately."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Text to be added could be included in curly-brackets. {"To be, or not
|
|||
|
to be. That is the question."}
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Numbered Paragraphs Greatly Assist Online Editors For ease of reference,
|
|||
|
""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""" the numbering of
|
|||
|
paragraphs will be a big help to online editors. In the case of detailed
|
|||
|
technical writings, the numbering of sentences could be useful, too.
|
|||
|
Almost any word-processing macro language can take care of numbering
|
|||
|
sentences or paragraphs. Look for such a macro coming to a disk drive near
|
|||
|
you, soon.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
It's a basic law of psychology that the human mind cannot
|
|||
|
simultaneously concentrate on the content of ideas and the expression of
|
|||
|
those ideas both at the same time. And even if you could do so, few writers
|
|||
|
anywhere can write prose that is so flawless as to leave an editor with no
|
|||
|
suggested changes to make. (Whether you decide to make those suggested
|
|||
|
changes, or not, will always be up to you.) To be sure, grammar checkers
|
|||
|
and spelling checkers can be helpful in correcting the superficial
|
|||
|
imperfections in writing. But to straighten out the internal logic of
|
|||
|
prose - - - to tighten prose so that every word carries force and meaning,
|
|||
|
you must necessarily look to the services of a skilled human editor.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Luckily for you, a fee-based online editing service may be soon only
|
|||
|
an e-mail message away. It will be interesting to see which of the
|
|||
|
national information services takes the lead in bringing such services
|
|||
|
online.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[*][*][*]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[The author takes an interest in the social dimensions
|
|||
|
of communication technology. He can be reached on
|
|||
|
GEnie at: p.shapiro1; on America Online at:
|
|||
|
pshapiro; and on Internet at:pshapiro@pro-novapple.cts.com]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[EOA]
|
|||
|
[CON]//////////////////////////////
|
|||
|
CONNECTIONS /
|
|||
|
/////////////////////////////////
|
|||
|
By Joe Kohn
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Copyright (c) 1992 by Joe Kohn
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Permission is hereby granted to non-profit Apple II User Groups to
|
|||
|
republish this article, in whole or in part, in their newsletters.
|
|||
|
Electronic re-distribution is encouraged via online network and/or
|
|||
|
BBS. This article may not be re-published by any for-profit
|
|||
|
organization without the written consent of Joe Kohn.)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[*][*][*]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Greetings everyone.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
* I am firmly convinced that the single most valuable peripheral
|
|||
|
device that can be connected to a computer is a modem. Once a modem is
|
|||
|
connected, it's possible for anyone to join that huge group of Apple II
|
|||
|
users who frequent America Online, CompuServe, GEnie, and the Internet. I'm
|
|||
|
so convinced of the importance of "going online" that I will be writing a
|
|||
|
new column for inCider/A+ on the subject. By now, many of you will have
|
|||
|
seen the first installment of "Grapevine", and I hope that it's piqued your
|
|||
|
interest in owning a modem. Each month, I'll be sharing interesting Apple
|
|||
|
II related tidbits found on the various online services, and I'll also be
|
|||
|
sharing money saving hints and tips for those of you who already have
|
|||
|
modems. Grapevine; coming monthly to inCider/A+.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
* I'd like to mention a brand new $10 Shareware program that's one of
|
|||
|
the best brain teasing, yet enjoyable, games I've ever played on the IIGS.
|
|||
|
Kenrick Mock, the author of that fine game Columns GS, has just released
|
|||
|
BoggleGS, and it's something that all fans of word games should have. When
|
|||
|
first run, a colorful grid filled with letters appears. You have 3 minutes
|
|||
|
to find words that can be made from adjacent letters in the grid. It's a
|
|||
|
very colorful program and even has music. If you enjoy working crossword
|
|||
|
puzzles, you should really enjoy it, and if you're a teacher, you'll love
|
|||
|
BoggleGS.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
* Speaking of shareware, I'd like to let you know about a fantastic
|
|||
|
new Apple IIGS shareware utility program that may change your life. Coming
|
|||
|
all the way from New South Wales in Australia, John MacLean's $10 DOS 3.3
|
|||
|
Launcher should be of great interest to long-time Apple II owners who have
|
|||
|
a large library of older DOS 3.3 software. In short, DOS 3.3 Launcher
|
|||
|
provides an easy-to-use way to store, and run, DOS 3.3 software on any hard
|
|||
|
drive connected to an Apple IIGS. Even if your hard drive wasn't DOS 3.3
|
|||
|
compatible before, it is now.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
DOS 3.3 Launcher is a GS/OS desktop based program that can be launched
|
|||
|
from the Finder. It has a standard GS/OS interface complete with pull down
|
|||
|
menus. Once run, it will allow you to copy DOS 3.3 Binary files, or entire
|
|||
|
DOS 3.3 disks, to your hard drive, and it will let you launch those files
|
|||
|
or disks from the Finder, and will return you to The Finder when you're
|
|||
|
finished using the DOS 3.3 software. DOS 3.3 Launcher works with single or
|
|||
|
double sided disks. It even slows down old games so that they run at 1 Mhz,
|
|||
|
and returns you to the GS'es faster speed upon exiting those programs. It
|
|||
|
does not work, of course, with copy protected software.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
John MacLean, who also wrote Roger Wagner's Graphic Exchange, has
|
|||
|
written a very useful utility program that will soon have you dusting off
|
|||
|
your old DOS 3.3 software.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
* Speaking of new software, I finally got around to installing the new
|
|||
|
AppleWorks Classic enhancement TimeOut Grammar. This is a grammar checker
|
|||
|
that works right from within AppleWorks, and I like it a lot. This TimeOut
|
|||
|
version is based upon the old Sensible Grammar, and works in a similar
|
|||
|
manner. It checks Appleworks word processing documents for grammar usage
|
|||
|
and punctuation. Combining that with TimeOut Thesaurus, AppleWorks V3.0 is
|
|||
|
a writer's best friend. TimeOut Grammar is available from Quality
|
|||
|
Computers.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
* Quality Computers will soon be releasing Finder Helper, an
|
|||
|
incredible collection of System 6.0 Finder Extensions and Desk Accessories
|
|||
|
written by noted IIGS programmer Bill Tudor. I really like Finder Helper a
|
|||
|
lot, but before I provide any details, allow me the liberty to stray, and
|
|||
|
please be patient with me as I editorialize a little.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Many of the utilities found in Finder Helper started out life as
|
|||
|
shareware products. Bill Tudor must have been quite proud when he saw that
|
|||
|
his programs had been downloaded hundreds of times from the various online
|
|||
|
networks, and were in use on thousands of System 6 equipped GS'es; hardly a
|
|||
|
day went by when I didn't hear someone rave about how great Bill Tudor's
|
|||
|
shareware programs were. But, something was amiss. Many of the people that
|
|||
|
used Bill Tudor's shareware never bothered to send in their shareware fees,
|
|||
|
so he sought a more traditional outlet for his software. Now that it's a
|
|||
|
commercial product, he'll at least be getting some monetary reward, but, in
|
|||
|
some ways, I can't help but feel that the Apple IIGS community has lost
|
|||
|
something.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
It's important to submit shareware fees for programs you use. By
|
|||
|
sending in shareware fees, you'll be helping to prolong the life of the
|
|||
|
Apple II, because you'll be encouraging those who program these computers.
