5328 lines
253 KiB
Erlang
5328 lines
253 KiB
Erlang
|
||
|
||
|||||| |||||| || || |||||| ||||||
|
||
|| || ||| || || ||
|
||
|| ||| |||| |||||| || |||| Your
|
||
|| || || || ||| || ||
|
||
|||||| |||||| || || |||||| |||||| GEnieLamp Computing
|
||
|
||
|| |||||| || || |||||| RoundTable
|
||
|| || || ||| ||| || ||
|
||
|| |||||| |||||||| |||||| RESOURCE!
|
||
|| || || || || || ||
|
||
||||| || || || || ||
|
||
|
||
|
||
~ WELCOME TO GEnieLamp APPLE II! ~
|
||
"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
|
||
~ BEGINNER'S CORNER: Polishing Green Apples ~
|
||
~ PD_QUICKVIEW: GIF.3200 ~
|
||
~ APPLE II HISTORY: DOS 3.3, PRODOS & BEYOND ~
|
||
~ HOT NEWS, HOT MESSAGES, HOT FILES! ~
|
||
|
||
\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\////////////////////////////////////
|
||
GEnieLamp Apple II ~ A T/TalkNET OnLine Publication ~ Vol.2, Issue 18
|
||
""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
|
||
Editor....................................................Douglas Cuff
|
||
Publisher.............................................John F. Peters
|
||
Copy-Editor...........................................Bruce Maples
|
||
\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\////////////////////////////////////
|
||
~ GEnieLamp IBM ~ GEnieLamp ST ~ GEnieLamp [PR] ~ GEnieLamp TX2 ~
|
||
~ GEnieLamp A2Pro ~ GEnieLamp Macintosh ~ LiveWire Online ~
|
||
~ Member Of The Digital Publishing Association ~
|
||
GE Mail: GENIELAMP Internet: genielamp@genie.geis.com
|
||
////////////////////////////////////\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\
|
||
|
||
>>> WHAT'S HAPPENING IN THE APPLE II ROUNDTABLE? <<<
|
||
""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
|
||
~ Septemember 1, 1993 ~
|
||
|
||
FROM MY DESKTOP ......... [FRM] HEY MISTER POSTMAN ...... [HEY]
|
||
Notes From The Editor. Is That A Letter For Me?
|
||
|
||
HUMOR ONLINE ............ [HUM] REFLECTIONS ............. [REF]
|
||
Fun & Games On GEnie. Online Communications.
|
||
|
||
BEGINNER'S CORNER ....... [BEG] NEWSBYTES ............... [BYT]
|
||
Polishing Green Apples. PC Prices: How Low Can They Go?
|
||
|
||
PD_QUICKVIEW ............ [PDQ] CowTOONS ................ [MOO]
|
||
GIF.3200 More Mootations.
|
||
|
||
THE ONLINE LIBARY ....... [LIB] PROFILES ................ [WHO]
|
||
Yours For The Downloading. Who's Who In Apple II.
|
||
|
||
SEARCH_ME ............... [FUN] CONNECTIONS ............. [CON]
|
||
Yours For The Downloading. Online Thoughts.
|
||
|
||
COMMUNICATIONS .......... [COM] APPLE II ................ [AII]
|
||
Apple II History, Part 14. Apple History, Part 15.
|
||
|
||
LOG OFF ................. [LOG]
|
||
GEnieLamp Information.
|
||
|
||
[IDX]"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
|
||
|
||
READING GEnieLamp GEnieLamp has incorporated a unique indexing
|
||
""""""""""""""""" system to help make reading the magazine easier.
|
||
To utilize this system, load GEnieLamp into any ASCII word processor
|
||
or text editor. In the index you will find the following example:
|
||
|
||
HUMOR ONLINE ............ [HUM]
|
||
[*]GEnie Fun & Games.
|
||
|
||
To read this article, set your find or search command to [HUM]. If
|
||
you want to scan all of the articles, search for [EOA]. [EOF] will take
|
||
you to the last page, whereas [IDX] will bring you back to the index.
|
||
|
||
MESSAGE INFO To make it easy for you to respond to messages re-printed
|
||
"""""""""""" here in GEnieLamp, you will find all the information you
|
||
need immediately following the message. For example:
|
||
|
||
(SMITH, CAT6, TOP1, MSG:58/M475)
|
||
_____________| _____|__ _|___ |____ |_____________
|
||
|Name of sender CATegory TOPic Msg.# Page number|
|
||
|
||
In this example, to respond to Smith's message, log on to page
|
||
475 enter the bulletin board and set CAT 6. Enter your REPly in TOPic 1.
|
||
|
||
A message number that is surrounded by brackets indicates that this
|
||
message is a "target" message and is referring to a "chain" of two
|
||
or more messages that are following the same topic. For example: {58}.
|
||
|
||
ABOUT GEnie Effective July 1, GEnie's non-prime time connect rate drops
|
||
""""""""""" to $3.00 per hour, a reduction of 50% from the current rate.
|
||
The monthly fee has been restructured, and moves from $4.95 to $8.95, for
|
||
which up to four hours of non-prime time access to most GEnie services,
|
||
such as software downloads, bulletin boards, GE Mail, an Internet gateway,
|
||
multi-player games and chat lines, are allowed without charge. To sign up
|
||
for GEnie service, call (with modem) 1-800-638-8369. Upon connection type
|
||
HHH. Wait for the U#= prompt. Type: XTX99014,DIGIPUB and hit RETURN. The
|
||
system will then prompt you for your information. Need more information?
|
||
Call GEnie's customer service line (voice) at 1-800-638-9636.
|
||
""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
|
||
|
||
|
||
/////////////////////////////////////// GEnie_QWIK_QUOTE ////
|
||
/ "true story: I was downloading a file the other day when /
|
||
/ my phone line was hit by lighting. Just before it died /
|
||
/ my modem said "*&^%$#@!" /
|
||
////////////////////////////////////////////// G.MARON ////
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
[EOA]
|
||
[FRM]//////////////////////////////
|
||
FROM MY DESKTOP /
|
||
/////////////////////////////////
|
||
Notes From The Editor
|
||
"""""""""""""""""""""
|
||
By Douglas Cuff
|
||
[D.CUFF]
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
THE OTHER NEW YEAR Perhaps you are always acutely of what day it is, but
|
||
"""""""""""""""""" I personally was astounded to realize that it's
|
||
September already... the beginning of the academic year. The thought
|
||
brings a smile to my lips. Do you realize that many teachers returning to
|
||
school are just now learning about TheWorks, the supercharged AppleWorks
|
||
project?
|
||
|
||
TheWorks isn't due for release until later this fall, but its features
|
||
have been a hot topic since the project was announced last month. Some
|
||
people have been lucky enough to see demonstrations of pre-release versions
|
||
of "Quadriga", to use the project's code name, and they all rave about how
|
||
you can't appreciate the program from cold lists of features. Despite the
|
||
fact that it wasn't live, even the demonstration of Quadriga that I saw on
|
||
the _II Alive_ video, "Apple II Review", was enough to make me enthusiastic
|
||
about the program. We have a real treat in store, it seems!
|
||
|
||
|
||
KANSASFEST Of course, it must be fall, since KansasFest has come and
|
||
"""""""""" gone. For the first time ever, I wasn't in a geographical
|
||
position that required me to banish all thoughts of attendance from my
|
||
mind, and yet I still couldn't attend. Not to worry, many of the A2 Gang
|
||
did attend, and they weren't shy about reporting what went on, as you'll
|
||
read in our THROUGH THE GRAPEVINE section.
|
||
|
||
Best of all, KFest organizer Tom Weishaar was heard to remark that
|
||
he'd like to do it all again. While this isn't a commitment for a sixth
|
||
KansasFest, it's more encouraging than the rumblings about this Fest just
|
||
past being the last. Perhaps the organizers found the trimmed-back
|
||
schedule more manageable. Let's all hope that we can meet in Kansas next
|
||
year!
|
||
|
||
|
||
THE POOR MAN'S TRADE SHOW I was keening over being unable to attend
|
||
""""""""""""""""""""""""" KansasFest when my copy of the _II Alive_
|
||
videotape, "Apple II Review" arrived in my otherwise empty post box. Aside
|
||
from the exciting Quadriga preview mentioned above (and a brief engagingly
|
||
shameless promotion of Quality Computers), this videotape features footage
|
||
from Apple Expo West, which took place last April in San Francisco. While
|
||
by no means a substitute for attending, the video did console me and
|
||
intrigue me. So *that's* what Lunatic looks and sounds like....
|
||
|
||
|
||
SYSTEM 6.0.1 RELEASED TO THE PEOPLE Not long after the Apple II version
|
||
""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""" of "hordes of people" had returned
|
||
from KansasFest, IIGS System 6.0.1 was made available on GEnie. Of course,
|
||
System 6.0.1 was really released about a month before, but was only
|
||
generally available through Resource Central. Now that it's more widely
|
||
released, expect to hear the raves (and gripes) rolling in.
|
||
|
||
|
||
IS THAT A LETTER FOR ME? NOPE, GUESS NOT! All right, so I've pinched the
|
||
"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""" subtitle of the HEY MISTER
|
||
POSTMAN column. The point is that the cards, letters, and E-mail *haven't*
|
||
been rolling in. I'd really like to hear what you think of GEnieLamp A2,
|
||
and you haven't said a word to me. You don't love me any more!
|
||
|
||
I don't think you appreciate what a chance you're throwing away. This
|
||
is only my second month on the job. I'm not set in my ways yet. (That
|
||
comes the month after next... we editors acclimatize quickly.) Let me know
|
||
what sweeping reforms you'd like to see. Let me know what parts of
|
||
GEnieLamp A2 I can't touch without starting a full-blown riot. Let me know
|
||
there's someone out there!
|
||
|
||
These days, it's important to know that you're not alone.
|
||
|
||
|
||
GEnie Mail: D.CUFF Internet: d.cuff@genie.geis.com
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
>>> NOTES FROM THE PUBLISHER <<<
|
||
""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
|
||
~ By John Peters [GENIELAMP] ~
|
||
|
||
AND THE BIG NEWS THIS MONTH IS... For over a year now, Atarians have
|
||
""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""" enjoyed graphics with their GEnieLamp
|
||
ST thanks to David Holmes and his revolutionary text reader, TX2. On the
|
||
Macintosh side, Jim Flanagan has been releasing a graphics issue which has
|
||
drawn nothing but praise for his efforts from everyone who has seen it.
|
||
But for the IBM folks, the ability to show graphics in GEnieLamp have been
|
||
noticeably absent. That situation is about to change.
|
||
|
||
I am happy to announce that are now offering graphics support for the
|
||
IBM platform with a new viewer called HyperRead by David Leithauser. Like
|
||
the ST/TX2 and Macintosh graphics issue, HyperRead uses keypresses or a
|
||
mouse to quickly jump to various articles in the magazine. Also, like the
|
||
ST/TX2 viewer, HyperRead allows graphics to be incorporated within the
|
||
text. Next month we will be offering screenshots of the PD_Q and Mini_Byte
|
||
reviews for the IBM issue just as we do in GEnieLamp ST/TX2. If you're
|
||
interested in checking out GEnieLamp IBM / HyperRead you can get your copy
|
||
of GEnieLamp IBM with the HyperRead viewer from the GEnieLamp menu located
|
||
on page 515.
|
||
|
||
Until next month...
|
||
|
||
John Peters
|
||
GEnieLamp/DigiPub RoundTable
|
||
|
||
|
||
/////////////////////////////////////////// GEnie_QWIK_QUOTE ////
|
||
/ "BTW, I recently realized that at $3.00/hour, or $.05/minute, /
|
||
/ GEnie now costs less than a local pay phone call, which is /
|
||
/ $.20 or $.25 for three minutes. Wild, huh?)" /
|
||
/////////////////////////////////////////////// A2.LUNATIC ////
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
[EOA]
|
||
[HEY]//////////////////////////////
|
||
HEY MISTER POSTMAN /
|
||
/////////////////////////////////
|
||
Is That A Letter For Me?
|
||
""""""""""""""""""""""""
|
||
By Douglas Cuff
|
||
[D.CUFF]
|
||
|
||
o BULLETIN BOARD HOT SPOTS
|
||
|
||
o A2 POT-POURRI
|
||
|
||
o HOT TOPICS
|
||
|
||
o WHAT'S NEW
|
||
|
||
o THROUGH THE GRAPEVINE
|
||
|
||
o MESSAGE SPOTLIGHT
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
>>> BULLETIN BOARD HOT SPOTS <<<
|
||
""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
|
||
|
||
[*] CAT5, TOP2 .............. Buy Apple stock?
|
||
[*] CAT5, TOP2 .............. License Apple IIgs System Software?
|
||
[*] CAT5, TOP3 .............. Favorite IIgs text screen colors
|
||
[*] CAT6, TOP10 ............. X-10 home automation on your Apple II
|
||
[*] CAT6, TOP15 ............. Flatbed scanner for IIgs?
|
||
[*] CAT10, TOP6 ............. Built-in dumb terminal in IIgs
|
||
[*] CAT42, TOP29 ............ Quadriga
|
||
[*] CAT44, TOP2 ............. KansasFest reports
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
>>> A2 POT-POURRI <<<
|
||
"""""""""""""""""""""
|
||
|
||
NO FILES IN ROOT DIRECTORY Because of the way ProDOS is designed, files in
|
||
"""""""""""""""""""""""""" the root directory are almost impossible to
|
||
recover. This is why it's always a good idea to use folders.
|
||
-Bryan
|
||
(SOFTDISK.INC, CAT35, TOP7, MSG:45/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
|
||
PASSPORT HOUSE LETTER I guess everyone knows by now that
|
||
""""""""""""""""""""" "Incider/A+" has ceased publication. And current
|
||
subscribers are being offered a choice of having the balance of their
|
||
subscription filled with either "// Alive", the new Apple // magazine put out
|
||
six times a year by Quality Computers or with "MacComputing".
|
||
|
||
But today, I received in the mail a letter from the Alliance
|
||
International that said they were shutting down operations because of a lack
|
||
of support from Apple // owners and developers. But the letter also announced
|
||
the existence of still another new Apple // publication called "The Passport
|
||
House Letter". Which publishes monthly at $24 a year (12 issues). They can be
|
||
contacted at:
|
||
|
||
The Passport House Letter
|
||
P.O. Box 145
|
||
Miles City, MT. 59301-0145
|
||
|
||
Is any one familiar with this magazine? This is the first I heard of
|
||
it. (R.ROEHNER, CAT4, TOP11, MSG:87/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
>>>>> I receive it and I'm very pleased with it. Its a 12-14 page
|
||
""""" newsletter about the Apple II development, product reviews, new
|
||
product reports, and articles like 'The Great Disk Drive' which went into
|
||
detail with just about everything you wanted to know about Disk Drives of all
|
||
sorts.
|
||
|
||
I recommend it!
|
||
|
||
Thanks
|
||
Paul
|
||
(P.PAVLICKO, CAT4, TOP11, MSG:92/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
|
||
DEFEATING APPLEWORKS MAIN DICTIONARY > I'd really like to create a German
|
||
"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""" > _main dictionary_.
|
||
Here in Holland some people have developed a Dutch dictionary for
|
||
AppleWorks. You do not have to replace only the Main Directory, but within
|
||
the program itself there is also a small directory with words that will
|
||
occur the most. The makers of the Dutch directory did also replace this
|
||
short directory. If you want I can send you the disk, that will change
|
||
AppleWorks. Maybe you can learn from this. If you want I can email you the
|
||
names and maybe the addresses of the users that made this program (I
|
||
believe they are no longer Apple // users but few of them still visit the
|
||
quarterly Apple Day).
|
||
|
||
I do have two versions of AppleWorks on my hd. One with the English
|
||
directory and one with the Dutch directory. This Dutch version has also
|
||
been patched (patch made by the famous John (UltraMacros) Tegelaar) to make
|
||
it all Dutch ; so Dutch menu's and alerts and so on.
|
||
|
||
So where are the secrets?
|
||
|
||
Peter van Dongen / Netherlands / Europe {Co-Pilot 2.1.1 + PT 3.1}
|
||
(P.DONGEN1, CAT17, TOP4, MSG:138/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
>>>>> Here is a patch for Europeans who do not want to wade through
|
||
""""" 80,000 English words to check Spelling. It allows them to have a very
|
||
large Custom Dictionary in their own language as the primary means for
|
||
spelling tests.
|
||
|
||
Macro:
|
||
|
||
a:<all oa-v poke $8d04,$80>! // Check Spelling, Custom dictionary only
|
||
|
||
Permanent Patch:
|
||
|
||
Get into Block Warden and F)ollow SEG.WP to byte $8385. Go into E)dit
|
||
mode and change the $F0 to $80. Write the block to disk and exit.
|
||
|
||
Thanks once again to Wally Bradford for giving us these locations.
|
||
|
||
Please tell anyone who's interested that you heard about it in --
|
||
|
||
TEXAS II.
|
||
(B.CADIEUX, CAT17, TOP4, MSG:151/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
|
||
I'VE HEARD THIS BEFORE > Joe Kohn (publisher of SSII) purchased a HP
|
||
"""""""""""""""""""""" > LaserJet 2P the same time I purchased this one. I
|
||
> shouldn't speak for him, but I have read his posts saying he is also
|
||
> pleased.
|
||
|
||
Actually, I got the HP LaserJet IIP Plus, and I'm more than just
|
||
pleased with it; I'm thrilled with it.
|
||
|
||
And, little did I think, when I purchased it, that I'd be using it to
|
||
print out a newsletter that would elicit comments like "You did that on an
|
||
Apple IIGS?" and "Which Mac did you use to print that?"
|
||
-Joe Kohn
|
||
(J.KOHN, CAT12, TOP13, MSG:106/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
|
||
NO UPGRADE FOR TIMEWORKS PUBLISH IT The response from Timeworks' Bob
|
||
""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""" Johnson....
|
||
|
||
> We have to write programs for (almost) the lowest common denominator.
|
||
> Most Apple users do not have much more than 128K of RAM - we get calls
|
||
> every day from users who don't even have IIe Enhanced machines. We have
|
||
> to start explaining what "Enhanced" means and how to get it done.
|
||
> There's only so far the program can go, and it's about there now.
|
||
|
||
> We can see the trend of Apple II hardware sales from our Apple II
|
||
> software sales - the trend isn't up. A lot of time, effort & money goes
|
||
> into a new piece of software - the developer has to see some potential
|
||
> of gain in order to invest in new products. While there are still quite
|
||
> a few Apple II's out there, I think you will agree that it isn't exactly
|
||
> a growing market.
|
||
|
||
> As a sidebar - about a year ago, we had some questions about the new
|
||
> GSOS. We called Apple & couldn't find ANYONE to talk to about the II's.
|
||
> Nobody could even tell who to speak to. They might have still been
|
||
> making IIGS's in December, but Apple was done with them long before
|
||
> that, if our experience was any indication.
|
||
|
||
> We appreciate your loyalty and I wish I did have something new to sell
|
||
> you, but I also don't want to get your hopes up for something that
|
||
> probably isn't going to happen.
|
||
|
||
> Bob TTS
|
||
|
||
Oh, well, I tried.
|
||
|
||
<<<Lloyd>>>
|
||
(L.DEVRIES, CAT8, TOP18, MSG:56/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
>>>>> I posted the last few posts concerning Publish It updates (?) to
|
||
""""" the AzApple BBS in Phoenix, AZ. Here's a response from Jerry Cline,
|
||
of InTrec software, publishers of Proterm 3.1:
|
||
|
||
The guy is a good politician. He articulated the problems well and he
|
||
is accurate in what he is saying.
|
||
|
||
Hypothetically, here is another way to look at it.
|
||
|
||
Perhaps another way the situation could be stated is to say: We can
|
||
make the drivers available but engineering costs will be $15,000 (or
|
||
whatever it would cost to take a top flight engineer off of a paying
|
||
project where that person is earning their way) and split the costs (plus a
|
||
slight profit - $3000 - to the company) to however many users would like to
|
||
make a bid. They would have to develop, test and market the project. Say
|
||
they sold 100 drivers, then each person would only have to pay just under
|
||
$200 for the driver. If it<EFBFBD>s justified, then maybe there is a case, but I
|
||
doubt anyone will be paying anywhere near that for a printer driver on an
|
||
Apple II. But the situation is more realistic.
|
||
|
||
But when a successful organization has a known active and highly
|
||
competitive market to pursue (and a lot of engineers, marketing and
|
||
management personnel to pay for) where just Apple Macintosh alone is 11
|
||
percent of an 11 billion dollar market (that is a one-billion-dollar-plus
|
||
market if your math is rusty) that already encompasses 12 million homes and
|
||
offices with 4 million being added every year, it makes the Apple II market
|
||
look bleak. If PublishIt were making a profit on Apple II products, they
|
||
would support it actively, they are just doing what any business does,
|
||
following the profit margin. It<EFBFBD>s the name of the game. If they did any
|
||
differently, their investors would get a rope. Apple Computer is in the
|
||
same boat. Think about it.
|
||
|
||
The part about the lowest common denominator (128K) is the killer and
|
||
the RAM is not all as usable as it is on Macintosh. That 128K figure is a
|
||
"hard" number. Consider the Apple IIgs, (which isn't all that different
|
||
from the Apple IIe), if you write for the GS, you narrow the market from
|
||
the 6 million Apple II's that were sold (includes Franklin and Laser), to
|
||
about only 1.25 million Apple IIGS sold and according to Roger Wagner
|
||
Publishing, about 70% + of those are still in the education market. That
|
||
leaves about +/- 50,000 in user's hands and a lot of those users are not
|
||
active and are looking to other platforms (you should see our mail
|
||
requesting ProTERM Mac).
|
||
|
||
It does not take a rocket scientist's mathematics to understand what
|
||
market to concentrate on if you are a business and don't want to go broke.
|
||
|
||
As far as the statement about the Apple IIe being sold in schools?
|
||
While it is still on the price list, I don't imagine sales are brisk -- Do
|
||
you? Would you buy a new Apple IIe or how about a bridge in Brooklyn or
|
||
perhaps some nice Moon property with "Earth-rise" and "Earth-set" exposure.
|
||
|
||
The choice is yours, check it out!
|
||
|
||
Let's see now, how does a user go about making a hardware buy?
|
||
|
||
Apple says, an enhanced Apple IIe with a composite (cheap) color
|
||
monitor, disk drive, drive controller card, 128K memory, 80 column
|
||
capability, is only about $1300. Wow, what an earthshaker!
|
||
|
||
See the Apple product catalog and order yours now! 800/795-1000 - To
|
||
top off this wild bargain Appleworks, a $239 value is included on a floppy
|
||
disk -- What a DEAL WHOA!!
|
||
|
||
-or- a few pages hence in the Apple catalog...
|
||
|
||
A Mac Classic with a color Trinitron color monitor, 4 megs of RAM,
|
||
built in 3.5" drive, an 80 meg hard drive and expandable to vistas
|
||
beyond... $1173.
|
||
|
||
Which one are you gonna to buy? Gee that's a hard decision!
|
||
|
||
...<scratch head here and get splinters under your fingernails>
|
||
|
||
Uhmmm... could I see them choices again -- Huhm?
|
||
|
||
Jerry
|
||
(C.KERN1, CAT8, TOP18, MSG:63/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
|
||
APPLE COMPUTER CO. IN EDUCATION Afraid so. In the business/home/whatever
|
||
""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""" market, they've sold a tremendous number
|
||
of machines and are continuing to snap at IBM's heals. Though IBM is still
|
||
#1, and the host of clones is huge, giving IBM and IBM compatibles
|
||
something like 80% of the market, if you combine ALL of them.
|
||
|
||
Still, Apple is doing all right.
|
||
|
||
In education they're losing fast, and they deserve it. The
|
||
unfortunate reality is, though, that it's hard for them to feel any pain
|
||
because they're still profitable and secure. Sure, they threw away
|
||
billions, but since they also made billions, it's hard to make them realize
|
||
they made a mistake. ("What do you mean we threw away billions? We made
|
||
billions!" Saying "You could have made billions more" just doesn't sink in
|
||
as well as if they were HURTING.)
|
||
|
||
The only question is, will they figure out why they're losing the
|
||
education market, and, is it too late for them to do anything about it?
|
||
|
||
It may be that if they threw everything into the Apple II for education
|
||
right now, they wouldn't be able to recover what they once held.
|
||
|
||
Maybe. Or maybe not. We won't find out unless they or someone else
|
||
tries.
|
||
|
||
Dean Esmay
|
||
(A2.DEAN, CAT15, TOP11, MSG:21/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
>>>>> If they made a GS with internal 40 meg, internal FDHD and 2 megs of
|
||
""""" memory, and sold it to the schools at approx $700 (which they COULD
|
||
do), they would sell a ton.
|
||
(GARY.UTTER, CAT15, TOP11, MSG:22/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
|
||
PROSEL AUTHOR GLEN BREDON TO MOVE I will be moving permanently sometime
|
||
""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""" around Nov. Watch this space for new
|
||
address.
|
||
(BREDON, CAT30, TOP2, MSG:138/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
|
||
IBM APPLETALK NETWORK? I recently read of a new IBM-compatible networking
|
||
"""""""""""""""""""""" method that uses a proprietary protocol and
|
||
inexpensive phone cable. The cards and connectors run about $150 a
|
||
machine. What got my attention was the mention at the end of the review
|
||
that the "proprietary protocol" was a version of Appletalk. The reviewer
|
||
went on to mention that if you wanted to hook up a Mac to the PC, all it
|
||
took was a $29 connector.
|
||
|
||
Called the company and asked about hooking up Apple II's. After the
|
||
initial explanations, the tech people became quite intrigued, particularly
|
||
when I told them I thought this was a potentially large market for them.
|
||
They called back later and said that the Appletalk on the II end would need
|
||
to be AFT 1.1 or backwardly compatible with 1.1, since that's what they
|
||
used. Also, the II would not be able to be a server, only a client.
|
||
|
||
I know Appletalk is built into the GS. What version is it? Also, I
|
||
have a IIe, and have been looking for a way to hook it up to my PC. If
|
||
anyone out there has a workstation card and software for the IIe they would
|
||
be willing to part with temporarily/permanently, I would like to borrow it
|
||
to try this out. (I'll pay shipping.) If it works, then I'd be looking to
|
||
buy one.
|
||
|
||
Any info on version? This has the potential to be a a very
|
||
interesting development.
|
||
(B.MAPLES, CAT12, TOP22, MSG:1/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
|
||
INCIDER AFTERMATH I just read that MacComputing, the rag that was supposed
|
||
""""""""""""""""" to replace InCider was killed before it was even able
|
||
to get its first issue on the stands. Seems the IDG was afraid that the
|
||
fallout from the Apple layoffs and problems in the computer world made them
|
||
decide to can the project because they could not get advertisers to
|
||
advertise.
|
||
|
||
Maybe they should have stayed with their 65,000 (?) subscribers who
|
||
own the dead II. Hmm..Apple drops the GS and then has to layoffs
|
||
thousands, IDG drops the II and folds on a Mac rag. That will teach them to
|
||
fool around with the Apple II gods!
|
||
|
||
II INFINITUM----------------------------->
|
||
|
||
Ron
|
||
(RON.ROYER, CAT5, TOP3, MSG:63/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
>>>>> Tom Abrams - I guess that I was unofficially maintaining the
|
||
""""" inCider/A+ category here in A2, and it was for that reason that I
|
||
(Shareware Solutions II) inherited category 28.
|
||
|
||
Facts...
|
||
|
||
- inCider/A+ ceased publication with the July, 1993 issue.
|
||
|
||
- A+ Publishing printed a single issue of Mac Computing.
|
||
|
||
- A+ Publishing had planned for Mac Computing to be a monthly
|
||
publication.
|
||
|
||
- As of today, A+ Publishing will cease to exist.
|
||
|
||
---Joe Kohn ------------
|
||
(J.KOHN, CAT2, TOP4, MSG:92/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
>>>>> More Facts -
|
||
"""""
|
||
- Cameron Crotty and Dan Muse now both work for MacWorld in San
|
||
Francisco.
|
||
|
||
- Joe Kohn is publishing inCider: The Next Generation (well, sort of)
|
||
|
||
- Joe Kohn has just secured the rights to all his inCider/A+ articles.
|
||
|
||
- The first edition of Mac Computing is now a collector's item.
|
||
|
||
- The first subscription copy of Mac Computing was sent to the
|
||
printers one hour before the entire staff of A+ Publishing was
|
||
informed that they were going to be laid off.
|
||
|
||
- HangTime's real name is Bruce.
|
||
|
||
---Joe (whose real name is Joseph) Kohn
|
||
(J.KOHN, CAT2, TOP4, MSG:94/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
|
||
APPLEWORKS GS AND SYSTEM 6 Claris _did_ release a new "Install" script for
|
||
"""""""""""""""""""""""""" AWGS and System 6.0. I called the 800 number
|
||
(or spoke to someone online, I don't remember) and they promptly shipped it
|
||
to me. Works like a charm.
|
||
|
||
Jeff - Delivered by Co-Pilot v2.1.1 and TIC
|
||
(J.CARR20, CAT17, TOP17, MSG:157/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
___
|
||
COPY II PLUS HARD ON HARD DRIVES |he problem with Copy II Plus is that it
|
||
"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""" doesn't check the storageType of files
|
||
when copying -- it just assumes that all files have a data fork and nothing
|
||
else. I'm sure it also uses direct block reads and writes, with the end
|
||
result being that when you tell it to copy a file with a resource fork, it
|
||
looks at where the data fork is and copies that block by block, totally
|
||
ignoring the resource fork. Luckily, the blocks used by the data in a
|
||
resource fork are marked as "used" in the volume allocation map, so it won't
|
||
copy any data fork-only files over on top of them. I suspect that its "zero
|
||
disk blocks" function doesn't respect those "used" blocks, though (since it
|
||
can't see what file uses them, it'd kill them), so that could possibly zap
|
||
your files that have resource forks.
|
||
|
||
][n the end, I (like many others) just say DON'T USE COPY II PLUS ON A
|
||
IIGS (unless you're trying to back up copy protected software, or are
|
||
working with DOS 3.3). There are simply too many ways that you could
|
||
accidentally damage or destroy important files.
|
||
|
||
-= Lunatic (:
|
||
(A2.LUNATIC, CAT9, TOP6, MSG:284/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
>>>>> Using the "undelete" function of Copy II+ is one of the KNOWN ways to
|
||
""""" make your hard drive disappear. Sometimes, when you use that option,
|
||
C2+, for an unknown reason, will trash block 0 and/or block 1 of your hard
|
||
drive. This is a Bad Thing.
|
||
|
||
This refers to Copy 2+ v9.0, by the way (the most current version, so
|
||
far as I know). Older versions don't do this, but they STILL shouldn't be
|
||
used on or around a GSOS hard drive. The program is flaky, it is not really
|
||
meant to work on hard drives. (It doesn't know, or care, that a HD is not a
|
||
floppy.)
|
||
|
||
Actually, I have Copy 2 installed on MY hard drive, and I run it from
|
||
there, but I ONLY use it on floppies. I NEVER use it on the hard drive, for
|
||
anything. (In fact, come to think of it, I haven't used Copy 2 at ALL,
|
||
haven't even launched it, in at least 2 years.)
|
||
|
||
Gary R. Utter
|
||
(GARY.UTTER, CAT9, TOP6, MSG:296/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
|
||
WHO WROTE RESCUE ROVER? If Bill Heineman did this game, why does his name
|
||
""""""""""""""""""""""" not appear on the credits that show up when you
|
||
press the down arrow at the dog house, and go down into the hole where the
|
||
bones are stacked? Exactly what did he do on this game?
|
||
|
||
Steve Weyhrich <IX0YE>--<
|
||
(S.WEYHRICH, CAT34, TOP6, MSG:62/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
>>>>> Bill took the IBM PC code and ported it to the IIgs. Then he tweaked
|
||
""""" it to make it playable on the IIgs. If you ever play the PC version
|
||
you'll notice a difference.
|
||
|
||
Thanks to John Carmack we can play Rescue Rover on the PC. Thanks to
|
||
Bill Heineman we can play it on the Apple IIgs.
