3199 lines
150 KiB
Erlang
3199 lines
150 KiB
Erlang
|
||
|
||
|||||| |||||| || || |||||| ||||||
|
||
|| || ||| || || ||
|
||
|| ||| |||| |||||| || |||| Your
|
||
|| || || || ||| || ||
|
||
|||||| |||||| || || |||||| |||||| GEnieLamp Computing
|
||
|
||
|| |||||| || || |||||| RoundTable
|
||
|| || || ||| ||| || ||
|
||
|| |||||| |||||||| |||||| RESOURCE!
|
||
|| || || || || || ||
|
||
||||| || || || || ||
|
||
|
||
|
||
~ WELCOME TO GEnieLamp APPLE II! ~
|
||
""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
|
||
~ SOFTVIEW A2: Review of Quick Click Calc v1.2 ~
|
||
~ APPLEWORKS ANNEX: AppleWorks 5 Released... Coming Soon for the Mac! ~
|
||
~ FOCUS ON...: Quick Click Morph Q&A ~
|
||
~ THE TREASURE HUNT: Easter Goodies and More ~
|
||
~ HOT NEWS, HOT FILES, HOT MESSAGES ~
|
||
|
||
\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\////////////////////////////////////
|
||
GEnieLamp Apple II ~ A T/TalkNET Publication ~ Vol.4, Issue 37
|
||
""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
|
||
Publisher................................................John F. Peters
|
||
Editor...................................................Douglas Cuff
|
||
\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\////////////////////////////////////
|
||
~ GEnieLamp IBM ~ GEnieLamp ST ~ GEnieLamp PowerPC ~
|
||
~ GEnieLamp A2Pro ~ GEnieLamp Macintosh ~ GEnieLamp TX2 ~
|
||
~ GEnieLamp Windows ~ GEnieLamp A2 ~ LiveWire (ASCII) ~
|
||
~ Member Of The Digital Publishing Association ~
|
||
GE Mail: GENIELAMP Internet: genielamp@genie.com
|
||
////////////////////////////////////\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\
|
||
|
||
>>> WHAT'S HAPPENING IN THE APPLE II ROUNDTABLE? <<<
|
||
""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
|
||
~ April 1, 1995 ~
|
||
|
||
|
||
FROM MY DESKTOP ......... [FRM] HEY MISTER POSTMAN ...... [HEY]
|
||
Notes From The Editor. Is That A Letter For Me?
|
||
|
||
HUMOR ONLINE ............ [HUM] CONNECTIONS ............. [CON]
|
||
Top 10 Lists. Buy a Computer for the Family.
|
||
|
||
FOCUS ON... ............. [FOC] APPLEWORKS ANNEX ........ [ANX]
|
||
Quick Click Morph Q&A. Introducing AppleWorks 5.
|
||
|
||
ASCII ART GALLERY ....... [ASA] THE TREASURE HUNT ....... [HUN]
|
||
Easter Showers. Easter and More.
|
||
|
||
SOFTVIEW A2 ............. [SOF] LOG OFF ................. [LOG]
|
||
Quick Click Calc v1.2. GEnieLamp Information.
|
||
|
||
[IDX]"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
|
||
|
||
READING GEnieLamp GEnieLamp has incorporated a unique indexing system to
|
||
""""""""""""""""" 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 GEnie's monthly fee is $8.95 which gives you up to four hours
|
||
""""""""""" of non-prime time access to most GEnie services, such as
|
||
software downloads, bulletin boards, GE Mail, an Internet mail gateway, and
|
||
chat lines. GEnie's non-prime time connect rate is $3.00. To sign up for
|
||
GEnie service, call (with modem) 1-800-638-8369 in the USA or
|
||
1-800-387-8330 in Canada. Upon connection type HHH. Wait for the U#=
|
||
prompt. Type: JOINGENIE and hit RETURN. When you get the prompt asking
|
||
for the signup/offer code, type: DSD524 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.
|
||
|
||
SPECIAL OFFER FOR GEnieLamp READERS! If you sign onto GEnie using the
|
||
"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""" method outlined above you will
|
||
receive $50.00 worth of credit. Want more? Your first month charge of
|
||
$8.95 will be waived! Now there are no excuses!
|
||
|
||
*** GET INTO THE LAMP! ***
|
||
"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
//////////////////////////////////////// GEnie_QWIK_QUOTE ////
|
||
/ "I am Pentium of Borg. Division is futile. /
|
||
/ You will be approximated." /
|
||
//////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
[EOA]
|
||
[FRM]//////////////////////////////
|
||
FROM MY DESKTOP /
|
||
/////////////////////////////////
|
||
Notes From The Editor
|
||
"""""""""""""""""""""
|
||
by Douglas Cuff
|
||
[EDITOR.A2]
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
>>> I COULD WRITE A SONNET... <<<
|
||
"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
|
||
|
||
Special message for those of you reading the April issue of GEnieLamp
|
||
A2 on the first day it's available: There aren't any April Fool jokes in
|
||
this issue, so all the good news you're about to get is true. (There's
|
||
very little bad news this month!) I've recently come to believe that if
|
||
you can't perpetrate a April Fool joke before noon on April 1--when your
|
||
victim knows he or she should be on his guard--then you haven't got any
|
||
business pulling the gag at all.
|
||
|
||
No, this is not because I got caught out last year. <grin> In fact,
|
||
last year, I was privileged to see what I consider to be very nearly the
|
||
perfect April Fool joke. The denizens of the Apple II Programming
|
||
RoundTable, A2Pro, put their welcoming banner up backwards:
|
||
|
||
SREMMARGORP II ELPPA EHT __ __ __ ______ _____
|
||
ELBATDNUOR SREPOLEVED DNA \ \\_\\_\ /______\|__ __\
|
||
___________________________________________ \_\/ \ \|__|___ |__|\__\
|
||
\_____\ |__|_\__\
|
||
mmoCidnyS yb deganaM eht fo muroF laiciffO nA \__\|________\
|
||
retupmoC lanoitanretnI ______\__|__| \__\
|
||
(NOCI) krowteN srenwO \________|__| \__\
|
||
|
||
atsoC aD gerG ,tsorT etaN :sposyS ruoY
|
||
lesetihW .P ddoT ,naolS leinahtaN
|
||
|
||
You really had to see it scrolling at 2400 baud or slower to
|
||
appreciate how startling it was. The time from being startled to the
|
||
sudden realization that I'd been had was mere seconds... and then I laughed
|
||
out loud.
|
||
|
||
I thought of stealing A2Pro's idea, and having this month's issue
|
||
start like this:
|
||
|
||
|||||| |||||| || || |||||| ||||||
|
||
|| || || ||| || ||
|
||
ruoY |||| || |||||| |||| ||| ||
|
||
|| || ||| || || || ||
|
||
gnitupmoC pmaLeinEG |||||| |||||| || || |||||| ||||||
|
||
|
||
elbaTdnuoR |||||| || || |||||| ||
|
||
|| || ||| ||| || || ||
|
||
!ECRUOSER |||||| |||||||| |||||| ||
|
||
|| || || || || || ||
|
||
|| || || || || |||||
|
||
|
||
!looF lirpA :.S.P
|
||
|
||
Naah! I don't particularly like April Fool jokes, but I really don't
|
||
like plagiarism. <grin>
|
||
|
||
[*][*][*]
|
||
|
||
|
||
I guess another reason I haven't inserted any April Fool jokes in
|
||
this month's issue is that I already feel foolish enough.
|
||
|
||
In this issue of GEnieLamp A2, I finally get to tie up the last loose
|
||
end created by the closure of A2-Central. It's like this: In September
|
||
1994, I asked Mike Westerfield of the Byte Works, Inc. for a review copy of
|
||
Quick Click Calc. He sent it, and I intended to review as soon as I had
|
||
time to sit down and put it through its paces. I really _hate_ software
|
||
reviews that are based on first impressions, and so I waited until I really
|
||
had time to thoroughly use Quick Click Calc. The review was supposed to
|
||
run in the March 1995 issue of A2-Central... and there was no March 1995
|
||
issue of A2-Central.
|
||
|
||
Another thing I really hate is not being able to follow through on my
|
||
commitments... so the Quick Click Calc review appears in this issue of
|
||
GEnieLamp A2. I know it's not exactly what you bargained for, Mike, but
|
||
it's the best I can do. (GS+, Shareware Solutions II, Softdisk G-S and II
|
||
Alive have already reviewed it.)
|
||
|
||
Mike Westerfield has been very good to me. I've owed him this review
|
||
for months now. Of course, I don't owe his program a _good_ review. So
|
||
did Quick Click Calc get a good review or not? You'll just have to read
|
||
this month's Softview A2 column and see.
|
||
|
||
In the meantime, the Byte Works has announced its second entry in the
|
||
Quick Click Calc series: Quick Click Morph. You'll read all about it this
|
||
month.
|
||
|
||
-- Doug Cuff
|
||
|
||
GEnie Mail: EDITOR.A2 Internet: editor.a2@genie.geis.com
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
__________________________________________________________
|
||
| |
|
||
| REPRINTING GEnieLamp |
|
||
| |
|
||
| If you want to reprint any part of GEnieLamp, or |
|
||
| post it to a bulletin board, please see the very end |
|
||
| of this file for instructions and limitations. |
|
||
|__________________________________________________________|
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
ASCII ART BEGINS
|
||
|
||
_____ ______ _ _ ___ ___
|
||
/ ____| ____| (_) | | / _ \|__ \
|
||
| | __| |__ _ __ _ ___| | __ _ _ __ ___ _ __ | |_| | ) |
|
||
| | |_ | __| | '_ \| |/ _ \ | / _` | '_ ` _ \| '_ \ | _ | / /
|
||
| |__| | |____| | | | | __/ |___| (_| | | | | | | |_) | | | | |/ /_
|
||
\_____|______|_| |_|_|\___|______\__,_|_| |_| |_| .__/ |_| |_|____|
|
||
| |
|
||
|_|
|
||
|
||
ASCII ART ENDS
|
||
|
||
|
||
[EOA]
|
||
[HEY]//////////////////////////////
|
||
HEY MISTER POSTMAN /
|
||
/////////////////////////////////
|
||
Is That A Letter For Me?
|
||
""""""""""""""""""""""""
|
||
by Douglas Cuff
|
||
[EDITOR.A2]
|
||
|
||
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 <<<
|
||
""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
|
||
|
||
[*] CAT17, TOP20 ............. AppleWorks 5 on the Mac with Phoenix II
|
||
[*] CAT17, TOP31 ............. AppleWorks 5.1 coming next month!
|
||
[*] CAT28, TOP4 .............. Unofficial 6.0.2 from Brutal Deluxe?
|
||
[*] CAT40, TOP2 .............. FAXination gets the bugs out
|
||
[*] CAT42, TOP10&11 .......... II Alive status
|
||
[*] CAT45, TOP4 .............. NEW! Quick Click Morph
|
||
|
||
|
||
>>> A2 POT-POURRI <<<
|
||
"""""""""""""""""""""
|
||
|
||
SUPERCONVERT UPDATE Unfortunately we haven't heard from Jason in a
|
||
""""""""""""""""""" while...a long time ago he got halfway through a real
|
||
nice update to SC, but then stopped for personal reasons (among them
|
||
getting married). As far as I know he hasn't touched SC since then. :(
|
||
|
||
With every royalty check we include a note asking him to finish
|
||
it...maybe one day he will. We're also working on some things that will
|
||
give us some other options in case he doesn't...we'll let you know when
|
||
anything results.
|
||
|
||
--Dave
|
||
(SEVENHILLS, CAT43, TOP5, MSG:190/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
>>>>> Jason's done some Newton stuff as well. He's got a pretty dern
|
||
""""" good Newton programmer utility.