|
|||
|
Think about it, and then take the pledge to submit at least one shareware
|
|||
|
payment to an author whose work you like.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Getting back to Finder Helper, it's a collection of Finder Extensions
|
|||
|
and New Desk Accessories that provide useful new tools that can be used
|
|||
|
when using GS/OS. It includes a very well behaved Alarm Clock that appears
|
|||
|
in the IIGS Menu Bar. It includes Cdev Alias that allows you to control
|
|||
|
your Control Panel Devices from a New Desk Accessory. SuperDataPath allows
|
|||
|
you to easily instruct the Finder where it can find your data files.
|
|||
|
HotKeys allows you to launch your favorite programs directly from the
|
|||
|
IIGS'es numerical keyboard. Catalog will save a disk catalog's contents to
|
|||
|
a file on disk. File Peeker shows you the contents of Text, Teach,
|
|||
|
Pictures, Sounds, Icons and Filetype documents. Workset allows you to
|
|||
|
double click on one small icon and have AppleWorksGS, for example, launch
|
|||
|
and load multiple documents. Crypt allows you to encrypt all your sensitive
|
|||
|
personal files, and MoreInfo provides, among other things, the ability to
|
|||
|
lock and unlock files right from the Finder's Extra Menu.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Due to the fact that Apple has trademarked the word "Finder", when
|
|||
|
this set of utilities is actually released, it may have a different name.
|
|||
|
No matter what it's named, it's a great package of System 6 enhancements.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
* I spent a pleasant afternoon recently with Olivier Goguel, the
|
|||
|
founder of the FTA, when he was visiting San Francisco. If you're not
|
|||
|
already familiar with the FTA, make sure you pick up some of their freeware
|
|||
|
disks from your local user group or download some from your favorite online
|
|||
|
service. The France based FTA has created a stunning collection of GS
|
|||
|
software, and it is not to be missed.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The FTA disbanded late last year, and are no longer actively
|
|||
|
programming for the IIGS, but Olivier Goguel still managed to bring me some
|
|||
|
GS news from France. And, it's from France that we might eventually see a
|
|||
|
MultiFinder. In any case, Olivier did give me a disk of his latest
|
|||
|
software. Alas, it requires an IBM or compatible. I brought it over to a
|
|||
|
friend's to see, and we were both mightily impressed.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
I was able to arrange what I think of as the "Summit Meeting of the
|
|||
|
Century" between Olivier Goguel and that GS programming master, Bill
|
|||
|
Heineman. The two spent a day together, impressing each other with their
|
|||
|
programming abilities. It's just possible that we'll see a joint project
|
|||
|
coming from that meeting.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
* In the rumor department, I've been hearing a lot recently about One
|
|||
|
World Software Wizards, a new group of Apple IIGS programmers whose plans
|
|||
|
include a freeware CAD program and a new version of NoiseTracker. It's even
|
|||
|
rumored that the founder of the FTA is going to be involved. Stay tuned, in
|
|||
|
future months, to see if anything comes from these great plans.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[*][*][*]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
** Joe Kohn is a Contributing Editor for inCider/A+ Magazine, and
|
|||
|
writes the monthly "Shareware Solutions" and "Grapevine" columns.
|
|||
|
He also writes a monthly column for Softdisk G-S, and is the
|
|||
|
Founder and President of Shareware Solutions: The User Group.
|
|||
|
Connections is his monthly column that is distributed as
|
|||
|
Copyrighted Freeware. Write to Joe Kohn at 166 Alpine Street, San
|
|||
|
Rafael, CA 94901. Send a self addressed stamped envelope if you'd
|
|||
|
like a personal reply. Or, contact Joe online. He shouldn't be too
|
|||
|
hard to locate on America Online, CompuServe, GEnie, or on the net.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[EOA]
|
|||
|
[ASK]//////////////////////////////
|
|||
|
ASK DOCTOR BOB /
|
|||
|
/////////////////////////////////
|
|||
|
Gotta Problem? Gotta Answer!
|
|||
|
"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
|
|||
|
By Bob Connors
|
|||
|
[R.CONNORS2]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
o 4DOS, NDOS, AND THE LOADHIGH COMMAND
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
o IS MY BATTERY FADING AWAY?
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Doctor Bob,
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Is the MS-DOS 6 readme correct that 4.02 will fix the LH switch
|
|||
|
problem? Or does one of the 4.01x versions fix this? Also, how do I
|
|||
|
install over NDOS which I am using now?
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Thanks,
|
|||
|
Daniel
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Hello Daniel,
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
My source tells me that 4DOS 4.02 fixes the LH switch problem
|
|||
|
although he hasn't used it (he uses QEMM386). He does know that it is not
|
|||
|
fixed in 4.01 though.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
As to your second question, there are two ways to go about it:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
1) Change the SHELL command in your CONFIG.SYS file to point
|
|||
|
to 4DOS instead of NDOS. Since NDOS is a subset of 4DOS,
|
|||
|
that should not affect things.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
2) Another alternative is to rename 4DOS.COM to COMMAND.COM
|
|||
|
and use that in your SHELL statement. I haven't tried it
|
|||
|
(I don't use 4DOS myself) but my source has and,
|
|||
|
according to him, it eliminates a whole lot of
|
|||
|
configuration problems with applications.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Hope this helps but a word of caution, BACKUP!
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
-Doctor Bob
|
|||
|
[*][*][*]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Doctor Bob,
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
I have a question about the IIGs battery. I have had my 'puter for
|
|||
|
going on 5 years now, and never changed the battery. Lately, about 4 times
|
|||
|
out of the last 50 cold boots, my computer lost all of my control panel
|
|||
|
settings and went to default, except for the sound. It goes to the max.
|
|||
|
Is this a symptom of my battery going on me or what? Any help would be
|
|||
|
appreciated. Thanks for any help,
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
chevy chase (R.GELLOCK)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Hi Chevy,
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
What you describe does certainly sound like a weak battery to me. I
|
|||
|
would suggest that you get it changed or, if you are technically
|
|||
|
responsible (you know which end of the screwdriver has the blade) and you
|
|||
|
know the details of your computer's innards, you might be able to do it
|
|||
|
yourself.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
If you do not know how to do it, then either take it to someone who
|
|||
|
services the IIGS or check out the APPLE, A2PRO, or A2 RoundTables. There
|
|||
|
is bound to be someone in one of those RoundTables who can give you the
|
|||
|
necessary guidance.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
-Doctor Bob
|
|||
|
[*][*][*]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
ASK DOCTOR BOB Do you have a question about operating systems, GEnie or
|
|||
|
"""""""""""""" anything concerning computers? If so, you can get your
|
|||
|
questions answered here in GEnieLamp by Doctor Bob. Any question is fair
|
|||
|
game...and if the good Doctor Bob doesn't know the answer, he'll find
|
|||
|
someone who does. Stop wandering around in the dark, send your question to
|
|||
|
Doctor Bob in the Digital Publishing RoundTable bulletin board, CATegory
|
|||
|
3, TOPic 3.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[EOA]
|
|||
|
[MOO]//////////////////////////////
|
|||
|
CowTOONS! /
|
|||
|
/////////////////////////////////
|
|||
|
100% lean ( )
|
|||
|
/~~~~\ /~~~~\ | | /~~|~~\ \/~~~~\ /~~~~\/ | | /~~~~\
|
|||
|
| | | | | | | || | |\ | `.
|
|||
|
| | | | | | | | (o || (o | | \ | `-.
|
|||
|
\____, \____/ \./ \./ | \____/ \____/ | \| \____)
|
|||
|
\ /
|
|||
|
/~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ \ / . No Skimming!