|
||
|
||
Jay Jennings
|
||
(PUNKWARE, CAT34, TOP6, MSG:63/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CMS HARD DRIVE REPAIR For those of you that are looking for repairs or data
|
||
""""""""""""""""""""" recovery from CMS drives, I do them. Generally its
|
||
worth repairing the drives, but if you have a CMS card that has gone bad it
|
||
is generally more cost effective to replace it with an Apple DMA SCSI card.
|
||
|
||
For those of you out there who would like to contact me about repairs
|
||
or just information I can be reached at:
|
||
|
||
Larry Beyer
|
||
ADD ON II/B&D Computer Repair
|
||
6115 S. Massasoit Ave.
|
||
Chicago, IL
|
||
60638
|
||
1-312-735-9010 between 9:30 am and 1:00 pm Central time.
|
||
(ADD.ON.II, CAT21, TOP5, MSG:23/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
|
||
LOST CLASSICS ADDRESS Should you wish to contact the Lost Classics Project,
|
||
""""""""""""""""""""" save the following information:
|
||
|
||
Timothy Tobin
|
||
Lost Classics
|
||
P.O. Box 4641
|
||
Redondo Beach, CA 90278
|
||
|
||
Internet: a2.tim@genie.geis.com
|
||
GEnie: A2.TIM
|
||
|
||
Timothy Tobin
|
||
Lost Classics Coordinator
|
||
(A2.TIM, CAT7, TOP1, MSG:9/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
DEACTIVATING HARDPRESSED I think it was mentioned earlier that the best way
|
||
"""""""""""""""""""""""" to go when doing backups is to inactivate
|
||
HardPressed when backing up and when restoring. It turns out that there's a
|
||
very good reason for that...
|
||
|
||
I was playing around with Apple's Archiver program, and discovered
|
||
that it doesn't correctly set the filetype when restoring files. It
|
||
creates it with the wrong auxtype, extracts the data, and then sets the
|
||
auxtype to what it's supposed to be.
|
||
|
||
Well, guess what. If you extract a file compressed with HardPressed,
|
||
and the auxtype is wrong, HP won't be able to tell that it's one of its own
|
||
files. So, it'll try to compress it again. Depending on how it was
|
||
compressed originally, it might succeed. The result is a file that's been
|
||
compressed twice, which tends to get real confusing real fast.
|
||
|
||
If you set HardPressed to "inactive", it won't try to compress the
|
||
files being extracted, thus avoiding the problem. So, the original advice
|
||
was good: turn HP off before backing up (to save space) and before
|
||
restoring (to save your files!)
|
||
|
||
Hopefully Apple will fix Archiver someday...
|
||
|
||
- Andy
|
||
(FADDEN, CAT37, TOP3, MSG:202/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
>>>>> BTW, don't forget that you can totally inactivate HardPressed by
|
||
""""" hitting 'H' while the system is booting... easier than marking it as
|
||
inactive from the Finder or ProSel-16.
|
||
|
||
- Andy
|
||
(FADDEN, CAT37, TOP3, MSG:222/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
|
||
FINDER TIP Loren -
|
||
""""""""""
|
||
> if it's not the one you wanted to
|
||
> have show up, you have to go digging with the mouse after all.
|
||
|
||
Nope--once you have established a letter by hitting it (e.g., "M"), you
|
||
can bicycle through all the icons ("M's") with that initial with TAB. (But
|
||
it IS an additional key used...Prosel IS still better, in that respect.)
|
||
|
||
Kirk Hollingsworth
|
||
(HOLLINGSWRTH, CAT2, TOP21, MSG:37/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
|
||
BRUNNABLE GAMES Seeing some of these BRUNable games gave me an idea.
|
||
""""""""""""""" I first wrote a program that will load and run them as a
|
||
SYS file that ProSel can pass the name of the BIN file to. Works! I'm
|
||
adding parms to it so you can slow a GS or //e down to 1MHz. Maybe a few
|
||
other options too. Kind of like SWCP for games.
|
||
|
||
The other program I wrote will turn any BIN file to a SYS file. And I
|
||
don't mean it will just change the filetype. It sticks my header on it and
|
||
relocates the code into the right place and jumps to it. Also works dandy.
|
||
Any interest in these? Other ideas for them?
|
||
(G.TOLAR, CAT7, TOP15, MSG:45/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
|
||
RAMFAST SCSI TIP FOR SMALL-CAPACITY DISKS Get into the RF utility and format
|
||
""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""" a disk but DO NOT PARTITION THE
|
||
DISK. This will give you the maximum capacity. Now exit from the utility and
|
||
when finder asks you to format or eject go ahead and format it from finder.
|
||
Now pop the disk out and back in. It should go away and come back as the
|
||
1.44m or 720k disk. If you partition the disk then we use up 32k for a
|
||
partition map.
|
||
|
||
Drew
|
||
(CV.TECH, CAT11, TOP16, MSG:152/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
A2 REAL-TIME CONFERENCES A2 RTC's Are Growing!
|
||
"""""""""""""""""""""""" With the new, lower rates, more and more people
|
||
are stopping into the RTC for help with a all types of questions, or just
|
||
to visit with the A2 Staff, and with each other. Because of this, we're
|
||
expanding our scheduled RTC's. The changes take effect on Monday, 8/16.
|
||
|
||
We'll be open nightly from 2100-0100, and don't be surprised if you
|
||
find us there even later. We're also open Sunday afternoon 1200-2000, and
|
||
all night on Friday!
|
||
|
||
Susan
|
||
|
||
Day Time Topic Host GE-Mail
|
||
--- ------------ ------------------------ --------------- ------------
|
||
|
||
Sun 1200-2000 ET Bewitched, Bothered Gena Saikin G.SAIKIN
|
||
or Bewildered Jeff Rash GS.OZONEMAN
|
||
|
||
Sun 2100-2300 ET II Speak Don Arrowsmith D.ARROWSMIT1
|
||
2300-0100 ET Mona Lisas & Mad Hatters Dennis Doms WIZARDS.MUSE
|
||
|
||
Mon 2100-0100 ET A Walk on the Wild Side Tara Dillinger TARA
|
||
with Tara & Co.
|
||
|
||
Tue 2100-2300 ET Formal Guest Dave Ciotti A2.BEAR
|
||
2300-0100 ET TBC Forum Mike Garvey TBC
|
||
|
||
Wed 2100-2300 ET Apple Working Susan MacGregor A2.SUSAN
|
||
2300-0100 ET Education Adrian Vance A.VANCE
|
||
|
||
Thu 2100-2300 ET Ellen's Room Ellen Rosenberg RC.Ellen
|
||
2300-0100 ET TBC Forum Mike Garvey TBC
|
||
|
||
Fri 2100-0100 ET Telecommunications Jim Zajkowski JIMZ
|
||
|
||
Sat 2100-2300 ET Games Dave Ciotti A2.BEAR
|
||
2300-0100 ET More Games Susan MacGregor A2.SUSAN
|
||
|
||
(A2.SUSAN, CAT3, TOP19, MSG:70/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
|
||
FONT LIBRARY CLEARINGHOUSE CHANGES I have recently been asked to take over
|
||
"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""" the duties of the Resource-Central
|
||
Font Clearinghouse. As part of this I have been going over all the old
|
||
uploads and all the old messages posted here in the BB. Some of you will
|
||
be getting e-mail from me in an attempt to resolve old issues which
|
||
appeared to not be satisfactorily completed.
|
||
|
||
In the meantime, I have noticed, in my downloading and study of the
|
||
existing A2 fonts, that there are some errors. A few fonts apparently did
|
||
not have the proper Filetype/Auxtype combination, and were thus not
|
||
properly recognized by the Font Manager. In others, some fonts were packed
|
||
with other fonts but not identified as such. Others were called the same
|
||
font but were really different. Still others were assigned improper ID
|
||
numbers, which will create conflicts for some people.
|
||
|
||
I am in the process of trying to clean up these problems, but it will
|
||
take some time. When I am done, I will presumably have every available
|
||
font installed on my system. Some will have to be re- packed and
|
||
re-uploaded to the library. My question to you is: In what format would
|
||
you like the fonts? Should I upload an entire family as one archive
|
||
(Times, Times-Bold, Times-Italic, etc., as one file) or should each font
|
||
style have its own archive? Or should we go the other way and have each
|
||
archive contain several related fonts? If so, what criteria should we use
|
||
to group them?
|
||
|
||
Also, what kind of information should be in the description for each
|
||
upload? I planned to include the actual font name, sizes, # characters
|
||
defined, Font ID, type (bitmap/TrueType), and alphabet (Roman, Cyrillic,
|
||
etc.). Do a search on keyword FONT and uploader A2.TIM for a couple
|
||
samples. Is this acceptable? Would you like something else? If so, what?
|
||
|
||
Please keep in mind that this project I am undertaking will be a
|
||
long-term project. New IDs will be assigned within a few hours to days,
|
||
depending on circumstances, but clearing up old discrepancies can take up
|
||
to a week or more per font, depending on the research needed. There are a
|
||
couple hundred fonts (out of several thousand) for which I have questions,
|
||
and I will likely need the Apple II community's help in resolving many of
|
||
them, so please bear with me. :)
|
||
|
||
There are currently two topics for discussions of Apple IIgs fonts.
|
||
This topic is one, and Category 23, Topic 11 is the other. To assist me, I
|
||
would like to have this topic be used for general font questions, font
|
||
uploads, etc., and reserve Cat 23, Topic 11 for official Clearinghouse
|
||
traffic. What this means is that if you want an ID, please post the
|
||
request in Cat 23, Top 11. If there is an ID conflict, or some specific
|
||
font identification problem, it should be raised in Cat 23, Topic 11. If
|
||
you want to know how a particular font looks, this topic (Cat 8, Top 17) is
|
||
a good place for things like that. I don't want to be authoritarian about
|
||
it, but it would really help me get this under control that much sooner. :)
|
||
The sooner I get this under control, the more of my limited time I can
|
||
devote to Lost Classics, and getting a Postscript Font utility for the
|
||
IIgs. :)
|
||
|
||
Thanks for your help, and all your patience, as we finally get a
|
||
responsive system for Font IDs in place. :)
|
||
|
||
By the way, the official mail address for the Resource-Central Font
|
||
Clearinghouse is:
|
||
|
||
Timothy Tobin
|
||
Font Clearinghouse
|
||
P.O. Box 4641
|
||
Redondo Beach, CA 90278
|
||
|
||
Internet: a2.tim@genie.geis.com
|
||
GEnie: A2.TIM
|
||
|
||
Please feel free to pass this information on. Also, if you own Font
|
||
Factory GS, please cross out the old name and address in the manual for the
|
||
Clearinghouse and write this in its place. :)
|
||
|
||
Timothy Tobin
|
||
Resource-Central Font Clearinghouse
|
||
(A2.TIM, CAT8, TOP17, MSG:96/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
|
||
IMAGEWRITER CUT SHEET FEEDER Bill, I have a cut sheet feeder for my
|
||
"""""""""""""""""""""""""""" ImageWriter II. I bought it at my local Apple
|
||
dealer.
|
||
|
||
LET ME TELL YOU and others, it is one of the best computer investments
|
||
that you can get -- and most people don't know about it.
|
||
|
||
Mine paid for itself in a year and one-half.
|
||
|
||
I can use all sorts of paper, even colored, and change at will without
|
||
any delays.
|
||
|
||
My big saving is that I used the OTHER side of used sheets for printing
|
||
out information that I am not sending anywhere. This re-cycled paper saves me
|
||
a bundle (pun intended).
|
||
|
||
Every sheet, ALWAYS, feeds to the same spot. It is also perfect for
|
||
printing on previously printed forms.
|
||
|
||
I can't say enough about it. Go get one --- YESTERDAY!
|
||
|
||
Gary Hayman -- (in printer's heaven)
|
||
(G.E.HAYMAN, CAT26, TOP6, MSG:180/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
|
||
GOOD DEALS ON SCSI HARD DRIVES I hope this is a good place to let Apple II
|
||
"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""" users know about a good deal on a SCSI
|
||
hard drive. In MacWeek, La Cie (a Quantum company) is offering a 170 meg
|
||
Quantum ELS hard drive with a 5 year warranty for $199 (internal mount) or
|
||
$249 for an external setup that includes a case and cable. The external
|
||
model includes switchable "active" termination. The phone number is
|
||
1-800-999-1386.
|
||
|
||
I did some checking and there are a few caveats to be aware of. The
|
||
case and its power supply are covered by warranty for 2 years, not 5.
|
||
Also, the case is fitted with 25 pin DB-25 connectors instead of the more
|
||
standard 50 pin Centronics type connectors. This should not present a
|
||
significant problem, as they supply a 25 pin cable which can be used to
|
||
connect the drive directly to any Apple II SCSI card or to a Mac. Other
|
||
devices could be hooked up with a standard 25 to 50 pin cable, especially
|
||
the cable that may previously have attached other devices directly to the
|
||
SCSI card.
|
||
|
||
-= Bill Shuff =-
|
||
(W.SHUFF, CAT11, TOP10, MSG:121/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
|
||
>>> HOT TOPICS <<<
|
||
""""""""""""""""""
|
||
|
||
SYSTEM 6.0.1 NOW ONLINE ][t's here! It's here! It's here! System 6.0.1
|
||
""""""""""""""""""""""" is now available for download in the A2 libraries!
|
||
Just so you didn't miss the banner (and for those GEM and CoPilot people who
|
||
may find it easier to pull file numbers and names out of BB messages than out
|
||
of banners), here are the files:
|
||
|
||
21163 SYSDISK.601.BXY X A2-CENTRAL 930811 606336
|
||
Desc: Main SYSTEM DISK for System 6.0.1
|
||
21161 SNTHLAB.601.BXY X A2-CENTRAL 930811 534400
|
||
Desc: SYNTHLAB disk for IIgs System 6.0.1
|
||
21160 FONTS.601.BXY X A2-CENTRAL 930811 296448
|
||
Desc: FONTS disk for IIgs System 6.0.1
|
||
21159 STOOLS2.601.BXY X A2-CENTRAL 930811 521984
|
||
Desc: SYSTEM TOOLS disk 2 for System 6.0.1
|
||
21158 STOOLS1.601.BXY X A2-CENTRAL 930811 536192
|
||
Desc: SYSTEM TOOLS disk 1 for System 6.0.1
|
||
21157 INSTALL.601.BXY X A2-CENTRAL 930811 520576
|
||
Desc: INSTALL disk for IIgs System 6.0.1
|
||
___
|
||
|he three files that you MUST HAVE for a complete System 6.0.1
|
||
installation are INSTALL.601.BXY, STOOLS1.601.BXY and STOOLS2.601.BXY. If
|
||
you don't have a hard drive then you probably want SYSDISK.601.BXY, the self-
|
||
booting floppy system disk. It's missing a lot of files that you may want to
|
||
customize your system, though, like extra FSTs, drivers, Control Panels, etc.
|
||
If you want those extras, you need to download the three main system disks
|
||
anyway. A self-booting floppy system disk CAN be constructed from the three
|
||
main system disks, but unless you have four 800K drives or equivalents (RAM
|
||
disks, etc.), it's a real pain and it takes a lot of disk swapping.
|
||
|
||
|\|ow, in case you're wondering "Should I upgrade? Are there likely to
|
||
be any problems with System 6.0.1 on my system?" here's the lowdown on most
|
||
of the reported problems:
|
||
|
||
Font Manager bug & Pointless - Fixed with FixFontMgr, file #21061,
|
||
FIXFONTMGR.BXY, in the A2 libraries
|
||
|
||
System folder "Magic Routing" bug - Not serious. Keep your System folder
|
||
on the desktop and you'll never see it.
|
||
|
||
The folder/disk you just opened becomes deselected - Not a bug, just the
|
||
way things work in System 6.0.1
|
||
|
||
When you close a window your icon selection changes to that folder/disk -
|
||
Again, not a bug, just the way it works, now.
|
||
|
||
Bill Tudor's CDev Alias NDAs no longer work - Third party problem. (:
|
||
|
||
___
|
||
|hat's about it, folks! There have yet to be discovered any really
|
||
major bugs in System 6.0.1 that don't have simple workarounds.
|
||
_
|
||
(_
|
||
__)o why should you update your system to 6.0.1? Here's a few good
|
||
reasons: The MS-DOS FST, Aliases and keyboard navigation in Finder, more bug
|
||
fixes, a new fast RAM disk driver for /RAM5, and a whole bunch of extra
|
||
little new features and tweaks.
|
||
|
||
][ say it's definitely worth the upgrade. Figuring out the cost to you,
|
||
each disk other than the self-booting system disk should take well less than
|
||
45 minutes to download -- at $3.00/hour, that's less than $2.20 each! How
|
||
can you afford NOT to upgrade?
|
||
|
||
(BTW, I recently realized that at $3.00/hour, or $.05/minute, GEnie now
|
||
costs less than a local pay phone call, which is $.20 or $.25 for three
|
||
minutes. Wild, huh?)
|
||
-= Lunatic (:
|
||
(A2.LUNATIC, CAT9, TOP6, MSG:351/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
>>>>> And just a reminder -- if you already have all the disks from
|
||
""""" System 6, you DO NOT need to download the System 6.0.1 Fonts or
|
||
SynthLab disks. There were NO changes to Fonts and the only change to
|
||
SynthLab was that it was linked with a different linker (no changes to the
|
||
actual program code were made and the program behaves exactly the same as the
|
||
6.0 version).
|
||
(QUALITY, CAT9, TOP6, MSG:352/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
|
||
6.0.1: FONT MANAGER BUG DETAILS As some of you may know, System 6.0.1 and
|
||
"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""" Pointless 2.0.1 don't work together too
|
||
well in some cases (specifically when you select Choose Font for a font that
|
||
has no bitmaps.)
|
||
|
||
Well, Nathan Mates (our summer intern) found that the problem had
|
||
nothing to do with Pointless and could be duplicated even without Pointless
|
||
installed. The problem will crop up anytime you do a ChooseFont for a font
|
||
that is not installed in the System.
|
||
|
||
For example, say you create a document in AWGS using a font called
|
||
"DingDong". If you then open this document on a different system that
|
||
doesn't have DingDong installed ChooseFont will crash.
|
||
|
||
Nathan has written a patch program that is very simple and very
|
||
cautious. It will only work with Font Manager v3.4 (which is what ships on
|
||
System 6.0.1).
|
||
|
||
I'll be uploading it to the A2 library in just a few minutes....
|
||
|
||
Bryan
|
||
(BRYAN.ZAK, CAT9, TOP10, MSG:1/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
>>>>> (And we'll have another patch program available shortly once we get
|
||
""""" confirmation from Apple... ;-)
|
||
|
||
Bryan
|
||
(SOFTDISK.INC, CAT9, TOP10, MSG:3/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
>>>>> No, this bug is only in Font Manager 3.4 -- which is part of
|
||
""""" System 6.0.1.
|
||
|
||
The patch program is VERY cautious. First it checks for Font Manager
|
||
3.4, and then it checks a series of bytes to make sure it hasn't already
|
||
been patched. And, the patch is only in memory -- not on disk, so nothing
|
||
is permanent.
|
||
|
||
Bryan
|
||
(SOFTDISK.INC, CAT37, TOP4, MSG:218/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
|
||
6.0.1: FINDER MAGIC ROUTING BUG Unfortunately, yes, this is a bug. It was
|
||
"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""" discovered shortly after 6.0.1 went final
|
||
and it was (as usual) non-trivial to fix. The simple solution is to not route
|
||
files from the desktop. Urgh.
|
||
|
||
Jim "who was really annoyed when this one was found a few months ago"
|
||
Murphy
|
||
(MURPH, CAT9, TOP3, MSG:209/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
|
||
6.0.1: COMMON INSTALLATION PROBLEM There is also a problem (not a bug)
|
||
""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""" with the SCC.Manager. If you use "Easy
|
||
Update" all the AppleTalk files are also copied to your system disk. When you
|
||
boot, the SCC.Manager checks to see if AppleTalk is active and if slot 1 or
|
||
slot 2 are set to "Your Card" and slot seven is set to "AppleTalk." If not
|
||
you will get a message stating that AppleTalk is not active. If you are not
|
||
using AppleTalk all you do is hit return. The problem is that each time you
|
||
boot you will get this message and you will have to hit return every time you
|
||
boot.
|
||
|
||
Fix 1. If you do not use AppleTalk and do not anticipate using
|
||
AppleTalk, remove SCC.Manager from your Driver folder and stick it in the
|
||
trash.
|
||
|
||
Fix 2. If you are like me and use AppleTalk only during printing to my
|
||
LaserWriter and Postscript, move SCC.Manager out of the Driver folder when
|
||
you are not printing. Just remember to move SCC.Manager back into the Driver
|
||
folder as part of your printer setup routine. It works for me.
|
||
|
||
-Mel (MelSoft) Fowler
|
||
(MELSOFT, CAT9, TOP6, MSG:353/M645;1)
|
||
___
|
||
>>>>> |his error message is usually caused because at some point in the
|
||
""""" past you installed the SCC.Manager file in your Drivers folder. This
|
||
file now generates "The selected AppleTalk Connection could not be found"
|
||
error message in System 6.0.1 if you don't have AppleTalk. Simply remove the
|
||
SCC.Manager file from your Drivers folder and this error should go away. If
|
||
you want to be more sure and do it the official way, or if removing the
|
||
SCC.Manager file doesn't get rid of the error message, simply launch the
|
||
Installer, hit the "Customize" button, select the "Network: AppleShare"
|
||
script from the list, and then hit the "Remove" button.
|
||
-= Lunatic (:
|
||
(A2.LUNATIC, CAT9, TOP14, MSG:1/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
|
||
6.0.1: THIRD-PARTY BUG You missed the bug in AppleWorks GS, where the
|
||
""""""""""""""""""""""" Save As dialog does not remember which volume and
|
||
directory the file was loaded from. It will result in files being stored on
|
||
the wrong volume (and being "lost") unless one realizes the path is wrong and
|
||
resets it.
|
||
|
||
My workaround is to use Kangaroo to get back to the original directory.
|
||
|
||
Glenn
|
||
(G.W.HOFFMAN, CAT9, TOP6, MSG:356/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
___
|
||
>>>>> |hanks, Glenn! I think that's another third party bug, though,
|
||
""""" especially since I haven't heard any reports of it showing up in
|
||
other programs. The only reason I included the third party bug in CDev Alias
|
||
is because that's more of a system-wide problem (happens in all desktop
|
||
programs) and people may have thought that it was actually a system bug
|
||
because of it.
|
||
-= Lunatic (:
|
||
(A2.LUNATIC, CAT9, TOP6, MSG:357/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
_
|
||
6.0.1: 5.25" DRIVERS GLITCH (_)k, I understand your problem, now. What's
|
||
"""""""""""""""""""""""""""" happening is that whenever GS/OS detects the
|
||
FIRMWARE for a 5.25" drive in a slot, it then assumes that there are two
|
||
drives connected to it. It does this because there is no way for it to
|
||
reliably be able to tell if you actually have one or more drives connected in
|
||
that slot. So you don't actually have to have a drive connected. With your
|
||
system, GS/OS _always_ see the firmware for a 5.25" drive in slot 6, whether
|
||
the slot is set to "Disk Port" or "Your Card." The only way you can keep
|
||
those 5.25" drive icons from showing up in Finder on you system is to do as
|
||
Udo suggests, and deactivate your 5.25" drive driver.
|
||
-= Lunatic (:
|
||
(A2.LUNATIC, CAT9, TOP10, MSG:16/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
>>>>> Note that this will ONLY affect GSOS. Your 5.25 will still be
|
||
""""" available to all P8 applications, so you can easily drop into
|
||
something P8 to copy files from/to the 5.25.
|
||
(GARY.UTTER, CAT9, TOP10, MSG:17/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
>>>>> >Do you have a better suggestion?
|
||
"""""_
|
||
/-\ctually, yes. Buy an adapter cable for your 5.25" drives so you can
|
||
plug them into the SmartPort on the back of your GS (or into the back of the
|
||
3.5" drives you may already have plugged into the SmartPort). Remove the
|
||
5.25" drive controller card from slot 7 and move your RamFAST to that slot.
|
||
Now, your GS will run cooler, you'll be able to disable your 5.25" drives
|
||
from ALL programs by setting slot 6 to "Your Card," and you could even sell
|
||
your 5.25" drive controller card and get back more money than the adapter
|
||
cable cost you.
|
||
|
||
]-[mm. In your later messages I see that you're using AppleTalk. You
|
||
can set your slot 7 to "AppleTalk" and slot 2 to "Your Card" and you should
|
||
then be able to plug your RamFAST into slot 2. (I know this works with the
|
||
Apple SCSI cards, I'm not so sure if the RamFAST supports slot 2 as well as
|
||
5, 6, and 7, though. I'm sure there are plenty of RamFAST owners here who
|
||
can clarify this, though.) If you're using ProTERM 3.x, it will ignore the
|
||
actual setting of slot 2 and continue to work fine with a modem plugged into
|
||
the modem port, as long as you tell it that you're using that modem port (it
|
||
talks directly to the port hardware). Most other telecommunications software
|
||
(including the AOL software, I'm sure :) won't do this.
|
||
(A2.LUNATIC, CAT9, TOP10, MSG:31/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
>>>>> Tim, why don't you try this instead:
|
||
"""""
|
||
|
||
Fm: Matt Deatherage 76703,3030
|
||
To: Ray Merlin 71435,1071 (X)
|
||
|
||
> Maybe it was decided that it's better that two icons appear
|
||
> instead of none at all.
|
||
|
||
That's exactly correct, Ray. There is no reliable way to detect 5.25"
|
||
drive presence, so now 6.0.1 doesn't try at all. Every slot looks like it
|
||
has two drives, so that's how many the driver reports.
|
||
|
||
If you only have one, changing the low nibble of the driver's auxtype
|
||
to $1 should prevent it from trying to find a second one.
|
||
|
||
Ken Lessing
|
||
(K.LESSING, CAT43, TOP8, MSG:193/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
|
||
6.0.1: MINOR BUG? I just found what looks like a minor bug in System
|
||
"""""""""""""""""" 6.0.1. If you use the slots control panel and set slot
|
||
1 to be modem, and then go to the printer port control panel, the mode still
|
||
says printer though it appears that the mode is in fact modem. Is this a
|
||
bug or a change in the way the cdev is supposed to work? I thought, in prior
|
||
versions, that the printer port cdev always referenced slot 1 and the modem
|
||
cdev always referenced slot 2 the way the CDA's do.
|
||
|
||
Don Elton (delton) or delton@pro-carolina.oau.org
|
||
(DELTON, CAT5, TOP5, MSG:35/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
|
||
6.0.1: ALIASES I've also used the idea of putting a single Alias folder on
|
||
""""""""""""""" the desktop so that I can open folders and launch apps
|
||
easily. However, instead of having the Alias folder itself be located on a
|
||
ProDOS partition, I have it located on my HFS partition. This allows me to
|
||
name the aliases within the folder with more useful and descriptive names
|
||
than ProDOS allows. It is very nice to have all of the items displayed in a
|
||
nice list (like in name order), but to actually have them being displayed in
|
||
small icon format. One trick to doing this is to open the folder, display in
|
||
name order, select all items and drag them onto the desktop, then change the
|
||
view to small icon, then select all of the desktop items and drag them back
|
||
into the folder window. Now they will be displayed in small icon format, but
|
||
lined up in one nice column, just like viewing by name, except that the whole
|
||
name should be visible.
|
||
|
||
Also, I am noticing one perhaps minor bug in 6.0.1. I have two 3.5" disk
|
||
drives. If I have a disk in each and select both disks and drag them
|
||
into the trash, Finder SHOULD eject both disks. Under 6.0.1 (on my system
|
||
anyway) if the disk in drive 1 has an open window, then the second disk will
|
||
not be ejected. Also, any open windows that the second disk may have will not
|
||
be closed. closed. This is hardly earthshaking, but I'm curious if anyone
|
||
else has seen this. Brendan Bellina
|
||
(B.BELLINA, CAT9, TOP15, MSG:149/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
>>>>> I have, I just went and tried it, and you're right, the second disk
|
||
""""" doesn't eject, or close windows. :)
|
||
(GARY.UTTER, CAT9, TOP15, MSG:150/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
>>>>> Brendan: Why are you dragging files in and out of windows to
|
||
""""" alphabetize them? Just use "Clean up by Name": leave the View set to
|
||
Small Icon, and hold down the Option key while you select Clean Up from the
|
||
Special menu.
|
||
(QUALITY, CAT9, TOP15, MSG:151/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
|
||
MORE ABOUT EASYMOUNT AND ALIASES Easymount allows you to make Mac style
|
||
"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""" "aliases" of applications, directories,
|
||
and volumes (and if you have Appletalk, it will easily mount those Appletalk
|
||
volumes). It is a Good Thing. Keep it, learn to use it.:)
|
||
|
||
Gary R. Utter
|
||
|
||
(GARY.UTTER, CAT2, TOP21, MSG:15/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
>>>>> 1. With EasyMount installed in the FinderExtras folder, you have
|
||
""""" access to its capabilities.
|
||
|
||
2. When you select the icon for an application, a folder or a volume,
|
||
you can go to the Extras menus and select EasyMount, which will make an Alias
|
||
of the item. You can also hit OpenApple M to make an alias. (And that is
|
||
easier. :)
|
||
|
||
3. An Alias can be opened just like the original item, be it folder,
|
||
file, or volume. (but again, only application files).
|
||
|
||
4. An Alias has the file type E2 FF. You can use an Icon Editor to set
|
||
icons to match a particular Alias just as you can any other file (and you
|
||
don't need to set an "application pathname").
|
||
|
||
5. You can put an Alias anywhere; when you click on it the file, folder
|
||
or volume it represents will open, no matter where it may be (as long as it
|
||
is online).
|
||
|
||
I don't know what else to tell you, but someone will probably have more.
|
||
:)
|
||
|
||
Gary R. Utter
|
||
(GARY.UTTER, CAT2, TOP21, MSG:25/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
>>>>> I was able to install SYSTEM 6.0.1 with no problems at all (so far).
|
||
""""" I have a ProSel-16 screen item called FINDER, which takes me there.
|
||
Once there, open the SYSTEM folder and highlight your ProSel.16 or START,
|
||
depending on how you setup ProSel-16 (in other words, highlight the file name
|
||
that is your ProSel-16 main program). Then go to EXTRAS and open EasyMount.
|
||
This allows you to ALIAS your ProSel-16 module. Save it, find it, drag it to
|
||
the desktop and you have your easy way back to ProSel-16 from FINDER.
|
||
|
||
Chuck
|
||
Charlie's AppleSeeds
|
||
Distributor, ProSel-16 v8.84
|
||
(A2.CHUCK, CAT30, TOP2, MSG:208/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
|
||
MORE ABOUT QUADRIGA'S FEATURES Hello people. I finally got around to
|
||
"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""" joining this topic. As Quadriga project
|
||
manager, I'm excited, stressed out, enthusiastic and bummed all at the same
|
||
time. Excited to see my vision becoming reality, stressed due to all the time
|
||
and effort involved, enthused to see the interest, and bummed that it's not
|
||
ready to ship yet. Of course, it's not late yet, either, but it's been an
|
||
obsession since early in 1993, and there's still a lot to do.
|
||
|
||
As for the name, it will always be "Quadriga" to me, just as AppleWorks
|
||
3.0 is still "Spike" in my mind, and resides in "/HD/SPIKE" on my hard drive.
|
||
|
||
A few tweaks to the feature list are in order. The alarm clock likely
|
||
won't make it into this version. Some other features to add to the list
|
||
include:
|
||
|
||
- three clipboards (separate one for each app- WP, DB, SS)
|
||
- full editing of all three clipboards
|
||
- mouse support included
|
||
- screen blanker included, with fancy screen saver disk to follow later
|
||
- file lists (Add/Delete...) support arrange by size, date, type, name
|
||
- file lists support OA-D to switch desktops, OA-Y to eject 3.5 disk
|
||
- WP special codes are unique to each printer instead of being global
|
||
- WP find and replace can be restricted to whole word matches
|
||
- DB records can be 2560 bytes instead of 1024
|
||
- DB sorts can be case sensitive
|
||
- DB can list matching categories in another DB file
|
||
- DB categories can all be formatted for decimal places, justification, etc.