|
||
(WANKERL, CAT43, TOP5, MSG:196/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
|
||
BILL TUDOR LEAVES GENIE (BUT NOT THE APPLE II!) Unfortunately, Bill will
|
||
""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""" probably not be seeing
|
||
your messages. He has dropped his GEnie account. He can be reached at
|
||
WTUDOR@AOL.COM now.
|
||
|
||
I will make a copy of your messages and forward them to him.
|
||
|
||
Ken Lucke
|
||
(K.LUCKE, CAT42, TOP26, MSG:224/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
|
||
GS TRACKBALL For those interested in a GS compatible trackball;
|
||
""""""""""""
|
||
Precision Instruments makes one; it's labeled as a Macintosh ADB but
|
||
it works just fine with my GS. Got mine for just under $40 at the local
|
||
Computer City, and yes, even the lock light works. . .
|
||
|
||
Ryan
|
||
(R.SUENAGA1, CAT12, TOP32, MSG:154/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
|
||
APPLEWORKS 5, ULTRAMACROS AND APPLETALK Don't give up on running AW5 and
|
||
""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""" macros with AppleTalk active. I
|
||
do it all the time.
|
||
|
||
The main trick seems to be launching AW5 from ProSel-16 rather than
|
||
from Finder (although I can often run AW5/UM even after launching from
|
||
Finder, but in that case Finder is launched from ProSel-16, which may
|
||
account for that).
|
||
|
||
Then you need to know how to patch AW5 to allow macros with AppleTalk
|
||
active. I'll be glad to give you that if you want to try it. Randy's Free
|
||
Patcher has a patch that purportedly does that, but I couldn't get it to
|
||
work, so I had to do it manually from Block Warden.
|
||
|
||
Let me know if you want to pursue this.
|
||
|
||
:: Dan ::
|
||
(D.CRUTCHER, CAT12, TOP13, MSG:156/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
<<<<< In AW5, in APLWORKS.SYSTEM, change offset +148F from EE to 2C
|
||
"""""
|
||
Longer answer (if not familiar with Block Warden or Zap): Run Block
|
||
Warden or Zap, set prefix to your AppleWorks directory, press "F" to
|
||
<F>ollow the file APLWORKS.SYSTEM, use up-arrow to move to byte $001400,
|
||
press "E" to enter <E>dit mode, use down- and right-arrow cursor keys to
|
||
move to byte $00148F, type "2C" to overwrite "EE", escape to "R/W mode" and
|
||
press "W" to write the change to disk. Of course, you should only do this
|
||
to a copy of AW5.
|
||
|
||
Having made the change, try running AW5 from ProSel-16 with AppleTalk
|
||
active and see what happens. If you still get crashes, suspect other
|
||
interrupt-driven inits or DAs. If you can't get it to work, you can always
|
||
reverse the process and change byte 148F back to EE.
|
||
|
||
:: Dan ::
|
||
(D.CRUTCHER, CAT12, TOP13, MSG:177/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
|
||
KARL BUNKER'S SOURCE CODE I received the following email from Karl Bunker
|
||
""""""""""""""""""""""""" in reply to an inquiry I sent to him.
|
||
|
||
[begin]
|
||
|
||
Charles --
|
||
|
||
Nice to hear a little blast from the past. It figures that there
|
||
would be some questions posted about my stuff on GEnie within weeks of me
|
||
closing my account there. But since I don't have an Apple II/IIgs any
|
||
more, and since I've been forgetting everything I ever know about the 'II
|
||
at an alarming rate, I probably wouldn't have been able to answer any
|
||
questions anyway.
|
||
|
||
Regarding my source code, I did release some of it for public use
|
||
when I left the A2 field, and uploaded it to GEnie's A2Pro library. I'm
|
||
not sure exactly what I released, but I know it included the code to
|
||
Quit.To, File-A-Trix and SF.Get. I still have just about all my assembly
|
||
source code from my Apple II days, so if anyone's interested in the source
|
||
to some of my other programs, or if there's some problem with accessing the
|
||
code I uploaded to GEnie previously, just let me know. My assembly code is
|
||
all in Lisa816 format, and Lisa816 saves its source in its own non-text
|
||
format, so to be usable one would need a copy of Lisa816 to convert it to
|
||
text. (The code I previously uploaded to GEnie had been converted to text,
|
||
but the code I have in my archives isn't converted.) I also have my
|
||
Lisa816 original disk, so if it's legal to do so, I could provide a copy of
|
||
that too. (I trashed or gave away all my other II/IIgs software long ago,
|
||
but I loved that darn assembler so much I just had to hang onto it.)
|
||
|
||
As to what I've been up to lately, well, I've been learning huge
|
||
amounts about Mac programming and programming in general (I'm embarrassed
|
||
to think about "real" programmers looking at my Apple II code from
|
||
way-back-then; my apologies to anyone who takes on the job of figuring it
|
||
out). And naturally, I have vastly huger amounts still to learn. I'm
|
||
currently programming full time for the first time in my life, and my plan
|
||
is to make a stab at earning a living by designing and writing games for
|
||
the Mac. I'm just finishing up a semi-major project; if you ever peruse
|
||
Mac magazines, perhaps you'll be hearing about it in 6 months or so.
|
||
|
||
Feel free to post this note on GEnie, if anyone's interested.
|
||
|
||
Karl
|
||
|
||
[end]
|
||
|
||
We will be in touch with Karl about getting his source code and will
|
||
keep everyone posted.
|
||
|
||
Charlie
|
||
(A2.CHARLIE, CAT13, TOP10, MSG:156/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
|
||
THE BEST POSSIBLE IIGS? I am looking for the reason I shouldnt move over
|
||
""""""""""""""""""""""" from my GS 01 unit to a 03 unit. I have already
|
||
been advised that my AE ramplus card may not work due to chips on or not on
|
||
the card. All tips needed..
|
||
|
||
I have come into a rom 03 GS 1meg but bare bones, only the monitor, 2
|
||
drives, keyboard, mouse, I have been thinking of setting it up with only
|
||
the best and fastest hardware. What would you do, if you did it over
|
||
again??
|
||
|
||
Any and all help will be appreciated. :)) Thanks....willis
|
||
(W.POOLE, CAT12, TOP5, MSG:121/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
>>>>> 1. RamFast Rev D with 1 meg cache
|
||
"""""
|
||
2. Sequential Systems 4 meg memory card.
|
||
|
||
3. ZipGS in the 10/64 configuration. (Faster is possible, but not
|
||
necessarily better, the 10/64 is stone reliable.)
|
||
|
||
4. Quantum 240 LPS hard drive in an APS case. (Since the 240 LPS is
|
||
no longer made, this may be hard to find. :) (Bigger drives run into a
|
||
problem with the number of usable partitions under ProDos, and I don't
|
||
beleive in using HFS partitions on a GS. A 240, with a Syquest as your
|
||
second drive, should give you all the capacity you'd ever need. The LPS
|
||
series drives were faster than the stuff Quantum is currently selling, not
|
||
that you could ever notice or measure the difference.)
|
||
|
||
5. Syquest drive for backups. I prefer the 44meg since it is the
|
||
least expensive (just bought two brand new carts from MacMall for $44/ea)
|
||
and has plenty of capacity for GS backups. (I.e. format the cart to 32
|
||
megs and a remainder, back up each of your 32 meg partitions on the main
|
||
drive to a Syquest cart using ProSel Volume Copy. (Of course, you COULD
|
||
buy a Syquest 270, and back everything up to ONE cart, but if that one cart
|
||
died......)
|
||
|
||
(Others may disagree, but you asked for opinions, and that's mine. :)
|
||
|
||
6. 28,800 modem (v34), USR or Hayes preferred, many others
|
||
acceptable...
|
||
|
||
(Sayyyyy, did I just describe MY system? Why, yes, I guess I did,
|
||
except that my memory card is actually from CV Tech, and my hard drives are
|
||
in TMS cases, but otherwise...)
|
||
|
||
7. Second Sight video card from Sequential (as soon as it becomes
|
||
available) running a 15" or better Sony or NEC SVGA monitor.
|
||
|
||
8. Buffered Grappler Plus running into a DeskJet 550C with either the
|
||
Vitesse or Sevenhills drivers.
|
||
|
||
9. Superdrive card and drive. (I'd run that out of Slot 6 myself,
|
||
and bag the 5.25 drives, then put a pair of 800K drives on the Smartport.)
|
||
|
||
If you REALLY want to tweak it, get a keyboard from a Mac SE30 (same
|
||
circuit board as the GS keyboard, in a better case) and make sure that you
|
||
have an original "grey ball" style GS mouse, not one of those new "black
|
||
ball" mice that shipped with the Rom 03. (Or try to find a Rom 03
|
||
Kensington Turbo mouse, if you like those things....) (And get a "Y"
|
||
connector for the ADB cables, so you don't have to plug the mouse into the
|
||
keybaord, it lays out much nicer on your desk.:)
|
||
|
||
For a touch of the obscure, find one of Bob Consortis "On Board" 4
|
||
meg memory cards. I don't know if Bob has any left, but that thing is the
|
||
BEST built memory card ever produced for the GS. (So well built, in fact,
|
||
that it cost Bob too much to produce it and he took a real bath on them.)
|
||
|
||
(You could put more RAM in the machine with a "piggyback" memory
|
||
card, and get a REALLY big hard drive, and a REALLY fast ZIP, but it would
|
||
just be for bragging rights. :) (If you're gonna do that, you'll want to
|
||
put a 20" monitor on that Second Sight card. :)
|
||
|
||
(Sayyy, this was fun, wasn't it? :)
|
||
|
||
Gary R. Utter
|
||
(GARY.UTTER, CAT12, TOP5, MSG:122/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
|
||
>>> HOT TOPICS <<<
|
||
""""""""""""""""""
|
||
|
||
FAXINATION v1.0.5 STOMPS SOME BUGS A new version of FAXination is now
|
||
"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""" available on the Vitesse BBS. Go to
|
||
the (X)transfers area, then select Area 3 and download from the only
|
||
directory in the FAXination Updates area.
|
||
|
||
The new version includes the NDA and the Print Driver. Unpack the
|
||
archive and replace your old files with the new ones. This update addresses
|
||
the following problems:
|
||
|
||
- Garbled receives on LineLink modems.
|
||
- Printing from AWGS and GraphicWriter III is much better now!
|
||
- You may now Print AND View faxes in your fax logs!
|
||
- When creating a fax document, FAXination now names the document for you
|
||
using the name from the title of your document window.
|
||
|
||
When logging on to the Vitesse BBS for the first time, try entering
|
||
your Invoice Number from the invoice you received with your FAXination
|
||
package. If you get a "Invalid Information Entered" response, I probably
|
||
haven't been notified that your program was shipped. Just type "NEW" to
|
||
apply for an account and you will be granted access within a few hours.
|
||
|
||
While most people can get on the BBS in the first try, one or two
|
||
have been bumped off due to line noise or something, which also locks up
|
||
the BBS. If this happens to you, send a FEEDBACK at the logon prompt and
|
||
tell me what you want to use for a handle and password, plus your invoice
|
||
number, and I will set up a complete account for you. If you STILL can't
|
||
get on, other arrangements will be made on a case by case basis.
|
||
|
||
Thank you.