|
|||
|
/ [MOO] By MIKE WHITE [MWHITE] (. .) . '
|
|||
|
* Cows from Literature, ~~~
|
|||
|
History, and the Arts
|
|||
|
|\~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~/|
|
|||
|
Volume I, Number 3 | |~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~| |
|
|||
|
| | | |
|
|||
|
| | o] [__] o][o | |
|
|||
|
| | [o [o^] ~ | |
|
|||
|
| | \ / /-------\/ ~ | |
|
|||
|
| | || / | || ~ | |
|
|||
|
| | * * ||----|| |: 0 | |
|
|||
|
| | ~~ ~~ | | |
|
|||
|
| | | |
|
|||
|
|/~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~\|
|
|||
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Cubist Cows
|
|||
|
~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|||
|
attributed to Pablo Piccowso, 1881 - 1973
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
$
|
|||
|
...---...
|
|||
|
../ / | \ \.. $
|
|||
|
./ / / | \ \ \.
|
|||
|
$ / / / | \ \ \ $
|
|||
|
/ / / | \ \ \
|
|||
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|||
|
$ \ | /
|
|||
|
\ | / $
|
|||
|
\ | /
|
|||
|
$ \ | /
|
|||
|
\ | /
|
|||
|
\ | / $
|
|||
|
\ | /
|
|||
|
\ | /(__)
|
|||
|
\|/ (oo)
|
|||
|
/---++--\/
|
|||
|
/ | || ||
|
|||
|
* ||-++-||
|
|||
|
~~ ~~
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
D. B. Mooper
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Hijacked a Northwest Boeing 727
|
|||
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|||
|
November 1971
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
(.....)
|
|||
|
( ! ! )
|
|||
|
\ ' /
|
|||
|
/ \
|
|||
|
/ \ CowTOONS? Stephen Litwin took us up
|
|||
|
|\ /| on our offer and sent in this month's
|
|||
|
| \|/ | CowTOONS selection.
|
|||
|
( | )
|
|||
|
\ | / If you have an idea for a CowTOON, we
|
|||
|
| | | would like to see it. And, if we pick
|
|||
|
] | [ .'''''''. your CowTOON for publishing in GEnieLamp
|
|||
|
J..../ ' 0 we will credit your account with 2 hours
|
|||
|
U of GEnie non-prime time!
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Arnold Cowl-mer
|
|||
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|||
|
Making a Perfect Cow Chip
|
|||
|
By Steve Litwin
|
|||
|
[S.LITWIN2]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[EOA]
|
|||
|
[AII]//////////////////////////////
|
|||
|
APPLE II /
|
|||
|
/////////////////////////////////
|
|||
|
Apple II History, Part 12
|
|||
|
"""""""""""""""""""""""""
|
|||
|
By Steven Weyhrich
|
|||
|
[S.WEYHRICH]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
>>> APPLE II HISTORY <<<
|
|||
|
""""""""""""""""""""""""
|
|||
|
Compiled and written by Steven Weyhrich
|
|||
|
(C) Copyright 1993, Zonker Software
|
|||
|
(PART 12 -- PERIPHERALS & THE APPLE II ABROAD)
|
|||
|
[v1.2 :: 12 Nov 92]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
INTRODUCTION Some information about the foreign versions of the AppleII
|
|||
|
"""""""""""" that have been released in the past are discussed in this
|
|||
|
section. It also includes an introduction to computer peripherals, and the
|
|||
|
classic ones released for this computer over the years.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
THE APPLE II ABROAD Early on, Apple got involved in selling the AppleII
|
|||
|
""""""""""""""""""" in Europe and the Far East. To function in those
|
|||
|
parts of the world called for a change to handle a different voltage (240V
|
|||
|
instead of the 120V we use in the U.S.). Also, the language differences
|
|||
|
had to be overcome. It was easiest in Europe where, for the most part, the
|
|||
|
standard Roman alphabet was used. The primary differences were in symbols
|
|||
|
used together with letters for certain specific uses. Apple's Europlus][
|
|||
|
had a modified ROM, and certain ESC key sequences could generate the German
|
|||
|
umlaut symbol to go with certain vowels.<1>
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
When the IIe was released there were some other differences. The
|
|||
|
German version was built with an external switch below the keyboard,
|
|||
|
allowing the user to change between a standard U.S. layout and a German
|
|||
|
layout. (American versions of the IIe lacked the switch, but had a place
|
|||
|
on the motherboard that could be modified to allow a Dvorak keyboard layout
|
|||
|
to be switched in instead of the standard keyboard). The IIe auxiliary
|
|||
|
slot, which was placed in line with the old slot 0 on American versions
|
|||
|
(but moved forward on the motherboard) was placed in front of slot 3 on
|
|||
|
German versions. This was because the European AppleIIe's also had added
|
|||
|
circuitry to follow the PAL protocol for video output used for televisions
|
|||
|
and computer monitors in Europe (in the U.S. the NTSC protocol is
|
|||
|
followed). Because of the extra space needed on the IIe motherboard for
|
|||
|
the PAL circuits, the auxiliary slot had to be moved to be in line with
|
|||
|
slot 3. Because the 80-column firmware was mapped to slot 3, if an
|
|||
|
80-column card was installed in the auxiliary slot it was not possible to
|
|||
|
use any other card in slot 3. Versions of the IIe made for other European
|
|||
|
countries had similar modifications to account for regional
|
|||
|
differences.<1>,<2>
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
When the AppleIIc came along, it was designed from the start to take
|
|||
|
the foreign market into account. If you recall, the U.S. version of the
|
|||
|
IIc had a standard layout when the keyboard switch was up, and a Dvorak
|
|||
|
layout when the switch was down. European versions were similar to the
|
|||
|
American layout with the switch up, and had regional versions that could be
|
|||
|
swapped in with the switch down. The British version only substituted the
|
|||
|
British pound sign for the American pound sign on the "3" key, but the
|
|||
|
French, German, Italian, and Spanish versions had several different symbols
|
|||
|
available. A Canadian version of the IIc was the same as the American with
|
|||
|
the switch up, and had some other special symbols with the switch down.
|
|||
|
This version was unique because each keycap had the symbols for both
|
|||
|
switched versions. For example, the "3" key had the "3" and "#" symbols,
|
|||
|
plus the British pound symbol, making it a bit more crowded than a typical
|
|||
|
keycap.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The AppleIIGS continued the practice of making international versions
|
|||
|
available, but improved on the design by making the various keyboard
|
|||
|
layouts all built-in. On the IIGS it was selectable via the control panel,
|
|||
|
as was the screen display of the special characters for each type of
|
|||
|
keyboard.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
APPLE II PERIPHERALS Moving on, we will now take a look at hardware items
|
|||
|
"""""""""""""""""""" that extend the capability of the AppleII. The
|
|||
|
ability to add an external hardware device to a computer has been there
|
|||
|
from the earliest days of the first Altair to the present. In fact, the
|
|||
|
success of a computer has inevitably led to hackers designing something to
|
|||
|
make it do things it couldn't do before. The more popular the computer,
|
|||
|
the more variety you will find in hardware add-ons. The AppleII, designed
|
|||
|
by a hacker to be as expandable as possible, was once a leader as a
|
|||
|
platform for launching new and unique hardware gadgets. Today, in 1991,
|
|||
|
the AppleII unfortunately no longer holds the front position; it has been
|
|||
|
supplanted by the Macintosh and IBM crowd. However, the AppleII still
|
|||
|
benefits from the "trickle-down" of some of the best new devices from other
|
|||
|
computers (SCSI disk devices and hand scanners, for example). This is due
|
|||
|
partly to emerging standards that make it easier to design a single
|
|||
|
hardware device that will work on multiple computers, and in the case of
|
|||
|
the Macintosh, because of Apple's decision to make peripherals somewhat
|
|||
|
compatible between the two computer lines.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Trying to sort out all the peripheral devices ever designed for the
|
|||
|
AppleII series of computers into a sensible order is not easy. In this
|
|||
|
segment of the AppleII History I'll try to give an overview of hardware
|
|||
|
devices that were either significant in the advancement of the II, or
|
|||
|
unique, one-of-a-kind devices. Obviously, this cannot be a comprehensive
|
|||
|
list; I am limited to those peripherals about which I can find information
|
|||
|
or have had personal experience.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
WHAT IS A PERIPHERAL? A basic definition of a peripheral would be,
|
|||
|
""""""""""""""""""""" "Something attached to a computer that makes it
|
|||
|
possible to do more than it could previously do." It is called a
|
|||
|
"peripheral" because it usually is connected to the computer after it
|
|||
|
leaves the factory. An argument could be made that something built-in is
|
|||
|
not a peripheral, but as things have changed over time there are some
|
|||
|
devices still called "peripherals" from force of habit, though they are now
|
|||
|
built-in (hard disks come to mind). Quite probably, in time many devices
|
|||
|
that were once considered optional accessories will become so essential
|
|||
|
that they will always be built-in.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Recall that the earliest computers came with almost nothing built-in.