|
||
- DB single record layout can have multiple pages per record, and can
|
||
include background text along with category data
|
||
- SS adds exponential notation formatting
|
||
- SS now supports OA-R Replace text or numbers
|
||
|
||
There are many more little features, such as displaying category widths
|
||
when editing DB multi-record layouts and showing coordinates when editing
|
||
single record reports. We don't have the patience to enter every single
|
||
little "tweak" here, but your AW will improve as a result.
|
||
(BRANDT, CAT42, TOP29, MSG:23/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
>>>>> > I am wondering is if the "older" TimeOut modules will
|
||
""""" > continue to work?
|
||
|
||
The old TimeOut modules still work great under The Works.
|
||
|
||
Yes, we are already taking advance orders, and there is a perk for
|
||
ordering early. Everyone who orders early will receive a video tape
|
||
highlighting some of the excellent new things you can do with the Works.
|
||
|
||
Walker
|
||
(W.ARCHER2, CAT42, TOP29, MSG:33/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
>>>>> How about importing TheWorks 4 files into programs like Publish.It! 4
|
||
""""" and GraphicWriter III. Will they work with the 'current' editions of
|
||
those two programs? (I'm talking AWP files here)
|
||
|
||
Will Sneeze 2.2 and File-A-Trix be able to still display them?
|
||
|
||
Gary Hayman - Greenbelt, MD (w/GEM v 4.21)
|
||
(G.E.HAYMAN, CAT42, TOP29, MSG:57/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
>>>>> Hi kids! I'm back from KFest, and despite minutes of sleep since
|
||
""""" yesterday, I'm trying to get caught up. It was great to see old
|
||
friends whose names I can't list for fear of forgetting someone due to sleep
|
||
deprivation. Anyway, on to the issues at hand.
|
||
|
||
File Librarian is due to be included with Quadriga. Envelope Addresses
|
||
likely will be automatically upgraded. Virtually all TimeOuts will have to be
|
||
modified, although the installer will make it automatic and easy.
|
||
|
||
re: sorting in German
|
||
I'll probably provide some docs for someone to write appropriate sort
|
||
routines for any languages. I believe a simple 2-string compare routine is
|
||
all that will be needed. Thanks to Jerry for the idea.
|
||
|
||
re: numbered categories
|
||
The AppleWorks numbered menu bar routine is limited to 30 entries, hence
|
||
DoubleData and Quadriga can't use it for accessing 60 categories. It
|
||
shouldn't take long to get to a desired category considering you can use OA-
|
||
9, or OA-Up or OA-Down to get near in a hurry before finishing with Up or
|
||
Down arrows. Someone could write a menu macro that could accept a numbered
|
||
input and then move down to the write position. As for your 15,000 record DB
|
||
file, you'll be able to find a sorted record in less than a second now.
|
||
|
||
re: dates
|
||
If you read the feature list given in this topic you should have noticed
|
||
that the SS supports new Date and Exponential format options. The Julian math
|
||
you referred to is possible in both the SS and DB now.
|
||
|
||
The DB can display dates from 1000 to 9999 and sort them
|
||
chronologically. Centuries are optional, so a date can be "Jul 24 93" or "Jul
|
||
24 1993". (Other dates are also possible...)
|
||
|
||
re: WP backwards compatibility
|
||
It's possible that some files will load, but that always makes it harder
|
||
to add features. I'll try to allow bland files to be accessible by AW 3.0,
|
||
but eventually those stuck in the past may have to settle for ASCII exchange.
|
||
(BRANDT, CAT42, TOP29, MSG:50/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
>>>>> > sorting
|
||
"""""
|
||
You don't have to think in reverse order if you're using AW 3.0, only if
|
||
you're doing multiple single sorts.
|
||
|
||
As for expanding the SS edit area, it's a bit late for that now, but
|
||
we'll put it on the "Possible 5.0 Features, If 4.0 Is Wildly Successful"
|
||
list.
|
||
|
||
TotalControl has been improved and included, except for the pop-up
|
||
calculator which isn't around any more. Everything else is better.
|
||
|
||
re: other programs importing
|
||
Obviously other software will have to be modified to load any "4.0-only"
|
||
files and will work the same as ever on files retaining 3.0 compatibility.
|
||
|
||
re: DIF
|
||
Greg, I basically don't have a clue about DIF and don't know why anyone
|
||
would use it anyway, so you'll need to enlighten me on that one.
|
||
|
||
re: Returns and Tabs in finds
|
||
Udo, I'm trying to enhance the find capabilities of AW. One problem with
|
||
Returns is that they aren't stored in the file as characters, making it a bit
|
||
trickier, but we'll see what can be done.
|
||
(BRANDT, CAT42, TOP29, MSG:62/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
>>>>> Quadriga allows you to insert or delete categories without destroying
|
||
""""" the layouts. It will also offer a "pages" option in SRL (single
|
||
record layout) in which not all categories have to be displayed. Report label
|
||
formats are expected to allow up to 60 lines so that a maximum record could
|
||
be displayed with one category per line.
|
||
(BRANDT, CAT17, TOP9, MSG:122/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
>>>>> Most TimeOut modules will need to be upgraded, but the Quadriga
|
||
""""" installer will handle most of them, so you won't need to send away
|
||
for a bunch of upgrade disks. Some are obsoleted, and some we just don't know
|
||
about yet, but our goal is to make it a one-time installation.
|
||
(BRANDT, CAT42, TOP29, MSG:80/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
>>>>> OmniPrint and Outliner will need to be updated to work with Quadriga-
|
||
""""" modified AppleWorks.
|
||
(BRANDT, CAT42, TOP29, MSG:97/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
>>>>> Good news for SEG.AM (aux slot memory) users. I just crushed the bug
|
||
""""" which kept Delete and OA-Delete from properly killing carriage
|
||
returns at the end of a line to pull up the following text line.
|
||
|
||
Bad news for everyone: due to time constraints, we've had to abandon a
|
||
couple of DB features. Single record layout will not have a pages/background
|
||
text in this version. There will be some speed/cosmetic improvements, but a
|
||
single scrolling page will have to do for now. If 4.0 is a rousing success,
|
||
wild stallions couldn't keep us from implementing this in 5.0.
|
||
(BRANDT, CAT42, TOP29, MSG:78/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
>>>>> >mouse support
|
||
"""""
|
||
The same as with Ultra. Scrolling and selecting menu items is supported,
|
||
but no new pull-down menus at this time.
|
||
|
||
Windowing would be nice, but not in this version. No time.
|
||
|
||
DeskJet support is expected to be about the same as was available with
|
||
SuperPatch, offering Landscape and Portrait printer definitions.
|
||
(BRANDT, CAT49, TOP22, MSG:112/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
>>>>> About 4-5 years ago, I got a disk from Don Aquilino (sp??) that
|
||
""""" somehow added pull-down menus to AppleWorks Classic. I never quite
|
||
got used to using it, but I know I still have it around here somewhere, and
|
||
remember that Don was selling it at an AppleFest in San Francisco.
|
||
|
||
At that time, Don was involved with Dave Gair and the AW Programmer's
|
||
Association. Unfortunately, I haven't kept up with them in years.
|
||
|
||
Is anyone else familiar with Don's AppleWorks add-on that added mouse
|
||
driven pull-down menus?
|
||
|
||
Joe Kohn
|
||
(J.KOHN, CAT42, TOP29, MSG:117/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
>>>>> > We're shooting for an October 1 release date for the Works. Ultra
|
||
""""" > 4.3 should ship soon after (compiler, debug, options, samples,
|
||
> etc.)
|
||
|
||
If I were to buy The Works, would I still want to upgrade to Ultra
|
||
4.3? Ultra 4.3 is for AW 3.0, right? Wouldn't every feature Ultra 4.3
|
||
gives AW 3.0 already be in The Works 1.0.0.0?
|
||
|
||
<<<Lloyd>>>
|
||
(L.DEVRIES, CAT42, TOP29, MSG:122/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
>>>>> Wrong. Ultra 4.2 is for AW 3.0 and ULtraMacros 4.3 is for The Works
|
||
""""" 1.0.0.0. All that the Works includes is a macro _player_. Ultra 4.3
|
||
adds a macro compiler, debugger, options and the ability to record macros.
|
||
(BRANDT, CAT42, TOP29, MSG:123/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
>>>>> Can this Ultra 4.3 upgrade be ordered now? Where? I've already
|
||
""""" placed my order for Quadriga with Quality, and would prefer to do all
|
||
the installing and learning at once rather in stages. I don't always get
|
||
around to the next stage!
|
||
|
||
I purchased Ultra 4 from JEM, but haven't gotten around to really
|
||
learning it since 3.1 works so well. I planned to make the move this
|
||
summer when I have time to read manuals and the lessons in Timeout Central,
|
||
but Quadriga was announced. It seemed "inefficient" to bother!!
|
||
(Inefficient sounds better than lazy or dumb.) Or should I be studying
|
||
like crazy now so that I'll be properly prepared for Quadriga??
|
||
|
||
** Marie Barry **
|
||
(M.BARRY2, CAT42, TOP29, MSG:124/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
>>>>> Marie, there are several other things you can do besides the
|
||
""""" Converter macro to prepare Ultra 3.1 macros for Q.
|
||
|
||
Required:
|
||
|
||
- Change Launch "Ultra.System" to Launch "um4.0.system" (required; but
|
||
be prepared to change it again)
|
||
- Change $0="Macro Compiler" to $0="U4 Compiler"
|
||
Change $0="Macro Options" to $0="U4 Options" (but be prepared....)
|
||
- Change & "Path" to .setdisk (required)
|
||
- Change Onerr Stop to Onerr Endmacro (required)
|
||
|
||
Optional (the old ways _still work_):
|
||
|
||
- Add Titles for a SA-ESC list and Labels to name your project
|
||
(optional; SA-ESC does not work in default macro set in Ultra 4.2,
|
||
but it does in Q)
|
||
- Change Down Down Down Down Down Down to (Down) 6 (optional)
|
||
- Change Msgxy to .writestr (optional, msgxy still works)
|
||
- Eliminate all msgxy 0,128's, if all msgxy's are converted to .ws's
|
||
- Change { comments } to // Comments (optional)
|
||
|
||
That should take care of it.
|
||
(B.CADIEUX, CAT42, TOP29, MSG:127/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
|
||
WHITHER GS/OS? Hmmm! It is illogical for Apple to continue to develop
|
||
"""""""""""""" GS/OS given that they no longer even officially SELL the
|
||
machine that it runs on. Although development of GS/OS probably accounts for
|
||
a very small portion of Apple's operating budget, none-the-less, it seems
|
||
foolish to spend ANY money at all on it. Therefore, I've gotta ask the
|
||
question, 'What does Apple get out of continued development of GS/OS?'
|
||
|
||
Is it goodwill? Very doubtful. Is it a belief that GS/OS will
|
||
ultimately turn GS users into MAC users? Hardly worth the cost anymore.
|
||
Those who would be converted HAVE BEEN converted. Is it R&D? Any research
|
||
and development for the MAC can be done ON the MAC, not on the GS. Is it a
|
||
way to keep some people at Apple employed? Nope. If Apple had wanted to cut
|
||
positions during the recent layoff, a logical place would have been in the
|
||
Apple IIgs development group. Is it a bureaucratic oversight? Perhaps, but
|
||
unlikely.
|
||
|
||
Next question: Why bother to develop an Ethernet interface and MS-DOS
|
||
compatibility for GS/OS? Is it because Apple, in their benevolence, wants
|
||
to provide GS users with as much utility as possible before they abandon
|
||
the platform altogether? Come on! Then why are these things being done?
|
||
|
||
The only conclusion I can come up with is that Apple plans to license
|
||
GS/OS along with the MAC system software.
|
||
|
||
J-Bird <<MAYBE WE AIN'T SEEN THE LAST GS YET!>>
|
||
(J.CURTIS8, CAT5, TOP2, MSG:233/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
>>>>> Jay, I agree that's an interesting, and logical, conjecture. If true,
|
||
""""" it would give a LOT of people in the A2 community a LOT of hope for
|
||
the future.
|
||
|
||
But, I submit to you: True enuf, System 6.0.1 came out as promised, but
|
||
do we have any CONFIRMATION on System 6.1? Re: the Apple II Ethernet Card,
|
||
has ANYONE heard of the current status of this product?
|
||
|
||
Furthermore, has anyone heard of the current status of the Apple II
|
||
group (whatever it's called this week?), esp. in light of the recent layoffs
|
||
and the drop in Apple stock and the rumors that Apple's financial
|
||
difficulties may force a cut in R & D?
|
||
|
||
Inquiring minds need to know......
|
||
|
||
TTFN, Larry ;-))
|
||
(L.FAUST2, CAT5, TOP2, MSG:235/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
>>>>> Apple will not license the GS System Software. Period.
|
||
"""""
|
||
(SOFTDISK.INC, CAT5, TOP2, MSG:236/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
>>>>> RE GS/OS: actually, I got to thinking a few nights ago that as a
|
||
""""" means of "porting" the Mac environment to other hardware, GS/OS is
|
||
Apple's Great Experiment (a _successful_ one, IMHO). The Mac was built to
|
||
support the interface concurrently, whereas the IIgs brought with it some of
|
||
the Apple II (pre-GUI) baggage.
|
||
|
||
What Apple will license, if anything, is the user interface as a
|
||
portable environment. It won't be either the Mac or IIgs OS since both are
|
||
somewhat synergistic with Apple-designed hardware.
|
||
(WIZARDS.MUSE, CAT5, TOP2, MSG:243/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
>>>>> Jay,
|
||
"""""
|
||
Good questions. The only reason I think they keep upgrading GS/OS is to
|
||
be nice to us. At the financial and save-face level, it's probably the least
|
||
expensive way to make sure Apple can refute any claims that it has dropped
|
||
support of the Apple II. But, I'll bet there are also a few softies in upper
|
||
management who cut their teeth on either using or marketing the Apple II and
|
||
can't stand there watching it get axed. There are many people I know who
|
||
work for Apple who have a lot of respect for the entire Apple II series.
|
||
(MORGAN-DAVIS, CAT5, TOP2, MSG:244/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
>>>>> From the "News" section of _Windows_ magazine, by Paul E. Schindler
|
||
""""" Jr.;
|
||
|
||
According to an Apple senior vice president, Dave Nagel, all of Apple
|
||
Computer's proprietary software will be available under Windows as soon as
|
||
possible...
|
||
|
||
Nagel, who heads the Software Architecture Division and Advanced
|
||
Technology Group, said that in the future, "there will be no more
|
||
single-platform services. We will strive to make our releases near
|
||
simultaneous on all platforms."
|
||
|
||
...In 12 to 18 months, AppleScript and QuickDraw will be available for
|
||
Windows, Nagel said. Eventually, all Apple systems software - scripting,
|
||
networking, and multimedia - will be available on as many platforms as
|
||
possible, he added.
|
||
|
||
Even Apple's crown jewel - the user interface it has so zealously
|
||
protected in the courts and elsewhere - will be available on UNIX systems
|
||
by year's end.
|
||
(R.WINSLOW3, CAT5, TOP2, MSG:245/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
|
||
WHAT ABOUT SYSTEM 6.1? > I don't remember the degree of certainty he used,
|
||
"""""""""""""""""""""" > but Matt definitely mentioned online the
|
||
> possibility of 6.1.
|
||
|
||
Sorry, but I don't know how many times I've said this, but Matt does
|
||
not, and has never worked in the Apple II engineering group. He doesn't
|
||
make the decisions on what gets done (and neither do I, for that matter).
|
||
The only person who can be expected to make statements regarding what we're
|
||
doing is Tim Swihart, my manager at Apple. He, to the best of my knowledge,
|
||
has never mentioned that we will be doing a 6.1.
|
||
|
||
Jim
|
||
(MURPH, CAT5, TOP5, MSG:15/M645;1)
|
||
___
|
||
>>>>> |he only mention I recall from anyone at Apple about a "6.1" or
|
||
""""" something like it was along the lines of "we'd _like_ to be able to
|
||
do a full minor version change for the last version of the IIgs system
|
||
software."
|
||
|
||
People then started assuming things, and we all know what that turns
|
||
us into....
|
||
-= Lunatic (:
|
||
(A2.LUNATIC, CAT5, TOP5, MSG:16/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
|
||
FLATBED SCANNER FOR IIGS? AppleScan.GS is a 320 mode GS/OS App. It has
|
||
""""""""""""""""""""""""" digitizing ratio from 75 dpi to 300 dpi in grey
|
||
scale, half tone, and line art modes. The version number is 1.0d1. It was
|
||
written by the Apple II System Software development team in 1990 or 1991, I
|
||
think. The only place I have seen it is on the Apple Developer Group System
|
||
6 CD-ROM. It looks pretty good to me. :)
|
||
|
||
Our users group got the CD-ROM in the System 6.0 six-disk mailing.
|
||
There are lots of other little goodies on the CD-ROM, but most are pre-
|
||
release versions and betas. I'm sure that if you posted a message in the
|
||
A2Pro area asking about the Developers CD-ROM, someone there could tell you
|
||
where to get one for yourself. That is if there are any left.
|
||
__
|
||
/ \ GS.Ozoneman - IIGS Forever!
|
||
\__/ 3 ---====> Delivered by GECopilot 2.1.1 & ProTERM 3.0
|
||
|
||
(GS.OZONEMAN, CAT6, TOP15, MSG:23/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
>>>>> I too would be interested in buying a Flatbed Scanner if it had the
|
||
""""" software support (OCR). My question is this, how does one hook up a
|
||
flatbed scanner? I thought it hooks to the SCSI port on Macs. I remember
|
||
seeing something in the CVTech area that the RF will not (ever) support
|
||
anything other than a storage device.
|
||
(B.HANDLER, CAT6, TOP15, MSG:27/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
>>>>> There is a driver that comes with System 6.x that will allow you to
|
||
""""" run an Apple flatbed scanner on the IIGS. It just becomes another
|
||
device in your SCSI chain. At this point there is no OCR program written for
|
||
the IIGS and a flatbed, as far as I know. There is however a graphic
|
||
screening program that appears to make SHR graphics of whatever you scan in.
|
||
I haven't seen this program work and have been told by a friend that the
|
||
program has a saving problem, "it won't do it", or at least that's what he
|
||
said.
|
||
(GS.OZONEMAN, CAT6, TOP15, MSG:28/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
WHEN THE MAC COMES IN THE DOOR, DOES THE GS GO OUT THE WINDOW? I'm on my
|
||
"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""" fourth Mac.
|
||
I have tons of high dollar, high performance software, and every toy that I
|
||
could want (except a good laser printer and maybe a tape backup), and I
|
||
STILL do better than 90% of my work on the GS. I originally got the Mac
|
||
because I needed a second terminal to do my automated online stuff while I
|
||
did my REAL work on the GS. I didn't think that it made sense to buy
|
||
another GS when I had an opportunity to expand my horizons, and I think
|
||
that was an appropriate decision. Still it took me a year and a half, 4
|
||
Macs, and thousands of dollars to get a Mac system that can perform in the
|
||
same ballpark with the GS, and the GS will STILL whip its butt when it
|
||
comes to speed and ease of use.
|
||
|
||
All of this is WAAAYYYYYY off topic, of course. :)
|
||
|
||
Gary R. Utter
|
||
(GARY.UTTER, CAT4, TOP14, MSG:125/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
>>>>> Right on!! :)
|
||
"""""
|
||
I don't mean to bash MACs, or even PCs for that matter. In fact, I plan
|
||
to add one of each to my GS collection. However, the GS is now, and always
|
||
has been, a very misunderstood machine, especially by folks who didn't own
|
||
them or didn't know how to expand them.
|
||
|
||
J-Bird <<WHO GOT THE LAST GS??>>
|
||
(J.CURTIS8, CAT4, TOP14, MSG:128/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
>>>>> > You've mentioned before that you use your GS much more than the
|
||
""""" > Macs for its speed and convenience. Would you go into specifics on
|
||
> that, in an _appropriate topic_? I think a lot of folks here
|
||
> (including yours truly) would be very interested.
|
||
|
||
> The Orchard Lounge is a good place: Cat 2 Topic 7.
|
||
|
||
I use the GS mostly for telecommunications and word processing. There
|
||
are a number of no-nonsense applications available on the GS that (in my
|
||
opinion) significantly outperform anything available on the Mac, at least
|
||
in terms of speed and ease of use. Now, y'all are thinking that this means
|
||
I am working with P8 applications, and comparing the speed of the GS text
|
||
screen with the Mac GUI. That turns out not to be the case. I haven't used
|
||
a P8 application in MONTHS, with the exception of Beta work with the next
|
||
version of TIC.
|
||
|
||
I use WriteAway as my main word processor, and Spectrum as my main
|
||
telecomm application.
|
||
|
||
When I need to do fancy fonts or complex layouts, I compose in
|
||
WriteAway, then transfer the text file to the Mac and doctor it with
|
||
WordPerfect, or perhaps Word 5, and then print it from the Mac. (While
|
||
Pointless and Express make it as easy to print out high quality stuff from
|
||
the GS as the Mac, the Mac is still faster, and less prone to glitches. PLUS,
|
||
doing heavy print jobs on the Mac leaves the GS free for whatever I want. :)
|
||
|
||
Gary R. Utter
|
||
(GARY.UTTER, CAT2, TOP7, MSG:40/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
|
||
USING YOUR IIGS FOR GEnie IN THE UK Well about a year ago I asked
|
||
""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""" people on GEnie about their opinion
|
||
about moving to St. Louis. Everyone seemed to think that was a fine place
|
||
and I did it. Now, however, I'm moving my family to London, England for a
|
||
year or so. Does anyone have any advice on using a IIGS in England. Do I
|
||
need a converter? Will it work on 50 cycles. How 'bout a Magnavox CRT?
|
||
Modems, DeskJet, hard drives, etc. Any advice would be appreciated. Also
|
||
how does one get on GEnie from London.?
|
||
(B.MOSIER1, CAT2, TOP4, MSG:99/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
>>>>> I think you'll need a voltage converter (240-120) but the GS will work
|
||
""""" fine on 50 cycles...hold down Option-Control-Reset and choose "Set
|
||
system standards and 50 hertz" or something like that...
|
||
|
||
Getting GEnie from London is harder...type PHONE or something like that
|
||
to find out the phone #...it costs a lot more though.
|
||
(T.BUCHHEIM, CAT2, TOP4, MSG:100/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
>>>>> 1. Check your email.
|
||
"""""
|
||
|
||
2. A.LETCHFORD (who is here on GEnie), being a Brit, can answer
|
||
questions about GEnie access.
|
||
|
||
3. About power... Your equipment should run fine with a 240 -> 110
|
||
transformer. Add up the wattage of everything that will be hooked up and buy
|
||
the nearest size transformer available (i.e., if it adds up to 275, buy a 300
|
||
watt transformer). Don't buy a 50,000 watt transformer to run 500 watts
|
||
worth of appliances - you'll burn them up!
|
||
|
||
4. Where to get a transformer? US military installation thrift shops
|
||
are always good. There is a naval installation in London (HQ, US Navy Europe
|
||
- tough duty...), airbases at Mildenhall and Lincolnheath, and I'll bet the
|
||
embassy has a thrift shop too. Otherwise, you have to check with
|
||
an electrical supply house. Obviously, as most Brits buy Brit electric /
|
||
electronic kit, they don't need 'em. BTW, you haven't lived till you've seen
|
||
a British washer. They make British showers look good!
|
||
|
||
5. Always, always, always, check polarity at the 110 end of the
|
||
transformer with a 3 prong polarity tester. Always.
|
||
|
||
6. My GS ran fine set for 60 hertz on 50 hertz current. The screen
|
||
output went to ca-ca when the control panel was set to 50 hertz.
|
||
__
|
||
Mike ("Maj") Murley \-\________ o\__
|
||
<Delivered by Co-Pilot & Spectrum>---------------\______________}I
|
||
(M.MURLEY3, CAT2, TOP4, MSG:111/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
>>>>> I missed Zorch's original post on this but I will be happy to help if
|
||
""""" I can. Without knowing the questions asked, my advice would be to
|
||
open a Mercury 5000 Dial account. Tel Customer services on (in UK) 081 914
|
||
2456.
|
||
|
||
Costs: Standard Registration #40 plus #40 per year rental. (this is
|
||
for one user name. Each additional user name is #10 registration plus #10
|
||
rental per annum - at the time of registration. Useful for groups to share
|
||
the overall cost).
|
||
|
||
Asynchronous usage charges per hour: 300-2400 9600
|
||
|
||
Peak (8:00am - 8:00pm Mon - Fri) -#1.75 #3:00
|
||
Off-Peak (8:00pm - 12:00pm Mon - Fri and
|
||
8:00am - 12:00pm Sat, Sun, Bank Holidays) -#1.35 #2.40
|
||
Night (12:00am- 8:00am Mon - Sun) -#0.85 #1.50
|
||
|
||
These charges are on top of GEnie charges but access is usually by a
|
||
local call. Cust Service will give the nodes but not all have 9600 access.
|
||
Once you have an account access to GEnie is a s simple as dialing the node
|
||
and logging on through PAD. I use a modified CoPilot script and I would be
|
||
happy to share this info if Zorch want to go down this route.
|
||
|
||
>>Where to get a transformer?
|
||
|
||
I use a site transformer 1500 watt (more than I need but hasn't burned
|
||
my kit yet). Make sure the transformer can accept through grounding. I have a
|
||
contact for that but I expect US sources will be cheaper.
|
||
|
||
Hope this helps. Happy to talk voice: tel no by Email please.
|
||
|
||
Andrew C Letchford ----- < Delivered by Co-Pilot and TIC >
|
||
(A.LETCHFORD, CAT2, TOP25, MSG:14/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
|
||
IIGS BUILT-IN DUMB TERMINAL Here is a copy of the original message I
|
||
""""""""""""""""""""""""""" received. It was written by M.Aikens1 to
|
||
A2.Help, where it was forwarded to me.
|
||
|
||
I was reading the July/August issue of II Alive and
|
||
in the article "Modem Nation - Making your first call" it
|
||
says there is a dumb terminal program built into the
|
||
//GS's firmware. Could you tell me how to access it
|
||
because I'm interested in that kind of stuff.
|
||
E - Mail me at M.AIKENS1
|
||
|
||
...Sloanie - A2Pro.Help
|
||
(A2PRO.HELP, CAT10, TOP6, MSG:1/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
>>>>> This message was sent to me by Jerry Kindall of Quality Computers
|
||
""""" (QUALITY) after I asked him what II Alive Magazine had written on the
|
||
subject (see last post for the II Alive reference)
|
||
|
||
It's accessed the same way as the built-in terminal program in the IIc
|
||
and in the super serial card. First you do IN#2. Then you set up the baud
|
||
rate, echo, linefeed handling, etc., using the usual Control-A commands (or
|
||
just do nothing and the system will use the defaults in the control panel).
|
||
Then do Control-A T (NOTE: Not Control-A Control-T, Control-A T) to enter
|
||
the terminal mode. Enter Control-A Q to quit.
|
||
|
||
...Sloanie - A2Pro.Help
|
||
(A2PRO.HELP, CAT10, TOP6, MSG:2/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
>>>>> Regarding the IIGS terminal mode: On my ROM 03 IIGS I was able to get
|
||
""""" this to work, just as was mentioned in the previous message. Get
|
||
into Applesoft BASIC, type "IN#2", then Ctrl-A T (which changes the cursor
|
||
from a flashing box to a flashing underline). Then I can type any command to
|
||
the modem (such as ATDT 555-1212), and it will call that number and connect.
|
||
Ctrl-A Q returns you to Applesoft.
|
||
|
||
Problems with this method: No buffer, so anything that scrolls by is
|
||
gone forever.
|
||
|
||
The IIc worked this way also, except the first version of the Memory
|
||
Expansion IIc, which had a bug in the built-in terminal program. The Revised
|
||
Memory Expansion IIc fixed that bug.
|
||
|
||
I don't think using the computer as a dumb terminal is worth the hassle,
|
||
considering the number of inexpensive term programs available. You can't do
|
||
anything except type and read with this dumb terminal.
|
||
|
||
Steve Weyhrich <IX0YE>--<
|
||
(S.WEYHRICH, CAT10, TOP6, MSG:5/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
>>>>> On my ROM 01 IIGS, I was not. Try as I might, all I could get was a
|
||
""""" printed "?", followed by "SYNTAX ERROR".
|
||
|
||
Jeff - Delivered by Co-Pilot v2.1.1 and TIC
|
||
(J.CARR20, CAT10, TOP6, MSG:7/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
>>>>> RE "terminal in the modem": no, it's in the _interface_, and more
|
||
""""" specifically in the interface _firmware_. The modem is a box that
|
||
accepts "AT" commands, but it's the _interface_ that gets the commands to the
|
||
modem. And it's the _firmware_ that lets Applesoft send and receive the
|
||
commands.
|
||
|
||
I don't know if there's an easy way to explain the latter, but let's try
|
||
this: Applesoft uses the monitor programs (firmware) built into the Apple,
|
||
and the monitor programs really only know one place to send user output (the
|
||
display screen) and one place to read user input (the keyboard).
|
||
|
||
To allow for alternative input/output devices in the peripheral slots,
|
||
the monitor includes the ability (supported by Applesoft) to change the
|
||
location of the program(s) that output is sent or input is gathered from.
|
||
Notice that since the Apple runs these programs, they have to reside in the
|
||
_Apple_'s memory. (That is, they can't reside in a self-contained box like a
|
||
modem.)
|
||
|
||
The way this is done is by allowing each peripheral card to have a tiny
|
||
slice of the Apple's memory for its specific program, which is normally
|
||
contained on a memory chip similar to the BASIC and monitor ROMs in your
|
||
Apple. The chip is on the card, and when you plug the card in the chip is
|
||
"mapped" into the Apple's memory and the programs on it become available. The
|
||
monitor (and Applesoft) can then be told to use the card's programs to send
|
||
and receive data (this, if you haven't figured it out by now, is what "PR#"
|
||
and "IN#" do).
|
||
|
||
In this particular case, when we say "dumb terminal" program we are
|
||
talking about the most _basic_ ability of the card's firmware to allow
|
||
diverting the input/output flow between Applesoft and the card to connect it
|
||
between the _display screen_ and the card. (That is, Applesoft no longer
|
||
receives the input so you don't see '?SYNTAX ERROR', and your keyboard input
|
||
is routed past Applesoft to the card so you just type 'Hello', not 'PRINT
|
||
"HELLO"'.)
|
||
|
||
Okay, are we straight on what the "dumb terminal" is? :) (For want of a
|
||
better definition, it's the part that allows making the keyboard and screen
|
||
appear to be connected directly to the communications port, bypassing
|
||
Applesoft. You _can_ have more features, but that basic input/output
|
||
capability is the root.)
|
||
|
||
Many serial communications interfaces have some sort of "dumb terminal"
|
||
built-in. The Apple Super Serial card does, and so do the IIgs and IIc serial
|
||
ports. But rip the ROM chip off a Super Serial card and the terminal is
|
||
"gone", yet the modem _hardware_ is still intact (and can, in fact, still be
|
||
used to communicate with an external device _if_ a suitable program is
|
||
available in the Apple II memory, probably loaded from disk). As an example,
|
||
my Epic internal modem has _no_ (Apple II "mapped") firmware and therefore no
|
||
"dumb terminal" capability, but is still perfectly usable with many software
|
||
programs, including all the "AT" functions (the software just loads its own
|
||
program to talk to the modem hardware). "PR#2" gets you "NO DEVICE CONNECTED"
|
||
(from ProDOS BASIC), though; it can't find the required "programs" to talk
|
||
to, so it doesn't think there's a modem interface there.
|
||
|
||
The Hayes Micromodem, by the way, incorporates the _modem_ and the
|
||
_serial interface_ (and firmware) on one card. That's why someone might think
|
||
the "modem" has the terminal program in it, because the tendency is to refer
|
||
to the integrated modem/serial card as only a "modem".
|
||
|
||
"Smart" modems accept commands from the dumb terminal and interpret them
|
||
for their own use. In fact, they contain their own "terminal" function that
|
||
allows them to work their own serial interface so they can send messages back
|
||
like "CONNECT" as if they were a remote computer. And that's exactly how the
|
||
computer sees them; it sends 'AT DT555-FAKE' to what it thinks is a "remote
|
||
computer" and the "remote computer" dials up and connects to _another_ remote
|
||
computer, then more or less "hides" except for the modem function
|
||
(translating between phone line data and computer data).