|
||
Da Programmer
|
||
(S.MCQUEEN1, CAT40, TOP2, MSG:374/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
<<<<< Re: Garbled faxes (Other than LineLink
|
||
"""""
|
||
I expect to get a LineLink 144e modem for testing in the next couple
|
||
of days, and will make it work at that time. Sorry for the false optimism
|
||
in the announcement for version 0.1.4, but I really thought I had something
|
||
there. :(
|
||
|
||
When set up to receive, whether manually or in Auto-receive mode,
|
||
FAXination starts a RunQ task which triggers once per second and looks for
|
||
a RING response from the modem. The RunQ task is not allowed to trigger
|
||
again until it has finished, but the NDA, which uses the same Resource
|
||
Manager files, could conceivably be causing some kind of a weird conflict,
|
||
which might account for the fact that a few people are seeing crashes if
|
||
they leave their Receive functions active for too long.
|
||
|
||
When a fax is actually coming in, FAXination uses its own interrupt
|
||
handler to place incoming characters in a buffer, and the main program
|
||
copies the characters from the buffer to a chunk of memory large enough to
|
||
contain the entire page. This copying is done between interrupts. The
|
||
interrupt handler permits other interrupts to be processed by the regular
|
||
system handlers when no incoming characters are detected, so it is possible
|
||
that NDA's or CDEV's which use interrupts could take control long enough to
|
||
cause characters to be lost.
|
||
|
||
Anyone who is experiencing garbled faxes which contain recognizeable
|
||
features should try disabling their other NDA's and any non-essential
|
||
CDEV's or INIT's which might be using interrupts. Clocks and screen
|
||
blankers come to mind as potential culprits. If your faxes contain nothing
|
||
but staticky-looking lines and dots, then you probably have a different
|
||
problem, and should report your modem type here or on the Vitesse BBS.
|
||
|
||
Da Programmer
|
||
(S.MCQUEEN1, CAT40, TOP2, MSG:425/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
|
||
QUICK CLICK MORPH Well, if you pay attention to the main GEnie banners,
|
||
""""""""""""""""" you now know that the second Quick Click program is
|
||
Quick Click Morph.
|
||
|
||
Sunday's conference topic is Quick Click Morph. I will upload a few
|
||
short sample morphs between now and then, BUT:
|
||
|
||
This announcement is a GEnie exclusive. I won't answer any questions
|
||
about the program itself until Sunday's conference... So be there! :)
|
||
|
||
I will, of course, answer questions about specific demos or about
|
||
morphing in general.
|
||
|
||
Mike Westerfield
|
||
(BYTEWORKS, CAT45, TOP4, MSG:1/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
<<<<< At the conference, I said QCMorph would ship around the end of the
|
||
""""" month. Some rather annoying (but in the long run not critical)
|
||
medical problems have kept me away from the keyboard for nearly a full
|
||
week, and as a result, QCMorph will ship around the first week of
|
||
April--unless the medical problems cause more delays. I'll keep you
|
||
informed, and I do appologize for the delay.
|
||
|
||
Mike Westerfield
|
||
(BYTEWORKS, CAT45, TOP4, MSG:32/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
|
||
PHOENIX II--APPLEWORKS 5 ON THE MAC > Is there anything like AppleWorks
|
||
""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""" > and Ultramacros to compare to in
|
||
> the mac world?
|
||
|
||
Well, this summer there will be AppleWorks 5 and UltraMacros IN the
|
||
Mac world. JEM Software will be shipping an emulator (codenamed Phoenix)
|
||
which lets you run your actual AppleWorks 5 on any 68020 or better Mac,
|
||
including a native PPC version for PowerMacs. The emulator wp find/replace
|
||
test mentioned in the Jan 1995 Naug Forum emulation article gave a time of
|
||
613 seconds for ][ in a Mac on a 610; on the same machine, Phoenix
|
||
currently takes 66 seconds, and on a PowerMac, only 15 seconds (compared to
|
||
about 30 seconds for a IIgs).
|
||
(BRANDT, CAT17, TOP6, MSG:9/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
<<<<< > I assume this is an unaccelerated GS
|
||
"""""
|
||
Yes, that's the the stock IIgs at 3mhz. However, a 7mhz IIgs takes
|
||
about 15 seconds as well, so the PowerMac is comparable on that test.
|
||
|
||
> Any idea about the price of Phoenix yet?
|
||
|
||
Yes. ][ in a Mac lists for $149. We'll probably list around $99,
|
||
and undoubtedly there will be an offer or two, such as to the NAUG
|
||
membership.
|
||
|
||
Keypad macros will work.
|
||
(BRANDT, CAT17, TOP20, MSG: /M645;1)
|
||
|
||
<<<<< > Are ya saying I'll be able to use AW5 and AW files on the Mac,
|
||
""""" > without any conversions? Can files be created on the Mac, and
|
||
> used on the GS? :)
|
||
|
||
Yes and yes. You're not running software similar to AppleWorks,
|
||
you're running actual AppleWorks. We just provide the "engine", so you'll
|
||
still need a copy of AppleWorks in order to work. Since you're running
|
||
AppleWorks, you're loading, working with, and saving regular old AppleWorks
|
||
disks. Under System 7.5, you can save directly onto ProDOS disks which can
|
||
then be popped into your IIgs. Better yet, all it takes is a connection
|
||
between your IIgs and your Mac and you can use Personal AppleShare to run
|
||
AppleWorks on both machines from the Mac hard drive.
|
||
|
||
> Will all the functions of AW5 be usable?
|
||
|
||
Not graphics stuff like Paint, Graph or DB Pix. We're not sure
|
||
exactly how printing will be handled yet. We will support a quick copy
|
||
to/from the AWP clipboard and the Mac system clipboard for data transfer to
|
||
other Mac apps.
|
||
|
||
WARNING: Although Phoenix runs on 68020 machines, the performance on
|
||
a Mac II is pretty bad. I wouldn't use it on a 68020 unless it was
|
||
accelerated. I haven't tried a 68030 yet, but my 68040LC does a great job,
|
||
and Mark's PowerMac provides impressive performance. I'm guessing/hoping
|
||
that the 604-based PowerMacs will run most AppleWorks functions faster than
|
||
a 12mhz IIgs. The great thing is that AppleWorks can just surf the latest
|
||
wave of Apple hardware, getting faster and faster as time goes by. :)
|
||
(BRANDT, CAT17, TOP20, MSG:9/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
<<<<< I hope we can live up to your expectations. We're working hard to
|
||
""""" make the Phoenix project a viable Mac application, at least to
|
||
former A2'ers. Yesterday we got externals working. There are now
|
||
UltraMacros commands which can call Mac external commands. For example, we
|
||
have one called PLAYSOUND. A macro such as A:<all msg ' Please wait ' :
|
||
.sound "Welcome" : goto sa-b>! will put up a message, speak a recorded
|
||
greeting as .sound tells PLAYSOUND to use the sound "Welcome", and continue
|
||
on with the macro. Pretty slick!
|
||
|
||
Another cool features is that your root directory can be specified as
|
||
"/*/" and the Mac will use the current Phoenix folder. This means that
|
||
regardless of the hard drive's name, inits and TimeOut apps load up and the
|
||
default data disk finds files in the Phoenix folder right after
|
||
installation without having to reconfigure everything like on the A2.
|
||
|
||
Yes, Mark is Mark Munz of Beagle Bros/JEM Software fame. He's the
|
||
programmer on Phoenix. I'm the publisher, A2 tech advisor and co-designer.
|
||
Between the two of us we've got it in pretty good shape by now.
|
||
(BRANDT, CAT17, TOP20, MSG:19/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
<<<<< We could ship a lot sooner if we didn't try to print from within
|
||
""""" Phoenix. Since we have a "wp clip-to-mac clip" feature, would most
|
||
of you settle for printing from within a normal Mac application?
|
||
(BRANDT, CAT17, TOP20, MSG:21/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
|
||
SYSTEM 6.0.2 FOR THE IIGS Olivier Zardini of Brutal Deluxe has asked me
|
||
""""""""""""""""""""""""" to post the following message here on A2.
|
||
Please note that his Internet e-mail address is at the end of his note, and
|
||
for various reasons which I think should be fairly obvious given that legal
|
||
copyrights are involved, I'd prefer if you contacted him directly rather
|
||
than by posting a response here or by e-mailing me. I'm simply passing
|
||
along Brutal Deluxe's message...
|
||
|
||
Hello,
|
||
|
||
After 2 months of hard work, we are proud to announce that we have
|
||
made the source code of the WHOLE Apple //gs 6.01 SYSTEM.
|
||
|
||
Few bugs have been corrected, such as the Font Manager one. But many
|
||
of them remain in the system. We have found many things like that
|
||
|
||
_TLStartUp
|
||
bcc *+3
|
||
brk $f0
|
||
.
|
||
.
|
||
|
||
That would explain why the system crashes so often. So, there is a
|
||
lot of work to do to clean the system up.
|
||
|
||
The purpose of this message is to get from the users a list of the
|
||
bugs. Apple Computer Inc should have such a list, could someone ask them
|
||
for it ?
|
||
|
||
A good thing will be to add to the next system (6.02 ??) the setup
|
||
files we mainly use (Bill Tudor's extensions, PicViewer...).
|
||
|
||
Our purpose is not to upload the whole sources code on FTP sites but
|
||
to find people (or organization like Phoenix Project) who could help us in
|
||
debugging some parts of the system. We are looking for experimented beta
|
||
testers, because some parts like FST (Appleshare, msdos...) can't be tested
|
||
on our configuration (We have no network at home).
|
||
|
||
We perfectly know that the Apple //gs system is not a public domain
|
||
software and the fact of releasing a new version is probably illegal. But,
|
||
if we and you don't do it, who will do it ? Apple has decided to leave the
|
||
Apple II community and will never change his mind. But, if someone at Apple
|
||
Comp wants to help us, that will be a good thing.
|
||
|
||
We are awaiting your comments. Your propositions & help are welcome.
|
||
|
||
Apple //gs System 6.02 infinitum :-)
|
||
|
||
Antoine VIGNAU and Olivier ZARDINI
|
||
from
|
||
Brutal Deluxe Software
|
||
|
||
Antoine VIGNAU Olivier ZARDINI
|
||
11 rue Emile Fourcand Res. la foret du Conte
|
||
33000 BORDEAUX 33140 CADAUJAC
|
||
FRANCE FRANCE
|
||
Tel : (33) 56.48.00.94 Tel : (33) 56.30.73.36
|
||
Rtel : 3615, 3614 Bal LOGO Rtel : 3615, 3614 Bal ZARDOS
|
||
|
||
Email : zardini@ixl.u-bordeaux.fr
|
||
(JOE.KOHN, CAT28, TOP4, MSG:273/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
<<<<< (Here's a follow up from Brutal Deluxe. I'm relieved after reading
|
||
""""" this..JK)
|
||
|
||
Hello...
|
||
|
||
... and many thanks to everyone who posted us a message.
|
||
|
||
Let us explain few things. We think that our previous message was not quite
|
||
understandable.
|
||
|
||
- We don't want to be a substitute of Opple and replace them in
|
||
updating the system they have provided.
|
||
|
||
- We DO KNOW that releasing a complete set of SystemDisk 6.0.2 is
|
||
illegal and we won't go that way. Even though it has not been
|
||
clearly explained, our purpose is to make a special disk including
|
||
updated files. A patch IS impossible in many cases. (It is exactly
|
||
what we did with our french version of the system)
|
||
|
||
- The _TLStartUp example was JUST an example :-) It was given in order
|
||
to show you that some utilities are bugged. The interesting part is
|
||
the BRK mnemonic. Okay?
|
||
|
||
- The aim is to have a 6.0.2 system which would be an update of 6.0.1
|
||
(update of 6.0) and NOT to had functionality to the system.
|
||
|
||
- We don't really think that Opple will release an update to the system
|
||
even though some says the contrary.
|
||
|
||
- We will be happy to have exchanges with other people who are working
|
||
in the same way (Quickdraw patch, Programmers on GEnie...).