|
|||
|
They had a microprocessor, a little memory, some means of data input and
|
|||
|
display of results, the ability to access some or all of the signals from
|
|||
|
the microprocessor, and that was all. For those computers, the first
|
|||
|
things that users added were keyboards and TV monitors to make it easier to
|
|||
|
use them. Recognizing that the earliest hardware peripherals were
|
|||
|
keyboards and monitors highlights one fact: Nearly everything that is sold
|
|||
|
as a peripheral for a computer is either an input device, and output
|
|||
|
device, or an interface to make it possible to connect input and output
|
|||
|
devices. Exceptions are cards to add memory, co-processor cards to allow
|
|||
|
it to run software from another computer, and accelerators to make the
|
|||
|
computer run faster.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
EARLY PERIPHERALS When we come to the release of the first AppleII, two
|
|||
|
""""""""""""""""" important "peripherals" were built-in: A keyboard, and
|
|||
|
the circuitry to allow easy connection of a TV monitor. It had, of course,
|
|||
|
the slots for inserting expansion cards (none were available), a game port
|
|||
|
(for attaching the game paddles that were included), a pin that could be
|
|||
|
used to connect an RF modulator (so a standard television could be used
|
|||
|
instead of a computer monitor), and a cassette interface. Since there were
|
|||
|
no cards available to plug into the slots, you would imagine that the
|
|||
|
AppleII couldn't make use of any other hardware. However, those early
|
|||
|
users who had a need usually found a way around these limits.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
To get a printed copy of a program listing, for example, was no
|
|||
|
trivial matter. First, there were very few printers available. Those who
|
|||
|
could, obtained old used teletypes salvaged from mainframe computers.
|
|||
|
These noisy, massive clunkers often had no lowercase letters (not a big
|
|||
|
problem, since the AppleII didn't have it either), and printed at the
|
|||
|
blazing speed of 10 cps (characters per second). To use these printers
|
|||
|
when there were yet no printer interface cards to make it easy to connect,
|
|||
|
hackers used a teletype driver written by Wozniak and distributed in the
|
|||
|
original AppleII Reference Manual (the "red book"). This driver sent
|
|||
|
characters to the printer through a connection to the game paddle port.
|
|||
|
One part of being a hacker, you can see, is improvising with what you
|
|||
|
have.<3>
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Another of the earliest devices designed for the AppleII came from
|
|||
|
Apple Pugetsound Program Library Exchange (A.P.P.L.E.). They were involved
|
|||
|
in distributing Integer BASIC programs on cassette to members of the group.
|
|||
|
To make it easier to send those programs to the person responsible for
|
|||
|
duplicating the cassette, Darrell Aldrich designed a means of sending the
|
|||
|
programs over the telephone lines. There were no modems available at the
|
|||
|
time, so his "Apple Box" was attached to the phone line with alligator
|
|||
|
clips and then plugged into the cassette port on the AppleII. To send a
|
|||
|
program, you first called up the person who was to receive it and got the
|
|||
|
computers on each end connected to the Apple Box. The sender then used the
|
|||
|
SAVE command in BASIC to tell the computer to save a program to tape. In
|
|||
|
actuality, the program was being "saved" through the cassette "out" port to
|
|||
|
the Apple Box, and onto the phone line connected. At the other end of that
|
|||
|
phone line, the data went into the other Apple Box, which was connected to
|
|||
|
the cassette "in" port on the other AppleII. That computer was executing
|
|||
|
the LOAD command in BASIC to "load" the program from the Apple Box.
|
|||
|
A.P.P.L.E. sold about twenty of these Apple Boxes at $10 apiece.<3>
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
INTERFACE CARDS One of the first interface cards made for the AppleII
|
|||
|
""""""""""""""" was released, naturally, by Apple. The AppleII Parallel
|
|||
|
Interface Card was released in 1977 and sold for $180.<4> Wozniak wrote
|
|||
|
the firmware ROM, and managed to make it fit entirely in only 256 bytes.
|
|||
|
As a parallel device, it used eight wires to connect the computer with a
|
|||
|
printer, one line for each data bit in a byte. Various parallel devices
|
|||
|
also used one or more extra wires as control lines, including a "busy" line
|
|||
|
(so the receiving device could tell the sending device to stop until it was
|
|||
|
ready for more), and a "ready" line (so the receiving device could tell the
|
|||
|
sending device to resume transmission). Because each of the eight bits
|
|||
|
needed a separate wire, the cables for parallel devices looked like ribbons
|
|||
|
and were not very compact. Most of the early printers available required
|
|||
|
this type of interface.<5> A problem noticed with Apple's card, however,
|
|||
|
was an inability to properly handle these "busy" and "ready" signals (a
|
|||
|
process known as "handshaking"). One solution offered by a reader of
|
|||
|
Call-A.P.P.L.E. magazine in 1979 was to add a couple of chips to the card.