|
||
|
||
And, yes, you _do_ run the modem using nothing but "AT" commands, plus
|
||
the escape ("plus plus plus") sequence...except as far as the handshaking
|
||
hardware goes (and even that is "AT" configurable).
|
||
|
||
However...if you rip the (external) "smart" modems off two computers and
|
||
connect them with a null modem cable, the "dumb terminal" programs can still
|
||
be invoked to let the systems "type" back and forth. Obviously, the program
|
||
isn't in the _cable_. :)
|
||
|
||
RE things like downloading: that's actually a bit beyond what a "dumb
|
||
terminal" is considered to do (that is, actually _storing_ data, even in
|
||
BASIC strings, is a step up). It's possible to do, but not very practical.
|
||
For one thing, I don't think Applesoft can keep up with anything much past
|
||
300 baud, if that. For another, you'd need to "bootstrap" the process in 2-3
|
||
steps to get to even a minimally capable communications program; the _time_
|
||
invested in learning (or explaining) how to do this and then implementing it
|
||
is impractical versus buying an inexpensive but fully functional
|
||
communications package (like Talk is Cheap, to pick one of the lowest-cost
|
||
ones I know of).
|
||
|
||
(Someone else might rather spend 10+ hours futzing with this as opposed
|
||
to spending $40+ on a program. If your time is not more valuable than
|
||
$4/hour, I have to ask why you have/use a computer in the first place. :)
|
||
(WIZARDS.MUSE, CAT10, TOP6, MSG:17/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
>>> WHAT'S NEW <<<
|
||
""""""""""""""""""
|
||
|
||
NOW SHIPPING!! The Parson's Engineering Focus Hard Card for the Apple II
|
||
"""""""""""""" series of Personal Computers. The Focus hard card is a
|
||
self contained 2.5" IDE hard disk drive with controller card that plugs
|
||
directly into either an Apple IIgs, IIe or Laser 128 system. It does not
|
||
require any additional hardware or software to operate. All that is
|
||
necessary to install and use the Focus hard card is to plug the card into
|
||
the Apple II computer, replace the cover on top of the machine, and turn
|
||
the power on.
|
||
|
||
The Focus card is the same length, height and thickness of a standard
|
||
Apple II full size peripheral card. It can be used with other cards without
|
||
mechanical interference. It operates very quietly and also has a power down
|
||
mode for extended periods of inactivity. (Perfect for BBS's)
|
||
|
||
Hard Drive Specifications:
|
||
|
||
* Small Internal hard card for the Apple IIgs, IIe and Laser 128 systems
|
||
* Lower cost IDE 2.5" drive and controller
|
||
* 40, 80 and 120 Megs sizes available
|
||
* Price includes hard card and software, nothing else required
|
||
* Easy to install, just plug it in and power up the system
|
||
* Quiet Operation
|
||
* Zip and Transwarp compatible (Both IIe and IIgs)
|
||
* Uses standard Apple power supply, you do not replace you existing one.
|
||
* 6 month warranty
|
||
|
||
Technical specs:
|
||
* <18ms access time
|
||
* +5V @ 450ma power requirement at startup, 100ma for the rest of the time
|
||
|
||
Contact Parson's Engineering for future information...
|
||
|
||
Parson's Engineering
|
||
5010 Rimhurst Ave.
|
||
Covina, CA 91724
|
||
Tel: (818)-966-5538 Fax: (818) 966-5701
|
||
|
||
Pricing:
|
||
|
||
Focus 40 : $349 Focus 80 : $449 Focus 120 : $599
|
||
Controller without a drive $129
|
||
|
||
(BURGERBILL, CAT2, TOP27, MSG:17/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
|
||
!!! EXPRESS VERSION 2.1 IS NOW AVAILABLE !!!
|
||
""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
|
||
|
||
Express v2.1:
|
||
|
||
- Fixes a bug where the spool file wasn't being written correctly in
|
||
low memory situations (which caused printed output to go ugly).
|
||
|
||
- When printing, forces Twilight II to use background blanking so
|
||
Express can keep working.
|
||
|
||
- The "Printer57600" port driver is now automatically recognized as a
|
||
serial connection, so data is blasted through Express' serial output
|
||
routine like other serial connections.
|
||
|
||
- IPC inward-bound and outward-bound calls added so third-party
|
||
applications can monitor Express' activity.
|
||
|
||
If you own Express v2.0 the update is just $3.50 for s&h.
|
||
|
||
If you own Express v1.0 or v1.1, UPGRADE NOW for $17.50+$3.50 s&h
|
||
($21.00 total). Express v2.1 is much faster than version 1, and has
|
||
several new features (e.g. automatic multiple copies, user-selectable spool
|
||
folder location, etc.).
|
||
|
||
SPECIAL OFFER for our online customers: If you own Express v2.0 we
|
||
can email Express v2.1 to you for free (you'll have to pay to download it,
|
||
but it's pretty small).
|
||
|
||
If you want us to email you a copy, send a private note to
|
||
"SevenHills" stating "Please email Express v2.1 to me." We will verify
|
||
that you are registered for Express v2.0, then upload Express v2.1 to you
|
||
on August 9.
|
||
|
||
All online upgrade requests MUST be received before August 9, 1993.
|
||
(SEVENHILLS, CAT43, TOP10, MSG:177/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
|
||
II.SYSTEM This year at KansasFest, Kitchen Sink Software took a little
|
||
""""""""" different approach to the sessions that we presented. In the
|
||
past, we have held sessions for the 8-bit guys who used their IIgs's as
|
||
fast IIe's and the others who don't have IIgs's but still enjoy hacking
|
||
around on the Apple II. We have presented sessions on the programs we have
|
||
written, and just some general programming sessions.
|
||
|
||
This year we announced a new development system for the Apple II.
|
||
Imagine having access to Double Hi-Res graphics, graphical user interface,
|
||
pull down menus, buttons, mouse support, and much more... Well, we demoed
|
||
our beta version of System II - The Graphical User Interface for the Apple
|
||
II. System II is an 8-bit development system which replaces BASIC.SYSTEM
|
||
with a much smaller shell. System II gives you a more complete access of
|
||
ProDOS from Applesoft. There are also quite a few entry points for machine
|
||
language programmers. II.SYSTEM (That's the SYS file run by ProDOS or your
|
||
favorite program launcher) handles the DOS stuff. A supplemental part of
|
||
System II is the graphics packages. There are two packages, one for Single
|
||
Hi-Res graphics, and one for Double Hi-Res graphics. These packages add on
|
||
to the capabilities of II.SYSTEM giving you Applesoft commands to do things
|
||
like play musical notes (not full MIDI, but one note melodies), add
|
||
pull-down menus to your programs, do hi-res/double hi-res character
|
||
generation, define buttons, do screen copying, inversing, combining, and
|
||
much more.
|
||
|
||
As I mentioned earlier, a beta version was demonstrated at
|
||
KansasFest. The bugs that we knew about during the demo have all been
|
||
fixed (I can't believe how some simple things cause so many problems). We
|
||
are looking to have the machine language portion of the programming
|
||
completed by the second week of August (since I am on vacation in Canada
|
||
until next Wednesday... that's why it will take that long). The runtime
|
||
version of the desktop environment for program launching is expected to be
|
||
completed by the end of August. We are hoping to release the complete
|
||
authoring system sometime in September or October (note: we do this just
|
||
like Apple, we announce the month, but never the year :)
|
||
|
||
Once we complete the runtime version of the code, we will probably be
|
||
uploading a demo here to GEnie for your preview. There are several GEnie
|
||
subscribers who attended the sessions at the conference and are already
|
||
registered developers with System II. Once we complete the rest of the
|
||
development system, they will receive all of the documentation, sample
|
||
code, and machine language information. However, if you were unable to
|
||
attend the sessions at the conference (not for sleep reasons, but because
|
||
you weren't there :) we will be offering the development system at a
|
||
reasonable price in our fall catalog.
|
||
|
||
I will be on vacation until next Wednesday, but I will be happy to
|
||
answer any questions once I return. I will also be adding a topic to the
|
||
list of Kitchen Sink topics over in A2Pro for System II developers to have
|
||
their questions answered. For now, hopefully, this post will bring people
|
||
up to speed on the System II environment and we will certainly be bringing
|
||
more information to the best on-line service in the business as it becomes
|
||
available.
|
||
|
||
Eric Bush, Kitchen Sink Software, Inc.
|
||
(KITCHEN.SINK, CAT44, TOP2, MSG:31/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
|
||
TALK IS CHEAP V4.00 After more than a year without an update, Talk is
|
||
""""""""""""""""""" Cheap, version 4.00 is ready for release. This is a
|
||
major update and includes the first printed revision of the documentation
|
||
since version 3.10. The major new features since version 3.31 that was
|
||
released a year or two ago are:
|
||
|
||
A very complete (to the limits of the Apple text screen) VT-102
|
||
emulator that includes both keyboard and screen emulation.
|
||
|
||
More great enhancements to the already most-powerful- on-the-market
|
||
scripting language. For those of you that script, have fun; for those who
|
||
don't, just wait until you see what creative minds can do with the new
|
||
features.
|
||
|
||
Full hardware handshaking is now fully supported for the IIgs ports
|
||
and the super serial card clones so you can run your computer at maximum
|
||
baud rate with those new high speed modems and not lose ANY data, even with
|
||
Appletalk active.
|
||
|
||
The IIgs modem buffer is now 64K to avoid overruns.
|
||
|
||
Scripts can now access any data that is stored in the TIC.CONFIG file
|
||
so they can better control and/or take advantage of the environment in
|
||
which you run TIC.
|
||
|
||
TIC now includes TIC scripts that guide the novice user through the
|
||
software installation process and actually handle all the file copying and
|
||
directory creation involved.
|
||
|
||
TIC will ship in both 5.25 inch (2 disks) or 3.5 inch (1 disk) formats
|
||
as requested by the purchaser (be sure to specify).
|
||
|
||
Many, many bugs have been fixed (many of which I'm surprised no one
|
||
else found before now).
|
||
|
||
One feature hasn't changed... The update price for old users (who can
|
||
provide a copy of the front page of their manual or trade in the master
|
||
disk of a competing product) is $15 and new TIC users can still purchase
|
||
the program for the inflation-busting $40 price of old.
|
||
|
||
Orders will now be shipped within 7-10 days (as soon as the docs get
|
||
back from the print shop) from my Orlando address. Dealers and schools etc.
|
||
can still purchase quantities of 10 or more copies of TIC for a 50%
|
||
discount (i.e. $200 for every 10 copies purchased).
|
||
|
||
Checks or money orders should be made out to:
|
||
|
||
Don Elton
|
||
14207 Glenhurst Way
|
||
Orlando, FL 32837
|
||
|
||
Tech support BBS/Fax: 407-858-9937
|
||
|
||
Don Elton (delton) or delton@pro-carolina.oau.org
|
||
(DELTON, CAT13, TOP3, MSG:130/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
>>>>> Re: competitive upgrade... The only restriction is that the product
|
||
""""" you trade in (by sending in your original master disk) has to be a
|
||
currently shipping commercial product.
|
||
|
||
Don Elton (delton) or delton@pro-carolina.oau.org
|
||
(DELTON, CAT2, TOP6, MSG:108/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
|
||
GNO/ME UNIX 2.0 August 8, 1993 (Littleton, CO)
|
||
""""""""""""""" Procyon Enterprises announced today that they are now
|
||
accepting orders for the new version of their GNO/ME UNIX system for the
|
||
Apple IIGS.
|
||
|
||
Jawaid Bazyar, Vice President of Procyon and head engineer of the GNO
|
||
project, said "GNO/ME 2.0 represents a substantial improvement over the
|
||
original, which was in its own right a ground-breaking work. In the past
|
||
year since the original release, we've listened to customer's concerns and
|
||
addressed most of them. We brought even more UNIX power to the IIGS by
|
||
implementing the most powerful inter-process communication system available
|
||
for the IIGS".
|
||
|
||
UNIX is quickly becoming the de-facto standard among operating
|
||
systems. Even operating systems which never claimed to be UNIX compatible
|
||
are rushing to provide POSIX compliance interfaces for their systems.
|
||
(POSIX is the International Standards Organization's UNIX standard).
|
||
|
||
"This release reaffirms our commitment to the Apple IIGS, a very
|
||
capable computer that many developers abandoned", said Matt Gudermuth,
|
||
President of Procyon. "Some people ask if the IIGS is powerful enough to
|
||
run UNIX, and many used to answer with a resounding NO!. We answer these
|
||
people by pointing out that the first mainframe computers that ran UNIX
|
||
were far less powerful than the Apple IIGS. The IIGS is here to stay, and
|
||
we're going to keep supporting it with our powerful system software."
|
||
|
||
GNO provides UNIX features in an application environment that runs
|
||
"on top of" GS/OS, so that the IIGS software everyone enjoys is actually
|
||
enhanced by using GNO. Included as standard with the GNO system are
|
||
almost one hundred standard UNIX utilities and some IIGS-specific ones such
|
||
as print spooling from text or desktop applications and a
|
||
"shell-in-a-window" New Desk Accessory. Full support for remote access to
|
||
a IIGS via a modem, and built-in ultra-high-speed serial communications
|
||
means that GNO is the perfect system for writing communications programs.
|
||
|
||
"Communications is one of GNO's strong points," remarks Derek
|
||
Taubert, the individual responsible for the upcoming Internet access
|
||
software for GNO. "Because GNO does all the low-level work for me, and
|
||
gives me a simple interface to access it, I can concentrate on the task at
|
||
hand instead of worrying about writing things like interrupt handlers".
|
||
|
||
GNO comes with comprehensive documentation covering all aspects of the
|
||
system, including programming the kernel, the shell, the C and assembly
|
||
libraries, and utilities.
|
||
|
||
For more information, including information on upgrade pricing,
|
||
contact Procyon at:
|
||
|
||
Procyon Enterprises Incorporated
|
||
Apple IIGS Software Publishing and Development
|
||
P.O. Box 620334
|
||
Littleton, CO 80162-0334 USA
|
||
(303) 781-3273
|
||
(PROCYON.INC, CAT2, TOP27, MSG:14/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
|
||
DRIVE-CHECK Summer Sizzlers from Vitesse, for Apple II Users!
|
||
""""""""""" [this message heavily edited for inclusion in WHAT'S NEW
|
||
-- Ed.] NEW!!! Just released!!! Drive-Check, our new floppy drive test
|
||
software checks the condition of your 5-1/4" and 3-1/2" floppy disk drives
|
||
for proper RPMs, proper head stepping through all tracks, heads and
|
||
electronics for proper Write/Read of disks, and it verifies Header/Sector
|
||
information written to floppy disks. Suggested Retail Price is $15.95.
|
||
Special introductory offer -- $9.95 plus $3 shipping and handling.
|
||
|
||
(Stock Number P022)
|
||
|
||
Vitesse, Inc.
|
||
P.O. Box 929
|
||
La Puente, CA 91747-0929
|
||
(800) 777-7344
|
||
FAX: 813-1273
|
||
|
||
(VITESSEINC., CAT40, TOP7, MSG:120/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
>>> THROUGH THE GRAPEVINE <<<
|
||
"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
|
||
|
||
KANSASFEST SCHEDULE A2-Central Summer Conference begins Thursday, July 22
|
||
""""""""""""""""""" The following sessions are confirmed & complete, but
|
||
changes may be necessary.
|
||
|
||
Programming in 3D. Mike Westerfield. The Byte Works, Inc.
|
||
|
||
Beginner's Guide to Object-Oriented programming. Mike Westerfield. The
|
||
Byte Works, Inc.
|
||
|
||
The Apple II & Education - The HyperStudio Approach. Roger Wagner.
|
||
RWP, Inc.
|
||
|
||
Making HyperStudio YOUR Platform: Writing NDAs & Transitions for Fun &
|
||
Profit. Roger Wagner. RWP, Inc.
|
||
|
||
Adventure Game Design - The Internals. Jay Jennings. Softdisk, Inc.
|
||
|
||
Intermediate Desktop Programming for the Apple IIGS. Bryan Pietzak.
|
||
Softdisk, Inc.
|
||
|
||
System II: The Complete Graphical Interface for the Apple II (8bit) &
|
||
How to Program it from Applesoft & Assembler. Guy Forsythe & Eric
|
||
Bush. Kitchen Sink Software, Inc.
|
||
|
||
Free National Marketing for Apple II Products in the Education Market.
|
||
J. Eric Bush. Kitchen Sink Software, Inc.
|
||
|
||
A View of the II through the Eyes of a Scope. Larry Schneider.
|
||
|
||
Fun & Easy: Writing Twilight II Modules & Savvy Modules. Jim
|
||
Marecondo. DigiSoft Innovations.
|
||
|
||
High Speed Data Compression - Andy McFadden.
|
||
|
||
Maximizing Shareware Profits. Joe Kohn. Shareware Solutions II: The
|
||
Newsletter.
|
||
|
||
An Introduction to Digital Electronics. Chuck Kelly. ProDEV, Inc.
|
||
|
||
Computer Peripheral Design. Chuck Kelly. ProDEV, Inc.
|
||
|
||
Integrating Applesoft & Assembly. Jerry Kindall. Quality Computers,
|
||
Inc.
|
||
|
||
The Latest & Greatest Advanced Sound Techniques with the Ensoniq 5503.
|
||
Nate Trost & Steve Gunn.
|
||
|
||
An Avatar Update. Bill Heineman.
|
||
|
||
Switched-On HyperStudio: Designing & Creating Switch Accessible
|
||
Software for the Apple IIGS. Bill Lynn. Simtech Productions.
|
||
|
||
The Hitchhiker Guide to Apple IIGS Telecommunication. Richard Bennett &
|
||
Steve Gunn.
|
||
|
||
The Still.A.Secret: The Mother of All Patch Disks. Randy Brandt. JEM
|
||
Software, Inc.
|
||
--------------
|
||
Days & Times for these sessions would be a helpful addition.
|
||
(C.KERN1, CAT44, TOP2, MSG:18/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
|
||
THE FIRST OFFICIAL KANASFEST REPORT The 5th annual A2-Central Summer
|
||
""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""" Conference ("KansasFest") is off to
|
||
quite a start! On Tuesday night all the GEnie Apple II sysops arrived, plus
|
||
Richard Bennet and Linda Harding. Along the way, A2Pro sysops Dave Miller
|
||
(JUST.DAVE) and Nathaniel Sloan (C.SLOAN, aka "Sloanie") were in a traffic
|
||
accident, totaling Dave's car. Luckily they got away with only a few
|
||
scrapes and bruises, and a few of the other sysops went off and picked them
|
||
up.
|
||
|
||
On Wednesday during the day we had our GEnie sysop meetings, working on
|
||
ways to bring even more Apple II information to GEnie and make the Apple II
|
||
RoundTables an even better place for Apple II people to be. Over the next
|
||
few months you'll be seeing some of the results of our efforts, in all areas
|
||
of the A2 RTs, and I think all the Apple II users here are really going to
|
||
like what we've got coming up. Further details will be made available as we
|
||
finalize each plan. Later on Wednesday the rest of the conference attendees
|
||
showed up, and we all spent a lot of time hanging out and chatting and
|
||
hacking, etc. late into the night (I got about three hours sleep, last night!
|
||
I'm not sure where I fit it in, but it was there somewhere. About an hour of
|
||
it was me missing breakfast.). There are about 100 attendees here, this
|
||
year. I'm not about to type in all their names, but rest assured that
|
||
everyone who is anyone in the Apple II world is here! Some of the companies
|
||
that have representatives present are: Alltech Electronics, Big Red Computer
|
||
Club, Bright Software, Byte Works, Inc., DYA/DigiSoft Innovations, Econ,
|
||
GEnie Apple II RoundTables, GS+ Magazine, JEM Software, Kitchen Sink
|
||
Software, Parsons Engineering, Procyon, Inc., Quality Computers, Resource
|
||
Central, Roger Wagner Publishing, Sequential Systems, Shareware Solutions II,
|
||
and Softdisk Publishing. There's also lots and lots of individual developers
|
||
and users here.
|
||
|
||
Today, Thursday, was the start of KansasFest proper. In the morning
|
||
there was an opening talk by Tom Weishaar, Uncle-DOS himself. After
|
||
welcoming everyone to the conference and saying a few opening words, Tom
|
||
presented a few "awards" to the people who have been able to come to every
|
||
single KansasFest yet held. Ken Kashmarek got a special award of recognition
|
||
for being the only person to have come to all KansasFests so far who actually
|
||
paid full price for all of them! Next, Tom actually went out into the
|
||
auditorium with the microphone and went to each audience member in turn,
|
||
asking them to introduce themselves and say a few words about who they were
|
||
and why they had come to KansasFest. This was the first time anything like
|
||
this had ever been done, and it was quite fun. Next we had the keynote
|
||
address by Mike Westerfield, talking about "Amateur Programming for Fun and
|
||
Profit." It was very informative, giving advice and suggestions to all the
|
||
programmers, developers, and would-be programmers and developers in the
|
||
audience.
|
||
|
||
Following Mike Westerfield was Bill "Burger Bill" Heinemann, giving us
|
||
all an update on the status of the Avatar project. Currently, the Avatar
|
||
itself is stalled for lack of funding, since their major financial backer
|
||
pulled out. Bill said that most of the design work has already been finished,
|
||
especially on the hardware, and they're mainly waiting on some capital to get
|
||
the whole thing rolling. In the meantime, they've been working on an Apple
|
||
IIgs clone computer interface for Super Nintendo game systems! This would be
|
||
a $299 to $399 plug-in device for the Super Nintendo that would turn it into
|
||
an Apple IIgs clone computer. A beta or prototype is already working,
|
||
according to Bill. It has not been named yet.
|
||
|
||
The device would come with 2 MB of RAM on board, an "IBM style" floppy
|
||
disk drive (720K and 1.44 MB only, no 800K support due to cost
|
||
considerations), and an external interface port (it would be either a regular
|
||
Apple II slot, or a PCMCIA slot -- an optional card cage could be added to
|
||
give more interfaces). The keyboard would be a standard "IBM style" keyboard
|
||
with Super Nintendo connectors, plugged into the joypad/joystick port(s). To
|
||
use a mouse you would have to purchase Super Mario Paint and use the mouse
|
||
included with that (Bill said there's no way he could include a mouse or sell
|
||
his own and compete with the price). Alternately you could use the Super
|
||
Nintendo's joypad, but he said that it was very awkward.
|
||
|
||
The beta/prototype of this device uses the ROM code for GS emulation
|
||
that Bill is developing for the Avatar. He has gotten some assistance from
|
||
Laser Computer (like a sheet of around 50 memory entry locations), so this
|
||
device will be at least as compatible in 8-bit Apple II mode with a real
|
||
Apple II as Laser computers are. Bill said that he has been able to get
|
||
HyperStudio to run on the beta/prototype just fine, but ran into problems
|
||
with Teach from System 6.0, and again even more problems with Teach from
|
||
System 6.0.1. One problem with this device is that the Super Nintendo screen
|
||
mode resolutions are different from those of the Apple IIgs. It has four
|
||
screen modes: 256x224, 256x448, 512x224, and 512x448. Emulating a IIgs, you
|
||
either lose some screen real estate, or you use a "squeezed" mode which looks
|
||
"really ugly," according to Bill. The speed of the device was reported to be
|
||
about twice the speed of a stock unaccelerated Apple IIgs. The only Super
|
||
Nintendo hardware features Bill reported using for the IIgs emulation were
|
||
some DMA memory-moving routines and sprite animation for the cursor.
|
||
|
||
In its original design, Bill reports the device would easily be able to
|
||
copy Super Nintendo cartridges onto a floppy disk (in fact he said it already
|
||
can). He is seeking approval from Nintendo for the device, though, which
|
||
would necessitate disabling that feature in hardware, for copyright reasons.
|
||
(Bill's written plenty of Super Nintendo games himself, so people could even
|
||
be pirating his own works! :)
|
||
|
||
No beta/prototype hardware or photos of such were available to actually
|
||
be shown.
|
||
|
||
There were no special activities at lunch on Thursday, but there is
|
||
entertainment scheduled for lunch on Friday.
|
||
|
||
After lunch the normal sessions began. This year, there are only two
|
||
tracks of sessions, instead of the three or four of the past few years.
|
||
Sessions on Thursday were generally organized into an "8-bit" track and a
|
||
"16-bit" track. The sessions in one were: "System II: The Complete Graphical
|
||
Interface for the Apple II (8-bit)," "Programming with System II from
|
||
Applesoft and Assembler," "Integrating Applesoft and Assembly," and "The
|
||
Apple II & Education: The HyperStudio Approach." The other track's sessions
|
||
were: "A Dieter's Guide to Hi-Speed Data Compression," "The Latest & Greatest
|
||
Advanced Sound Techniques with the Ensoniq 5503," "Fun & Easy: Writing
|
||
Twilight II Modules," and "Intermediate Desktop Programming." On Friday the
|
||
sessions are much less easily divisible.
|
||
|
||
Thursday night in the cafeteria was the Creative Black Tie Celebration
|
||
and Celebrity Roast. Part of the "celebration" was inspired by Roger
|
||
Wagner's traditional unique ties -- a contest was held to see if anyone could
|
||
match or beat Roger's taste in ties (I won the "Most Colorful" prize, for my
|
||
black leather bow tie :). The "roastee" of honor after that was Tom
|
||
Weishaar, head of Resource Central and all-around swell guy. The "roasters"
|
||
were Dennis Doms, Dean Esmay, HangTime, Roger Wagner, and Matt Deatherage
|
||
(with help from Tara Dillinger). Any description I could write here would
|
||
simply not do the roast justice, so I'm not even going to try! I'm sure
|
||
videotapes will be made available by the various groups taping the event,
|
||
such as GS+ Magazine, Resource Central, and others, so you can just get the
|
||
tape and see it all for yourself.
|
||
|
||
Late Thursday night there were some rather amusing antics being
|
||
performed in one of the dorm lounges, as a group of Apple II developers,
|
||
including Roger Wagner, played a game were each person in turn had to grab
|
||
and pick up a paper grocery bag in their teeth, while only touching the
|
||
ground in one place. After everyone had made an attempt, the bag was
|
||
shortened a few inches and they went around again. At the end it got down to
|
||
just a single flat piece of paper with a few frayed edges sticking up. It was
|
||
quite a sight. Around the time that was ending up, a couple of people pulled
|
||
out Aerobee(tm) flying rings and started sailing them back and forth to each
|
||
other down the tictactoe board-like halls (the lounge is in the middle).
|
||
One was making a clockwise circuit and the other was making a
|
||
counter-clockwise circuit. Everyone not involved dodged and ducked their
|
||
heads as they went from room to room. (:
|
||
|
||
-= Lunatic E'Sex (:
|
||
Copyright 1993
|
||
LUNATIC@GEnie.GEIS.Com
|
||
|
||
(This message was originally posted to the Apple II RoundTables on
|
||
GEnie. It may be reposted and reprinted anywhere as long as the
|
||
entire message including this notice and the copyright notice remain
|
||
intact.)
|
||
(LUNATIC, CAT44, TOP2, MSG:22/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
|
||
UNOFFICAL KFEST REPORT #1 All of Kfest was more fun than is probably
|
||
""""""""""""""""""""""""" legal, but here are a few of my more memorable
|
||
moments from KansasFest:
|
||
|
||
Dean Esmay and Jerry Kindall doing a very passable Beavis and Butthead
|
||
imitation.
|
||
|
||
Watching Bryan Zak and Jay Jennings program in a new language that
|
||
they hadn't used before. Jay was open to a seemingly random place in Volume
|
||
One of the manual and Bryan to a similar place in Volume Two, and they were
|
||
having at it, using the "cut and try" school of programming. (These guys
|
||
are professionals; don't try this at home, boys and girls!) Roger Wagner
|
||
was gleefully videotaping Bryan and Jay for posterity and possible
|
||
blackmail, I think. I finally threw all three of them out of my room
|
||
because it was 3AM and they weren't making a whole lot of progress. I've
|
||
never seen more error messages than program lines before. *8-)
|
||
|
||
Rooming with Hangtime. I don't recommend that anyone try this who has
|
||
feeble health or a pacemaker (or common sense).
|
||
|
||
The roast of Uncle-DOS. Dean and Hangtime were FUNNY. We should all
|
||
lean on them to upload their speeches.
|
||
|
||
Having a long talk with Joe Kohn (one way-cool guy).
|
||
|
||
The sight of the A2Pro gang, several of which shaved their heads at
|
||
Kfest.
|
||
|
||
The seminars on the nifty stuff coming out RSN for the Apple II.
|
||
|
||
And lots more! TomZ
|
||
(T.ZUCHOWSKI, CAT44, TOP2, MSG:26/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
|
||
UNOFFICAL KFEST REPORT #2 The Funniest Scenes Awards: (as seen by me)
|
||
"""""""""""""""""""""""""
|
||
Funniest Sleeping positions: Sloanie & Jim Z (During a Session)
|
||
|
||
Funniest Roast Routine: A tie between Dean & Hangtime
|
||
|
||
Funniest Food: Slaw! (A mountain of it served at KC Masterpiece)
|
||
|
||
Funniest Luncheon quote: Matt, you ignorant Slut! By Diz
|
||
|
||
Funniest Comments: Everything by Hangtime..(Matt Deatherage: Honorable
|
||
mention)
|
||
|
||
Funniest Attempt at a song: Matt and Yours Truly in the Roast
|
||
|
||
Funniest Game Name: Bite The Bag
|
||
|
||
Funniest Hair: Tom W (Honorable mention: A2pro guys)
|
||
|
||
Funniest Plot to confuse Diz: Jay Jennings, Hangtime & TomZ
|
||
|
||
Funniest Prankster: A2PRO.Steve
|
||
|
||
Funniest Nocturnal Activity: Roger Wagner attempting to climb the Dorm
|
||
building wall
|
||
|
||
Funniest Computer Sound: Arghhhh! (sp?)
|
||
|
||
Funniest 5 Days in a Row That I've Had in a Long Time: KansasFest!
|
||
|
||
-I laughed and laughed! (but don't I always...hehehe)
|
||
|
||
Thanks everyone!
|
||
Love you!
|
||
Tara ;)
|
||
|
||
(What makes you think this is funny?)
|
||
(What makes you think this is funny?)
|
||
|
||
(TARA, CAT44, TOP2, MSG:27/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
|
||
>>>>> You forgot: "Don't play with HangTime, you don't know where he's
|
||
""""" been" -- Matt. <g>
|
||
|
||
I am so happy to be remembered for my impersonation (with Dean's help)
|
||
of Beavis and Butthead. To me, that sums up what KansasFest is all about.
|
||
(QUALITY, CAT44, TOP2, MSG:30/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
|
||
KANSASFEST -- OUR LAST REPORT Believe it or not I'm only just getting
|
||
""""""""""""""""""""""""""""" back on-line from KansasFest. I didn't get
|
||
home until something like 6:00 a.m. Monday morning and I slept the entire day
|
||
away. I've been fighting some sort of low-level infection since just before
|
||
KFest and it started hitting me pretty hard on the way home. Then I had to
|
||
set my computer back up and had some personal stuff to take care of, so I'm
|
||
just now catching up to messages from the last week!
|
||
|
||
KansasFest was a lot of fun as usual. I actually slept most nights this
|
||
year, which was a change from my usual routine. (Yes, some people actually
|
||
DO sleep at KFest. It's not impossible. All you have to do is shut and lock
|
||
your door. :-)
|
||
|
||
This year there wasn't a whole lot of news. There was 3D Logo from
|
||
Byteworks, and that looks mondo cool. Other than that, most of what went on
|
||
was exploration of things we already knew about, as opposed to new
|
||
announcements. Randy Brandt's presentation on the new Appleworks, for
|
||
example, was awe-inspiring. Bill Lynn did a great presentation on using
|
||
Hypermedia to make great software for the disabled.
|
||
|
||
One significant bit of news from Jawaid Bayzar was that Sequential is
|
||
planning to take over manufacturing, sales, and support of the RamFast SCSI
|
||
card in the near future. I suppose we'll be hearing more about that soon.
|
||
|
||
There was more but I missed a number of sessions - I hope others can
|
||
fill us in on those that I missed! Especially on Thursday's sessions, where
|
||
I was most busy of all and missed nearly everything.
|
||
|
||
As usual most of the fun at KFest was after hours, wandering around
|
||
meeting fellow Apple II users, talking about computers and everything else
|
||
under the sun, and so on.