|
||
|
||
The following is the software we had worked on:
|
||
|
||
- Complete set of Control Devices (/CDEVs)
|
||
|
||
- Complete set of Desk Accessories (/Desk.Accs)
|
||
|
||
- Complete set of Drivers (/Drivers)
|
||
|
||
- Complete set of File Translators (/FSTs)
|
||
|
||
- Complete set of Init Files (/System.Setup)
|
||
|
||
- Complete set of Tools (/Tools)
|
||
|
||
The next software is on a way to completion or need no updating:
|
||
|
||
- GS/OS (That's but stupid you install it in bank $00, there is a loss
|
||
of about 8kb of direct page area)
|
||
|
||
- Finder (The disassembling is ended, the Magic Dropping Routine
|
||
located and will soon be corrected)
|
||
|
||
- ADU, Archiver, Installer, SynthLab, Teach We don't think these files
|
||
need to be updated (The Installer is really well programmed, and ADU
|
||
is a nightmare...)
|
||
|
||
So, for we can release such an update, we want you to send us:
|
||
|
||
1/ The list of the bugs you have encountered:
|
||
Which supposed file is corrupted and so on...
|
||
(Hi Geoff: Can you send us your list please?)
|
||
|
||
2/ The domain in which you can help us debugging:
|
||
Hello, I have a BlueDisk, then you can test MsBeurk FST...
|
||
|
||
As far as FSTs are concerned:
|
||
|
||
1/ Understanding the internal structure of an FST is not so hard
|
||
|
||
2/ Writing a FST suppose to know other platforms' system files. We have
|
||
no documentation on Commodore Amiga files structure...
|
||
|
||
3/ We will probably write a documentation of the FST structure.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Here we go...
|
||
|
||
Antoine VIGNAU and Olivier ZARDINI
|
||
from
|
||
Brutal Deluxe Software
|
||
|
||
(JOE.KOHN, CAT28, TOP4, MSG:296/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
<<<<< My initial reaction after I got the e-mail from Brutal Deluxe was
|
||
""""" fear; fear of copyright infringement.
|
||
|
||
After a series of e-mails back and forth with Brutal Deluxe, and
|
||
after hearing from Bob Consorti (the author of the _new_ BOS operating
|
||
system for the Apple III) that fear has dissipated.
|
||
|
||
If you have specific information about System 6.0.1 bugs, please
|
||
e-mail them to Brutal Deluxe. If you want to help them, please e-mail
|
||
Brutal Deluxe. If you have technical information about FSTs or other
|
||
components of GS/OS, please e-mail them to Brutal Deluxe.
|
||
|
||
Thanks.
|
||
|
||
Joe
|
||
(JOE.KOHN, CAT28, TOP4, MSG:303/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
|
||
OUTLOOK FOR II ALIVE II Alive will continue to be published for at least
|
||
"""""""""""""""""""" another year, although starting with the next issue,
|
||
the size will decline even further. We will be removing some of the ads to
|
||
help make up for this.
|
||
(II.ALIVE, CAT42, TOP10, MSG:148/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
<<<<< II Alive is not going quarterly anytime soon. Thanks, everyone,
|
||
""""" for all the suggestions, but I'm afraid I'm not the one who's made
|
||
the decisions regarding II Alive, and in any case these decisions are not
|
||
subject to change at this time.
|
||
(II.ALIVE, CAT42, TOP11, MSG:111/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
>>>>> The official word is that the magazine will continue "at least
|
||
""""" another year".
|
||
|
||
I've heard enough "official statements" to recognize that the
|
||
modifier "at least" is there to allow maneuvering room in case of
|
||
unexpected occurrences, and that "another year" is the only definite
|
||
statement.
|
||
|
||
The official word is that the magazine's going to get thinner, and
|
||
that advertising will be reduced. Both of these changes are contrary to
|
||
the end of attracting new subscribers.
|
||
|
||
It is my belief that the majority of subscriptions run through the
|
||
end of 1995; it is my belief that this is why the magazine will continue
|
||
"another year".
|
||
(R.HARDMAN, CAT42, TOP11, MSG:117/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
<<<<< Well, actually, we hired Dean Esmay to edit II Alive a while back,
|
||
""""" and then we turned around and hired Syndicomm (the company he owns)
|
||
to help us with theLINQ, our new Internet service for education. So we
|
||
have recently hired another editor for II Alive -- one whose work has
|
||
impressed me time and again. I'll be announcing his name soon and he'll be
|
||
taking over this account. B)
|
||
(II.ALIVE, CAT42, TOP11, MSG:119/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
|
||
>>> WHAT'S NEW <<<
|
||
""""""""""""""""""
|
||
|
||
QUICK CLICK MORPH FOR THE APPLE IIGS
|
||
""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
|
||
|
||
Published by Byte Works, Inc.
|
||
|
||
Price: $60
|
||
Requirements: System 6.0.1, 1.125M RAM
|
||
Also supports: Hard drives, printers, accelerator cards
|
||
|
||
Contact:
|
||
Mike Westerfield
|
||
Byte Works, Inc.
|
||
8000 Wagon Mound Dr. NW
|
||
Albuquerque, NM 87120
|
||
(505) 898-8183
|
||
|
||
AOL: Send e-mail to MikeW50 or visit us using keyword ByteWorks.
|
||
GEnie: Send e-mail to ByteWorks or visit us in A2, Category 45.
|
||
Internet: Send e-mail to MikeW50@AOL.COM
|
||
|
||
|
||
Announcing Quick Click Morph The Byte Works, long the dominant company
|
||
'''''''''''''''''''''''''''' for Apple II development tools, announced
|
||
their second productivity tool in a GEnie exclusive on March 19th. The new
|
||
program puts the G for Graphics back in the Apple IIGS in a big way: Quick
|
||
Click Morph brings Hollywood style special effects to the Apple II
|
||
community! You can create movies with morphs, tweens and fades. Quick
|
||
Click Morph also brings a new standard for movie color on the Apple IIGS,
|
||
supporting several color palettes including 256 color movies!
|
||
|
||
Quick Click Morph is expected to ship around the end of March, 1995.
|
||
The Byte Works will announce the program again when it actually ships, but
|
||
will accept orders now. Naturally, pre-release orders will not be
|
||
processed until the program actually ships.
|
||
|
||
Look What You Can Do Morphs are those amazing movie clips you sometimes
|
||
'''''''''''''''''''' see on high budget films and commercials. You start
|
||
with two or more original pictures, identify a few similar points, like the
|
||
eyes on a girl and a cat, and the program creates a smooth movie that
|
||
changes one picture to another. The middle frames, showing a mix of the
|
||
two pictures, can be amusing, informative, or thought provoking.
|
||
|
||
Morphs are great attention grabbers. For example, think how
|
||
effectively you could grab the attention of a 7th grade student with a
|
||
HyperStudio evolution stack that opens with a morph that gradually changes
|
||
a pre-human skull to a human skull. Imagine their reaction to continental
|
||
drift if you grab their attention with a morph that changes Pangaea, the
|
||
original grouping of continents, smoothly into the current world map.
|
||
|
||
Morphs are also a great way to make a statement. Morphing your
|
||
"favorite" politician into Mickey Mouse could release some tension, not to
|
||
mention get your point across at a meeting.
|
||
|
||
My favorite morphs are for entertainment. A morph changing my
|
||
daughter into her cat was an instant neighborhood hit. (This morph is
|
||
available in GEnie's A2 library.) Mother-daughter morphs and
|
||
mother-child-father morphs are a lot of fun, too. Whatever your subjects,
|
||
morphs are a great way to entertain!
|
||
|
||
Can I Share My Morphs? Of course, once you create a morph, you'll want to
|
||
'''''''''''''''''''''' send it to your friends. Morphs created with
|
||
Quick Click Morph can be played with any standard PaintWorks movie player.
|
||
We even give you one with Quick Click Morph, and it's freeware, so you can
|
||
send it to anyone you want at no charge. Our movie player even lets you
|
||
create a movie slide show that plays selected movies until you tell it to
|
||
stop.
|
||
|
||
And for those unfortunate friends who don't have an Apple IIGS, you
|
||
can always hook a standard VCR recorder from your television set to the
|
||
monitor output for your Apple IIGS and record all the morphs you want!
|
||
|
||
What can Quick Click Morph Do? For those of you who are familiar with
|
||
'''''''''''''''''''''''''''''' Morphing, and want to know the gritty
|
||
details, here they are! For those of you who have no idea what these
|
||
details mean, don't worry--the manual teaches you how to create morphs with
|
||
step-by-step examples that show you how to use the program, not just what
|
||
the features are!
|
||
|
||
Quick Click Morph starts with two or more pictures, which you can
|
||
supply in a variety of formats. These include Apple IIGS screen dumps,
|
||
Apple Preferred pictures (including 3200 pictures stored in Apple Preferred
|
||
format) and uncompressed RGB TIFF files.
|
||
|
||
Once you assemble the original pictures for your morph, you have a
|
||
variety of options for each sequence. You control the number of frames,
|
||
how fast the colors shift, the way the images change, and much more.
|
||
|
||
Picking the control points to tell the program how to map one picture
|
||
to another is a key feature of any Morph program, and Quick Click Morph
|
||
gives you a lot of flexibility. You can choose from control points or
|
||
lines. Color coding helps you see which points correspond between your
|
||
start and end frames. You can look at the frames full size, or shrunk so
|
||
the entire frame fits in the available space, and you can view one frame or
|
||
the start-end frame pair. A simple click of the mouse creates a control
|
||
point, and moving one is as simple as dragging it with the mouse.
|
||
|
||
You can pick from a variety of color palettes. Grayscale movies are
|
||
great for any application. For geometric morphs, the standard 320 mode
|
||
color palette is a fast and effective color choice. HyperStudio likes to
|
||
work in the standard 640 color palette, and Quick Click Morph is happy to
|
||
oblige. You can also select a custom 16 color palette. All of these
|
||
choices lead to fast morphs which take as little as 30 seconds per frame on
|
||
an unaccelerated Apple IIGS. (The time goes up with the number of control
|
||
points. Typical morph times on an unaccelerated Apple IIGS are about 5
|
||
minutes per frame.)
|
||
|
||
If you'd like to invest a little more computer time on a morph, you
|
||
can also pick from the dazzling 128 color and 256 color morphs! These
|
||
formats take full advantage of the Apple IIGS's multiple color palettes.
|
||
And due to some behind the scenes tricks, these full-color movies can still
|
||
be played with a standard PaintWorks movie player!
|
||
|
||
The Byte Works We're the Byte Works, famous for our programming tools for
|
||
'''''''''''''' the Apple II series of computers--and now for our
|
||
productivity tools for the Apple IIGS, too!
|
||
|
||
Founded in 1980, we have a long history of serving the Apple II
|
||
community. We started with ORCA/M, a macro assembler that is one of two
|
||
programs ever to earn a perfect rating from Peelings II magazine. We went
|
||
on to write APW, Apple Computer's standard programming environment for the
|
||
Apple IIGS. We've brought you dozens of other programs, too, like ORCA/C,
|
||
the award winning C compiler; ORCA/Pascal, the only commercial object
|
||
oriented language for the Apple II; and our Toolbox Programming courses,
|
||
which have introduced thousands to the world of Apple IIGS toolbox
|
||
programming. And don't forget HyperLogo and 3D Logo, our fun, easy to use
|
||
programming languages that can actually show 3D pictures on any color Apple
|
||
IIGS!
|
||
|
||
Look for more innovative, fun, useful programs for your Apple IIGS
|
||
for us in the months to come. We're one company with a long term
|
||
commitment to our Apple IIGS customers!
|
||
|
||
Ordering We accept Visa and MasterCard orders on-line or by phone, and
|
||
'''''''' personal checks or school purchase orders by mail.