|
|||
|
If that was not done, however, the only way to do printouts that were very
|
|||
|
long was to either buy a 2K print buffer that could be used with some early
|
|||
|
printers, or use the "SPEED=" statement in Applesoft to slow down the speed
|
|||
|
at which data was sent to the printer.<6>,<7>
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Apple released the Centronics parallel printer card in 1978. Selling
|
|||
|
for $225, it was specifically designed to work with Centronics brand
|
|||
|
printers.<4> It was similar to the Parallel Printer Interface, but had
|
|||
|
fewer control codes. The "Centronics standard" used seven data bits and
|
|||
|
three handshaking bits.<8> It would automatically send certain control
|
|||
|
codes to the printer when a program sent the proper command (such as a
|
|||
|
change in line width). As such, it was limited to properly working only
|
|||
|
with a Centronics printer, but many companies made printers that used the
|
|||
|
same control codes and would work with it.<5>
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
In April 1978 the AppleII Communications Card came out, selling for
|
|||
|
$225.<4> It was intended for use with a modem, and worked for speeds from
|
|||
|
110 to 300 baud. The low speed (by today's standards) was for several
|
|||
|
reasons. One was that most modems of the time were acoustic. With an
|
|||
|
acoustic modem you dialed up the number yourself, and when you made a
|
|||
|
connection you put the handset (that's the part you talk and listen with,
|
|||
|
for you non-technical folks) into rubber sockets to seal out extraneous
|
|||
|
sound. A tiny speaker and microphone in the modem were then used to send
|
|||
|
and receive signals. This leads to a second reason for the low speeds of
|
|||
|
the time, which was that greater than 300 baud communications was not
|
|||
|
considered possible. In fact, the Phone Company was quite certain that
|
|||
|
speeds over 300 baud were not possible with any modem, although they would
|
|||
|
be glad to lease you a special data-quality phone line so you could get the
|
|||
|
best possible connection at 300 baud.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The AppleII Serial Interface Card ($195) appeared in August of
|
|||
|
1978.<4> Serial devices required fewer data transmission lines, and so
|
|||
|
could work with more compact cables. Instead of sending each byte as eight
|
|||
|
simultaneous bits as was done in parallel devices, serial interfaces send
|
|||
|
each byte as a series of eight bits, which only took two wires; one to send
|
|||
|
and one to receive data. Like the parallel cards, there were a couple of
|
|||
|
other wires that went with the data lines to control handshaking. Also,
|
|||
|
serial cards needed a means of letting the sending and receiving devices
|
|||
|
identify when a byte began and ended, and the speed at which data was being
|
|||
|
transmitted. This meant that some additional information, such as "start"
|
|||
|
bits, "stop" bits, and "parity" bits, was needed.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The original version of the Serial Interface Card had a ROM that was
|
|||
|
called the P8 ROM. It contained the on-card program that allowed a user to
|
|||
|
print or otherwise communicate with the card without having to know much on
|
|||
|
the hardware level. The P8 ROM didn't support handshaking that used two
|
|||
|
ASCII control characters named ETX (Control-C) and ACK (Control-F), so a
|
|||
|
later revision called the P8A ROM was released. (ASCII stands for American
|
|||
|
Standard Code for Information Interchange). This worked better with some
|
|||
|
printers, but unfortunately the P8A ROM was not compatible with some serial
|
|||
|
printers that had worked with the earlier P8 ROM.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The Apple Super Serial Card firmware was finished in January 1981. It
|
|||
|
was called "super" because it replaced both the older Serial Interface Card
|
|||
|
and the Communications Card. To change from one type of mode to another,
|
|||
|
however, called for switching a block on the card from one position to
|
|||
|
another (from printer position to modem position). The Super Serial Card
|
|||
|
was also able to emulate both the P8 and P8A Serial Cards, making it
|
|||
|
compatible with most older software written specifically for those
|
|||
|
cards.<9>
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
VIDEO CARDS After getting a printer interface card (and printer), the
|
|||
|
""""""""""" next variety of peripheral cards popular for the AppleII and
|
|||
|
IIPlus were ones that allowed display of 80 columns of text (which was
|
|||
|
rapidly becoming a standard outside the AppleII world). An early entry
|
|||
|
into this market was the Sup'R'Terminal card made by M&R Enterprises, the
|
|||
|
same company that made the Sup'R'Mod RF modulator for the AppleII. One of
|
|||
|
the most popular of the 80-column cards was the Videx Videoterm. Videx
|
|||
|
even made a display card that would display 132 columns card for the
|
|||
|
AppleII, but it never made much headway in the computer world (being
|
|||
|
supplanted by bit-mapped graphics displays, ala Macintosh).<3>
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Many other companies made 80-column cards, but for the most part they
|
|||
|
were not very compatible with each other. One problem was deciding on a
|
|||
|
method to place the characters on the 80-column screen. With the standard
|
|||
|
Apple 40-column display, you could use either the standard routines in the
|
|||
|
Monitor, or directly "poke" characters to the screen. With these 80-column
|
|||
|
cards, they often used a standard from the non-Apple world, that of using
|
|||
|
special character sequences to indicate a screen position or other
|
|||
|
functions. For example, to put a character at row 12, column 2, a program
|
|||
|
needed to send an ESC, followed by a letter, followed by 12 and 02.
|
|||
|
Similar ESC sequences were used to clear the screen, scroll it up or down,
|
|||
|
or do other things that Apple's built-in screen routines could do.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
When the AppleIIe was released, with its RAM-based method of
|
|||
|
displaying 80 columns of text, nearly all the older 80-column cards
|
|||
|
disappeared from the market. As of 1991, only Applied Engineering still
|
|||
|
makes one for those remaining II and IIPlus users that don't yet have an
|
|||
|
80-column display.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
One unique video product was made by Synetix, Inc. around 1983. Their
|
|||
|
SuperSprite board plugged into slot 7 (which had access to some video
|
|||
|
signals not available on other slots), and was promoted as a graphics
|
|||
|
enhancement system. It worked by overlaying the hi-res screen with
|
|||
|
animated "sprite" graphics (programmable characters that moved
|
|||
|
independently on any screen background). Since each sprite was on its own
|
|||
|
"plane" on the screen, they didn't interfere with each other. Also, it
|
|||
|
didn't take extra effort bythe 6502 microprocessor to manipulate the
|
|||
|
sprites; once the programmer placed the sprite on the screen and started it
|
|||
|
moving, it would continue until told to change. This was much easier than
|
|||
|
trying to program a hi-res game using standard Apple graphics.
|
|||
|
Unfortunately, at the price of $395 it never took off. (It was hard for
|
|||
|
developers to justify writing programs for only a few users that might have
|
|||
|
this card). Another company later made a similar card called the
|
|||
|
StarSprite, but it suffered the same fate. Even Apple's own double hi-res
|
|||
|
graphics, introduced on the IIe, had the same problem with a small supply
|
|||
|
of supporting software until the IIc and IIGS market got large enough to
|
|||
|
guarantee that enough owners had the capability of displaying double
|
|||
|
hi-res.<10>
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
ROM/RAM EXPANSION CARDS All peripheral cards released for the AppleII up
|
|||
|
""""""""""""""""""""""" to the time of the AppleIIPlus were usable only
|
|||
|
in slots 1 through 7. Slot 0 was designed differently, and until the
|
|||
|
release of the Applesoft Firmware Card ($200) in 1979 nothing had been
|
|||
|
built to make use of it. The Firmware Card contained ROM that paralleled
|
|||
|
the upper 12K of AppleII memory. If you recall from the discussion in Part
|
|||
|
3 of this History, Integer BASIC and the ROM version of Applesoft covered
|
|||
|
the same space in memory, and so could not co-exist. When it was clear
|
|||
|
that a floating-point BASIC (Applesoft) was what many people wanted, the
|
|||
|
IIPlus came out with Applesoft in ROM. To make sure that the previous
|
|||
|
AppleII owners were not left out, Apple released the Applesoft Firmware
|
|||
|
Card to plug into slot 0. It had a switch that allowed the user to select
|
|||
|
which BASIC should be active. In one position, the motherboard ROM would
|
|||
|
be selected, and in the other position the Applesoft and Autostart ROM was
|
|||
|
selected. Because there were quite a few Integer BASIC programs that
|
|||
|
AppleIIPlus users wanted to run, the Firmware Card also came out in an
|
|||
|
Integer BASIC version with the old Monitor ROM, that allowed IIPlus users
|
|||
|
to simulate owning a standard II.<4>
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
One of the benefits of the Integer BASIC ROM was the lack of something
|
|||
|
known as a "RESET vector" in the Autostart ROM. The Autostart Monitor was
|
|||
|
called that because it would automatically try to boot the DiskII drive
|
|||
|
when the power was turned on, and jumped to a known memory location when
|
|||
|
the RESET key was pressed. This allowed the disk operating system to
|
|||
|
reconnect itself, but more importantly made it possible to create
|
|||
|
copy-protected software. Since the Autostart ROM made it possible for a
|
|||
|
programmer to do something on RESET that prevented a user from examining
|
|||
|
his program, it was popular with companies producing programs that they
|
|||
|
didn't want copied and freely given away. Usually, a RESET on a protected
|
|||
|
program would restart the program, erase the program from memory, or
|
|||
|
re-boot the disk. The Integer BASIC and Old Monitor ROM lacked this
|
|||
|
feature; a RESET would just drop the user into the Monitor. This, of
|
|||
|
course, was just what hackers and those who liked to break copy-protection
|
|||
|
wanted. The users with non-Plus AppleII's or with the Integer BASIC
|
|||
|
Firmware Card on a IIPlus could prevent a RESET from restarting anything,
|
|||
|
allowing them to hack a program as much as they wanted.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The next card Apple released for slot 0 was called the Language Card.