|
||
|
||
KansasFest is THE social gathering of the Apple II universe. Those of
|
||
you who keep skipping it simply DO NOT know what you are missing.
|
||
|
||
Dean "Five year veteran, gunning for six" Esmay
|
||
|
||
PS - And after his roasting, Tom Weishaar was heard to say that he sure
|
||
would like to hold KFest again. Let's all pester him so we can nuke those
|
||
rumors about this maybe being the last.
|
||
(A2.DEAN, CAT44, TOP2, MSG:28/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
|
||
FANTAVISION GS RESURRECTED Several months back I purchased a IIgs "hard
|
||
"""""""""""""""""""""""""" drive installable" version of Fantavision GS
|
||
(formerly published by Broderbund).
|
||
|
||
The company now publishing this program is: Wild Duck Software, 979 Golf
|
||
Course Drive, Suite 256, Rohnert Park, California,(707)586-0728.
|
||
|
||
The price at the time I purchased it was $59.00 + 3.50 shipping and
|
||
handling (CA residents also pay State sales tax :-(.
|
||
|
||
This version is System 6.0 compatible and includes a Hyperstudio XCMD
|
||
that allows you to directly import Fantavision GS animations into
|
||
Hyperstudio. The program itself works pretty much (from what I can tell) the
|
||
same as that released by Broderbund but as mentioned, this version can be
|
||
installed on any hard drive.
|
||
|
||
Hope that this post is of interest to fellow "animationalists:-)...
|
||
|
||
Also, I have one quick question... whatever happened to the animation
|
||
program called "Animasia" that was supposed to be published this year for the
|
||
GS... I recall downloading some of the pre-release info on this program but
|
||
haven't heard anything about it for a long time... anyone got a clue???
|
||
|
||
-=Ron=- >>> via GEM v4.21 and ProTerm 3.1 <<<
|
||
(R.HOCHEVAR, CAT6, TOP5, MSG:106/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
|
||
PREVIEW WITH PAPERFREE... SOMEDAY >>Is there a desk accessory or program
|
||
""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""" which allows one to see what something
|
||
looks like on a page before printing in a P16 program?
|
||
|
||
Marie,
|
||
|
||
Not yet but forthcoming 'Hot Products' from ECON Technologies list
|
||
something called 'PaperFree' which 'allows you to preview and manipulate
|
||
documents on screen before printing them out'. I'm quoting from ECON News and
|
||
it goes on to say that it will work with any GSOS application that uses the
|
||
print manager. This should therefore work with GWIII. Due for release mid-
|
||
summer at a retail of $39.95. Don't know what the mail-order price will be.
|
||
|
||
Andrew C Letchford ----- < Delivered by Co-Pilot and TIC >
|
||
(A.LETCHFORD, CAT12, TOP5, MSG:157/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
|
||
WHITHER C.V. TECH? I suspect that the RF will still be around in the apple
|
||
"""""""""""""""""" 2 market for another year or two.
|
||
|
||
Drew
|
||
(CV.TECH, CAT46, TOP6, MSG:82/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
>>>>> One significant bit of news from Jawaid Bayzar was that Sequential is
|
||
""""" planning to take over manufacturing, sales, and support of the
|
||
RamFast SCSI card in the near future. I suppose we'll be hearing more about
|
||
that soon.
|
||
(A2.DEAN, CAT44, TOP2, MSG:28/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
|
||
APPLENET 2.0 NEARS RELEASE Since I last posted that bit in topic 1 about
|
||
"""""""""""""""""""""""""" AppleNET being "close enough for release", I've
|
||
gotten a couple of requests for me to release what I have now -- a "crippled"
|
||
version of AppleNET v2.0, if you please. I'm not sure if I'm comfortable with
|
||
this idea, as two of the most important parts are still not implemented (i.e.:
|
||
messages and files). But, if enough people would like to see AppleNET v2.0b1
|
||
released to the public, I think I'd be willing to let it go into GEnie's
|
||
libraries.
|
||
|
||
What do you think?
|
||
|
||
Derek Fong
|
||
~~~~~~~~~~
|
||
Sysop of Eagle-Eyes' Emporium
|
||
The official AppleNET support BBS!
|
||
(514) 337-8844
|
||
(M.POTTER4, CAT41, TOP2, MSG:128/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
|
||
STAR TREK: FIRST CONTACT V2.0 Here's a bit of advertising for those
|
||
""""""""""""""""""""""""""""" Apple II gamers of a science fiction bent...
|
||
Star Trek: First Contact v2.0 is almost through its beta test. The game has
|
||
been significantly improved. Some of the highlights:
|
||
|
||
- More complex and detailed. Multiple landing sites on each planet.
|
||
- Much smoother operation. All those repetitious command sequences
|
||
have been improved.
|
||
- New missions for the alien Intruder.
|
||
- Fully Apple IIgs compatible (no crashes!)
|
||
|
||
Release time (if all goes well) -- two weeks.
|
||
-Jim.
|
||
(J.ROYAL1, CAT6, TOP2, MSG:124/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
|
||
QFAX GS As far as the modem goes....Check this out.
|
||
"""""""
|
||
The Qmodem v32.bis 14.4 modem with send/receive fax. The modem also
|
||
features:
|
||
|
||
Real baud rate of 14,400 bps.
|
||
|
||
With v32bis compression you can achieve connections up to 56,600 bps.
|
||
|
||
The modem has caller ID, send/receive fax, silent answer (automatically
|
||
distinguishes between voice and fax or you can have it distinguish between
|
||
fax and data).
|
||
|
||
Currently, the fax features only work on the Mac and IBM, but we're
|
||
working on Qfax GS which will work with the modem. Initially it will be send
|
||
only.
|
||
|
||
And for the price....hold on to your mouse:)
|
||
|
||
$299.95.
|
||
|
||
Quality Computers --- Power for performance
|
||
(W.CARVER1, CAT24, TOP5, MSG:125/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
>>>>> Bill,
|
||
"""""
|
||
Do you have any idea:
|
||
1) When Qfax GS may be available?
|
||
2) Whether it will be able to append scanned material, such
|
||
as a signature?
|
||
(M.TOLCHIN, CAT24, TOP5, MSG:130/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
>>>>> 1> We don't have a release date as of yet. 2> Yes. If you use
|
||
""""" GraphicWriter or the AWGS page layout, you can include a scan of your
|
||
signature
|
||
|
||
Quality Computers --- Power for performance
|
||
(W.CARVER1, CAT24, TOP5, MSG:133/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
>>>>> Sounds great. I don't suppose you can send a whole scanned page?
|
||
"""""
|
||
(M.TOLCHIN, CAT24, TOP5, MSG:137/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
>>>>> As long as it's a 640 graphic. Basically, if you can print it, you
|
||
""""" can fax it.
|
||
|
||
Quality Computers --- Power for performance
|
||
(W.CARVER1, CAT24, TOP5, MSG:139/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
|
||
NEW COPILOT THIS FALL I have the new CoPilot scripts for TIC and Spectrum
|
||
""""""""""""""""""""" about 99% completed.
|
||
After a lot of essentially wasted work, I have come to the conclusion that
|
||
it is simply going to be impossible to continue to support Point to Point
|
||
or versions of TIC older than v3.31 so far as the enhanced scripts are
|
||
concerned.
|
||
|
||
To make this as clear as I can, CoPilot will continue to support PtP
|
||
and older versions of TIC when it comes to uploading/downloading library
|
||
files, RT messages and Email. However, the things we are doing with the
|
||
enhanced scripts are as close to impossible as makes no difference with the
|
||
older versions of TIC and with PtP.
|
||
|
||
As of the next release of CoPilot, FULL support will only be available
|
||
to owners of TIC v3.31 or greater, ProTerm v3.0 or greater and Spectrum.
|
||
|
||
For those of you who have older versions of TIC your choice is to
|
||
spend $15 for the upgrade or to be unable to use the "enhanced" features of
|
||
the new scripts.
|
||
|
||
NOTE TO PtP OWNERS: You might have missed it, but Don Elton is
|
||
offering an upgrade path for YOU. Send him your original PtP disk and he
|
||
will sell you the latest version of TIC (4.0 is now released), complete
|
||
with new manual, for the same price as the upgrade to TIC owners. $15 for
|
||
one of the most powerful comm programs around is NOT a bad deal.
|
||
|
||
NOTE: Dons offer applies to ANY commercial comm program for the Apple
|
||
II, so far as I know. So all you MouseTalk and Teleworks Plus owners (not
|
||
to mention a lot of OTHER programs) should think about this real hard, it's
|
||
a deal that can't be beat. :)
|
||
|
||
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
||
|
||
Now, let me tell you a little about what the enhanced scripts will
|
||
do....
|
||
|
||
1. Allow you to cancel categories and topics, ignore categories and
|
||
topics, and mark topics. (And this happens BEFORE you read
|
||
messages. :)
|
||
|
||
2. Allow you to draw an INDex of a RoundTable and set you NAMe in a
|
||
RoundTable.
|
||
|
||
3. Allow you to set up a library search while offline and have it run
|
||
automatically when you go online.
|
||
|
||
4. Allow you to set up a message search (by date and/or message #
|
||
and/or author etc.) while offline and have it run automatically
|
||
when you go online.
|
||
|
||
5. Allow you to prepare Xmodem Email while offline and have it sent
|
||
automatically.
|
||
|
||
6. Allow you to retrieve Xmodem Email automatically (unattended).
|
||
|
||
7. Allow you to prepare files to upload to the library while offline
|
||
and have them upload automatically when you go online.
|
||
|
||
8. Allow you to check libraries for new uploads once a day,
|
||
automatically.
|
||
|
||
9. Allow you to do a RAM instead of a BRO NOR. (FINALLY :)
|
||
|
||
10. Allow you to break out of the script between RTs without messing
|
||
things up. (Useful when you change your mind about doing
|
||
EVERYTHING right now. :)
|
||
|
||
Those are the high points. There are a few more minor things that I
|
||
can't think of right now.
|
||
|
||
I am CONSIDERING a "personal menu" option that will allow you to call
|
||
your own scripts from the "enhanced" CoPilot menus, but unless I can make
|
||
it work smoothly and without much room for error, it won't happen.
|
||
|
||
Oh, yeah, you'll be able to download the GEnieLamp automatically with
|
||
the new version.
|
||
|
||
SOME of these things take a bit of configuration, but mostly it is a
|
||
question of putting a specifically named text file in the GEFiles folder.
|
||
|
||
I think this update is going to be real popular.
|
||
|
||
Right now we are working on the translation of the TIC scripts to
|
||
ProTerm. Once that is done, we'll be ready to go with this. Unfortunately,
|
||
for all its power, PT3 is a bit more difficult to script for than TIC, so
|
||
this will take a bit. We're shooting for Labor Day weekend, but DON'T count
|
||
on it.:)
|
||
|
||
Gary R. Utter
|
||
(GARY.UTTER, CAT10, TOP11, MSG:160/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
>>>>> From the "good news/bad news" department.....
|
||
"""""
|
||
The bad news is that it now looks EXTREMELY unlikely that we will be
|
||
able to deliver the new scripts by Labor Day weekend.
|
||
|
||
The GOOD news is that the reason for the delay is that we are adding
|
||
even MORE neat features.
|
||
|
||
1. Ability to set your choice of directory for downloaded files for
|
||
EACH RoundTable. (finally, eh? :)
|
||
|
||
2. Ability to set up a list of RTs from which to get a "new files"
|
||
list, which will be run automatically, once in any given 24 hour
|
||
period.
|
||
|
||
3. Ability to do a delayed logon.
|
||
|
||
4. Ability to toggle the state of Xmodem Email downloading, either
|
||
automatically, or manually.
|
||
|
||
There will probably be a couple of other things as well, keep your
|
||
fingers crossed. :)
|
||
|
||
Gary R. Utter
|
||
(GARY.UTTER, CAT10, TOP11, MSG:202/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
|
||
APPLE EXPO BOSTON POSTPONED Word has it that Apple Expo Boston has been
|
||
""""""""""""""""""""""""""" postponed from October to April. Anyone have
|
||
any additional information about this?
|
||
|
||
Tyler
|
||
(A2.TYLER, CAT4, TOP12, MSG:22/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
>>>>> That is correct and verified.
|
||
"""""
|
||
Joe Kohn
|
||
(J.KOHN, CAT4, TOP12, MSG:23/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
|
||
SIX PACK BUGS FIXED; NEW FEATURES The Six Pack bugs (with CdevAlias and the
|
||
""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""" Alarm Clock NDA) have been fixed. Call
|
||
1-800-777-3642 for an update.
|
||
(QUALITY, CAT9, TOP6, MSG:352/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
>>>>> Tim - I don't think you missed anything. There are a couple of "bugs"
|
||
""""" regarding Six Pack and System 6.0.1, namely, CDev Alias no longer
|
||
work and the Alarm Clock's window does not draw. Both of these bugs have been
|
||
fixed and are now shipping (I think) with SixPack. QC may have an update
|
||
path/program for you if you are interested in this, however...
|
||
|
||
The BIG update to Six Pack is not quite ready yet. Actually, the coding
|
||
is all done. The only things left are to squeeze out any last minute bugs
|
||
that appear (i.e., do some final testing) and to write up some documentation
|
||
for the changes and NEW (hint hint) stuff. Of course, after that it has to
|
||
get printed and the programs placed on disk, etc. Timetable? No release date
|
||
available until the testing is complete, because this is a variable. If all
|
||
goes well, a great new 6Pack will be available soon...
|
||
|
||
Can't talk about un-released material, BUT...
|
||
|
||
+ A number of user-suggestions have been implemented
|
||
+ Eight of the existing programs have been enhanced
|
||
+ Four new programs may be included in the new release
|
||
|
||
In general terms, the big changes are...
|
||
|
||
+ Six Pack modules will talk to and cooperate with each other
|
||
as well as the Finder
|
||
+ The new programs are great!
|
||
|
||
+ A great happy surprise for SuperDataPath fans
|
||
+ Using the finder will be easier and more productive then
|
||
ever, with lots of functions just a Click or a Keypress away...
|
||
|
||
Hope that whets some appetites!!
|
||
|
||
Bill {W.TUDOR}
|
||
(W.TUDOR, CAT42, TOP26, MSG:166/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
>>>>> Here's another little peek at what's coming...
|
||
""""" SuperDataPath in _Save_ dialogs!!
|
||
(W.TUDOR, CAT42, TOP26, MSG:172/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
>>> MESSAGE SPOTLIGHT <<<
|
||
"""""""""""""""""""""""""
|
||
|
||
Category 4, Topic 14
|
||
Message 119 Sat Jul 24, 1993
|
||
J.CURTIS8 [Jay] at 12:24 EDT
|
||
|
||
>Gee...I'd like to get a new house with a pool for $2000. And NO
|
||
>SHACK! A complete system for $400 and "NO JUNK!"?
|
||
|
||
$400 DOES seem a bit low for a complete system. However, the way GS
|
||
stuff is selling right now, as a starting offer it's about right. In my
|
||
locale, complete systems (some fully decked out) are going for $550 to
|
||
$600. This is hardly a GS system's functional value, however.
|
||
|
||
My advice to anyone thinking about selling their GS is: (A) Take your
|
||
time, and part it out. You'll make more on it, but you'll have to wait for
|
||
your money. Or, (B) KEEP YOUR GS! As a functional tool, it's worth much,
|
||
much more than the $500 to $600 you'll get for it (if you get ANY offers at
|
||
all).
|
||
|
||
>Mac people consider it junk
|
||
|
||
Grrrrr! Heck, the dern thing's got a 24-bit-wide data bus, DMA, fully
|
||
addressable 8MB RAM capability, 4096 colors, FULL OS with the friendliest,
|
||
object-oriented, graphic-based user interface you'll ever see on ANY
|
||
machine, including a MAC. It's got TrueType, multitasking, aliasing and
|
||
file compression extensions... With an RF card and Zip it'll literally run
|
||
rings around any 386/16...or more than 90% of the DOS boxes in use today,
|
||
to say nothing of MAC Classics, LCs and many IIs.
|
||
|
||
DOS still hasn't effectively broken the 640k RAM barrier, not even
|
||
DOS 6.0, (btw)... and never will. While Windows may look pretty, it runs on
|
||
DOS, and the majority of the <<real>> work gets done in DOS sessions,
|
||
anyway. Windoze is a VERY POOR, unfriendly, system-jamming imitation of the
|
||
Apple user interface, which does little more than steal your RAM and your
|
||
$$$$. While MACs have a friendly, pleasing interface, most of them can't
|
||
expand, are often subjectively slower than an unaccelerated GS, or any GS
|
||
with RF card for that matter. None have a character-based user interface
|
||
option except for the LC in 8-bit emulation (which, btw, is a joke standing
|
||
next to a GS running the same software).
|
||
|
||
The GS is__ still__ a superior machine to most of the computers in
|
||
use. Why sell it, when most people don't realize how good it is and aren't
|
||
willing to pay what it is worth as a tool? Don't get caught up in glitter
|
||
and hype, or be panicked by the fact that Apple has stopped selling the GS.
|
||
Make hard, objective comparisons before you buy or sell. Consider your
|
||
needs, and consider the fact that eventually the GS may be worth a lot more
|
||
money, market-wise. Anything less than that may be a waste of your dollars
|
||
and your sense. :)
|
||
|
||
J-Bird <<WHO GOT THE LAST GS??>>
|
||
|
||
[*][*][*]
|
||
|
||
|
||
Category 2, Topic 5
|
||
Message 73 Mon Aug 09, 1993
|
||
A2.LUNATIC [Lunatic] at 05:24 EDT
|
||
|
||
___
|
||
|he "visionary" aspect of Apple Computer has ALWAYS been taking an
|
||
existing technology and implementing it in a consumer product, though. Just
|
||
like Ford invented the Model-T, not the automobile, Apple didn't actually
|
||
invent the personal computer, they invented the Apple II. They didn't
|
||
invent disk I/O, they invented an AFFORDABLE disk I/O device (the Disk II).
|
||
They didn't invent the GUI, they invented the Lisa/Macintosh GUI (the first
|
||
mass-market, popular GUI). Likewise, they didn't invent the mouse, laser
|
||
printers, the SCSI interface, SIMM sockets, 3.5" floppy drives, or many
|
||
other things that are now taken for granted with 90% of the new personal
|
||
computers sold today. They did, however, use them first on widely available
|
||
popular personal computers. So Apple didn't invent the PDA, so what? The
|
||
Newton still looks to be the Model-T of the future PDA world. Apple got
|
||
into the true laptop arena late, but boy those PowerBooks sure look nice
|
||
compared to the MS-DOS/Windows laptops currently available, don't they?
|
||
Nice enough that even a lot of DOS diehards bought them.
|
||
_
|
||
/-\pple's NEVER been an "inventing" company. They make a lot of great
|
||
actual products out of the raw clay (ideas) from others, though. THAT'S how
|
||
they are "visionary." It may just be that now with so many other potters at
|
||
their own wheels, the products of any one potter are much less distinct and
|
||
unique. Plus it's so much more cutthroat now that everyone's trying to find
|
||
out what everyone else is doing, and beat them to market. Even without
|
||
spying on each other, everyone is trying to find ways to come up with the
|
||
same result, and naturally more than one company is likely to follow the
|
||
same path, independently.
|
||
-= Lunatic (:
|
||
|
||
[*][*][*]
|
||
|
||
|
||
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 Apple II, 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.
|
||
|
||
|
||
/////////////////////////////////////////// GEnie_QWIK_QUOTE ////
|
||
/ "Status $2f indicates that the device did not respond to the /
|
||
/ selection process. In a nutshell we said 'Hey drive!' and it /
|
||
/ didn't say 'What?'" /
|
||
////////////////////////////////////////////////// CV.TECH ////
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
[EOA]
|
||
[HUM]//////////////////////////////
|
||
HUMOR ONLINE /
|
||
/////////////////////////////////
|
||
Fun & Games On GEnie
|
||
""""""""""""""""""""
|
||
[JOKEMASTER]
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
>>> JOKEMASTER'S COMPLETE LIST OF BOGUS VIRUSES-POLITICAL VIRUSES <<<
|
||
"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
|
||
|
||
BILL CLINTON VIRUS This virus mutates from region to region. We're not
|
||
"""""""""""""""""" exactly sure what it does, but may be taxing to your
|
||
system.
|
||
|
||
BILL CLINTON VIRUS - Strain 2 It doubles the files on your hard drive
|
||
""""""""""""""""""""""""""""" while it states it is decreasing the
|
||
number of files, increases the cost of your computer, taxes its CPU to
|
||
maximum capacity, and then uses Quicken to access your bank accounts and
|
||
deplete your balances.
|
||
|
||
AL GORE VIRUS Not strong enough to act on it's own, but when combined
|
||
""""""""""""" with another virus it hops on a bus and travels around the
|
||
system.
|
||
|
||
ROSS PEROT VIRUS Similar as the Jerry Brown Virus, only nicer fonts are
|
||
"""""""""""""""" used, and it appears to have a lot more money put into
|
||
it's development. Unknown effects, but just when you think it's quit...
|
||
IT'S BACK!
|
||
|
||
ROSS PEROT VIRUS - Strain 2 Activates every component in your system,
|
||
""""""""""""""""""""""""""" just before the whole thing quits.
|
||
|
||
ROSS PEROT VIRUS - Strain 3 After several years, the damage caused by
|
||
""""""""""""""""""""""""""" this little virus is still unclear. It often
|
||
displays impressive graphics which have little relevance to the users
|
||
interests or needs.
|
||
|
||
Source: JOKEMASTER (some from various sources) #3707C
|
||
Keywords: Virus,Original,Computer,Political
|
||
|
||
[*][*][*]
|
||
|
||
|
||
HUMOR_QWIKPICK true story: I was downloading a file the other day when
|
||
"""""""""""""" my phone line was hit by lighting. Just before it died
|
||
my modem said "*&^%$#@!" [G.MARON]
|
||
|
||
|
||
HUMOR_QWIKPICK Ad in the classified section of a local computer rag.
|
||
"""""""""""""" Honest! Coleman Grads! Are you or your computer "not
|
||
working"? We can help! IBM, Apple, Amiga? We can tell you which one you
|
||
have! We specialize in: power cable attachment and power switch toggling;
|
||
Advanced DOS commands such as DIR, COPY, DEL, and "FORMAT C:" Making
|
||
write-protected diskettes usable again; Programmer deprogramming. REMEDIAL
|
||
CONSULTING GROUP. ###-#### [KD]
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
[EOA]
|
||
[REF]//////////////////////////////
|
||
REFLECTIONS /
|
||
/////////////////////////////////
|
||
Thinking About Online Communications
|
||
""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
|
||
By Phil Shapiro
|
||
[P.SHAPIRO1]
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
>>> THE SOCIAL RAMIFICATIONS OF LOW-COST HIGH-SPEED MODEMS <<<
|
||
""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
|
||
|
||
Every advance in communications technology brings with it a
|
||
concomitant advance in human welfare. The easier and less expensive it
|
||
becomes to communicate at long distance, the greater the benefit to society
|
||
as a whole.
|
||
|
||
For instance, when long-distance modem communications is made less
|
||
expensive, new opportunities open up for software developers around the
|
||
country to collaborate on new software development projects. Naturally,
|
||
society as a whole benefits from the fruits of software development
|
||
projects.
|
||
|
||
Likewise, when long-distance modem communications is made less
|
||
expensive, doctors in different parts of the country can more easily share
|
||
the results of medical tests, medical records, and medical research.
|
||
Society, as a whole, benefits substantially in this way.
|
||
|
||
In a similar way, engineers and scientists can benefit from the
|
||
lower-cost interaction. Writers and artists can more easily communicate,
|
||
resulting in a more productive cross-fertilization of ideas. Students can
|
||
benefit from having access to more information resources at their
|
||
fingertips.
|
||
|
||
So when U.S. Robotics introduced their popular "Sportster" high-speed
|
||
modems a few months ago, the online world quickly became abuzz with
|
||
excitement. With a street price of under $200, these new modems bring
|
||
high-speed communications within the reach of many individuals and small
|
||
businesses.
|
||
|
||
Other modem manufacturers have made similar price cuts in their line
|
||
of high-speed modems. What makes these high-speed 14,400 bits-per-second
|
||
modems so useful is that they allow even large files to be transmitted in a
|
||
matter of minutes.
|
||
|
||
But what are the social ramifications of individuals and businesses
|
||
connecting at 14,400 bits-per-second? Many and varied.
|
||
|
||
In a manner of speaking, high-speed modems shrink distances across the
|
||
country. With the advent of low-cost high-speed modems, California becomes
|
||
closer to Washington DC. In the past, physical distances served as a
|
||
barrier between people. Three hundred years ago, if someone lived more
|
||
than a hundred miles away from you, you might never have a chance to meet
|
||
them in your life. Today, the chances of your exchanging ideas with
|
||
someone across town are almost the same as the chances of you exchanging
|
||
ideas with someone across the country.
|
||
|
||
Those of us who have been involved with online communications are so
|
||
accustomed to incremental improvements in telecommunications technology
|
||
that it is difficult to appreciate when a truly breakthrough development
|
||
occurs. The introduction of low-cost high-speed modems in the past few
|
||
months is the type of advance that will bring a quantum increase in social
|
||
benefits, both near and far.
|
||
|
||
In a sense, modem manufacturers are involved in producing a tool that
|
||
brings benefits to people in all walks of life -- regardless of whether
|
||
they themselves personally make use of the new communications technology.
|
||
A reverberation of benefits will be accruing to society as a whole as
|
||
high-speed modems penetrate our homes and businesses.
|
||
|
||
A round of applause, please, for U.S. Robotics, Hayes, Microcom,
|
||
Practical Peripherals, Zoom, Supra and the many other modem manufacturers
|
||
who have brought us forward to this point. Their work to bring cheaper,
|
||
faster modems to market will produce social benefits whose importance we're
|
||
only just beginning to fathom.
|
||
|
||
-Phil Shapiro
|
||
|
||
[*][*][*]
|
||
|
||
The author takes a keen interest in the social dimensions
|
||
of communications technology. He can be reached on GEnie
|
||
at P.SHAPIRO1; on Internet: p.shapiro1.genie.geis.com;
|
||
on America Online at: pshapiro
|
||
|
||
|
||
/////////////////////////////////////////// GEnie_QWIK_QUOTE ////
|
||
/ "Any software that stays secret forever generates very little /
|
||
/ revenue!" /
|
||
/////////////////////////////////////////////////// BRANDT ////
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
[EOA]
|
||
[BEG]//////////////////////////////
|
||
BEGINNER'S CORNER /
|
||
/////////////////////////////////
|
||
Polishing Green Apples
|
||
""""""""""""""""""""""
|
||
By Steve Weyhrich
|
||
[S.WEYHRICH]
|
||
|
||
|
||
>>> GS VOCABULARY 101 <<<
|
||
"""""""""""""""""""""""""
|
||
|
||
IN MY LAST ARTICLE I discussed putting together an Apple IIGS system,
|
||
"""""""""""""""""" with the costs and possible sources of the equipment.
|
||
This month, instead of the promised closer look at what you can do with a
|
||
bare-bones IIGS system, I would like to define some terms that will be
|
||
coming up as our discussion continues. The goal of presenting this word
|
||
list is to make sure that the technical terms I will be using are clear
|
||
ahead of time.
|
||
|
||
I am placing this list not in an alphabetic order, but rather in a
|
||
topical order, so terms with similar or related meanings are defined in the
|
||
same general area. If you want it alphabetized, I leave that as an
|
||
exercise for the reader.
|
||
|
||
WARNING!! The National Weather Service has issued a Flash Word-Flood
|
||
Warning, effective immediately for all computers downstream of this issue
|
||
of the GEnieLamp. Be prepared to sandbag your monitor, in case the flood
|
||
of words gets too overwhelming. If you are unable to safely protect your
|
||
desk, you are instructed to turn off your monitor or head for higher
|
||
ground. Do not, repeat, DO NOT flush your buffer until that backlog has
|
||
cleared, and boil all of your floppy disks before using them.
|
||
|
||
[*][*][*]
|
||
|
||
|
||
RAM: Random-Access Memory Can refer to the memory chips in the computer
|
||
"""""""""""""""""""""""""" ("I had to order eight of the RAM chips to
|
||
increase the memory in my computer.") Also used in the context of how much
|
||
memory is available ("This software package requires a minimum of 768K
|
||
RAM.") What is important to remember about the RAM used in your computer
|
||
is that it holds data only as long as power is supplied; if you lose power
|
||
or shut the computer off before saving your work, it will be gone.
|
||
|
||
ROM: Read-Only Memory Electronically the same thing as RAM, with one
|
||
"""""""""""""""""""""" exception: the programs or data in ROM do NOT
|
||
disappear when power is shut off. Thus, ROM is used in to hold
|
||
instructions for the computer that are expected to be available at all
|
||
times, even when first turning on the computer. This makes the computer
|
||
smart enough to get itself started with little intervention from the user.
|
||
Although ROM may also be referred to in terms of how many "K" or "megs" it
|
||
holds, you cannot store any new data on top of what is stored in ROM; it is
|
||
not erasable.
|
||
|
||
HARDWARE The physical components of a computer (i.e., the computer
|
||
"""""""" itself, the keyboard, disk drive, monitor, etc). Primarily
|
||
refers to what can be physically picked up, touched, smelled, tasted, or
|
||
can be modified with hand-held tools.
|
||
|
||
SOFTWARE The programs you run on your computer. Software is definitely
|
||
"""""""" NOT something that you can handle physically, although the
|
||
disks on which a program is stored CAN be. Because ROM is unchangeable,
|
||
software is loaded into RAM and executed in RAM.
|
||
|
||
FIRMWARE This is software that has been stored permanently in a ROM chip.
|
||
"""""""" It is called "firm" instead of "soft" because it cannot be
|
||
modified or erased. The Applesoft BASIC interpreter that is part of every
|
||
Apple II from the II Plus up through the IIGS is an example of firmware.
|
||
The built-in software routines in the IIGS that manage memory, graphics,
|
||
and many other functions are also firmware.
|
||
|
||
MICROPROCESSOR The "brain" of a computer. This is an integrated circuit
|
||
"""""""""""""" that is able to manipulate the data in RAM or ROM and
|
||
come up with a result through a set of specific steps, or instructions.
|
||
The microprocessor used in the original Apple II, II Plus, and unenhanced
|
||
IIe is the 6502; in the Apple IIc and the enhanced IIe it is the 65c02; and
|
||
in the Apple IIGS it is the 65816. (For those interested, the 6502 is also
|
||
used as the brains of the Nintendo game system, and the 65816 is the brains
|
||
of the Super Nintendo.)
|
||
|
||
The microprocessor used by the Macintosh, Amiga and Atari ST computer
|
||
is the Motorola 68000 series (68020, 68030, and 68040 are progressively
|
||
more powerful and sometimes faster versions of this processor). The IBM
|
||
series has used microprocessors made by Intel, with names like 8088, 8086,
|
||
80286, 80386 (or 386), 486, and now Pentium (previously known as 586 or P5).
|
||
|
||
8-BIT The 6502 and 65c02, used in the Apple II, II Plus, IIe, and IIc, is
|
||
""""" an 8-bit microprocessor, since it handles 8 bits (one byte) of
|
||
data at a time. It has an address width of 16 bits, which makes it
|
||
possible to handle 64K of RAM (65,366 bytes) at any one time. In order for
|
||
certain programs (such as AppleWorks or Publish It!) to use larger amounts
|
||
of memory, those programs do what is known as bank-switching, where they
|
||
jump among various 64K banks of memory. The 6502 is still working with
|
||
only 64K at a time, but it is being fooled into handling larger amounts of
|
||
memory. This is somewhat workable, but the memory management is still
|
||
somewhat difficult, and not many programs have been able to do this.
|
||
|
||
16-BIT The 65816, used in the Apple IIGS, is a 16-bit microprocessor,
|
||
"""""" capable of handling 16-bits (two bytes) of data at a time. It
|
||
has an address width of 24-bits, which makes it possible to handle 16 megs
|
||
of RAM (16,777,216 bytes) at a time. This chip can treat all of this
|
||
memory as one large continuous space, and does not have to use any
|
||
complicated bank-switching scheme as does the 6502/65c02 processors.