|
||
|
||
Please include $5 for shipping in the US and Canada. For credit card
|
||
orders, we can charge exact shipping for our overseas customers. If you
|
||
need to know oversees shipping in advance, send your name, address, what
|
||
you are ordering and how you want it shipped (air or surface), and we'll be
|
||
happy to calculate the shipping charges.
|
||
|
||
Distribution Please give a copy of this [message] to everyone you know!
|
||
'''''''''''' Feel free to use it in newsletters or catalogs, or to post
|
||
it on bulletin boards or on-line services.
|
||
|
||
For a printed brochure describing Quick Click Morph, send us your
|
||
mailing address. Ask about our product list showing other Apple IIGS
|
||
programs, too! We'll also let you know about other new Apple IIGS programs
|
||
and special offers in the months to come.
|
||
|
||
|
||
STATUS OF TURBOREZ GS (Mar 7, 1995) As of the above date, production of
|
||
""""""""""""""""""""" the TurboRez GS board has been suspended and will
|
||
not be resumed. It's been a long, difficult path over the years, with
|
||
various versions of the product appearing periodically. At this point,
|
||
however, the project is being laid to rest and RezTek will not be
|
||
developing any standalone video boards for the Apple II in the future.
|
||
Despite getting about as close as we've ever been to completing the
|
||
product, there's no arguing with the fact that the competing board from
|
||
Sequential Systems is not only beating us out the door by 3-4 months but
|
||
also has the clear advantage in the price category. Rather than subject
|
||
ourselves to an economically bruising battle and putting the Apple II
|
||
marketplace thru a VHS/Beta type product war, we decided this was the best
|
||
course of action. This will insure a single, standard upgrade path.
|
||
|
||
So, for those Apple IIe/IIGS users who are interested in enhancing
|
||
the video output of their computers, we'd like to suggest and recommend the
|
||
Second Sight video card from Sequential Systems (which should be shipping
|
||
right about now). Sequential is a company known for putting out solid,
|
||
well-designed products in the past, and the Second Sight card looks to be
|
||
no exception. Here at RezTek, we're looking into the distinct possibility
|
||
of supporting the Second Sight product sometime in the near future. Stay
|
||
tuned for more on that subject...
|
||
|
||
William St.Pierre
|
||
RezTek
|
||
2301 Cotton Ct
|
||
Santa Rosa, Ca 95401
|
||
707-573-9257
|
||
Internet: Reztek@Genie.Geis.Com
|
||
|
||
|
||
GOLDEN ORCHARD ORDERING INFORMATION
|
||
"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
|
||
|
||
What is Golden Orchard? Golden Orchard is the largest Apple II CD-ROM
|
||
''''''''''''''''''''''' made to date. It contains over 600 megabytes of
|
||
files useful to Apple II owners, including tons of freeware, shareware,
|
||
utilities, games, graphics, sounds, music, source code, and much more, all
|
||
in uncompressed, easy-to-navigate form. It is primarily targetted at the
|
||
Apple IIGS owner, and can be fully accessed on a Mac or Apple IIGS equipped
|
||
with CD-ROM drive. (Apple IIe owners can access the ProDOS partition
|
||
only.)
|
||
|
||
Golden Orchard Shipping SOON! Golden Orchard will ship the first week of
|
||
''''''''''''''''''''''''''''' April! We are now taking preorders, which
|
||
will be sent out the first day we ship.
|
||
|
||
SPECIAL INTRODUCTORY OFFER: Save $5 off the normal $65 list price by
|
||
ordering now! That's LESS THAN 10 CENTS PER MEGABYTE!
|
||
|
||
Pricing Information for Introductory Special
|
||
''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''
|
||
Golden Orchard (Special) .. $60
|
||
|
||
Shipping & Handling:
|
||
United States ........... $2
|
||
Mexico/Canada ........... $3
|
||
Overseas ................ $5
|
||
|
||
To order, please send payment to:
|
||
|
||
Jim Maricondo
|
||
PO Box 11005
|
||
Stanford, CA 94309-1005
|
||
|
||
Make checks payable to Jim Maricondo.
|
||
|
||
Sorry, credit cards are not acceptable. User group bulk discounts
|
||
available.
|
||
|
||
For further information, check out our world wide web site at:
|
||
* http://www-leland.stanford.edu/~jagaroth/digisoft/
|
||
|
||
Or email:
|
||
* jagaroth@mail.stanford.edu
|
||
|
||
GOLDEN ORCHARD QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS MARCH 17, 1995 REVISION
|
||
""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
|
||
|
||
Will the CD be readable on a PC? No. The ISO 9660 file system
|
||
'''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''' (needed for the CD to be PC readable) is
|
||
just too restrictive and thus not very feasible for our needs. Instead the
|
||
CD has ProDOS and HFS partitions.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Will the CD be readable on a Mac? Yes. The CD has six HFS partitions
|
||
''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''' (this) was due to bugs in the HFS FST,
|
||
but it also allowed us to fit a LOT more on the CD since it reduced HFS
|
||
overhead considerably) and one ProDOS partition, all of which are capable
|
||
of being mounted on a Mac. However, you will need Mac CD drivers that will
|
||
recognize multiple HFS partitions and ProDOS partitions. The only driver
|
||
we know of that will do this is FWB's CD-ROM Toolkit. It will mount the 5
|
||
HFS partitions, and if you have the ProDOS File System extension (part of
|
||
the Apple IIe card software for the Mac) it will also mount the ProDOS
|
||
partition as well.
|
||
|
||
Almost all files should fit on an 800k disk so you could read them on
|
||
a Mac with CD-ROM drive and transfer them to the GS manually. 800k disk
|
||
images are one exception, but you can convert them into their original disk
|
||
format on the Mac or the IIGS using included programs, so it shouldn't be a
|
||
problem.
|
||
|
||
Will the CD be useful to an Apple IIe owner? Somewhat. The ProDOS
|
||
'''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''' partition is around 18MB.
|
||
It contains lots of AppleWorks files, ProDOS 8 utilities and programs,
|
||
BASIC programs, and other items of interest to Apple IIe owners. However
|
||
the definite focus of this disc is the IIGS.
|
||
|
||
What is the current status of the project? When will the CD be shipping?
|
||
'''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''
|
||
We expect it to REALLY be shipping the first week of April (1995), if not
|
||
sooner! Right now the CD is being replicated by the CD manufacturing
|
||
company. We are presently taking preorders that will be shipped when we
|
||
start shipping.
|
||
|
||
Will there be user group discounts? If your user group would like to put
|
||
''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''' together a group order, please
|
||
contact us (see below) for group discount information.
|
||
|
||
What about overseas orders? We encourage overseas orders but regret that
|
||
''''''''''''''''''''''''''' we cannot accept credit cards as a method of
|
||
payment. Overseas orders will be charged a $5 shipping and handling fee
|
||
for air mail shipping.
|
||
|
||
GOLDEN ORCHARD CONTENTS SUMMARY: (Partial listing)
|
||
""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
|
||
|
||
Applications 81mb
|
||
Demos 10mb
|
||
Games 27mb
|
||
Graphics & Sound Demos 7mb
|
||
Graphics Utilities 5mb
|
||
Sound & Music Programs 10mb
|
||
System Utilities 4mb
|
||
Telecommunications 5mb
|
||
Disk Images 145mb
|
||
FTA Software 22mb
|
||
Graphics 51mb
|
||
3200 Color Pictures 8mb
|
||
Animations 10mb
|
||
APF Pictures 5mb
|
||
GIF Pictures 12mb
|
||
Music 64mb
|
||
MIDI Songs 5mb
|
||
MODs 22mb
|
||
SoundSmith Songs 16mb
|
||
SynthLab Songs 12mb
|
||
Sounds 13mb
|
||
Apple Software 28mb
|
||
System Software
|
||
HyperCard IIGS
|
||
AppleWorks 10mb
|
||
BASIC Programs 1mb
|
||
Stacks 28mb
|
||
HyperCard IIGS 6mb
|
||
HyperStudio 22mb
|
||
Bitmap Fonts 2mb
|
||
TrueType Fonts 28mb
|
||
Deprotects & Cheats 6mb
|
||
Icons 1mb
|
||
CDAs 2mb
|
||
NDAs 2mb
|
||
Inits 1mb
|
||
Finder Extensions 1mb
|
||
Patches & Updates 1mb
|
||
Text Files 25mb
|
||
Programming 124mb
|
||
From Apple 31mb
|
||
Data Compression 2mb
|
||
Assembly Source 8mb
|
||
C Source 10mb
|
||
Utilities 18mb
|
||
|
||
|
||
OMNIPRINT NOW AVAILABLE FOR APPLEWORKS 5 Kitchen Sink Software is proud
|
||
"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""" to finally announce that
|
||
OmniPrint is now available for AppleWorks 5.0. For those customers who
|
||
purchased OmniPrint from Kitchen Sink Software directly since Dec. 1, 1994
|
||
you should be receiving your free upgrade in the mail within the next few
|
||
days.
|
||
|
||
Upgrades for all other versions are available for $10.00. You can
|
||
call or write to Kitchen Sink Software at:
|
||
|
||
Kitchen Sink Software, Inc.
|
||
903 Knebworth Ct.
|
||
Westerville, OH 43081
|
||
800-235-5502 (continental US)
|
||
614-891-2111 (Columbus Ohio and outside the US)
|
||
|
||
We accept VISA and Master Card orders as well as school purchase
|
||
orders, money orders, and checks. We do not recommend sending cash through
|
||
the mail, but if we get it, we will honor it :)
|
||
(KITCHEN.SINK, CAT25, TOP3, MSG:21/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
<<<<< OmniPrint can be used only with an ImageWriter II. Basically what
|
||
""""" it does is give you complete control over the downloaded fonts
|
||
capability of the printer. It comes with several fonts which can be
|
||
transferred to the printer's memory and then print at the same speed as
|
||
regular text.
|
||
|
||
You can use all of the special characters for foreign language
|
||
printouts or a special font for math symbols. You can create custom
|
||
borders to go around text you want to highlight. You can even print
|
||
letters rotated 90 degrees.
|
||
|
||
The single user price for OmniPrint is $49.95. Or, you can get a lab
|
||
site license for $99.95.
|
||
|
||
Kitchen Sink will even honor School Purchase Orders, or VISA/Master
|
||
Card. You can order at 800-235-5502 or send an order to:
|
||
|
||
Kitchen Sink Software, Inc.
|
||
903 Knebworth Ct.
|
||
Westerville, OH 43081
|
||
|
||
Eric Bush
|
||
Kitchen Sink Software, Inc.
|
||
(KITCHEN.SINK, CAT25, TOP3, MSG:23/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
|
||
>>> THROUGH THE GRAPEVINE <<<
|
||
"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
|
||
|
||
ONLINE IIGS GENIE NAVIGATOR BEING TESTED Hello! Syndicomm, the
|
||
"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""" organization which manages the
|
||
Apple II RoundTables here on GEnie, is proud to announce....
|
||
|
||
"GEnie for the IIgs," the Apple IIgs front end for GEnie, is now
|
||
ready for beta testing! That's right, we're now opening the door for YOU
|
||
to access a brand-new way to use GEnie on your Apple IIgs! If you would
|
||
like to be involved in the beta-testing effort, please send GEnie mail to
|
||
A2PRO.HELP, including the following information:
|
||
|
||
Your full name
|
||
An evening phone number
|
||
A description of your Apple IIgs system. You'll need:
|
||
o System Software 6.0.1 (available in the A2 & A2Pro libraries)
|
||
o An error-connecting modem (MNP4 or v.42, for example)
|
||
o At least 1.25 megabytes of memory (more recommended)
|
||
o Hard drive recommended
|
||
|
||
Also, please include a short self-description. In what other beta
|
||
tests have you been involved? Why you think you should be admitted to this
|
||
beta test? Describe your experience with GEnie and with the Apple IIgs
|
||
desktop interface. How long have you been telecommunicating? etc. :)
|
||
|
||
The beta test will commence on or about March 12th.