|
|||
|
It was released in 1979 with Pascal, and expanded a 48K AppleII into a
|
|||
|
full 64K memory computer. It did not remove the upper 16K of ROM, but the
|
|||
|
card contained 16K of RAM that was electronically parallel to the ROM.
|
|||
|
Using "soft switches" (recall that these are memory locations that, when
|
|||
|
read or written to, caused something internally to change) one could
|
|||
|
switch out the ROM and switch in RAM memory. This extra memory was used
|
|||
|
to load the Pascal disk system, and under DOS 3.2 and 3.3, to load into
|
|||
|
RAM the version of BASIC that was not in the ROM. This was a more
|
|||
|
flexible alternative to the Firmware Card, and opened the way to other
|
|||
|
languages beyond BASIC for AppleII users.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Since the only way to get Apple's Language Card was to buy the entire
|
|||
|
Pascal system ($495), it was too expensive for many users. Other companies
|
|||
|
eventually came out with similar cards that did not require purchasing
|
|||
|
Pascal, and some of them designed the cards with more "banks" of memory,
|
|||
|
making 256K or more of extra memory available. Saturn Systems was one
|
|||
|
early suppliers of the large RAM cards. Typically, each 16K bank on the
|
|||
|
card would be switched in to the same memory space occupied by the Language
|
|||
|
Card RAM through the use of a special softswitch.<11>
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
CO-PROCESSORS Although it did not go into slot 0, another significant
|
|||
|
""""""""""""" card for the AppleII was the Microsoft Z-80 Softcard, which
|
|||
|
sold for around $300. It was a co-processor card, allowing the AppleII to
|
|||
|
run software written for the Z-80 microprocessor. The most popular
|
|||
|
operating system for the Z-80/8080 processors was the CP/M (Control Program
|
|||
|
for Microcomputers) system. Although the DiskII used a different method of
|
|||
|
recording data than was used by Z-80 computers, AppleII users managed to
|
|||
|
get programs such as the WordStar word processor transferred to the Apple
|
|||
|
CP/M system. Microsoft worked to make it compatible with the 80-column
|
|||
|
cards that were coming out at the time, since most CP/M software expected a
|
|||
|
screen of that size.<3>,<12>
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
After the arrival of the IBM Personal Computer and its wide acceptance
|
|||
|
by the business world, there was interest in a co-processor for the AppleII
|
|||
|
that would run IBM software. A company called Rana, which had been
|
|||
|
producing disk drives for the AppleII for several years, came out with the
|
|||
|
Rana 8086/2 sometime in 1984. This was a system that plugged into slots on
|
|||
|
a IIPlus or IIe, and would allow the user to run programs written for the
|
|||
|
IBM PC. It would also read disks formatted for that computer (which also
|
|||
|
used a completely different data recording system than the one used by the
|
|||
|
AppleII). One Rana owner, John Russ, wrote to A2-Central (then called
|
|||
|
Open-Apple) to tell of his experience with it: "We also have one of the
|
|||
|
Rana 8086/2 boxes, with two [Rana] Elite II compatible drives and a
|
|||
|
more-or-less (mostly less) IBM-PC compatible computer inside it. Nice
|
|||
|
idea. Terrible execution. The drives are half-high instead of the full
|
|||
|
height drives used in the normal Elite II, and are very unreliable for
|
|||
|
reading or writing in either the Apple or IBM format... And this product
|
|||
|
again shows that Rana has no knowledgeable technical folks (or they lock
|
|||
|
them up very well). We have identified several fatal incompatibilities
|
|||
|
with IBM programs, such as the system crashing totally if any attempt to
|
|||
|
generate any sound (even a beep) occurs in a program, or if inverse
|
|||
|
characters are sent to the display... The response from Rana has been no
|
|||
|
response at all, except that we can return the system if we want to.
|
|||
|
Curious attitude for a company, isn't it?"<13> By August 1985 Rana was
|
|||
|
trying to reorganize under Chapter 11, and the product was never upgraded
|
|||
|
or fixed.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
A co-processor called the ALF 8088 had limited distribution. It
|
|||
|
worked with the CPM86 operating system (a predecessor to MS-DOS) was used
|
|||
|
by some newer computers just before the release of the IBM PC.<14>
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Even the Motorola 68000 processor used in the Macintosh came as a
|
|||
|
co-processor for the AppleII. The Gnome Card worked on the IIPlus and IIe,
|
|||
|
but like other 68000 cards for the II, it didn't make a major impact, with
|
|||
|
the exception of those who wanted to do cross development (create programs
|
|||
|
for a computer using a microprocessor other than the one you are using).
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The most successful device in this category was the PC Transporter,
|
|||
|
produced by Applied Engineering. It was originally designed by a company
|
|||
|
in the San Jose area called The Engineering Department (TED). The founder
|
|||
|
was Wendell Sanders, a hardware engineer who formerly had worked at Apple
|
|||
|
and was involved in the design of the Apple III and parts of the SWIM chip
|
|||
|
(Super Wozniak Integrated Machine) used in the IIc and IIGS. Around 1986
|
|||
|
Applied Engineering began discussions with TED about buying the PC
|
|||
|
Transporter to sell and market it. At that time, the board was about four
|
|||
|
times the size it eventually became. AE's people were able to shrink a lot
|
|||
|
of the components down to just a few custom ASIC chips. The software that
|
|||
|
helped manage the board originally came from TED also.<15> It was finally
|
|||
|
released in November 1987, and included a card that plugged into any of the
|
|||
|
motherboard slots (except slot 3) and one or more IBM-style disk drives.
|
|||
|
The PC Transporter used an 8086 processor and ran about three times as fast
|
|||
|
as the original IBM PC. It used its own RAM memory, up to a maximum of
|
|||
|
768K, which could be used as a RAMdisk by ProDOS (when not in PC-mode). It
|
|||
|
used some of the main Apple memory for the interface code that lets the PC
|
|||
|
Transporter communicate with the hardware.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The PC Transporter has undergone some minor hardware changes and
|
|||
|
several sets of software changes (mostly bug fixes but a few new features).