|
||
Because of design limitations, however, the Apple IIGS can use only 8 megs
|
||
of this address space for RAM; the other 8 megs is partly used by the
|
||
system ROM, but is otherwise unavailable.
|
||
|
||
DECIMAL The base 10 system of counting, where ten digits (from 0 through
|
||
""""""" 9) are used to represent numbers. The number "234" in the
|
||
decimal system refers to:
|
||
|
||
234 = 2*10^2 + 3*10^1 + 4*10^0
|
||
234 = 2*100 + 3*10 + 4*1
|
||
234 = 200 + 30 + 4
|
||
234 = 234
|
||
|
||
(Note that in algebraic notation, "10^2" means "10 times 10", or "10
|
||
squared", or "10 raised to the second power". "3*10" means "3 times 10").
|
||
|
||
BINARY The base 2 system of counting, where two digits (0 and 1) are used
|
||
"""""" to represent numbers. On computers, the percent symbol is
|
||
sometimes used to depict a number as binary, particularly in a language
|
||
known as assembly (which deals with the function of the computer on the
|
||
level of the microprocessor). The decimal number "234" would be
|
||
represented in binary as "%11101010", or:
|
||
|
||
%11101010 = 1*2^7 +1*2^6 +1*2^5 +0*2^4 +1*2^3 +0*2^2 +1*2^1 +0*2^0
|
||
%11101010 = 1*128 +1*64 +1*32 +0*16 +1*8 +0*4 +1*2 +0*1
|
||
%11101010 = 128 + 64 + 32 + 0 + 8 + 0 + 2 + 0
|
||
%11101010 = 234
|
||
|
||
HEXADECIMAL The base 16 system of counting, where sixteen digits (0
|
||
""""""""""" through 9 and A through F) are used to represent numbers.
|
||
This system was designed to make the expression of numbers on a computer
|
||
easier, since it still shows something about what the number is in binary,
|
||
but uses fewer digits and is easier to read (once you get used to it!). In
|
||
this system, the digits 0 through 9 have the same meaning as in the decimal
|
||
system, but the letters A through F are used to represent the decimal
|
||
numbers 10 through 15.
|
||
|
||
On computers that use the 6502 or 65816 microprocessor, it has become
|
||
customary to designate hexadecimal numbers with a preceding dollar sign.
|
||
(Other computers may use the letter "H", as "HEA" instead of "$EA"). The
|
||
decimal number "234" would be represented in hexadecimal as "$EA", or:
|
||
|
||
$EA = E*16^1 + A*16^0
|
||
$EA = 14*16^1 + 10*16^0
|
||
$EA = 14*16 + 10*1
|
||
$EA = 224 + 10
|
||
$EA = 234
|
||
|
||
It is easy to determine the binary equivalent of a hexadecimal number,
|
||
simply by taking it a hex digit at a time ($E = %1110, and $A = %1010, so
|
||
$EA = %11101010).
|
||
|
||
BIT A single binary digit, which can be on or off, one or zero. It is
|
||
""" the smallest piece of data that can be manipulated at a single time
|
||
by a microprocessor.
|
||
|
||
NIBBLE One half of a byte, or four bits, this term is not used much by
|
||
"""""" non-programmers. The byte $EA is composed of two nibbles, $E and
|
||
$A.
|
||
|
||
BYTE For the sake of convenience, bits are usually clumped together into
|
||
"""" groups of eight. A group of eight bits is called a "byte", and can
|
||
be any number from 0 to 255 (decimal). Thus, the number "0" is "%00000000"
|
||
in binary, and the number "255" is "%11111111" ("$00" and "$FF" in
|
||
hexadecimal, respectively).
|
||
|
||
KILOBYTE Also known as "K", this is from the metric system method of
|
||
"""""""" designating one thousand. However, since computers think in
|
||
binary, 1 kilobyte is not exactly 1000 bytes, but rather 1024 bytes (2^10,
|
||
or 2 multiplied by itself 10 times). Computer memory and disk storage have
|
||
usually been designated in "K", but with larger and larger sizes of memory
|
||
and storage becoming available, this is becoming an outdated term. The
|
||
Apple II Plus came standard with 64K memory (64*1024 bytes = 65536 bytes of
|
||
memory).
|
||
|
||
MEGABYTE Also known as "meg" or "MB", this is also from the metric system
|
||
"""""""" for one million (or a thousand thousand). Again, this does not
|
||
refer simply to 1,000,000 bytes, but to 1024 K, or 1024*1024 = 1,048,576
|
||
bytes. The Apple IIGS is capable of handling up to 8 megs of memory, and a
|
||
common size for a hard disk is 40 megs.
|
||
|
||
MONITOR This is used in two ways on the Apple II:
|
||
"""""""
|
||
1) "monitor" (not capitalized) refers to the screen or CRT (cathode
|
||
ray tube) used as a primary display device. A monitor may be
|
||
monochrome (usually a black background with characters in white,
|
||
green, or amber), or RGB (Red-Green-Blue) color monitors. A
|
||
standard television could be attached to a computer, but the
|
||
resolution is usually not high enough to properly display 80-column
|
||
text in a legible fashion. A IIGS is most useful (and fun!) with
|
||
an RGB monitor, but will work acceptably with monochrome. Monitors
|
||
with names like CGA, EGA, and VGA are primarily for the IBM series
|
||
of computers, and refer to increasing graphics capabilities.
|
||
|
||
2) "Monitor" (capitalized) refers to a program in ROM that is used to
|
||
examine the values of memory addresses, clear the screen, send a
|
||
character to the printer port, read a keypress from the keyboard,
|
||
and many other functions.
|
||
|
||
MOTHERBOARD Refers to the large circuit board inside the computer. The
|
||
""""""""""" motherboard holds the electronic circuitry that makes the
|
||
computer work, as well as places where external devices (such as a
|
||
keyboard, mouse, monitor, etc.) may be attached.
|
||
|
||
SLOT This is a long socket on the motherboard of a computer into which a
|
||
"""" peripheral card may be plugged. The IIGS has seven slots along the
|
||
back side of the motherboard, and another one on the right front that is
|
||
reserved specifically for memory expansion cards.
|
||
|
||
PORT This is the designation given to a place where an external device
|
||
"""" may be attached to the computer. The back panel of the IIGS has a
|
||
printer port, modem port, disk port, RGB monitor port, monochrome monitor
|
||
port, and keyboard port.
|
||
|
||
INTERFACE An interface is something which translates something into
|
||
""""""""" something else. For example, a keyboard is an interface that
|
||
translates letters and numbers that humans understand into digital
|
||
electronic signals that the computer can comprehend and act upon. A
|
||
monitor is an interface that translates those digital electronic signals
|
||
into a visual representation that humans can read.
|
||
|
||
Interfaces are also used between electronic devices. A disk drive
|
||
uses digital information in a manner different from that used in RAM chips,
|
||
so an interface card (also called a controller card) is needed to translate
|
||
from the language understood by the disk drive to that understood by the
|
||
computer.
|
||
|
||
PARALLEL INTERFACE An interface that transmits data to another device
|
||
"""""""""""""""""" through eight or more parallel wires, where each line
|
||
carries a single bit of information. This allows a full byte to be sent at
|
||
once. Parallel cables look like flat ribbons.
|
||
|
||
SERIAL INTERFACE This type of interface sends data to another device as a
|
||
"""""""""""""""" continuous stream of single bits. The cable for a
|
||
serial device is simpler (fewer wires) than the cable for a parallel
|
||
device, and generates less radio frequency interference; however, it may
|
||
not be as fast as a parallel device, since it takes longer to send a stream
|
||
of eight bits than it takes to send eight bits simultaneously.
|
||
|
||
MOUSETEXT A set of pictograms that can be displayed on the standard text
|
||
""""""""" screen of a IIGS, IIc, or enhanced IIe. These lines, arrows,
|
||
pointers, and other symbols can be used to highlight plain text. They
|
||
cannot be directly generated by typing on the keyboard, but must be
|
||
"printed" to the screen in a particular way.
|
||
|
||
INTERRUPT This is a special signal sent to the microprocessor that tells
|
||
""""""""" it to stop what it is doing, and start running a special
|
||
program elsewhere in memory. Certain types of interrupts (such as pressing
|
||
the Control and RESET at the same time) can never be avoided; the
|
||
microprocessor MUST respond to that type of interrupt. Other types of
|
||
interrupts can be temporarily disabled by programs that cannot allow
|
||
themselves to be interrupted (such as the timing routines used by the
|
||
software that controls disk drives).
|
||
|
||
CLASSIC DESK ACCESSORIES (CDAs) Add-on programs that are available at any
|
||
""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""" time, while using any program on the
|
||
IIGS, whether 8-bit or 16-bit, as long as that program does not disable
|
||
interrupts. (A keyboard interrupt is responsible for getting the attention
|
||
of the microprocessor and displaying the CDA screen.)
|
||
|
||
NEW DESK ACCESSORIES (NDAs) Add-on programs that are ONLY available when
|
||
""""""""""""""""""""""""""" running 16-bit software that supports access
|
||
to them (i.e., it must display a menu bar at the top of the screen, and
|
||
have the solid apple symbol displayed on the left edge). These programs
|
||
can be and usually are more complex than CDAs.
|
||
|
||
|
||
NEXT TIME Tune in again next time for a discussion that deals with the
|
||
""""""""" IIGS Classic Desk Accessories, focussing on the all-important
|
||
Control Panel. We'll get to what can be done with a minimal GS system yet.
|
||
I promise.
|
||
|
||
Really.
|
||
|
||
|
||
/////////////////////////////////////////// GEnie_QWIK_QUOTE /////
|
||
/ "You should see what happens when you try to eject a ram disk. /
|
||
/ Chips flying everywhere. It's horrible." /
|
||
///////////////////////////////////////////////// W.CARVER1 ////
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
[EOA]
|
||
[BYT]//////////////////////////////
|
||
NEWSBYTES /
|
||
/////////////////////////////////
|
||
PC Prices: How Low Can They Go?
|
||
"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
|
||
(Reprinted with permission)
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Editorial - PC Prices, How Low Can They Go? 08/13/93
|
||
""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
|
||
WASHINGTON, DC, U.S.A., 1993 AUG 13 (NB) -- By John McCormick.
|
||
|
||
Should you buy now or wait for lower prices?
|
||
|
||
That question, often ignored by computer publications, is really more
|
||
important to most users than whether the latest microprocessor is 2.5-times
|
||
faster than the last release or will really only run their software
|
||
2.25-times more quickly.
|
||
|
||
Because most users never push their hardware or software anywhere near
|
||
the limits, few buyers really care about the fastest hardware and instead
|
||
are far more interested in the cost of just enough power to meet their
|
||
particular needs.
|
||
|
||
These days, that generally means a 386SX if you don't run Windows, and
|
||
a 486 if you do, or whatever Macintosh you can afford if you are
|
||
Apple-oriented.
|
||
|
||
With the steady deterioration in profit margins for manufacturers and
|
||
a consequent Dutch-auction atmosphere among buyers, you really have to give
|
||
some serious thought to non-essential new hardware purchases. (A
|
||
Dutch-auction just means that, unlike normal auctions where people keep
|
||
bidding prices up, prices are constantly marked down until products sell.)
|
||
|
||
Obviously, if you need new hardware then you buy it now, selecting
|
||
among vendors based on price, quality, and options. This also holds true
|
||
if you don't have a computer yet - they are such powerful tools that
|
||
virtually every business and many individuals really need one and the
|
||
price/pay-off ratio for a first computer has been right for almost a
|
||
decade.
|
||
|
||
But what if you would like to upgrade although you don't really need
|
||
to yet? In that case, your real problem is not selecting a vendor but
|
||
deciding if prices will continue to drop.
|
||
|
||
Apple Computer, after suffering the worst fiscal quarter in its
|
||
history, will obviously have to continue its recent price-cutting ways and
|
||
work at reducing costs if it wants to improve or even maintain its market
|
||
share.
|
||
|
||
Price cuts continue for two basic reasons. First, competition is
|
||
really getting to cutthroat proportions as more and more buyers are
|
||
discovering that, to paraphrase Gertrude Stein, a PC is a PC is a PC. And,
|
||
second, efficient PC makers can afford to cut prices because component
|
||
prices are continuing to fall. Intel's 486 processor prices are falling
|
||
and will probably plunge when AMD starts selling large numbers of its
|
||
compatible chip.
|
||
|
||
Also, if you have delayed buying a large hard drive because of high
|
||
costs, then you obviously haven't been paying attention because many drive
|
||
prices have dropped by as much as 50 percent just since January.
|
||
|
||
Don't look for prices to ever go much below $1,000 for a decent
|
||
computer simply because it costs that much to package, market, warehouse,
|
||
and support a hardware package at a reasonable profit, but if you are
|
||
looking at desktop computers priced in the $2,000 to $3,000 range then you
|
||
can expect to see more features along with larger memories and hard drives
|
||
added to specific clone models and lowered prices on big-name computers in
|
||
that price range.
|
||
|
||
If you are looking at workstations, and especially servers priced from
|
||
$5,000 to $20,000 or more, then hold on to your hats because it looks as if
|
||
hardware prices will really plunge.
|
||
|
||
Why wouldn't they, when you can assemble a 66-megahertz 80486- based
|
||
server-type system with 16 megabytes of memory and a pair of gigabyte plus
|
||
hard drives for less than $5,000?
|
||
|
||
Notebooks are the one major area where prices may have bottomed out
|
||
and could even increase. Recently Compaq's notebook manufacturer, Citizen,
|
||
stopped shipping computers to the Texas- based company because the drop in
|
||
value of the US dollar versus the Japanese yen has meant that Citizen had
|
||
lost its entire profit margin on the deals.
|
||
|
||
This upward price pressure may well continue and spread since most
|
||
notebook computers and all notebook display screens are made overseas and
|
||
the dollar shows no real signs of strengthening.
|
||
|
||
(John McCormick/19930716/)
|
||
|
||
Copyright (C) 1993, GEnie. All rights reserved.
|
||
Reproduction or further distribution prohibited.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
[EOA]
|
||
[PDQ]//////////////////////////////
|
||
PD_QUICKVIEW /
|
||
/////////////////////////////////
|
||
GIF.3200 (v0.20)
|
||
""""""""""""""""
|
||
By Mel Fowler
|
||
[MELSOFT]
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Program Name : GIF.3200 v 0.20
|
||
Filename : GIF.3200.BXY V.0.2
|
||
Library Area : 22
|
||
Program Number : 13756
|
||
File Size : 18900
|
||
Program Type : Converts GIF files to IIGS format
|
||
Author : Jonah Stich [J.STICH1]
|
||
Version Reviewed: 0.20
|
||
File Type : SHAREWARE! $5.00
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
ABOUT THE PROGRAM Here is a program that was designed to do only one
|
||
""""""""""""""""" thing, convert Graphic Interchange Format (GIF,
|
||
pronounced "jif") graphics into Apple IIGS 320x200 16- or 3200-color
|
||
graphics. The GIF graphics format was developed by CompuServe to provide a
|
||
means for exchanging graphics among the different computer platforms.
|
||
Until now, Apple IIGS users weren't too keen on GIF, mainly due to the poor
|
||
results seen when GIF graphics were converted to IIGS format. This is no
|
||
longer the case.
|
||
|
||
GIF.3200 v0.20, under development by Jonah Stich, has opened the world
|
||
of GIF graphics to IIGS users. The results are the best graphics that I have
|
||
ever seen on the Apple IIGS, especially those GIF graphics converted by
|
||
GIF.3200 to the 3200 color format. Version 0.20 added two important features
|
||
that no other IIGS GIF conversion program that I know of has: (1) the
|
||
ability to handle more than 16 colors; and (2) the ability to convert
|
||
graphics larger than 320x200 pixels.
|
||
|
||
GIF graphics may range in size from 300x100 to 640x480 and even larger.
|
||
The 640x480 size is common and is roughly twice the size of a IIGS screen.
|
||
There may be 16, 256, or 4092 colours per screen.
|
||
|
||
Converting a 320x200 GIF graphic is simple, just open the GIF file and
|
||
the program will handle the conversion. When you open a file, the IIGS
|
||
screen looks like this:
|
||
|
||
--------------------------------------
|
||
_________
|
||
Horiz size: 640+ |_________|
|
||
_________
|
||
Vert size: 480+ |_________|
|
||
|
||
Color map size: 16777216
|
||
|
||
Pixel map size: 256
|
||
____________________
|
||
Quantize: | Pre-scale COLOR |
|
||
|____________________|
|
||
____ ____
|
||
X Scale: 1:|____| Y Scale: 1:|____|
|
||
|
||
OKAY CANCEL
|
||
---------------------------------------
|
||
|
||
This is what you would see if you opened a GIF file 640x480 with
|
||
16777216 possible colors with 256 colors available per screen. To convert
|
||
this GIF file directly to a 320x200 IIGS screen, just choose an X Scale of
|
||
1:2 ratio and Y Scale also to a 1:2 ratio, which will reduce it to half
|
||
size.
|
||
|
||
There is a second method of converting this GIF file and that is by
|
||
using the Horizontal size and Vertical size boxes. Picture in your mind a
|
||
graphic 640 pixels wide by 480 pixels high. We are trying to draw that on
|
||
a IIGS screen that is 320x200. If the Horizontal size and Vertical size
|
||
boxes both contained 0, your IIGS screen stops when it reaches the 319th
|
||
pixel... that is, it draws only the upper left quarter of the GIF graphic.
|
||
By entering 20, for example, in the Horizontal size box, you move the GIF
|
||
20 pixels to the right and now cover pixels 20 through 340. If you then
|
||
enter 200 in the Vert Size box, the GIF is moved down 200 pixels and you
|
||
are looking at the lower half of the GIF graphics. Therefore, by keeping
|
||
the X and Y Scales at a 1:1 ratio, you select various portions of the
|
||
original GIF graphic and view them at their original resolutions. To view
|
||
the whole thing, you just convert several graphics to IIGS format. This is
|
||
a powerful feature of the program.
|
||
|
||
Note that in the above example the GIF graphic is 480 pixels high. If
|
||
you wanted to center the picture vertically for a full IIGS conversion you
|
||
would set X and Y to 1:2 ratio and input 40 into the Vert Scale.
|
||
|
||
Quantizing determines which algorithm is used to convert the colors.
|
||
There are seven quantizing options. There are four for 16 color format:
|
||
Pre-scale Color, Post-scale Color, Grey scale and Median-Cut. The other
|
||
three are for 3200 color format, 3200 Color (post), 3200 Color (pre), and
|
||
Median-Cut 3200. The "pre" options are quick but crude conversions used
|
||
for looking at the GIF file before converting it. Use these options to
|
||
figure out how to set the scaling and sizing before making your conversion.
|
||
The finest conversions are obtained by using the Median-Cut and Median-Cut
|
||
3200 options. However, these are also the slowest and may take as much as
|
||
20 minutes.
|
||
|
||
GIF.3200 v0.20 is shareware and has a modest $5.00 fee. As you can
|
||
tell by the version number, this program is still unfinished. The last
|
||
rumor that reached our ears was that Mr. Stich was attending UC Berkeley
|
||
and has not been an active Apple II programmer for some time. I am hoping
|
||
that this review will rekindle the author's interest in finishing this
|
||
program and in adding the features he mentioned in the documentation
|
||
(written in 1990), such as converting to a larger format, 320x396 "page"
|
||
format or even multiple screens, saving to other formats (such as APF, PWG,
|
||
3201), and speeding things up. The conversions do take a long time! If
|
||
you download this program and would like to see it developed further, send
|
||
in that all- important shareware fee! You should be able to contact Jonah
|
||
on GEnie at J.STICH1.
|
||
|
||
One last word about converting GIF files. Your conversion is only as
|
||
good as the original graphics. GIF.3200 will not make a bad GIF file into
|
||
a good IIGS graphics.
|
||
|
||
You can download GIF graphic files from most of the computer RTs on
|
||
GEnie, but the best place is from the Photobase RoundTable, keyword PHOTO.
|
||
|
||
|
||
-Mel (MelSoft) Fowler
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
[EOA]
|
||
[MOO]//////////////////////////////
|
||
CowTOONS! /
|
||
/////////////////////////////////
|
||
More Mootations
|
||
""""""""""""""" /\ /\
|
||
By Mike White |o \ / |
|
||
[MWHITE] | \ . . / o |
|
||
| o \_\__/_/ |
|
||
|o /~(oo)~\ o |
|
||
|/^ / \/ \ ^\|
|
||
| / \ o|
|
||
\/ Butter Fly \/
|
||
~~~~~~~~~~
|
||
|
||
(,/~\,)
|
||
(o o) (,/~\,)
|
||
/(.)\ (o o)
|
||
| ~ | /(.)\
|
||
/\ /\ * | ~ | * O__O
|
||
/ ^ ^ \ ) / \ / \ ) (oo)
|
||
| |/ | ^ ^ |/ /\/\
|
||
\ _)-(_ / \ _)-(_ / ( >< )/*
|
||
-~~~ ~~~- -~~ ~~- -~ ~-
|
||
|
||
Kangamoos Kangamoo Rat
|
||
~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
||
|
||
|
||
(__I__)
|
||
(oo oo)
|
||
/-------\/^\/------\ Siamese Cows
|
||
/ | || || | \ ~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
||
* ||----|| ||----|| * Joined at the horn
|
||
~~ ~~ ~~ ~~
|
||
|
||
[*][*][*]
|
||
|
||
|
||
(__) Watch for another thunderin' herd of
|
||
( oo ) Moo Fun from Mike White in the next
|
||
( \/ ) issue of GEnieLamp.
|
||
( __ )
|
||
( || || ) If you have an idea for a CowTOON, we
|
||
~~ ~~ would like to see it. And, if we pick
|
||
your CowTOON for publishing in GEnieLamp
|
||
Michelin Cow we will credit your account with 2 hours
|
||
"""""""""""" of GEnie non-prime time!
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
[EOA]
|
||
[LIB]//////////////////////////////
|
||
THE ONLINE LIBRARY /
|
||
/////////////////////////////////
|
||
Yours For the Downloading
|
||
"""""""""""""""""""""""""
|
||
By Mel Fowler
|
||
[MELSOFT]
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
TAKE ANOTHER LOOK Here are some of the recent uploads to the A2 library
|
||
""""""""""""""""" that deserve a second look:
|
||
|
||
Number: 21062 Name: UNDER.RUG.BXY
|
||
Address: LUNATIC Date: 930719
|
||
Approximate # of bytes: 4480
|
||
Number of Accesses: 64 Library: 6
|
||
|
||
Description: Are you a teacher or parent with small children? Do you
|
||
wish you could somehow hide Finder's trash can so that the kids couldn't
|
||
throw away important files? Now you can! Under the Rug is a Finder
|
||
extension that simply hides the trash can while it's installed. You can
|
||
get it back temporarily by holding down the Shift and Delete keys while
|
||
Finder is starting up. This program is $3 shareware, Copyright 1992-1993
|
||
by Lunatic E'Sex. Send fees to the address enclosed, or send a $3 GEnie
|
||
Gift of Time to LUNATIC. Includes a "Read Me" file. Packed with GSHK.
|
||
Includes resources.
|
||
|
||
Keywords: Under the Rug,Rug,Finder extension,FExt,Trash Can,hide
|
||
trash,kids,children
|
||
|
||
[*][*][*]
|
||
|
||
|
||
Number: 21061 Name: FIXFONTMGR.BXY
|
||
Address: BRYAN.ZAK Date: 930718
|
||
Approximate # of bytes: 2688
|
||
Number of Accesses: 301 Library: 6
|
||
|
||
Description: If you use System 6.0.1 this is a *MUST* download. Nathan
|
||
Mates discovered a bug in the ChooseFont routine and has been nice enough
|
||
to write this patch program. If you have Pointless, it will eliminate the
|
||
need to be sure that there is at least one bitmap of each TrueType font in
|
||
the system. Packed with ShrinkIt.
|
||
|
||
Keywords: Font Manager,Pointless,bug,patch,fix,bugfix,6.0.1,system
|
||
6.0.1, Westcode
|
||
|
||
[*][*][*]
|
||
|
||
|
||
Number: 21071 Name: NTV16.BXY
|
||
Address: G.MCHUGH1 Date: 930720
|
||
Approximate # of bytes: 500096
|
||
Number of Accesses: 30 Library: 25
|
||
|
||
Description: Another GREAT music & graphics disk from the One World
|
||
Wizards. You can read about this disk before downloading it by listing the
|
||
text file, "About NTV16" located nearby in the library. Enjoy! This is a
|
||
packed disk. Use ShrinkIt to unpack to a blank 3.5" disk. [Note: There
|
||
have been problem reports from ROM 03 owners concerning the NTV disks. If
|
||
you have a ROM 03, this program might not work for you.]
|
||
|
||
Keywords: Sound,Music,One World,Dr. Tom,Vamps,NTV
|
||
|
||
[*][*][*]
|
||
|
||
Number: 21108 Name: POWERPLAY.BXY V1.1
|
||
Address: P.BRINKLEY Date: 930802
|
||
Approximate # of bytes: 50176
|
||
Number of Accesses: 119 Library: 21
|
||
|
||
Description: PowerPlay is a GS program containing 4 different games.
|
||
An earlier version (1.0) is not System 6 compatible. The 4 games are: Tron
|
||
-- A 2-player light-cycle race game. FourPlay -- A brain-twisting
|
||
Tetris-like game. GridLock -- A puzzle with ever-increasing complexity.
|
||
PIGnBULL -- A number matching game, similar to Mastermind. This program is
|
||
FREEWARE. Have fun. The GASMAN
|
||
|
||
Keywords: Powerplay,tron,pignbull,gridlock,fourplay,gasman,mastermind
|
||
|
||
[*][*][*]
|
||
|
||
Number: 21041 Name: VIRTUAL.BXY
|
||
Address: B.DUNST Date: 930712
|
||
Approximate # of bytes: 54272
|
||
Number of Accesses: 156 Library: 22
|
||
|
||
Description: This is an awesome little program that will put your
|
||
graphics on 'walls' and enable you to walk around this 'virtual art
|
||
gallery.' It accepts $C1 uncompressed graphics, $C0 Paintworks 320 (top
|
||
half only), PackBytes/Eagle format (all), and Apple Preferred Format.
|
||
Requires System 5.0 or higher, 1 meg of ram. Written by the infamous Jason
|
||
Harper! Compressed with GS ShrinkIt version 1.1. This little ditty is
|
||
really something. I would recommend getting it. Ever play Wolfenstein on
|
||
the IBM? This is just like walking through those hallways and seeing the
|
||
pictures on the walls scale. Uploaded by the one, the only...B.DUNST!!!
|
||
|
||
Keywords: Virtual Reality,Art Gallery,Slide Show,Jason Harper, Pictures,
|
||
Graphics
|
||
|
||
[*][*][*]
|
||
|
||
Number: 21034 Name: SAP.V0.7.BXY
|
||
Address: K.MOCK Date: 930710
|
||
Approximate # of bytes: 212864
|
||
Number of Accesses: 79 Library: 22
|
||
|
||
Description: Updated version of SAP, the Simple Animation Program. SAP
|
||
is the only freeware animation system for the GS, and the only one which is
|
||
still supported! This version adds additional power to version 0.5. It
|
||
allows for user interaction and provides looping capabilities. See the
|
||
accompanying SAPDEMOV0.7 for a demonstration of the new capabilities. This
|
||
disk contains complete docs and a tutorial. A GS with a hard drive,
|
||
accelerator, and 2 megs of RAM is recommended, but not required. Unpack
|
||
with ShrinkIt GS and you're off...
|
||
|
||
Keywords: SAP,0.7,animation,multimedia,freeware,graphics,sound
|
||
|
||
[*][*][*]
|
||
|
||
|
||
Number: 20996 Name: CAF.RESUR.BXY
|
||
Address: H.PORTNOY Date: 930630
|
||
Approximate # of bytes: 50816
|
||
Number of Accesses: 97 Library: 40
|
||
|
||
Description: CHANGE-A-FILE V.4.17 and RESURRECTION V.2.9. CAF, a batch
|
||
file utility: Read AWP and TXT files; convert AWP to TXT, TXT to AWP, and
|
||
AWP 3.0 to 2.x; Repair ADB and AWP files; change file info, strip linefeeds
|
||
and more. RESURRECTION restores files even when disk directories are
|
||
damaged. Docs included. Partially free and partially shareware. $10 for
|
||
both.
|
||
|
||
Keywords: AppleWorks,CHGFIL,Resurrection,Repair,AWP,ADB,Strip,
|
||
Linefeeds,Restore
|
||
|
||
[*][*][*]
|
||
|
||
|
||
Number: 20975 Name: GS.ENTERTAN.BXY
|
||
Address: C.KERN1 Date: 930623
|
||
Approximate # of bytes: 38528
|
||
Number of Accesses: 68 Library: 25
|
||
|
||
Description: GS Entertainment is a program that can show various
|
||
graphic formats and play sound or music. It can show PNT, PIC, ANI and
|
||
3200 graphic images in a series while playing music or sound. It can also
|
||
play sound and music as a jukebox. The sounds and music it can play are:
|
||
SoundSmith, SynthLAB, Music Studio, HyperStudio and rSounds. Written by
|
||
Clayburn Juniel, AzApple User Group. Packed with GS ShrinkIt 1.1. [Note:
|
||
This is a re-upload of file #20869, which has been deleted from the
|
||
library. If you already have GS.Entertainment, you don't need this.]
|
||
|
||
Keywords: music,graphics,sound,jukebox,SoundSmith,SynthLAB,MusicStudio,
|
||
rSounds,Hyper
|
||
|
||
[*][*][*]
|
||
|
||
|
||
Number: 20935 Name: OFFLINE.MGR.BNY
|
||
Address: T.ZUCHOWSKI Date: 930620
|
||
Approximate # of bytes: 5504
|
||
Number of Accesses: 18 Library: 18
|
||
|
||
Description: With the abolishment of free areas on GEnie, we're all
|
||
looking for ways to minimize connect time. Offline processors like GEM,
|
||
Copilot and others can work wonders, but they don't work with the Modem MGR
|
||
telecom program. The tips in this "Offline Cookbook for Modem MGR" will
|
||
show you how to get a lot of stuff done offline where the billing clock
|
||
isn't running.
|
||
|
||
Keywords: Modem MGR,offline,off line,cookbook,telecom
|
||
|
||
[*][*][*]
|
||
|
||
|
||
Number: 20934 Name: OFFLINE.TIC.BNY
|
||
Address: T.ZUCHOWSKI Date: 930620
|
||
Approximate # of bytes: 5888
|
||
Number of Accesses: 51 Library: 18
|
||
|
||
Description: With the abolishment of free areas on GEnie, we're all
|
||
looking for ways to minimize connect time. Offline processors like GEM,
|
||
Copilot and others can work wonders, but some computers don't have the
|
||
horsepower needed to run them, and sometimes you just want to get online
|
||
"quick and dirty". The tips in this "Offline Cookbook for Talk Is Cheap"
|
||
will show you how to get a lot of stuff done offline where the billing
|
||
clock isn't running.
|
||
|
||
Keywords: Talk Is Cheap,TIC,offline,off line,cookbook,telecom
|
||
|
||
[*][*][*]
|
||
|
||
Number: 20933 Name: OFFLINE.PT3.BNY
|
||
Address: T.ZUCHOWSKI Date: 930620
|
||
Approximate # of bytes: 4352
|
||
Number of Accesses: 145 Library: 18
|
||
|
||
Description: With the abolishment of free areas on GEnie, we're all
|
||
looking for ways to minimize connect time. Offline processors like GEM,
|
||
Copilot and others can work wonders, but some computers don't have the
|
||
horsepower needed to run them, and sometimes you just want to get online
|
||
"quick and dirty". The tips in this "Offline Cookbook for ProTERM 3" will
|
||
show you how to get a lot of stuff done offline where the billing clock
|
||
isn't running.
|
||
|
||
Keywords: Proterm,offline,off line,cookbook,telecom
|
||
|
||
[*][*][*]
|
||
|
||
|
||
Number: 20912 Name: SSMITH.HELP.BXY
|
||
Address: T.WARD5 Date: 930617
|
||
Approximate # of bytes: 12544
|
||
Number of Accesses: 80 Library: 25
|
||
|
||
Description: A simple guide on how to write SoundSmith songs. Its
|
||
main focus is on transcribing sheet music into the SoundSmith
|
||
spreadsheet-style format. But you should be able to start writing your own
|
||
songs after reading this. This archive contains a standard text file, and
|
||
an AppleWorks WP file. Packed with GSHK.