|
||
|
||
The GEnie for the Apple IIgs Project Manager stated "I believe we're
|
||
on schedule for a June release, as I originally stated earlier this year.
|
||
Of course, that will depend largely upon how well the beta process goes -
|
||
if any major bugs are discovered, it may take longer to reach release, of
|
||
course. However, I do believe we'll be ready before Windows 95 will be."
|
||
|
||
This topic will be closed. Please make any replies or comments in
|
||
topic 36 in this category (3).. and please use GEnie Mail to volunteer for
|
||
the beta test.
|
||
(A2PRO.HELP, CAT3, TOP35, MSG:2/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
|
||
SOFTDISK PERSONNEL CHANGES About a week and a half ago, I resigned my
|
||
"""""""""""""""""""""""""" position at Softdisk, Inc. As such, I will no
|
||
longer be in charge of, or officially associated with, the Softdisk G-S
|
||
product.
|
||
|
||
Unofficially, I will continue to work with Softdisk in supporting the
|
||
GSLib programmers library and in submitting programs for publication on
|
||
Softdisk.
|
||
|
||
Mail for Softdisk should now be routed to SOFTDISK.INC and not to me.
|
||
|
||
-Greg Templeman
|
||
(BARNABAS, CAT2, TOP3, MSG:327/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
<<<<< In my final Diskovery article (on the next issue), I wrote that
|
||
""""" unlike those who came (and left) before me, I leave Softdisk as an
|
||
unapologetic Apple IIGS programmer (the fact that I never bought another
|
||
machine may contribute to that... :)
|
||
|
||
What happens at Softdisk is that people work very very hard with very
|
||
few resources, and so we stretch ourselves thin. We can only work so hard
|
||
for so long.
|
||
|
||
Now that I'll no longer be expected to write articles, fix up
|
||
submissions, correspond/talk with submitters/subscribers, assemble issues,
|
||
make templates, and write programs I'm not very interested in because of
|
||
the demands of each issue, I hope to be able to actually produce more of my
|
||
own actual programs. And of course, I certainly hope Softdisk G-S is
|
||
around for a long, long time (because they pay submitters good money, and I
|
||
wouldn't mind some extra income doing what I love).
|
||
|
||
-Greg Templeman
|
||
(BARNABAS, CAT2, TOP3, MSG:331/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
>>>>> Greg's departure does not mean the demise of SDGS in quality or
|
||
""""" support for the Apple II community. I have been with the company
|
||
for five years starting before Zak, before Mohawk Man, before Dean, and
|
||
before Barnabas.
|
||
|
||
This company was founded on the Apple II line and remains steadfast
|
||
in its support of its "Parent Product." I remain as Editor-in-Chief of the
|
||
Apple Development Group and will now lend my hand (directly) to the SDGS
|
||
product.
|
||
|
||
I can assure you that you will be receiving the same quality and
|
||
stability that you have always enjoyed. For instance, on the next issue we
|
||
have an update to Western Vistas with more vistas, the second winner in our
|
||
Softdisk Adventure Machine Contest, and more!!!! Look forward to some
|
||
killer apps, useful productivity items, and YES, even Greg's contributions
|
||
(albeit as a submitter).
|
||
|
||
Sincerely,
|
||
|
||
Lee Golden
|
||
Softdisk Editorial
|
||
|
||
PS. If you didn't figure it out yet I will be the online rep for SDGS.
|
||
(SOFTDISK.INC, CAT34, TOP2, MSG:277/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
|
||
BUG REPORT FLUSHES OUT APPLEWORKS 5.1! I have discovered a significant
|
||
"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""" bug in AWKS 5.0 ADB that has been
|
||
repeated many times. Do a record selection with two or more criteria, then
|
||
insert a field at the top of the multiple-record layout screen. Then start
|
||
copying down the column using oa-'. Hold down the keys and when the bottom
|
||
of the column (the end of the selection) is reached, it starts scrolling
|
||
the entire list of records WITHOUT the SELECTION even though it still is
|
||
indicated at the top of the screen. It occurs mostly when the selection is
|
||
no longer valid due to the changes made to the category. The result is
|
||
destruction of data. I've had this happed many times over the last several
|
||
days working on a rather large project. Has this condition always existed?
|
||
|
||
John F. King
|
||
(J.KING26, CAT17, TOP31, MSG:50/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
>>>>> As soon as you insert a record, rules are cancelled. Look at the
|
||
""""" count of records selected as soon as you insert; it matches your
|
||
total records, proving that rules are off. However, I did find a display
|
||
bug which must be the cause of your confusion, in that the rules message
|
||
isn't immediately re-drawn. I'll fix that in 5.1 so it resets to All
|
||
records as soon as the insert occurs.
|
||
|
||
BTW, your background text problems are solved in AW 5.1. Thanks for
|
||
the sample file which allowed me to duplicate the bug and squash it.
|
||
(BRANDT, CAT17, TOP31, MSG:51/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
>>>>> AppleWorks 5.1 is a free update (the files are useless to anyone
|
||
""""" who doesn't already have AW 5.0) and will be available by
|
||
mid-April, as soon as I decide it's survived the beta test period. It'll be
|
||
available here on GEnie.
|
||
(BRANDT, CAT17, TOP31, MSG:53/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
|
||
FAX SOFTWARE IN DEVELOPMENT It *has* been awhile since I've updated
|
||
""""""""""""""""""""""""""" everyone...
|
||
|
||
PMPFax is coming along just fine. It is now successfully sending and
|
||
receiving faxes. I've also got most of the superstructure finished, and
|
||
will soon be tying up some loose ends, adding a few more features that I
|
||
want, and getting everything ready for fourth-party developers to write
|
||
extensions for it. It will be quite involved and have quite a number of
|
||
features and configurable options, which is why its taking me longer than
|
||
anticipated to finish. But the wait will be worth it :)
|
||
|
||
Again, if anyone has any suggestions or wishes for it, its still not
|
||
too late to tell me and possibly have them included. Post any suggestions
|
||
here to let everyone mull it over a bit. And thanks for being patient!
|
||
|
||
Paul
|
||
(PMP, CAT38, TOP15, MSG:194/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
|
||
>>> MESSAGE SPOTLIGHT <<<
|
||
"""""""""""""""""""""""""
|
||
|
||
Category 43, Topic 15
|
||
Message 420 Mon Mar 13, 1995
|
||
GARY.UTTER [Dispatcher] at 07:11 EST
|
||
|
||
>> "LOL! I guess that's the price of more power (tm Tim Allen)."
|
||
|
||
More power? I think NOT. :)
|
||
|
||
Don't tell the folks in the Mac RT this (I am the Chief Sysop over
|
||
there, after all), but I still do a good 90% of my work on the GS.
|
||
|
||
The 10/64 GS is mucho faster than my Mac IIsi, and the maximum text
|
||
file size I can load up is measured in megabytes (as opposed to 32K for
|
||
SimpleText).
|
||
|
||
I use the Mac for things the GS cannot do (because the software is
|
||
not available) like complex graphic layout work, Internet connectivity, and
|
||
accessing GUI based BBSs like First Class and NovaLink. The Mac also does a
|
||
MUCH nicer job of printing. (Pointless and suchlike notwithstanding, the
|
||
Mac simply does a superior job.)
|
||
|
||
A PowerMac with the equivalent of CoPilot could probably persuade me
|
||
to make the switch....
|
||
|
||
Gary R. Utter
|
||
|
||
[*][*][*]
|
||
|
||
|
||
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.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
[EOA]
|
||
[HUM]//////////////////////////////
|
||
HUMOR ONLINE /
|
||
/////////////////////////////////
|
||
Top 10 Lists
|
||
""""""""""""
|
||
by Steve Weyhrich
|
||
[S.WEYHRICH]
|
||
and Doug Cuff
|
||
[D.CUFF]
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
>>> APPLE II TOP TEN LISTS <<<
|
||
""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
|
||
Copyright 1994 by ICON.
|
||
Reprinted in GEnieLamp A2 by special permission.
|
||
|
||
|
||
From Overland Park, Kansas, "I don't think we're in Oz anymore", it's
|
||
the A2-Central Show, with Doug and Steve!
|
||
|
||
And now, from the home office in London, Ontario:
|
||
|
||
|
||
TOP TEN REASONS THE APPLE IIe IS BETTER THAN THE IIgs
|
||
'''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''
|
||
|
||
9. Looks so much like the original machine Woz designed that we
|
||
don't _need_ to put his name on the case.
|
||
8. Don't have to deal with cretins who ask "What kind of Mac is
|
||
that?"
|
||
7. The Running Man.
|
||
6. Typing "IIe" takes one fewer key-press than "IIgs".
|
||
5. The mouse is _optional_.
|
||
4. Friends don't mistake Reset key for rewind button.
|
||
3. Most IIe's labelled with cool original corporate Apple font, not
|
||
some wimpy version of Garamond.
|
||
2. Can't lose keyboard.
|
||
1. An adequate disk operating system will actually fit into 16K of
|
||
RAM.
|
||
|
||
And the Number 0 reason the Apple IIe is better than the IIgs...
|
||
|
||
0. Power light doubles as finger-warmer.
|
||
|
||
|
||
But wait! There's more!! That's right, an A2-Central Show exclusive;
|
||
not one but _two_ Top Ten lists!!!
|
||
|
||
Again, from the home office in London, Ontario:
|
||
|
||
|
||
TOP TEN REASONS THE APPLE II-PLUS IS BETTER THAN THE IIe OR IIgs
|
||
''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''
|
||
|
||
9. Provides practical use for lonely monophonic cassette recorder
|
||
gathering dust on shelf.
|
||
8. FlAsHiNg TeXt Is LoTs cOoLeR tHaN mOuSeTeXt.
|
||
7. Get to make up entertaining lies to explain the REPT key to
|
||
youngsters.
|
||
6. Only two graphics modes to keep track of.
|
||
5. If the original 6502 was good enough for Woz, it's good enough
|
||
for me!
|
||
4. Slot 0 sure to impress the babes.
|
||
3. Freed from worry of clothes washer mangling disks left in shirt
|
||
pocket.
|
||
2. Can afford one for every room in the house.
|
||
1. Reset key conveniently located just above Return key, making
|
||
word processor double as a game of skill.
|
||
|
||
And the Number 0 reason that the Apple II Plus is better than the IIe
|
||
or IIgs... whoa, we have a tie!
|
||
|
||
0. Spouse can't yell at you for leaving the Caps Lock key down. /
|
||
LIFE IS SIMPLER IN UPPER CASE (tie)
|
||
|
||
[*][*][*]
|
||
|
||
|
||
Reprinted from A2-Central (December 1994), with permission of
|
||
the publisher, ICON, and the authors, Steven Weyhrich and Doug
|
||
Cuff. Unlike the rest of GEnieLamp A2, this article may not be
|
||
reprinted in user group newsletters, etc. without written
|
||
permission.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
[EOA]
|
||
[CON]//////////////////////////////
|
||
CONNECTIONS /
|
||
/////////////////////////////////
|
||
Online Thoughts
|
||
"""""""""""""""
|
||
by Al Fasoldt
|
||
[A.FASOLDT]
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
>>> BUY A COMPUTER FOR THE FAMILY, NOT FOR THE KIDS <<<
|
||
"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
|
||
Copyright 1995 by Al Fasoldt. All rights reserved.