|
|||
|
The major reasons for hardware changes came about because of the
|
|||
|
availability of cheaper RAM (the original RAM was quite expensive and
|
|||
|
difficult to obtain). Additionally, changes were made to make the onboard
|
|||
|
"ROM" software-based, which made it easier to distribute system upgrades
|
|||
|
that enhanced hardware performance.<16>,<17>,<18> The major limitation for
|
|||
|
this product has been a reluctance by Applied Engineering to match the
|
|||
|
changes that have happened in the MS-DOS world and come out with a version
|
|||
|
of the Transporter that used a more advanced microprocessor (80286, 386, or
|
|||
|
486). As of 1991 this is slowly beginning to become more of a limitation
|
|||
|
for those who wish to use both MS-DOS and AppleII software on the same
|
|||
|
AppleII computer, since advanced software needing those more powerful
|
|||
|
processors is beginning to be released for MS-DOS.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
ACCELERATORS The two things that all computer users eventually need (or
|
|||
|
"""""""""""" at least want) are more storage and faster speed. The 1 MHz
|
|||
|
speed of the 6502 and 65c02 chips is somewhat deceiving, when compared with
|
|||
|
computers that have processors running at a speed of 20 to 40 MHz. To put
|
|||
|
things into perspective: Since the 6502 does more than one thing with a
|
|||
|
single cycle of the clock on the microprocessor, a 1 MHz 6502 is equivalent
|
|||
|
to a 4 MHz 8086 chip. Therefore, an AppleII with an accelerator board or
|
|||
|
chip running at 8 MHz is equivalent to an MS-DOS computer running at 32
|
|||
|
MHz.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
One of the first accelerators for the AppleII was the SpeedDemon, made
|
|||
|
by MCT. This board used a faster 65c02 chip, with some high-speed internal
|
|||
|
memory that was used to actually execute the programs (since the internal
|
|||
|
AppleII memory chips were not fast enough). In essence, it put a second
|
|||
|
AppleII inside the one you could see, using the original one for input and
|
|||
|
output. Another speedup board was the Accelerator IIe by Titan
|
|||
|
Technologies (formerly Saturn Systems; they had to change their name
|
|||
|
because it was already in use by someone else). This board worked in a
|
|||
|
similar fashion to the SpeedDemon. Some users felt this product ran faster
|
|||
|
than the SpeedDemon, but it depended on the application being tested. Both
|
|||
|
boards were attached to the computer by plugging them into a slot other
|
|||
|
than slot 0 on the motherboard.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
In 1986 Applied Engineering introduced the TransWarp accelerator
|
|||
|
board. This product has lasted in the marketplace longer than any of the
|
|||
|
other ones, possibly because AE did far more advertising than the companies
|
|||
|
producing the older boards. The TransWarp did the acceleration using a
|
|||
|
different method. Instead of trying to duplicate all of the AppleII RAM
|
|||
|
within the accelerator, they used a cache. (If you recall from the segment
|
|||
|
on hard disk drives, a cache is a piece of memory holding frequently
|
|||
|
accessed information). Because they used the cache, the TransWarp did not
|
|||
|
require any high-speed RAM on the motherboard. Instead, any memory access
|
|||
|
was also stored in the cache RAM, which was high-speed RAM. The next time
|
|||
|
a byte was requested from RAM, the accelerator looked first into the cache
|
|||
|
memory to see if it was there. If so, it took it (far more quickly) from
|
|||
|
there; if not, it got it from motherboard RAM and put it into the cache.
|
|||
|
Early TransWarp boards ran at 2.5 MHz; later versions pushed this speed to
|
|||
|
7 MHz (this was the top speed used by the TransWarp GS, released in
|
|||
|
November 1988 for the AppleIIGS).
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The next step in accelerator technology was to put all the components
|
|||
|
of an accelerator board into a single chip. This happened when two rivals,
|
|||
|
the Zip Chip and the Rocket Chip, were released. The Zip Chip was
|
|||
|
introduced at AppleFest in May 1988, and the Rocket Chip soon after.
|
|||
|
Running at 4 MHz, the Zip Chip was a direct replacement for the 6502 or
|
|||
|
65c02 on the AppleII motherboard. It contained its caching RAM within the
|
|||
|
housing for the processor, the difference being mostly in height (or
|
|||
|
thickness) of the integrated circuit. Installing it was a bit more tricky
|
|||
|
than simply putting a board into a slot; the 6502 had to be removed from
|
|||
|
the motherboard with a chip puller, and the Zip Chip installed (in the
|
|||
|
correct orientation) in its place. Software to control the speed of the
|
|||
|
chip was included, and allowed about ten different speeds, including the
|
|||
|
standard 1 MHz speed (some games simply were too fast to play at 4 MHz, and
|
|||
|
software that depended on timing loops to produce music had to be slowed
|
|||
|
down to sound right). The controlling software also let the user determine
|
|||
|
which (if any) of the peripheral cards should be accelerated. Disk
|
|||
|
controller cards, since they used tight timing loops to read and write
|
|||
|
data, usually could not be accelerated, where many serial and parallel
|
|||
|
printer and modem cards would work at the faster speed. The Zip Chip even
|
|||
|
allowed the user to decide whether to run all sound at standard speed or at
|
|||
|
the fast speed.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The Rocket Chip, made by Bits And Pieces Technologies, was almost
|
|||
|
exactly the same as the Zip Chip, with a few minor exceptions. It was sold
|
|||
|
with the ability to run programs at 5 MHz, and could be slowed down below
|
|||
|
the 1 MHz speed (down to 0.05 MHz). Later, when Zip came out with an 8 MHz
|
|||
|
version of their Zip chip, a 10 MHz Rocket Chip was introduced.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The rivalry between Zip Technologies and Bits And Pieces Technologies
|
|||
|
came from a mutual blaming of theft of technical information. The Bits &
|
|||
|
Pieces people insisted that they had done the original work on a single
|
|||
|
chip accelerator with the Zip people, but had all the plans and
|
|||
|
specifications taken away without their permission. Consequently, they had
|
|||
|
to form their own company and start from scratch to design their own chip.
|
|||
|
Zip, on the other hand, insisted that Bits & Pieces had stolen the
|
|||
|
technology from them. The problem eventually came to court, and it was
|
|||
|
decided that Zip Technologies was the originator of the technique and the
|
|||
|
Rocket Chip had to stop production.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[*][*][*]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
NEXT INSTALLMENT Peripherals, cont.
|
|||
|
""""""""""""""""
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
NOTES
|
|||
|
"""""
|
|||
|
<1> Huth, Udo. (personal mail), GEnie, E-mail, Mar 1991.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
<2> Spring, Michael. "Write-A.P.P.L.E.", Call-A.P.P.L.E., Apr
|
|||
|
1984, pp. 49-50.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
<3> -----. "A.P.P.L.E. Co-op Celebrates A Decade of Service",
|
|||
|
Call-A.P.P.L.E., Feb 1988, pp. 12-27.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
<4> Peterson, Craig. The Computer Store, Santa Monica, CA, Store
|
|||
|
Information And Prices, Aug 10, 1979, p. 1.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
<5> Bernsten, Jeff. GEnie, A2 Roundtable, Apr 1991, Category 2,
|
|||
|
Topic 16.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
<6> Lewellen, Tom. "Integral Data/Parallel Card Fix", PEEKing At
|
|||
|
Call-A.P.P.L.E., Vol 2, 1979, p. 113.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
<7> Golding, Val J. "Integral Data IP 225 Printer - A Review",
|
|||
|
PEEKing At Call-A.P.P.L.E., Vol 2, 1979, p. 151.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
<8> Wright, Loren. "On Buying A Printer", Micro, Aug 1981, pp.