|
||
|
||
Keywords:SoundSmith,songwriting,transcribing,sheet music,scales,
|
||
notes,help
|
||
[*][*][*]
|
||
|
||
|
||
Number: 20907 Name: SUPER.TTT.BXY
|
||
Address: C.HARTLEY3 Date: 930616
|
||
Approximate # of bytes: 4480
|
||
Number of Accesses: 72 Library: 33
|
||
|
||
Description: Play a friend or play the computer! Super Tic Tac Toe has
|
||
sixteen squares instead of nine, and more ways to win. A game of strategy.
|
||
FREEWARE. Enjoy.
|
||
|
||
Keywords: Hartley,Tic Tac Toe,TicTacToe,strategy
|
||
|
||
[*][*][*]
|
||
|
||
|
||
Number: 20905 Name: THEATER.BXY
|
||
Address: J.RASH4 Date: 930616
|
||
Approximate # of bytes: 3456
|
||
Number of Accesses: 31 Library: 23
|
||
|
||
Description: This is a desktop picture for Color CDev. It was inspired
|
||
by Mystery Science Theater 3000. Apple II Forever!
|
||
|
||
Keywords: Mohawk,picture,CDev,Color CDev,MST3000,Ozoneman
|
||
|
||
[*][*][*]
|
||
|
||
|
||
Sometimes files are removed from the library after we publish this
|
||
magazine. In many cases, the removed file has been replaced with an
|
||
updated version of that file. If you can't find one of the files listed
|
||
here, there is a way to check for a newer version. Do a keyword search
|
||
on the library using a word that describes the file you are look- ing for.
|
||
Chances are, you will find a newer version of that file, or another file
|
||
that meets your expectations.
|
||
|
||
|
||
////////////////////////////// GEnie_QWIK_QUOTE ////
|
||
/ "Spooj is the scientific name for 'finger mung'" /
|
||
/////////////////////////////////// BILL.LYNN ////
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
[EOA]
|
||
[WHO]//////////////////////////////
|
||
PROFILES /
|
||
/////////////////////////////////
|
||
Who's Who In Apple II
|
||
"""""""""""""""""""""
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
>>> WHO'S WHO <<<
|
||
"""""""""""""""""
|
||
~ GEnieLamp Profile: Joe Kohn, Publisher-Editor, Shareware Solutions II ~
|
||
|
||
|
||
GEnieLamp> Would you tell us how you first became interested in the
|
||
""""""""" Apple II? Was it your first computer?
|
||
|
||
Kohn> I bought my first computer in about 1980. At that time, I narrowed
|
||
"""" my choices down to two competing systems: The Apple II and the
|
||
Atari 400. I clearly remember reading that there would be a shake-out in
|
||
the computer industry, and believed that I should purchase a computer from
|
||
the company that I thought would be around for a few years. Based on that
|
||
sound reasoning, I bought an Atari 400.
|
||
|
||
A year or so later, I went back to my computer dealer, and asked about
|
||
a new peripheral that I'd heard about. He explained to me what a disk
|
||
drive was, and after having used cassettes for storage, I wanted one.
|
||
Unfortunately, the dealer explained, disk drives cost as much as my entire
|
||
system had cost, and they couldn't be connected to the Atari 400.
|
||
|
||
I wanted a new computer. I wanted one with disk drives and with lots
|
||
of power. I wanted a computer that came from a visionary company that
|
||
would be in business for years and years. So, I got an Osborne I.
|
||
|
||
A year or so after that, I got an Osborne Executive. It was
|
||
everything I could have wanted in a computer. It was portable, it had
|
||
built-in parallel and serial ports, it had a large 8" screen, it ran CP/M,
|
||
and best of all, it came bundled with word processing, spreadsheet and
|
||
database software. The database software, quite literally, changed my
|
||
life. I realized that computers could store any type of information, and I
|
||
decided that I wanted to master dBase and offer my services setting up and
|
||
maintaining databases.
|
||
|
||
Around that time, I was visiting a friend who'd just gotten an Apple
|
||
II. We were arguing about the merits of our computer systems. I told my
|
||
friend: "I can run WordStar on my system". He said: "So can I." I then
|
||
told him: "I can keep financial records on my computer with a spreadsheet.
|
||
He said: "So can I." Finally, I used my ace in the hole, and said: "I can
|
||
keep any type of records using dBase." His response, of course, was "So
|
||
can I."
|
||
|
||
He then used his ace in the hole. He sat me down in front of his
|
||
computer, and started up a program named Lode Runner. He watched as my jaw
|
||
fell, and smugly asked me if my computer could do that.
|
||
|
||
Two days later, I purchased an Apple II+.
|
||
|
||
GEnieLamp> You used to be sysop of the Apple II forums on The Source, one
|
||
""""""""" of the major commercial networks for individual users (now,
|
||
alas, defunct). When and how did that happen?
|
||
|
||
Kohn> It was a case of coincidence and serendipity. In the mid-1980s, a
|
||
"""" good friend and I, George Goldsmit (the owner of The Apple Resource
|
||
Center in Tracy, CA) put our heads together trying to figure out a way to
|
||
support our Apple II habits. We set up and ran the Apple II Information
|
||
Exchange (ATIE), which we envisioned as being a super User Group for User
|
||
Groups. We were going to supply the Apple II user group community with
|
||
technical information, articles for newsletters, and had plans to collect
|
||
every single Apple II public domain program ever written.
|
||
|
||
George lived in San Jose at the time, not too far from Apple's
|
||
headquarters. We registered ATIE with Apple's User Group Connection, and
|
||
gave George's address.
|
||
|
||
In late 1986, the Source Information Network was looking for someone
|
||
to take over and manage their Apple II forums. They contacted Apple to get
|
||
a listing of Apple II User Groups based in Silicon Valley, and guess who
|
||
appeared first in the alphabetical listing that they received?
|
||
|
||
Soon after we took over the Source's Applesig, George founded the ARC,
|
||
and no longer had the time to devote to the Source, so Applesig became a
|
||
"one-man band" for more than two years. During that time, I provided all
|
||
the ongoing Apple II technical support and still had time to upload
|
||
thousands of programs to the library.
|
||
|
||
I continued to run The Source's Applesig right up until its demise.
|
||
|
||
GEnieLamp> Big Red Computer Club is now known as the place that has
|
||
""""""""" resurrected classic Apple II software titles from publishers
|
||
such as Activision. What was BRCC like when you became its freeware and
|
||
shareware librarian?
|
||
|
||
Kohn> I went to work for Big Red Computer Club two days after the Source
|
||
"""" closed down. At that time, BRCC was an Apple II user group and was
|
||
essentially a family operation. I worked from my house, nearly 2,000 miles
|
||
from the BRCC office. It was a great match, and I think that John Wrenholt
|
||
and I were a great team. I wrote approximately 50% of BRCC's monthly
|
||
newsletter and supplied 90% of all the Apple II and IIGS freeware and
|
||
shareware in BRCC's library. I submitted all my articles via modem, mailed
|
||
in all the master disks, and never once visited the BRCC offices.
|
||
|
||
After working for BRCC for two years, the organization had somewhat of
|
||
a change of focus. It was then that BRCC started licensing and purchasing
|
||
Apple II commercial software, and started its meteoric climb to become the
|
||
largest publisher of Apple II software.
|
||
|
||
GEnieLamp> When you announced Shareware Solutions II, you joked that
|
||
""""""""" organizations that hire you fold not long afterward... The
|
||
Source, Apple IIGS Buyers' Guide, and now inCider/A+. The Big Red Computer
|
||
Club has survived your involvement. When did you leave there, and why?
|
||
|
||
Kohn> It was a joke, but it has some validity. The Source sold their
|
||
"""" operation to their nearest competitor, who promptly put them out of
|
||
business. Then, the Apple IIGS Buyers' Guide sold their operation to their
|
||
nearest competitor, who promptly put them out of business. Then,
|
||
inCider/A+ sold their operation to their nearest competitor, who promptly
|
||
put them out of business. I was starting to see a trend.
|
||
|
||
With Big Red Computer Club, we had an amicable parting of the ways
|
||
about 1.5 years ago. And, despite my leaving, BRCC has flourished ever
|
||
since.
|
||
|
||
GEnieLamp> You've been described as a "shareware champion" and "shareware
|
||
""""""""" evangelist". How did this start?
|
||
|
||
Kohn> The very day I purchased my Apple II+, I also bought 100 blank
|
||
"""" disks, and on my way home, I stopped by the offices of the San
|
||
Francisco Apple Corps. Within a few hours, those 100 disks were filled.
|
||
|
||
That was long before the concept of shareware was developed, so all
|
||
the thousands of programs on those 100 disks were all free. There was just
|
||
something appealing to me about free software.
|
||
|
||
GEnieLamp> Do you yourself write programs?
|
||
"""""""""
|
||
|
||
Kohn> Not really.
|
||
""""
|
||
|
||
GEnieLamp> Shareware users clearly have an obligation to pay for programs
|
||
""""""""" they keep. Do shareware authors have any responsibilities?
|
||
|
||
Kohn> At this year's KansasFest, I gave a talk on the very subject of
|
||
"""" shareware author's responsibilities. I expected my talk to be
|
||
quite controversial, and was literally shocked when shareware programmers
|
||
applauded me at the end. At some point, I hope to use those remarks to
|
||
develop a "Shareware Code of Ethics" .
|
||
|
||
In short, I do feel that a shareware author has certain
|
||
responsibilities to their customers. If nothing else, they owe people who
|
||
remit payments a note of thanks. It amazes me how many irate letters I get
|
||
from users of shareware who tell me how bad and mad they feel after sending
|
||
in money, and never hear anything back from the programmer, not even a 19
|
||
cent post card that acknowledges receipt of the payment, or offers a kind
|
||
word of thanks. Often, programmers forget the importance of courtesy, and
|
||
I'd like to change that.
|
||
|
||
I do have many other ideas on how shareware authors can maximize their
|
||
profits with a minimal amount of effort, but I'd like to save those for
|
||
Shareware Solutions II. Once I have written up the "Shareware Code of
|
||
Ethics", I will be happy to share "the secrets of the stars".
|
||
|
||
GEnieLamp> Shareware Solutions was the name of your column, which of
|
||
""""""""" course focused on shareware, freeware, and public domain
|
||
software. Does the newsletter only cover shareware, freeware, and PD?
|
||
|
||
Kohn> The title "Shareware Solutions II" is a misnomer, as in many ways,
|
||
"""" it turned out to be more like inCider: The Next Generation. I
|
||
chose the name for one reason and one reason only: name recognition. I
|
||
figured that after having written a column with that title for 4-5 years,
|
||
first in the Apple IIGS Buyer's Guide and then in inCider/A+, that it would
|
||
be a recognizable name for a new publication.
|
||
|
||
Of course, Shareware Solutions II is about shareware, but it's also
|
||
about solutions. Above all, it's about the Apple II.
|
||
|
||
Obviously, I'm biased, so let me share with you a few letters I've
|
||
received from subscribers. They can tell you all about Shareware
|
||
Solutions II.
|
||
|
||
David Kerwood writes: "I just received my copy of Shareware Solutions
|
||
II, and I can tell you that I was very impressed with what you have done
|
||
here. I suppose I have gotten most of the A2 newsletter-format
|
||
publications that have ever been published since 1986 (when I first
|
||
discovered the world of Apple II computing), and this has been the best
|
||
premier publication in this genre that I have ever received."
|
||
|
||
William Scott writes: "Congratulations on the first issue of Shareware
|
||
Solutions II. It is more than I imagined. It is well written,
|
||
informative, and contains information not found anywhere else. Thank you
|
||
for taking the chance, and <20>supporting those who support the Apple II.<2E>"
|
||
|
||
Bill Ingraham writes: "Issue 1 of Shareware Solutions II is really
|
||
great. I had envisioned it as being all about downloading, and maybe a
|
||
little news. Instead, it is loaded with news of the II world."
|
||
|
||
And, if I remember correctly, the interviewer also had a few choice
|
||
words to say about Shareware Solutions II. Your turn, Mr. Cuff.
|
||
|
||
GEnieLamp> Thanks for ruining any chance I had at presenting a semblance
|
||
""""""""" of journalistic impartiality! <laughs> I believe I said that
|
||
it was value for money, which in my personal opinion it certainly is.
|
||
|
||
Kohn> You wrote: "My rating of Shareware Solutions II, overall, is
|
||
"""" 'must-have'. The content makes you feel you're really getting your
|
||
money's worth."
|
||
|
||
GEnieLamp> You announced your decision to start Shareware Solutions II in
|
||
""""""""" what proved to be the final edition of inCider. Did you
|
||
decide to start your own newsletter because you knew inCider's days were
|
||
numbered?
|
||
|
||
Kohn> Yes. I knew of inCider's plans at least 6 months before readers
|
||
"""" did, yet I decided to stick it out to the very end. It was only
|
||
after my final articles had been submitted to inCider/A+ that I went
|
||
forward with my plans to self-publish my own Apple II-oriented newsletter.
|
||
Shareware Solutions II was announced in the July 1993 issue of inCider/A+,
|
||
as I knew that was to be the final issue.
|
||
|
||
As an aside, I'd like to point out that I got in the last word. The
|
||
last words on the last page of the last issue of inCider were supplied by
|
||
me. Those magical words, of course, were "Apple II Forever".
|
||
|
||
GEnieLamp> This is your first venture as publisher and editor-in-chief.
|
||
""""""""" Do you find it a different experience from that of being a
|
||
contributor to magazines such as inCider/A+ and The Apple IIGS Buyer's
|
||
Guide?
|
||
|
||
Kohn> It's like night and day. As a Contributing Editor, I simply
|
||
"""" emailed my articles as ASCII text, and several months later, they
|
||
appeared with art work and were polished products. Now, the text is just
|
||
the first step of a long process. After writing each article, I have to
|
||
lay it out, test print it many times to make sure everything fits and looks
|
||
good, bring the completed newsletter to the printers, type mailing labels,
|
||
lick stamps, and bring them to the post office.
|
||
|
||
GEnieLamp> What hardware and software are you using to produce the
|
||
""""""""" newsletter?
|
||
|
||
Kohn> I own an Apple IIGS, and I'm writing all the articles with
|
||
"""" AppleWorks v3.0, beefed up with TimeOut Thesaurus and UltraMacros.
|
||
I try to do as much editing and revising as I can with AppleWorks Classic.
|
||
Then, I load the articles into AppleWorks GS's word processing module,
|
||
where I'll use the Find and Replace function to add "smart quotes", and
|
||
then finally, copy each article into AppleWorks GS's Page Layout module,
|
||
where all the layout and last-minute editing is done.
|
||
|
||
Then, it's a simple matter of printing it out on my Hewlett-Packard
|
||
LaserJet IIP Plus and then bringing my final copy to the printer for mass
|
||
duplication.
|
||
|
||
GEnieLamp> The professional look of the first issue brings to mind the
|
||
""""""""" frequent cry "I didn't know you could do that on an Apple II!"
|
||
Obviously it can be done... but is desktop publishing with a IIGS and a
|
||
laser printer easy to set up and use? What has your experience been?
|
||
|
||
Kohn> Learning how to use a desktop publishing program is the easy part.
|
||
"""" Learning how to use that program to create a work of art is the
|
||
difficult part.
|
||
|
||
GEnieLamp> Is Shareware Solutions II essentially a one-man operation?
|
||
"""""""""
|
||
|
||
Kohn> Not essentially. It _is_ a one-man operation. I do everything.
|
||
""""
|
||
|
||
GEnieLamp> Then you also track the subscriptions using your Apple II?
|
||
"""""""""
|
||
|
||
Kohn> The AppleWorks v3.0 database is just ideal for keeping track of
|
||
"""" subscribers.
|
||
|
||
GEnieLamp> What do you enjoy doing other than writing? What do wish you
|
||
""""""""" had more time for?
|
||
|
||
Kohn> A couple of years ago, I looked down and saw what others refer to
|
||
"""" as "computer stomach", and I didn't like what I saw, so I joined a
|
||
local gym and now work out twice a week. I used to ski a lot, but have
|
||
only gotten in one day a year on the slopes ever since I started working
|
||
full-time with my Apple II. I'd like to go skiing a little more. I also
|
||
like to hike, and I love to go to the monthly star party held atop a local
|
||
mountain. I like to go to the movies, and I like to go to my local
|
||
library. I like to go see the Oakland A's play, but they've been breaking
|
||
my heart recently. I also like to listen to music, but find it too
|
||
distracting when working.
|
||
|
||
I like to share my computer expertise, as a volunteer, to non-profit
|
||
organizations, and through CompuMentor (a San Francisco-based non-profit
|
||
organization) have helped more than 30 social service organizations and
|
||
schools to use their Apple II's more efficiently. I also like to share my
|
||
expertise with my neighbors, and am currently President of the GravenStein
|
||
Apple IIGS User Group.
|
||
|
||
But, above all, I'm going into my second decade of a love affair. I
|
||
love the Apple II.
|
||
|
||
GEnieLamp> Shareware Solutions II is currently a bimonthly. Does this
|
||
""""""""" seem like a realistic schedule, or do you feel you'll be going
|
||
monthly soon?
|
||
|
||
Kohn> As of today, I only have "one issue under my belt" so it's
|
||
"""" premature to say when Shareware Solutions II will become a monthly.
|
||
|
||
GEnieLamp> You've recently acquired an Internet address. Internet mail
|
||
""""""""" and newsgroups seem to be very hot topics right now. Will you
|
||
be addressing this in Shareware Solutions II?
|
||
|
||
Kohn> I've been active on the Internet and Usenet for nearly 2 years, but
|
||
"""" it has only been during the past 6 months that it dawned on me that
|
||
the Internet contains the entire accumulated knowledge of all mankind, and
|
||
it's all just a keystroke or two away. The much-hyped "super data highway"
|
||
already exists, and in Issue #2 of Shareware Solutions II, I will have a
|
||
long article all about the Internet. I'll be looking at "the net" from an
|
||
Apple II user's perspective, and will be providing very specific
|
||
instructions on how to access it and how to use it.
|
||
|
||
GEnieLamp> What else can people look for in future issues of Shareware
|
||
""""""""" Solutions II?
|
||
|
||
Kohn> Shareware Solutions II will provide on-going coverage of the
|
||
"""" Apple II family of computers.
|
||
|
||
What I'm most excited about today is "Such a Deal", a new column that
|
||
will appear starting in Issue #2. I have been making arrangements with
|
||
Apple II software publishers and hardware manufacturers who agree to give
|
||
subscribers of Shareware Solutions II special discounted pricing on their
|
||
products. Just as in Issue #1, Seven Hills Software offered subscribers a
|
||
50% discount on most of their software, Issue #2 will contain special
|
||
offers from at least five well-known (or soon to be well-known) Apple II
|
||
developers.
|
||
|
||
In addition, there will be general Apple II hints and tips, articles
|
||
that should help modem owners to have more fun with their modems, and of
|
||
course, write-ups of the latest and greatest Apple II freeware and
|
||
shareware.
|
||
|
||
My overall goal is to make Shareware Solutions II an indispensable
|
||
resource for the Apple II community, and to make it the best magazine
|
||
available for the Apple II. Based on the feedback so far, it looks like I
|
||
just might be succeeding on both counts.
|
||
|
||
|
||
[If you'd like to subscribe, you can contact Joe Kohn online at
|
||
J.KOHN, or write to him at:
|
||
|
||
Joe Kohn
|
||
166 Alpine Street
|
||
San Rafael, CA 94901
|
||
USA
|
||
|
||
A 12-issue subscription costs $25 within North America; $40 for
|
||
overseas mail delivery. Checks and money orders only, payable to Joe Kohn.
|
||
For more information, send a self-addressed stamped envelope.]
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
[EOA]
|
||
[FUN]//////////////////////////////
|
||
SEARCH_ME /
|
||
/////////////////////////////////
|
||
Online Puzzle Fun
|
||
"""""""""""""""""
|
||
By Scott R. Garrigus
|
||
[S.GARRIGUS]
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
>>> SEARCH_ME! <<<
|
||
""""""""""""""""""
|
||
|
||
THIS HAS GOT TO BE A MISTAKE! A couple of months ago my brother went out
|
||
""""""""""""""""""""""""""""" shopping for a new computer. Now after
|
||
all these years of having Atari around the house and me being an avid Atari
|
||
user, you can imagine my surprise when he came home with a Tandy Sensation.
|
||
"This has got to be a mistake!", I thought to myself. "This is nothing but
|
||
an IBM PC clone!". Well, at least that's what I thought at the time; but
|
||
not anymore. I've heard all the war stories about how IBM's have all these
|
||
problems and how Windows can't do this and Windows can't do that. Well,
|
||
let me tell you, after about a month of playing around with it, I have to
|
||
admit, I really like it! I can't say I like it better than my Atari. No,
|
||
Atari will always be my first love; but working with Windows on an IBM can
|
||
be a lot of fun!
|
||
|
||
As you've probably guessed by now, this month I visited the Windows
|
||
Roundtable. I must say that after being around for only about a year, they
|
||
are really doing a great job over there. The BBS is already loaded with
|
||
topics on all kinds of Windows subjects from General Windows Questions to
|
||
Windows Development. There are also separate categories for Windows NT and
|
||
for many Windows software vendors too. They have RTC's every day of the
|
||
week except for Saturday and Sunday. Even Sysops need a little time off,
|
||
you know. :) Of course, most of my time has been spent in the software
|
||
library downloading files and having lots and lots of fun playing with some
|
||
of the programs. You'll find games, pictures, .WAV files, and utilities
|
||
galore here.
|
||
|
||
So if you've got an IBM with Windows, by all means visit the Windows
|
||
RT! To get there type either M1335 or WINDOWS at any GEnie prompt. First,
|
||
however, be sure and solve this month<74>s puzzle, which is full of all those
|
||
wonderful Windows buzzwords you ought to know! I don't do all this work
|
||
for nothing! ;) Until next month!
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
>>> WINDOWS ROUNDTABLE <<<
|
||
""""""""""""""""""""""""""
|
||
~ Keyword: WINDOWS, Page 1335 ~
|
||
|
||
W A G Y E S W W D C R M T C C H P A E Q F N
|
||
O R F G N I K S A T I T L U M O Y L R R W J
|
||
R C A N J V P Z B R E B S N W L M B Z O T T
|
||
D E B L R V O J V K Q A O E O F M E T S Y S
|
||
P T A R T F H D A Y A L R R W T E M T G S U
|
||
E D S D F N S I F T C P E E L A R Z S I F S
|
||
R B I B O G O O I H O E H M O A V O A D U T
|
||
F Z C V S M T V C I I R A S K J N F N P Q A
|
||
E N G F O U O R N I C W L O U E J D I P O R
|
||
C D G K R L H T E Z S L C T F R H F R L S T
|
||
T X Q K C T P F J D M A J Y N M B K Q S E U
|
||
T Q M E I I U R L T R S B H G S H T I O X P
|
||
G R J P M M C J X G B O W L Q X W C N B V E
|
||
X M P Y I E Q B B B R N C I A V J O Q I E Z
|
||
D L K T U D P W R A H N K E N U N V D G A D
|
||
T B S E B I V E N T U R A R R D S L K N V P
|
||
I P G U V A W I N C L O C K B Q O I V M I H
|
||
C R Q R G O O I Q F H V C Y A A U W V B A W
|
||
X Z T T P D L B R P A U E U T H Q Z S Z M A
|
||
|
||
BORLAND GFABASIC MICROSOFT
|
||
MULTIMEDIA MULTITASKING NORTON
|
||
PAINTBRUSH PHOTOSHOP POWERBBS
|
||
POWERPOINT RECORDER STARTUP
|
||
SYSTEM TRUETYPE VENTURA
|
||
VISUALBASIC WAVFILE WINCLOCK
|
||
WINDOWS WINDOWSNT WORDPERFECT
|
||
|
||
[*][*][*]
|
||
|
||
|
||
GIVE UP? You will find the answers in the LOG OFF column at the end of
|
||
"""""""" the magazine.
|
||
|
||
This puzzle was created with a freeware program called
|
||
SEARCH-ME, an Atari ST program by David Becker.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
[EOA]
|
||
[CON]//////////////////////////////
|
||
CONNECTIONS /
|
||
/////////////////////////////////
|
||
Online Thoughts
|
||
"""""""""""""""
|
||
By Al Fasoldt
|
||
[A.FASOLDT]
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
>>> ARE WE READY FOR MULTIMEDIA? <<<
|
||
""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
|
||
~ Copyright 1993 by Al Fasoldt. All rights reserved. ~
|
||
|
||
IS _IT_ READY FOR US? When television was invented, the world was abuzz
|
||
""""""""""""""""""""" with talk about the wonders of the new technology.
|
||
Most of them have been wasted, as we all know by now --or as we soon
|
||
discover after an afternoon of sex-and-scandal shows from Oprah, Phil and
|
||
Maury.
|
||
|
||
The same sort of dreck is about to come our way in the guise of
|
||
multimedia. My advice is to pass it by until either multimedia or its
|
||
creators grow up.
|
||
|
||
Multimedia is a catchword for something that no one really knows how
|
||
to define. It's like love or a bad smell --you can't really define it, but
|
||
you know it when you find it.
|
||
|
||
Multimedia is supposed to be the marriage of sight, sound and text in
|
||
a computer or a device that works like a computer. What makes multimedia
|
||
different from plain old TV is that multimedia is controllable --you can
|
||
zip around in a multimedia document, playing it (or viewing it, hearing it,
|
||
or reading it) in any order, for example.
|
||
|
||
It's possible to have multimedia on a more-or-less regular personal
|
||
computer such as an Apple Macintosh or a PC running Microsoft Windows, even
|
||
if the computer doesn't have anything fancy added on. But to really get
|
||
into multimedia, you need a computer with some sort of laser disc attached.
|
||
|
||
Usually, this is a CD-ROM drive. It's a compact disc player that can
|
||
play (the computer term is "read") CDs that have computer data on them.
|
||
Most CD-ROM drives can't deliver the data to the computer fast enough, so
|
||
what you get if you buy a cheap CD-ROM drive is a bunch of jerky images and
|
||
halting text displays.
|
||
|
||
In another year, the best of today's CD-ROM drives -- the ones that
|
||
are fast enough for multimedia -- will be the cheapies, and the world will
|
||
be ready for the new way of reading, viewing, watching and experiencing
|
||
things.
|
||
|
||
But right now, multimedia is for the most part an exercise in
|
||
silliness.
|
||
|
||
You can already buy multimedia encyclopedias that show you text and
|
||
moving pictures. That's good, right?
|
||
|
||
Not when you see what those moving pictures look like. They're tiny
|
||
and spasmodic. Uncle Harry did a lot better with his camcorder at the last
|
||
family picnic.
|
||
|
||
They also have built-in hi-fi sound. As a devoted high-fidelity fan,
|
||
I'm probably biased when it comes to judging sound that comes out of one or
|
||
two tiny speakers attached to a PC, but I can tell you this: Beethoven
|
||
would end up with the "1813" overture if he had to listen all year to a PC
|
||
that thought it was a stereo set.
|
||
|
||
But encyclopedias don't make money for the multimedia mavens anyway.
|
||
Games do. Computer games with do-it-yourself endings and fancy graphics do.
|
||
That's what's coming your way.
|
||
|
||
Don't ask me whatever happened to stickball and hopscotch. They're
|
||
old stuff. The new stuff keeps the kids in a darkened room, staring at a
|
||
screen and listening to squeaky loudspeakers all day.
|
||
|
||
And for those older kids, there are, um, different kinds of games.
|
||
Adult games, with, um, adult, um ... you know what I mean.
|
||
|
||
This is dismal, I agree. But there is hope. Companies here and in
|
||
Japan and Europe are working on multimedia atlases that you can use in the
|
||
car. They read your position from a satellite and tell you exactly where
|
||
you are and how to get anyplace else.
|
||
|
||
They're also working on multimedia tours of museums. And multimedia
|
||
dramas and musicals.
|
||
|
||
That sounds like fun. And looks like fun -- someday.
|
||
|
||
In the meantime, I'll just wait and see. Watching a technology grow
|
||
up can be a long process.
|
||
|
||
|
||
/////////////////////////////////////////// GEnie_QWIK_QUOTE ////
|
||
/ "Under my preferences menu, the standard 'check 5.25 drives /
|
||
/ on startup' now says 'Make obnoxious grinding noises'." /
|
||
//////////////////////////////////////////////// W.CARVER1 ////
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
[EOA]
|
||
[COM]//////////////////////////////
|
||
COMMUNICATION /
|
||
/////////////////////////////////
|
||
Making Contact
|
||
""""""""""""""
|
||
By Darrel Raines
|
||
[D.RAINES]
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Every one of us spends a good part of each day communicating with
|
||
other people. It is a large part of most jobs. We must tell others what
|
||
is needed from them and we must understand what is required of us. A
|
||
failure to express ourselves clearly or a failure to comprehend another can
|
||
lead to chaos, either eventual or immediate.
|
||
|
||
When my boss tells me what s/he wants me to do, it is my
|
||
responsibility to make sure that I know what s/he is asking of me. There
|
||
have been a number of times that I happily completed a task, expecting to
|
||
be praised for my accomplishments, only to find out that my superior wanted
|
||
something else altogether. Certainly neither of us was happy about the
|
||
situation.
|
||
|
||
It is rather easy in the case described above to point a finger at the
|
||
other person and say, "You told me you wanted the other thing". Only when
|
||
we put ourselves in the other persons shoes do we see where they think the
|
||
blame lies. When two people fail to communicate, then both are at fault
|
||
and both suffer the consequences. The sharing out blame is rather
|
||
pointless. This is the time that we should spend understanding why we
|
||
failed to communicate and how the situation can be improved next time.
|
||
|
||
Either party in a communication may indicate that the information
|
||
passed was not understood correctly. We should not wait for the other
|
||
person to come to us and seek better information. Remember, no one wins
|
||
when we do not understand each other. This humorous example will serve to
|
||
illustrate:
|
||
|
||
An American furniture salesman met a very pretty
|
||
French woman on one of his regular trips to Paris to buy
|
||
goods for his stores in the States stores. They seemed to
|
||
like each other immediately, but neither spoke the other's
|
||
language. Then the salesman hit upon an idea. He grabbed a
|
||
piece of paper and drew a picture of a plate and fork. The young
|
||
French woman nodded her head in vigorous agreement, so the
|
||
American gentleman called a cab and took the lady to dinner at a
|
||
local restaurant.
|
||
|
||
They were both enjoying each other's company over a fine meal
|
||
when the American took a napkin and drew a picture of a glass
|
||
with bubbles popping. The young French woman smiled her agreement.
|
||
The salesman ordered a bottle of champagne and they enjoyed the
|
||
bubbly refreshment with the rest of their meal. After dinner, the
|
||
American man drew a picture of a pair of shoes and a trumpet blowing
|
||
musical notes. The beautiful lady smiled and once again agreed to
|
||
his suggestion. Soon the couple were dancing the night away in a
|
||
nearby nightclub.
|
||
|
||
After a while, the young woman smiled demurely and motioned for
|
||
the pencil and paper. She blushed slightly and drew a picture of
|
||
a four-poster bed. The American was amazed. To this day he has
|
||
not figured out how the young woman knew that he was a furniture
|
||
salesman!
|
||
|
||
Now obviously the these two would-be lovebirds did not communicate at
|
||
a critical point. The same thing can happen to us if we do not constantly
|
||
work at making ourselves clear.
|
||
|
||
Most of us use electronic media as a method of communication on a
|
||
regular basis. We may not stop and think about this phenomenon, but the
|
||
fact is still there. If you work in a computerized office, then you
|
||
probably have Electronic mail (E-mail) set up to make life easier. As a
|
||
GEnie subscriber, you probably use the E-mail system here to pass
|
||
information back and forth between friends and acquaintances. If you use
|
||
visit any of GEnie's RoundTables or use a bulletin board system (BBS), then
|
||
you know that you can "talk" with a large number of people by posting a
|
||
single message.
|
||
|
||
All of this dissemination of information will probably give us the
|
||
false impression that we are "communicating" with one another. Not
|
||
necessarily. The quality of what goes into the message makes all the
|
||
difference in the world. Two people could send 50 messages back and forth
|
||
and never get their points across. Only if one chooses one's words with
|
||
some care and precision is the desired meaning conveyed.