|
||
|
||
|
||
I've been asked many times to help others choose a new personal
|
||
computer for their home. Some of the readers who write or call are looking
|
||
for their first home computer, and others are upgrading to a faster and
|
||
fancier model. Many add a qualification: They'd like to buy the same type
|
||
of computer their children are using in school.
|
||
|
||
I can think of no worse reason to choose one computer over another.
|
||
|
||
The computers used in typical American schools may very well be
|
||
outdated. Many schools can't even afford to buy the books they need and
|
||
pay their teachers a proper wage, let alone purchase modern computers.
|
||
Some are even still using old Apple II models, which aren't made any
|
||
longer. [!!!--Ed.]
|
||
|
||
But this is, for me, a minor point. What matters much more is the
|
||
question of why families buy computers in the first place.
|
||
|
||
A home computer is an appliance that can make life more interesting
|
||
and can make daily chores easier. It's a tool that can improve your
|
||
writing skills and your financial abilities. It's a gateway to adventure
|
||
and an extension to the telephone that can connect you with a world you may
|
||
never have explored before.
|
||
|
||
This is something children need to realize as much as you do. That's
|
||
how they learn and grow.
|
||
|
||
Before you start shopping for a computer, write down a list of
|
||
everything you'd be using the computer for. Will you use it for word
|
||
processing? Nearly all home computers are. Will you use it to connect
|
||
with online services?
|
||
|
||
Do you want to take advantage of the educational and recreational
|
||
aspects of the latest addition to home computing, CD-ROM? More than half
|
||
of all new personal computers come with CD-ROM devices built-in.
|
||
|
||
Notice that none of these things (and there are dozens of other uses)
|
||
is specifically oriented toward children. In some ways, they are family
|
||
activities. Some of them, such as the incredibly easy way you can do your
|
||
taxes on a computer, are strictly for adults.
|
||
|
||
To your kids, of course, this is a children's world. If you ask them
|
||
what they want to do with a computer, you'll get a kids' answer. Listen to
|
||
them and take their desires into account.
|
||
|
||
They may, for example, want to play the games that are available on
|
||
CD-ROM. Or they may want to log onto GEnie. (And they'll probably do it
|
||
before you do, since children aren't afraid to try something new. The rest
|
||
of us are usually stodgy and wary of everything newfangled.)
|
||
|
||
Most important, keep in mind that children learn much faster than we
|
||
adults do.
|
||
|
||
"My kids would have to learn how to use a different kind of
|
||
computer," one reader told me. "That seems like too much to ask when they
|
||
have everything else going on."
|
||
|
||
Not at all. I'd bet it wouldn't take a 9-year-old more than 10
|
||
minutes to learn how to use a different computer. I could be wrong,
|
||
though; kids learn how to play new video games at the arcade in about three
|
||
nanoseconds, and so they'd probably master your Mac or your Windows PC--or
|
||
any kind of computer--faster than you can say, "Don't press that key!"
|
||
|
||
Heck, let them press that key. They'll be masters of the new machine
|
||
in no time.
|
||
|
||
And then they can teach you.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
[EOA]
|
||
[FOC]//////////////////////////////
|
||
FOCUS ON... /
|
||
/////////////////////////////////
|
||
Quick Click Morph Transcript
|
||
""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
|
||
by Cindy Adams
|
||
[C.ADAMS11]
|
||
and Tim Kellers
|
||
[KELLERS]
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
>>> QUICK CLICK MORPH Q & A <<<
|
||
"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
|
||
Copyright (c) 1995 by the Apple II RoundTable of GEnie.
|
||
All rights reserved.
|
||
|
||
|
||
On March 19, 1995, Mike Westerfield of the Byte Works, Inc. chose a
|
||
GEnie Real-Time Conference--on the A2 RoundTable, natch!--as the place to
|
||
announce his new program, Quick Click Morph!
|
||
|
||
With the permission of the A2 RoundTable, GEnieLamp A2 presents a
|
||
heavily edited transcript of that conference. If you'd like to read the
|
||
conference in all its glory as conducted by Cindy Adams, just move to the
|
||
A2 Library (m645;3) and download file #24583, QCMRPHTRNCT.BXY. To see the
|
||
sample KarenCat morph referred to throughout the conference, download file
|
||
#24489, KARENCAT.BXY.--Ed.
|
||
|
||
[*][*][*]
|
||
|
||
|
||
WESTERFIELD: QC Morph is a GS implementation of what is becoming very
|
||
popular on some other computers, which is a personal-sized
|
||
(and priced) morph program that lets you take two or more
|
||
drawings of any kind and create a movie that smoothly changes
|
||
from one to another. There are countless applications for
|
||
morph programs, from serious educational applications to just
|
||
plain silly, but my personal favorite is entertainment! Some
|
||
of you may have seen the KarenCat morph... which shows my
|
||
daughter Karen morphed into one of our cats!
|
||
|
||
[See the QC Morph press release in HEY MISTER POSTMAN for more ideas.--Ed.]
|
||
|
||
QUESTION: When will it be released, and how much is it?
|
||
|
||
WESTERFIELD: QC Morph itself will be released in about 1.5 to 2.5 weeks
|
||
[March 29-April 5], depending on when the covers get back
|
||
from the printer. The price is $60.
|
||
|
||
You can order by e-mail, or by contacting us:
|
||
Byte Works, Inc.
|
||
8000 Wagon Mound Dr. NW
|
||
Albuquerque, NM 87120
|
||
(505) 898-8183
|
||
GEnie: ByteWorks
|
||
Internet: MikeW50@AOL.COM
|
||
We'll need this information from you:
|
||
Name
|
||
Mailing Address
|
||
VISA or MC card # and expiration date
|
||
(or a personal check if you are ordering by mail)
|
||
What you are ordering
|
||
What you expect to pay (avoids confusion)
|
||
($60 for QC Morph. Shipping is $5 in the U.S.
|
||
and Canada; a bit more to other places.)
|
||
|
||
QUESTION: What formats are the movies saved in, other than C2?
|
||
|
||
WESTERFIELD: QC Morph writes movies as PaintWorks animation files.
|
||
|
||
It comes with a freeware movie player, so you don't even
|
||
have to download one to give the movies away.
|
||
|
||
The _input_ formats include screen files, Apple Preferred
|
||
images (including 3200 images in Apple Preferred format) and
|
||
uncompressed RGB TIFF files (since QC Morph can handle far
|
||
more colors than you can display on a screen).
|
||
|
||
The morphs can be creates as grayscale, or in color using a
|
||
variety of palettes, including: the default 320 palette, the
|
||
default 640 palette (think HyperStudio movies), a custom 16
|
||
color palette, 128 colors, or 256 colors. All can be saved
|
||
as PaintWorks movies.
|
||
|
||
QUESTION: With the KarenCat morph, I can tell that you carefully
|
||
positioned the eyes, nose, and mouth so the morph was smooth. Is this a
|
||
feature of the program or do you need to carefully pay attention to such
|
||
details?
|
||
|
||
WESTERFIELD: It's something you do, but it's very easy. You start by
|
||
putting in a few points by clicking the mouse at the proper
|
||
location. For KarenCat I started with four points around
|
||
each eye and four more around the mouth. You then flip to
|
||
the final frame, and drag the points to the corresponding
|
||
position there. If you get mixed up, color coding helps you
|
||
keep the dots straight. After playing with a one or two
|
||
frame morph to see where the problems are, you add more
|
||
points (in that case, around the outside of the head/ears and
|
||
along the chin) and try again until the results are good.
|
||
Finally, you up the number of frames, start the morph, and go
|
||
do something else for a while. When you come back--presto, a
|
||
movie!
|
||
|
||
QUESTION: Your description of Karencat indicates that you used other
|
||
programs to create that morph. Do you need all that to create morphs?
|
||
|
||
WESTERFIELD: No, you don't _need_ anything else to use QC Morph. Just
|
||
some starting pictures.
|
||
|
||
QUESTION: Will QC Morph support the Second Sight card?
|
||
|
||
WESTERFIELD: I'm looking into the possibility of supporting it, but don't
|
||
have one of the cards yet. I'd also like to see how many
|
||
people will buy it before making too big of a commitment.
|
||
But Second Sight would work _very_ well with 12 bit color
|
||
morphs! Put it at about 80% based on the info I've seen so
|
||
far. (For me, 80% is pretty high.)
|
||
|
||
QUESTION: How long would it take to create a 15 second morph at 30
|
||
frames/second?
|
||
|
||
WESTERFIELD: The time depends on what you are doing and how many frames
|
||
per second you ask for. The baseline time is about 17
|
||
seconds for a grayscale fade between two frames. The time
|
||
goes up roughly 8 seconds per control point, and you need
|
||
about 15 for a passable morph; more for a really good one.
|
||
KarenCat used about 15-20. When you add color, things slow
|
||
down even more. For a very complicated morph with color and
|
||
a lot of control points, you will probably need to let the
|
||
computer run overnight. On the other hand, the same is true
|
||
of the Mac and PC--they're faster, but in a way the GS screen
|
||
makes up for it by requiring less resolution. :)
|
||
|
||
QC Morph is about as fast as the program I've tested on the
|
||
50 MHz 486 machine, but slower than my PowerMac.
|
||
|
||
QUESTION: Is that on an unaccelerated GS?
|
||
|
||
WESTERFIELD: I'm running an accelerated GS. That's where they are about
|
||
the same, but keep in mind that there are a _lot_ of
|
||
variables there!
|
||
|
||
QUESTION: What are the limits on control points? How many?
|
||
|
||
WESTERFIELD: There is no limit on the number of control points, other than
|
||
available memory and screen clutter. You can also pick
|
||
between control _points_ like Morph on the Mac, or control
|
||
_lines_, which work much better on many kinds of pictures,
|
||
especially hand-drawn or line-art originals.
|
||
|
||
QUESTION: What is the overall limiting factor on the length of a movie?
|
||
RAM or drive space?
|
||
|
||
WESTERFIELD: RAM space.
|
||
|
||
QUESTION: How much memory do stored movies generally take up?
|
||
|
||
WESTERFIELD: That depends on how complex they are. KarenCat is about
|
||
average for a picture morph; it uses about 17K per frame.
|
||
|
||
QUESTION: 4 megs of ram is good for how much morphing?
|
||
|
||
WESTERFIELD: There are some variables, but it would be pretty save to
|
||
assume you can get 35 frames, probably more. If the morph is
|
||
smaller than 320x200--say like the KarenCat morph--that goes
|
||
up a lot. For something like KarenCat, the number of frames
|
||
would be closer to 100.
|
||
|
||
QUESTION: Is there any way to link morphs together into a "slide show" for
|
||
use in visual presentations? Specifically, can you link more than one
|
||
movie together into a slide show.
|
||
|
||
WESTERFIELD: As in creating movie slide shows? You bet. Morph itself
|
||
doesn't do it, but the movie player does. Let me clarify...
|
||
Morph can take as many originals as you like. It always
|
||
creates a single movie, though. The movie player (freeware)
|
||
will play multiple movies in a slide show.
|
||
|
||
QUESTION: Mike, can you have QC Morph do a transition from an initial pic
|
||
to a second, then to a third? Or chain two transitions?
|
||
|
||
WESTERFIELD: You bet. Use as many original frames as you like. The only
|
||
practical limit on anything--number of frames, number of
|
||
morphed frames, number of control points--is RAM and time.
|
||
|
||
QUESTION: If you morph between two pictures, then after the fact want to
|
||
add a third, can you append, or must you regenerate the sequence?
|
||
|
||
WESTERFIELD: You just append the new one. QC Morph knows that the
|
||
original morph sequence is not dirty, and does not use time
|
||
to regenerate it unless you change something that would
|
||
affect that part of the movie.