|
|||
|
33-35.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
<9> Weishaar, Tom. "Control-I(nterface) S(tandards)", Open-Apple,
|
|||
|
Oct 1987, pp. 3.65.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
<10> -----. "Tomorrow's Apples Today", Call-A.P.P.L.E., Oct 1983,
|
|||
|
p. 71.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
<11> Weishaar, Tom. "A Concise Look At Apple II RAM", Open-Apple,
|
|||
|
Dec 1986, p. 2.81.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
<12> -----. (ads), Call-A.P.P.L.E. In Depth #1, 1981, p. 106.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
<13> Weishaar, Tom. "Ask Uncle DOS", Open-Apple, Apr 1985, p. 1.32.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
<14> Davidson, Keith. "The ALF 8088 Co-Processor",
|
|||
|
Call-A.P.P.L.E., Feb 1984, p. 54.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
<15> Holcomb, Jeff. GEnie, A2 Roundtable, Mar 1992, Category 11,
|
|||
|
Topic 7.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
<16> Utter, Gary. GEnie, A2 Roundtable, Dec 1991, Category 14,
|
|||
|
Topic 12.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
<17> McKay, Hugh. GEnie, A2 Roundtable, Dec 1991, Category 14,
|
|||
|
Topic 12.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
<18> Jones, Jay. GEnie, A2 Roundtable, Dec 1991, Category 14,
|
|||
|
Topic 12.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
/////////////////////////////////////////////// GEnie_QWIK_QUOTE ////
|
|||
|
/ "[Aladdin] allows me to participate in this message base, where /
|
|||
|
/ I would not be able to afford it if I had to do my typing online, /
|
|||
|
/ and gives me time to spend downloading the files I want." /
|
|||
|
///////////////////////////////////////////////////// NTACTONE ////
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[EOA]
|
|||
|
[LOG]//////////////////////////////
|
|||
|
LOG OFF /
|
|||
|
/////////////////////////////////
|
|||
|
GEnieLamp Information
|
|||
|
"""""""""""""""""""""
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
o COMMENTS: Contacting GEnieLamp
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
o GEnieLamp STAFF: Who Are We?
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
GEnieLamp Information GEnieLamp is published on the 1st and the 15 of
|
|||
|
""""""""""""""""""""" every month on GEnie on page 515. You can also
|
|||
|
find GEnieLamp on the main menus in the ST (475), Macintosh (605), IBM
|
|||
|
(615), Apple II (645), A2Pro (530), Unix (160), Mac Pro (480), Geoworks
|
|||
|
(1050), BBS (610), CE Software (1005) and the Mini/Mainframe RoundTables.
|
|||
|
GEnieLamp can is also distributed on CrossNet, Internet, America Online and
|
|||
|
many public and commercial BBS systems worldwide.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
We welcome and respond to all GE Mail. To leave comments, suggestions
|
|||
|
or just to say hi, you can contact us in the DigiPub RoundTable (M1395) or
|
|||
|
send GE Mail to John Peters at [GENIELAMP] on page 200.
|
|||
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|
|||
|
GEnieLamp pays for articles submitted and published with online GEnie
|
|||
|
credit time. Upload submissions in ASCII format to library #42 in the
|
|||
|
DigiPub RoundTable on page 1395 (M1395;3) or send it to our GE Mail
|
|||
|
address, GENIELAMP.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
U.S. MAIL
|
|||
|
"""""""""
|
|||
|
GEnieLamp Online Magazine
|
|||
|
Atten: John Peters
|
|||
|
5102 Galley Rd. Suite 115/B
|
|||
|
Colorado Springs, CO 80915
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
>>> GEnieLamp STAFF <<<
|
|||
|
"""""""""""""""""""""""
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
GEnieLamp o John Peters [GENIELAMP] Senior Editor
|
|||
|
"""""""""
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
ATARI ST o John Gniewkowski [J.GNIEWKOWSK] Editor
|
|||
|
"""""""" o Mel Motogawa [M.MOTOGAWA] ST Staff Writer
|
|||
|
o Terry Quinn [TQUINN] ST Staff Writer
|
|||
|
o Sheldon Winick [S.WINICK] ST Staff Writer
|
|||
|
o Richard Brown [R.BROWN30] ST Staff Writer
|
|||
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o John Hoffman [JLHOFFMAN] ST Staff Writer
|
|||
|
o Al Fasoldt [A.FASOLDT] ST Staff Writer
|
|||
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|
|||
|
ATARI ST/TX2 o Cliff Allen [C.ALLEN17] Editor/TX2
|
|||
|
""""""""""""
|
|||
|
ATARI [PR] o Fred Koch [F.KOCH] Editor/PD_Q
|
|||
|
""""""""""
|
|||
|
IBM o Robert M. Connors [R.CONNORS2] Editor
|
|||
|
""" o Peter Bogert [P.BOGERT1] IBM Staff Writer
|
|||
|
o Brad Biondo [B.BIONDO] IBM Staff Writer
|
|||
|
o Tippy Martinez [TIPPY.ONE] IBM Staff Writer
|
|||
|
o David Holmes [D.HOLMES14] IBM Staff Writer
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
MACINTOSH o James Flanagan [JFLANAGAN] Editor
|
|||
|
""""""""" o Richard Vega [R.VEGA] Mac Co-Editor
|
|||
|
o Dan "Remo" Barter [D.BARTER] Mac Staff Writer
|
|||
|
o Tom Trinko [T.TRINKO] Mac Staff Writer
|
|||
|
o Bret Fledderjohn [FLEDDERJOHN] Mac Staff Writer
|
|||
|
o Bill Garrett [BILL.GARRETT] Mac Staff Writer
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
MacPRO o James Flanagan [JFLANAGAN] Editor
|
|||
|
"""""" o Erik C. Thauvin [MACSPECT] Supervising Editor
|
|||
|
o Chris Innanen [C.INNANEN] MacPRO Staff Writer
|
|||
|
o Paul Collins [P.COLLINS] MacPRO Staff Writer
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
APPLE II o Darrel Raines [D.RAINES] Editor
|
|||
|
"""""""" o Phil Shapiro [P.SHAPIRO1] A2 Co-Editor
|
|||
|
o Mel Fowler [MELSOFT] A2 Staff Writer
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
A2Pro o Jim B. Couch [J.COUCH2] Editor
|
|||
|
""""" o Nate C. Trost [N.TROST] A2Pro Staff Writer
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
INTERNET o Jim Lubin [JIM.LUBIN] GEnieLamp IBM
|
|||
|
""""""""
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
ETC. o Jim Lubin [JIM.LUBIN] Add Aladdin
|
|||
|
"""" o Scott Garrigus [S.GARRIGUS] Search-ME!
|
|||
|
o Bruce Faulkner [R.FAULKNER4] CrossNET Support
|
|||
|
o Mike White [M.WHITE25] Cowlumnist/Asst. SysOp
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
GEnieLamp CONTRIBUTORS
|
|||
|
""""""""""""""""""""""
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
o Steven Weyhrich [S.WEYHRICH]
|
|||
|
o Paul Varn [P.VARN]
|
|||
|
o Larry E. Elseman [L.ELSEMAN1]
|
|||
|
o Steve Litwin [S.LITWIN2]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\////////////////////////////////////
|
|||
|
Material published in this edition may be reprinted under the
|
|||
|
following terms only. All articles must remain unedited and
|
|||
|
include the issue number and author at the top of each article
|
|||
|
reprinted. Reprint permission granted, unless otherwise noted, to
|
|||
|
registered computer user groups and not for profit publications.
|
|||
|
Opinions present herein are those of the individual authors and
|
|||
|
does not necessarily reflect those of the publisher or staff of
|
|||
|
GEnieLamp. We reserve the right to edit all letters and copy.
|
|||
|
Include the following at the end or the beginning of every reprint:
|
|||
|
\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\////////////////////////////////////
|
|||
|
(c) Copyright 1993 T/TalkNET Online Publishing and GEnie. To join
|
|||
|
GEnie, set your modem to 2400 baud (or less) and half duplex
|
|||
|
(local echo). Have the modem dial 1-800-638-8369. When you get a
|
|||
|
CONNECT message, type HHH. At the U#= prompt, type:
|
|||
|
XTX99014,DIGIPUB
|
|||
|
and hit the [return] key. The system will then ask you for your
|
|||
|
information. Call (voice) 1-800-638-9636 for more information.
|
|||
|
\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\////////////////////////////////////
|
|||
|
[EOF]
|
|||
|
|
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|
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