|
||
|
||
It is imperative that you spend some time thinking about the content
|
||
of your messages before you send them. You are not present when a message
|
||
is read, so you must anticipate the reader's state of mind and try to
|
||
present your message in a way that they will be able to understand. This
|
||
is not always easy. But it is important if we are to use electronic
|
||
communication effectively.
|
||
|
||
We tend to think of E-mail as a time saver. We can send out the same
|
||
message to a dozen people faster than we can tell one person, face-to-face,
|
||
what we wanted to say. However, the danger here is that we will fail to
|
||
convey our message in a way that can be understood by all twelve people,
|
||
each with a different perspective on what you are trying to communicate.
|
||
The results may be less effective than expected.
|
||
|
||
I can probably talk at least 20 times faster than I can type. This
|
||
fact alone should indicate to us that electronic communication will never
|
||
entirely replace speech. There will always be some types of conversations
|
||
that can be held more effectively with verbal communication. Therefore,
|
||
you should always be on the alert for the types of messages that would be
|
||
better communicated on a one-to-one basis.
|
||
|
||
To summarize: Proper communication is one of the most important tools
|
||
for productive working arrangements. We must, individually, seek to
|
||
improve our methods of communication. It does not do any good to try and
|
||
assign blame when we misunderstand one another: all of us suffer the
|
||
consequences of the problem. Electronic communication, just like its
|
||
verbal counterpart, is subject to the problems if we do not use it
|
||
effectively. In this electronic age, we should be on the lookout for
|
||
situations where verbal communication would be a more productive
|
||
alternative to the E-mail standard.
|
||
|
||
I hope that I have communicated my message clearly. If not, then send
|
||
me a communication indicating the problem and I will re-communicate my
|
||
communication concerning the topic of communication. If you did not
|
||
understand the last sentence, then give me a call and we will work it out.
|
||
:)
|
||
|
||
[*][*][*]
|
||
|
||
|
||
Darrel Raines is an Electrical Engineer who works as a
|
||
contractor to NASA on the Space Station Freedom program.
|
||
He is also an avid computer hobbyist, programmer and writer.
|
||
You may reach him on GEnie at D.RAINES.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
[EOA]
|
||
[AII]//////////////////////////////
|
||
APPLE II /
|
||
/////////////////////////////////
|
||
Apple II History, Part 15
|
||
"""""""""""""""""""""""""
|
||
By Steven Weyhrich
|
||
[S.WEYHRICH]
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
>>> APPLE II HISTORY <<<
|
||
""""""""""""""""""""""""
|
||
Compiled and written by Steven Weyhrich
|
||
(C) Copyright 1992, Zonker Software
|
||
(PART 15 -- DOS 3.3, PRODOS & BEYOND)
|
||
[v1.2 :: 30 Sep 92]
|
||
|
||
|
||
INTRODUCTION In the last section we saw the beginnings of the disk
|
||
"""""""""""" operating system used on the Apple II, up to the release of
|
||
DOS 3.2.1. This segment of the History continues with DOS 3.3, the most
|
||
widely used version of DOS on Apple II's, even to this day (in spite of the
|
||
fact that ProDOS was released nearly ten years ago). The discussion
|
||
continues with Pascal, CP/M, ProDOS, and GS/OS for the IIGS.
|
||
|
||
|
||
DOS 3.3 In August of 1980, Apple released an upgrade for DOS, to version
|
||
""""""" 3.3. This upgrade was an important one. It consisted of not
|
||
only a new System Master disk, but a hardware upgrade chip as well. The
|
||
original disk drive had been designed with the ability to read and write 35
|
||
tracks of 13 sectors each on a 5.25 inch disk. At 256 bytes possible per
|
||
sector, this made the disk capable of holding 113.75K of information.
|
||
Since it was designed to have DOS present on each disk in the first three
|
||
tracks, and the catalog took up another entire track, there was actually
|
||
only 100.75K available for data storage. Steve Wozniak, the author of the
|
||
original DOS disk driver (RWTS), had found a way to increase the storage
|
||
capacity of Apple floppy disks. Changing slightly the method used for
|
||
encoding data on the disk made it possible to have 16 sectors per track,
|
||
instead of the original 13 sectors per track in DOS 3.1 and 3.2. This
|
||
resulted in a disk that could now hold a maximum of 140K of data (124K
|
||
excluding DOS and the catalog track), a 23 percent increase over the 13
|
||
sector disks. The remarkable thing about this upgrade was that the disk
|
||
drives themselves did not need to be changed to make this possible. Only
|
||
the ROM program on the Disk II controller card needed to be changed to make
|
||
the move to DOS 3.3. Those users who bought this upgrade to DOS 3.3 had to
|
||
change the ROM chip on the disk controller (or have their dealer do it for
|
||
them). An updated and greatly expanded version of the DOS manual was also
|
||
included in the DOS 3.3 upgrade.<1>
|
||
|
||
|
||
DOS 3.3 - FEATURES The DOS 3.3 System Master disk included many programs
|
||
"""""""""""""""""" that had previously been present on the DOS 3.2
|
||
Master, plus a few others. The "COPY" program (used to copy entire disks)
|
||
was translated to Applesoft as "COPYA" for those II Plus users who didn't
|
||
have access to Integer BASIC. The newer COPY programs also worked properly
|
||
on single drive systems (previously, you had to have two disk drives in
|
||
order to use this program to copy a disk). To allow users to startup their
|
||
older 13-sector DOS 3.2 disks, a binary program called "BOOT13" was
|
||
included. (Also, a separate disk called "BASICS" was included that could
|
||
be used in the same way as a pre-boot for 13-sector disks).<1>
|
||
|
||
Because of the changes in the ROM controller, it was not easy to read
|
||
disks formatted under DOS 3.2 directly from DOS 3.3. It could have been
|
||
incorporated into DOS 3.3, but would have called for a major effort in
|
||
rewriting the track and sector access routines, as well as making DOS
|
||
larger than the earlier versions. Instead, Apple supplied on the System
|
||
Master disk a conversion program called "MUFFIN" to allow files to be moved
|
||
from 13 sector to 16 sector disks. Enterprising hackers in the Apple II
|
||
world made modifications to MUFFIN and created DE-MUFFIN, a DOS 3.2 utility
|
||
to convert the files back to the 13 sector format.<1> Rich Williams at
|
||
Apple wrote the MUFFIN program (which was supposed to stand for Move
|
||
Utility For Files In NewDOS).
|
||
|
||
The System Master disk also contained a new utility called "FID"
|
||
(which started at version "M"; just like DOS "3", nobody knows why the
|
||
first public release didn't start with "A"). FID, written entirely in
|
||
assembly language, allowed easier copying of files, particularly Text and
|
||
Binary files that couldn't simply be LOADed and SAVEd from one disk to
|
||
another, as could Applesoft and Integer programs. The name "FID" was odd,
|
||
however. The Apple manuals said it stood for FIle Developer, but Rich
|
||
Williams (who also wrote this utility) said that the original name of the
|
||
program was FISHEAD (which had some sort of mnemonic meaning that he could
|
||
no longer recall). Apple Marketing said he couldn't name a program
|
||
FISHEAD, so he changed it to FID, which they said was okay. It really
|
||
stood for Fishead In Disguise (or Fishead In Drag by some within
|
||
Apple).<2>,<3>,<4>
|
||
|
||
Some Apple II users didn't like to have to use utility programs to
|
||
manage their collections of disks in both the 13 and 16 sector formats.
|
||
One method that was used to overcome this inconvenience was to piggyback
|
||
the old and the new disk controller ROMs and use a switch to toggle between
|
||
systems. The most elegant solution I've found was a ROM chip that plugged
|
||
into a special card (the ROMPlus made by Mountain Hardware, or the ROMBoard
|
||
made by Andromeda). A call to a memory location would switch between DOS
|
||
3.2 and 3.3, making file conversions quite easy. Soft Ctrl Systems, the
|
||
company that sold this Dual DOS ROM also sold ROMs that gave instant access
|
||
to an Applesoft renumber and merge program, an Applesoft editor, and a
|
||
specialized disk command menu and disk map.<2>
|
||
|
||
Another change found on the DOS 3.3 System Master was in the method
|
||
used to load the alternate BASIC. Since by this time the Language Card was
|
||
available (which, as you should recall, was simply 16K more RAM to add in
|
||
parallel to the Apple II ROM), there were two groups of users to service on
|
||
bootup. For Apple II Plus owners, there was a file named "INTBASIC", which
|
||
would load Integer BASIC onto the Language Card. For the older Apple II
|
||
(non-Plus) users, the file "FPBASIC" would be loaded onto the Language Card
|
||
when the DOS 3.3 disk was booted, making Applesoft available. The last
|
||
version of the DOS 3.3 Master disk, released with the Apple IIe, used a new
|
||
utility to load these files which was significantly faster than the
|
||
standard DOS BLOAD command.
|
||
|
||
|
||
DOS 3.3 - MISCELLANEOUS A rumor expressed in a letter to Call-A.P.P.L.E.
|
||
""""""""""""""""""""""" magazine in January 1982 suggested that up until
|
||
Christmas of 1980 there never had been an assembly language source listing
|
||
of DOS. The writer of the letter stated that changes made to DOS up until
|
||
that time were done by patching it with the mini-assembler in the Monitor.
|
||
However, during a phone interview in September 1991 with John Arkley at
|
||
Apple, he said there ALWAYS was a source code listing for DOS, as far back
|
||
as DOS 3. He believes the writer of the letter may have been referring to
|
||
the problem with the lost Autostart ROM source code (see Part 6 of this
|
||
History). Arkley stated that the earliest versions of DOS were written
|
||
using a cross-assembler on a Horizon microcomputer.<5>,<6> He also said
|
||
that the only part of DOS 3.3 that was assembled from scratch was the new
|
||
RWTS. The rest was merely attached to RWTS and "conditionally" assembled
|
||
(a programmer's term; sorry). They made a few patches to fix bugs in the
|
||
File Manager and Main DOS routines, but did so only in very specific
|
||
places, to avoid moving undocumented entry points that programmers had been
|
||
using up to that point.<3>,<4>,<7>,<8>
|
||
|
||
|
||
DOS 3.3 - LIMITATIONS The major limit of DOS 3.3 was that it, like its
|
||
""""""""""""""""""""" predecessors, was designed specifically to support
|
||
the Disk II drive. Hard disks, RAM disks, and 3.5 disks (like those used
|
||
in the Macintosh when it was released in 1984) could not be directly used
|
||
with DOS 3.3.<9>
|
||
|
||
|
||
PASCAL SYSTEM The Pascal system was released in 1979, prior to the
|
||
""""""""""""" DOS 3.3 upgrade. It used the same hardware upgrade to the
|
||
Disk II controller as was included with DOS 3.3. The method used by the
|
||
Pascal disk system to store files was quite different from that used by
|
||
DOS, however. Instead of the 256-byte "sectors" used with DOS 3.2 (and by
|
||
3.3), the Pascal system used 512-byte "blocks", using two sectors per
|
||
block. Pascal used the larger 140K disks from the beginning, and its
|
||
method of file naming was somewhat more limited. Instead of names that
|
||
could be as long as 30 characters and could contain any ASCII character (as
|
||
was the case with DOS 3.2 and 3.3), Pascal files could be only 15
|
||
characters long, and could contain only letters, numbers, or a period. It
|
||
was designed with a little more flexibility in the types of files that
|
||
could be created, however. Instead of DOS 3.2's limit of eight different
|
||
file types ("A", "I", "B", "T", and the other four little-used ones),
|
||
Pascal was designed to allow many more, and used a two-byte code to
|
||
designate file types. A Pascal file entry also had space for a date when
|
||
the file was created or updated. DOS 3.2 or 3.3 could not easily do this,
|
||
even if a clock card was installed.<7>,<10>
|
||
|
||
Pascal disks differed also in being able to have a unique name to
|
||
designate each disk. DOS 3.2 and 3.3 could be formatted to use up to 254
|
||
different volume "numbers", but this feature was seldom used and did not
|
||
allow disks to be very unique. The Pascal disk name could be up to 7
|
||
characters in length, and had the same limits of character choice as did
|
||
file names. Another feature of the Pascal disks that differed from the
|
||
older DOS disks was how space was allocated on a disk for a particular
|
||
file. Under DOS 3.2 and 3.3, space was used on the disk to identify which
|
||
sectors were used and which were free. When a new file was created or an
|
||
existing file was enlarged, this track/sector list was consulted by DOS to
|
||
find where free space could be found, and the list was updated when a new
|
||
sector was used. The advantage was that all space on the disk could be
|
||
used as it was needed, but the disadvantage was that a file could be
|
||
"fragmented", with the sectors that made up that file scattered throughout
|
||
the disk.
|
||
|
||
Pascal disks did not have any map of free blocks. Instead, a Pascal
|
||
file used only consecutive blocks on a disk, and a new file would be
|
||
started following the end of the last file on the disk. The advantage of
|
||
this system was faster access to disk files, since they were all on one
|
||
continuous piece of the disk. The disadvantage was that if a file was
|
||
deleted, the newly freed space could not be used unless Pascal's "Krunch"
|
||
utility was used to move all files forward over the unused space.
|
||
|
||
The Pascal system also included some other built-in disk utilities, an
|
||
assembler, and a compiler. As part of this system one could also purchase
|
||
from Apple a compiler for FORTRAN programs and a few other computer
|
||
languages.<10>
|
||
|
||
|
||
CP/M With the release of the Microsoft CP/M Softcard, a disk system was
|
||
"""" needed to handle this foreign programming environment. (Recall from
|
||
Part 12 of the History that the CP/M system gave Apple II users a
|
||
Z-80-based computer inside their 6502 computer and, therefore, access to
|
||
programs and utilities that were previously unavailable). CP/M disks were
|
||
designed to use four 256-byte sectors as one "block" (twice as large as the
|
||
Pascal "block"). Like DOS 3.2 and 3.3, the first three tracks on the disk
|
||
were used for the CP/M operating system which was loaded into memory when
|
||
booting the disk. Like Pascal, the CP/M directory was found at the start
|
||
of the disk, instead of in the middle as DOS was designed.
|
||
|
||
Apple II CP/M disks followed the standard CP/M file naming system. A
|
||
file name consisted of 8 characters, followed by a period, and then a three
|
||
character "extension". One interesting feature of CP/M files was that if a
|
||
file was longer than 16 CP/M blocks (64 DOS sectors), a new directory entry
|
||
would be made with the same file name. This entry had an extra byte set to
|
||
show that this was a continuation of a previous file, instead of a new,
|
||
separate file.<10>
|
||
|
||
|
||
SOS/PRODOS The operating system designed for the Apple III computer was
|
||
"""""""""" called "SOS". This title arose from the Apple III's code
|
||
name, "Sara", which itself came from the name of engineer Disk Huston's
|
||
daughter. Originally, then, SOS stood for "Sara's Operating System". The
|
||
manuals released with the computer, however, used the more
|
||
professional-sounding name "Sophisticated Operating System." SOS was the
|
||
first operating system for a microcomputer to use the concept of "device
|
||
drivers", which were programs taken from the startup disk and made part of
|
||
the operating system. These drivers told the computer how to communicate
|
||
with the various devices that were attached to it, from a variety of disk
|
||
drives to the keyboard and monitor. This gave flexibility to the Apple III
|
||
to use new technology as it became available.<9>
|
||
|
||
When Apple designed the Apple III, they were under constraints of
|
||
maintaining some compatibility with the Apple II disk format. They used
|
||
the same disk controller and the same capacity disks as the Pascal/DOS 3.3
|
||
systems: 35 tracks, of 16 sectors each. However, the engineers were free
|
||
to make any changes they wanted in the way in which files were stored on
|
||
the disk. They came up with something that was a hybrid between the DOS
|
||
3.3 and Pascal methods of file storage. From Pascal they took the concept
|
||
of using 512-byte blocks as the basic unit of storage, a two-block "system
|
||
loader" program at the start of the disk (this loader would locate a larger
|
||
system file elsewhere on the disk to actually start the operating system),
|
||
and a four-block main catalog (which they called a "directory"). From DOS
|
||
3.3 they used the concept of disk maps and block lists for each file,
|
||
allowing parts of files to be stored anywhere on the disk (and eliminating
|
||
the need for the Pascal "Krunch" function). The SOS filing system also
|
||
continued the use of a byte to identify different filetypes, space for a
|
||
date (and time) of file storage, and the 15 character file names using only
|
||
letters, numbers, and a period. Because the Apple III was intended to be a
|
||
business machine and had to be able to access larger disk devices than were
|
||
allowed for the Apple II, they also added the ability to create and use
|
||
different levels of file directories. A single four-block directory had
|
||
space only for 51 files; even if it was enlarged to allow more files, on a
|
||
large disk it would soon be difficult to find a file in a list that got
|
||
longer than a couple of hundred names.
|
||
|
||
The SOS disk file system also would allow files to be as large as 16
|
||
MB, and a single disk volume could be up to 32 MB in size. In 1981, when
|
||
the 5 MB Profile hard disk was released by Apple for the III, this limit of
|
||
32 MB was considered to be more than adequate.
|
||
|
||
In 1984, when ProDOS was released for the Apple II as a "Professional
|
||
Disk Operating System", the same file structure was used. In fact, the
|
||
disks were so designed that a disk created by the Apple II ProDOS formatter
|
||
installed an Apple III SOS loader segment in the second block on the disk.
|
||
This made it possible to boot the same disk on either an Apple II or an
|
||
Apple III, if the necessary system files unique to each computer were
|
||
present on the disk. Also, files could be shared easily between the two
|
||
computers. Even as late as 1992, when the Apple III has been out of
|
||
production for eight years, disks formatted by Apple II System Utilities
|
||
still have SOS boot information located on block 1. What may be even more
|
||
amazing is that this disk system for the Apple III, released in 1980 (and
|
||
probably designed in 1978 or 1979), is still flexible enough to be useful
|
||
for Apple II's in 1992.<10>
|
||
|
||
|
||
PRODOS The original DOS for the Apple II was designed primarily to
|
||
"""""" support BASIC. If a programmer wanted to make use of the disk
|
||
system for an assembly language program, he had to make use of
|
||
undocumented, low level calls to the DOS File Manager, or possibly to some
|
||
of the Main DOS Routines. This method was clumsy, and often made
|
||
inefficient use of memory, as DOS expected that any calls made to it were
|
||
done on behalf of BASIC. Moreover, this tied the hands of programmers at
|
||
Apple in their ability to enhance DOS, since any changes they might make
|
||
would most likely change internal addresses, and cause older software to
|
||
malfunction if used with the revised DOS.
|
||
|
||
Another problem with DOS was speed. Since each byte read from the
|
||
disk was copied between memory buffers THREE times, much of the disk access
|
||
time was spent in moving things around in memory. Consequently, as hackers
|
||
took DOS apart and found better ways to do things, several variations of
|
||
DOS speed-up programs appeared by 1983, including Diversi-DOS, ProntoDOS,
|
||
and David-DOS. Each of these programs were mutually incompatible in terms
|
||
of the low-level calls they made, and had slightly different ways of
|
||
speeding up DOS.
|
||
|
||
DOS was also limited since it was device dependent. It was designed
|
||
to work quite well with the Disk II drive, but to make use of a hard disk
|
||
or RAM disk (a pseudo-disk "drive" that was actually RAM memory, had no
|
||
moving parts, and was therefore quite fast), DOS had to be patched. This
|
||
usually made it impossible to use different brands of hard disks together,
|
||
or to use a hard disk and a RAM disk simultaneously.
|
||
|
||
Other problems with DOS included poor support for interrupt signals
|
||
generated by various hardware devices, obstacles in designating memory
|
||
areas as protected from being overwritten by DOS, and the difficulty in
|
||
customizing DOS for special functions.
|
||
|
||
With the introduction of ProDOS, all of these weaknesses were
|
||
addressed. ProDOS would run up to eight times faster than DOS in accessing
|
||
5.25 disks. It supported a standardized protocol for hardware-based
|
||
devices, allowing reads, writes, status calls, and formatting (erasing).
|
||
This allowed a large variety of disk devices to be used on an Apple II.
|
||
Support was also included for a hardware clock, allowing date- and
|
||
time-stamping of files. Hardware interrupts were supported, necessary
|
||
system calls were placed in a standard location in memory (called a "global
|
||
page"), and memory could be protected from being overwritten by the actions
|
||
of ProDOS.
|
||
|
||
Because the functionality of this disk operating system was enhanced
|
||
so much, its size grew as well. To specifically support Applesoft BASIC, a
|
||
separate "SYSTEM" program was included that worked nearly the same as the
|
||
older DOS 3.3 did. In addition, it included some further enhancements that
|
||
had been requested for years by Applesoft programmers. The only
|
||
disadvantage of the new ProDOS was that it did NOT support Apple's original
|
||
Integer BASIC, since the ProDOS program loaded itself into high memory
|
||
where Integer BASIC was loaded in an Apple II Plus. Since very little
|
||
development of software had been done in Integer BASIC since the
|
||
introduction of Applesoft, this was felt to be a reasonable trade-off. And
|
||
if Integer BASIC was needed, it could still be run under DOS 3.3. At the
|
||
time of this writing, there has been no release of a ProDOS system program
|
||
that would support Integer BASIC (with the exception of an Integer BASIC
|
||
compiler distributed by ByteWorks in late 1991 for instructional
|
||
purposes).<1>
|
||
|
||
|
||
PRODOS 16 When Apple released the IIGS, with its considerably greater
|
||
""""""""" power compared to the older 8-bit Apple II's, changes were
|
||
needed in the operating system to better manage that power. This had to be
|
||
done with another goal, that of maintaining compatibility with older Apple
|
||
II software. The new operating system was called ProDOS 16, and the
|
||
operating system intended for use with 8-bit software (both on the IIGS and
|
||
on the older Apple II's) was renamed ProDOS 8. But ProDOS 16 version 1.0
|
||
was somewhat of a temporary fix to the problem of disk access for 16-bit
|
||
software. It was not written in 16-bit code, and it simply translated the
|
||
new system calls defined for ProDOS 16 into ProDOS 8 calls to actually
|
||
carry out disk activities. As such, it was slow and cumbersome.<9>
|
||
|
||
|
||
GS/OS With the experience of SOS, ProDOS, and the Macintosh Operating
|
||
""""" System to draw from, Apple engineers and programmers devised a yet
|
||
more powerful and flexible disk operating system for the Apple IIGS.
|
||
Written completely in 16-bit code, GS/OS was released in September 1988.
|
||
It was more than a DISK operating system, but a truly comprehensive
|
||
operating system that also handled keyboard input, monitor output (text and
|
||
graphics), mouse input, printers, modems, and more. In these respects it
|
||
was just as powerful as the older SOS written for the Apple III back in
|
||
1980. But they also added a new concept.
|
||
|
||
Although GS/OS would allow an Apple IIGS to communicate with disk
|
||
devices that had not been used on an Apple II before, there would still be
|
||
the limits of having to know exactly HOW files were stored on that disk.
|
||
ProDOS could only handle files stored in the specifically defined
|
||
ProDOS/SOS format; DOS 3.3 could only handle files stored in THAT format;
|
||
and so on. To make this new system as broad-based as possible, Apple
|
||
programmers built into it the concept of a File System Translator (FST).
|
||
With the appropriate FST teamed up with a suitable disk driver, GS/OS could
|
||
theoretically be able to read ANY disk created by ANY computer. The FST
|
||
simply translated the requests made by GS/OS into the language "spoken" by
|
||
the disk it was trying to read. This task had never before been attempted
|
||
by a computer company in designing a disk operating system. Apple,
|
||
recognizing that the computers used in the real world would never be 100
|
||
percent Apple, made it possible to simplify transfer of data between
|
||
different computers. The concept was first implemented in a limited
|
||
fashion on the Macintosh, when the Apple File Exchange program was modified
|
||
to be able to use MS-DOS disks. The Mac system is now also able to add its
|
||
equivalent of an FST for the ProDOS and MS-DOS disk systems, but not as
|
||
easily as has been implemented in GS/OS.
|
||
|
||
GS/OS was also made more flexible by removing the older Apple II
|
||
method of identifying a disk by the slot where its disk controller was
|
||
attached, and removing the limitation of only two disk devices per slot.
|
||
The limits of maximum file and disk size built into ProDOS 8 were expanded.
|
||
A GS/OS file or disk volume can be as large as 4 GB (gigabytes), or 4096 MB
|
||
to be more specific. However, when GS/OS is dealing with ProDOS disk
|
||
volumes, it still has to stay within the limits of ProDOS (files no bigger
|
||
than 16 MB, and disk volumes no bigger than 32 MB).<9>
|
||
|
||
System Software 5.0 for the IIGS was introduced in May 1989. It added
|
||
speed, speed, and more speed to many features of the IIGS, accomplishing
|
||
this through more efficient software coding. There were patches to the
|
||
IIGS ROM Toolbox to improve throughput in many of the built-in capabilities
|
||
of the machine. A new feature called "Expressload" was added, making it
|
||
possible for certain program files to load from disk up to eight times
|
||
faster. GS/OS was modified to be capable of staying in memory during a
|
||
switch to ProDOS 8 applications, making the return to GS/OS significantly
|
||
faster. The text-based control panel was supplemented by a new
|
||
graphics-based one that was accessible in the same way as other 16-bit desk
|
||
accessories. Access to 3.5 disks was accelerated by implementing a feature
|
||
called "scatter read", which could take an entire track (rather than just a
|
||
single block) of data from the disk at a time. An FST for AppleShare was
|
||
added, allowing a IIGS attached to an AppleTalk network to access the file
|
||
server as a disk. It also included an FST to allow access to CD-ROM
|
||
drives, new utilities for disk partitioning, and it had an intelligent
|
||
"Installer" program to make it easier to install system or application
|
||
files.<11>,<12>
|
||
|
||
Because of further improvements in features, System Software 5.0.2 (an
|
||
upgrade to 5.0) required a minimum of 512K memory, and worked best with
|
||
768K or more. Versions 5.0.3 and 5.0.4 needed a full megabyte of
|
||
memory.<9> An improved "standard file dialog" was included in the system
|
||
tools for 5.0.3, (making it possible to choose files more easily for
|
||
loading into an application), as were improved drivers for the ImageWriter
|
||
II and ImageWriter LQ printers. System 5.0.4 was released six weeks after
|
||
5.0.3 to fix some remaining important bugs discovered too late.<12>
|
||
|
||
|
||
GS/OS SYSTEM 6 Before System 5.0 was released, plans were already in
|
||
"""""""""""""" store for further improvements to the system software.
|
||
Apple IIGS "power" users were calling for the ability to use Macintosh HFS
|
||
(Hierarchical Filing System) disks, as well as the older Apple II DOS 3.3
|
||
and Pascal formats. Although there were some simple third-party
|
||
translation programs available that allowed transfer of files from Mac
|
||
disks to ProDOS disks, they did not provide the same ease of use as did the
|
||
direct access possible with ProDOS and CD-ROM files. Although it sounded
|
||
to these users like a relatively straightforward proposition, the increased
|
||
complexity of the Mac HFS directory structure complicated things. Not only
|
||
did the Mac disks contain more information about each file than did ProDOS
|
||
disks, but the names of files on Mac disks (as on DOS 3.3 disks) could
|
||
contain characters that were not "legal" for ProDOS file names. To help
|
||
with this problem, the new FSTs were designed to watch for potentially
|
||
illegal filenames, and to make suggestions for alternate names that WERE
|
||
legal.
|
||
|
||
Apple software engineers had always made it clear to programmers
|
||
clamoring for additional FSTs that such changes were more than just
|
||
dropping the new FST into the System/FST folder on a boot disk.
|
||
Modifications were necessary throughout GS/OS to accommodate these new
|
||
features, and the time needed to make these changes was becoming longer
|
||
than originally planned. To allow some improvements to be made available
|
||
without waiting for them all, the system software engineers divided tasks
|
||
during 1990, putting the features that could be programmed most quickly
|
||
onto a fast track that would allow them to be released as Version 5.0.3
|
||
later that year.
|
||
|
||
The other half of the team worked on the rest of the planned
|
||
enhancements for what would become System 6.0. When 5.0.4 was completed,
|
||
the entire team again came together to continue work on this upgrade.
|
||
After fourteen months of hard work, they were finally ready to release
|
||
GS/OS System 6.0 in March 1992. In addition to FSTs for the Mac HFS disks,
|
||
DOS 3.3, and Apple Pascal, device drivers were created to allow support of
|
||
the Apple Scanner, the slot-based Apple II Memory Expansion card (which on
|
||
the IIGS works primarily as a RAM disk), and the Apple Tape Drive. The
|
||
SCSI drivers were enhanced, and the Apple 5.25 disk driver was made faster.
|
||
A new printer driver was included, to support the Apple StyleWriter inkjet
|
||
printer, and more large fonts were included to use with that and other
|
||
printers. The Finder was re-designed almost from scratch by Andy Nicholas,
|
||
the author of ShrinkIt and GS-ShrinkIt. Archiver (a disk backup utility)
|
||
and Teach (a GS/OS-based text-editing program) were also included.
|
||
Finally, ProDOS 8 v2.0.1 was released, allowing 8-bit programs access to as
|
||
many as fourteen disk devices on a single slot. This made large,
|
||
partitioned hard disks usable even to Apple IIc and enhanced IIe users
|
||
(this version of ProDOS 8 required the opcodes of the 65c02 chip, although
|
||
ProDOS 8 v1.9 was still available to run on the Apple II Plus or unenhanced
|
||
IIe).<12>
|
||
|
||
At the 1992 KansasFest, Apple engineers announced that v6.0.1 of GS/OS
|
||
would be out later in 1992 or early in 1993. Because of delays in the
|
||
completion of the Apple II Ethernet card (which this version of GS/OS will
|
||
specifically support), the actual release will probably not be until the
|
||
middle of 1993. Aside from being able to handle the Ethernet card, this
|
||
revision is expected to include fixes for bugs found in 6.0, and an MS-DOS
|
||
FST (at least read-only, with write capability to come later).
|
||
|
||
[*][*][*]
|
||
|
||
|
||
NEXT INSTALLMENT: Languages
|
||
""""""""""""""""
|
||
|
||
NOTES
|
||
"""""
|
||
<1> Worth, Don, and Lechner, Pieter. Quality Software, BENEATH APPLE
|
||
DOS, Reseda, CA, 1984, pp. 2.1-2.9.
|
||
|
||
<2> -----. (ads), CALL-A.P.P.L.E. IN DEPTH #1, 1981, p. 106.
|
||
|
||
<3> Auricchio, Rick. (personal telephone call), Sep 4, 1991.
|
||
|
||
<4> Wozniak, Stephen. (personal telephone call), Sep 5, 1991.
|
||
|
||
<5> Roberts, Henry. "A.P.P.L.E. Doctor", CALL-A.P.P.L.E., Jan 1982,
|
||
p. 63.
|
||
|
||
<6> Arkley, John. (personal telephone call), Sep 9, 1991.
|
||
|
||
<7> Little, Gary. Addison-Wesley Publishing Company, Inc, EXPLORING
|
||
APPLE GS/OS AND PRODOS 8, Reading, MA, 1988, pp. 2-4.
|
||
|
||
<8> Little, Gary. Brady Communications Co, INSIDE THE APPLE //C,
|
||
Bowie, MD, 1985, pp. 1-7.
|
||
|
||
<9> Deatherage, Matt. "The Operating System", THE APPLE II GUIDE,
|
||
Fall 1990, pp. 117-125.
|
||
|
||
<10> Hunter, Skillman. "Road Maps To Apple II Disks: DOS 3.3, CP/M,
|
||
Pascal, and ProDOS", CALL-A.P.P.L.E., Feb 1985, pp. 10-21.
|
||
|
||
<11> Weishaar, Tom. "Breaking the incompatibility barrier:An
|
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introduction to Apple's GS/OS", OPEN-APPLE, Nov 1988, pp.
|
||
4.75-4.78.
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||
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<12> Deatherage, Matt. "The Operating System", THE APPLE II GUIDE,
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1992, pp. 111-113.
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/////////////////////////////////////////////// GEnie_QWIK_QUOTE ////
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/ "My [GEnie] bill went down roughly 30%... and I just got a raise, /
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