|
||
|
||
QUESTION: Is there a way to link the movies into Hyperstudio, to allow the
|
||
interposition of still frames, etc..?
|
||
|
||
WESTERFIELD: Sure. Hyperstudio uses movies as animations. You can play
|
||
anything you create that way. HyperLogo can play movies
|
||
under script control from Hyperstudio, too.
|
||
|
||
QUESTION: How does it handle "color-shifts" if a control point is a
|
||
different color in one frame than it is in the next?
|
||
|
||
WESTERFIELD: For 128 and 256 color movies, Morph works internally with
|
||
full 12 bit colors, computing the actual best fit color for
|
||
every pixel in the picture on the morph pass, followed by a
|
||
color fit algorithm much like the ones used by SuperConvert
|
||
to reduce the colors to the best ones for the GS screen.
|
||
That takes a lot of time, of course. I'm still playing with
|
||
that part of the code, though, so I can't give you final
|
||
numbers. Suffice it to say you won't generate a 50 frame 128
|
||
color morph and sit watching the screen while you wait for
|
||
the results. :)
|
||
|
||
QUESTION: How does it handle it if the two pictures have different color
|
||
palettes? Does it dynamically remap the color palettes in between frames,
|
||
or does it try to get a best fit out of the two and just switch at some
|
||
point?
|
||
|
||
WESTERFIELD: For some applications (like HyperStudio) you'll use a fixed
|
||
palette, but for most movies you'll choose between grayscale
|
||
or a custom color palette of 16, 128 or 256 colors.
|
||
|
||
For a 16 color palette, Morph uses the original picture's
|
||
colors exclusively. It works best if the original picture
|
||
and destination picture use the same palette, of course. For
|
||
128 colors, the program actually calculates 12 bit color
|
||
internally. Then for each frame, it picks the best 128
|
||
colors for that picture, using 8 palettes. This gives a
|
||
smooth color transition between any pair of pictures, and the
|
||
starting and ending pictures can have very different color
|
||
palettes.
|
||
|
||
With 256 colors, you'll usually start with similar pictures.
|
||
This gives a full 16 palettes for each frame, and the colors
|
||
remain fixed over each morph sequence,but for similar colored
|
||
start and stop frames, the results are better than for 128
|
||
color morphs.
|
||
|
||
QUESTION: As I understand now, QC Morph constructs a PaintWorks movie that
|
||
can be run in many venues, right?
|
||
|
||
WESTERFIELD: Yes. You see, PaintWorks itself may not handle 256 colors,
|
||
but the movie format _can_! It's just delta frames, and you
|
||
can slip color table and SCB changes into the middle of any
|
||
PaintWorks movie!
|
||
|
||
QUESTION: Does QC Morph utilize Publish & Subscribe? Can you make a graph
|
||
morph into another graph, for instance, in a QCC worksheet?
|
||
|
||
WESTERFIELD: QC Morph does not use publish and subscribe, due to my
|
||
reluctance to write code I cannot test and the fact that
|
||
subscribing to movies from a spreadsheet, or spreadsheets
|
||
from a movie, didn't make much sense. :) If I do a QC
|
||
Write, I will definitely support Publishing of movies from QC
|
||
Calc and Subscribing to them from QC Write.
|
||
|
||
QUESTION: Mike, what do the QC Calc sales numbers look like? I bet QC
|
||
Morph surpasses those!
|
||
|
||
WESTERFIELD: QC Calc was pretty disappointing. I think QC Morph will do
|
||
better too, though--or I wouldn't have written it, frankly.
|
||
|
||
QUESTION: Will there ever be a QC Write? If not, what's next?
|
||
|
||
WESTERFIELD: Whether or not there is a QC Write depends a great deal on
|
||
how well QC Morph sells.
|
||
|
||
I'd also like to mention that we'll be offering a new
|
||
service with QC Morph. We have not worked out all the
|
||
details yet (i.e. price), but we will offer scanning
|
||
services, taking your pictures and converting them to TIFF
|
||
files you can load with QC Morph. And BTW, QC Morph can
|
||
color convert those TIFF files to a variety of GS color
|
||
formats for you, too. So watch for that service after we
|
||
finish out time studies to make sure we charge enough to pay
|
||
for the labor. :)
|
||
|
||
Also, for the mathematically inclined, I'll mention that you
|
||
can use QC Morph as a special effects package. You can
|
||
export the dots positions, paths, and fade percent to an
|
||
ASCII file, edit them, and reload them. Normally that would
|
||
be pretty anal, but you can do things like create a series of
|
||
morph lines that flip one picture into another using a
|
||
mathematical transition you create from, say, BASIC, then
|
||
load the transition and use it on any two frames. In fact,
|
||
this is the basis for a HyperStudio special effects package
|
||
that will come out someday.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
[EOA]
|
||
[AWX]//////////////////////////////
|
||
APPLEWORKS ANNEX /
|
||
/////////////////////////////////
|
||
Introducing AppleWorks 5
|
||
""""""""""""""""""""""""
|
||
by Jay Curtis
|
||
[J.CURTIS8]
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
>>> APPLEWORKS 5 BRINGS HOME THE USERS <<<
|
||
""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
|
||
|
||
Thanks to AppleWorks 5, I'm an Apple II user reborn!
|
||
|
||
Some years ago, the office where I work embraced the Macintosh.
|
||
Despite this, I have continued to use a IIgs at home. I was even able to
|
||
persuade my boss that the LC-III computer he purchased for my use should
|
||
have a IIe card. In time, however, the advantages of Apple II computing
|
||
became less obvious. I started to save my money for an eventual Mac
|
||
purchase.
|
||
|
||
This past winter, I spent some of that Mac money for an AppleWorks
|
||
5.0 upgrade. I'm sure glad that I did. For the time being, I've stopped
|
||
saving for a Mac. I'm now saving instead for an H-P Deskjet printer and
|
||
other refinements for one of my IIgses. AppleWorks 5.0 is simply the
|
||
smartest software purchase I have ever made.
|
||
|
||
What makes AW5 so great is the speed, the convenience, the astounding
|
||
level of integration that programmers Randy Brandt and Dan Verkade have
|
||
built into the three modules, and the ease with which you can link
|
||
documents. Other integrated software products such as Microsoft Works and
|
||
ClarisWorks just don't have the level of integration, the relational
|
||
capabilities, or the speed that AppleWorks 5.0 possesses. (This is no
|
||
April fool's joke; they really don't have them.) AW5 is a mature program
|
||
that almost certainly goes well beyond anything that Robert Lissner ever
|
||
envisioned when he created the original AppleWorks.
|
||
|
||
AW5's performance comes at a cost, however. Some users may need
|
||
additional memory to run this powerhouse. According to the AW5 delta
|
||
manual, a "minimum" of 256K is required to run AppleWorks 5.0.(1) However,
|
||
256K should really be considered a BARE minimum for AW5. With 256K of RAM,
|
||
you will get a respectable 100K of space for your desktop files on a IIe,
|
||
but none of the modules will load into memory. With limited RAM, you will
|
||
be slowed down markedly while program segments are being accessed from
|
||
disk, and you will be hard pressed to make full use of all of AW5's
|
||
integration capabilities. Asking AW5 to run in 256K is analogous to asking
|
||
Frank Shorter to run the Boston Marathon on crutches.
|
||
|
||
While AW5's predecessor, AppleWorks 4.x, would run on 128K machines,
|
||
the desktop size was only 20K with such machines, and a minimum of 320K was
|
||
necessary to load ANY of the three AppleWorks modules. For these reasons,
|
||
128K of RAM was never really a practical minimum for AppleWorks 4.x, any
|
||
more than 256K is now for AppleWorks 5.0. For this latest version of
|
||
AppleWorks, the effort to make it run in 128K has been abandoned.
|
||
|
||
To make AW5 really sing, you will want to load all three modules to
|
||
memory, make your TimeOut applications memory resident, and load your
|
||
standard and custom dictionaries to a RAM disk. (If you're storing
|
||
AppleWorks 5 on a hard drive connected to a RamFAST SCSI card, there's
|
||
really no advantage to loading AppleWorks modules, TimeOut applications, or
|
||
dictionaries to RAM.) Set "remember loaded files" to "yes," and set your
|
||
printer buffer option to "yes." Some may wish to increase spreadsheet rows
|
||
from 999 to 9999, and many others will also want to keep UltraMacros and
|
||
Init Manager active. Just how much memory do you need for all of this?
|
||
Some users will be satisfied with 512K, but 1 megabyte or more will provide
|
||
a great deal more security, especially for those who work with large files
|
||
and who want to make the fullest use of AW5's integration capabilities.
|
||
|
||
What else do you need? AppleWorks 5.0 and "extras" come from Quality
|
||
Computers on a pair of 3.5" disks, period. The 5.25" disks disappeared
|
||
with the last version (although, if you want to install AW5 to a hard drive
|
||
and only have 5.25" floppy drives, you can get a set of 5.25" disks for
|
||
that purpose). Your Apple II will need one or two 3.5" drives, or a hard
|
||
disk drive and one microfloppy. The majority of those who will read this
|
||
article, and who are also interested in AW5's advanced features, will
|
||
already possess the necessary system requirements to run it.
|
||
|
||
Although a mouse is not required, AW5 has a fully configurable mouse
|
||
interface, similar to the capabilities UltraMacros gave to AppleWorks 3.0.
|
||
The mouse is great to have, especially if you are someone who is used to
|
||
also working with GS or Mac desktop applications. Additionally, a clock is
|
||
a definite "must have" with AW5. While a clock is not required, AW5 has a
|
||
number of time-dependent features that offer great convenience, and you'll
|
||
need a clock to access them.
|
||
|
||
There may be a few folks (hopefully VERY few) who are still running
|
||
AppleWorks on 128K Apple IIe systems or 256K IIgs systems. To those
|
||
people, I believe that it is reasonable to say that upgrading your system
|
||
AND purchasing AppleWorks 5.0 will still be considerably cheaper than
|
||
buying a new computer. It will cost you under $500 (much less if you
|
||
purchase used equipment) for the necessary upgrades to make AW5 basically
|
||
BLOW THE DOORS off of most current 4MB Mac systems running ClarisWorks or
|
||
Microsoft Works under System 7. It's something to think about.
|
||
|
||
AppleWorks 5.0 has a number of new features that make Quality
|
||
Computer's $59.95 upgrade from AppleWorks 4.x extremely worthwhile. Some
|
||
of these features include an outliner and print previewer in the word
|
||
processor, background text in single record layout in the database, and the
|
||
ability to install cell memos or notes in the spreadsheet. Another really
|
||
great, new feature is the ability to view database files in what is called
|
||
"mixed mode," both single record layout AND multiple record layout,
|
||
simultaneously. There's an "AfterWork" screen saver, alarm clock reminder
|
||
function, "@today" function in the database, and there's also the ability
|
||
to actually view pictures in the database. The new capability of AW5 to
|
||
print odd or even pages will come in especially handy when you print
|
||
document pages back-to-front with that new HP Deskjet that you're going to
|
||
want.
|
||
|
||
As mentioned previously, there are also several new features that
|
||
mean speed--lots of speed. For example, there is now a FULL Ultramacros
|
||
package (which allows you to WRITE and compile, as well as RUN, these
|
||
macros) and thereby customize those repetitive tasks that are unique to
|
||
your computing habits. There is an excellent desktop organizer that
|
||
remembers the files you access and speedily returns them to the desktop
|
||
after you leave and return to AppleWorks. There are also "one touch"
|
||
menus, a "memory manager" that allows you to easily set up and access a RAM
|
||
disk on most Apple II systems, and there's a built-in printer buffer that
|
||
gets you back to work much faster after you send documents to the printer.
|
||
For me, all of this speed has been a welcome change from the lethargic
|
||
Microsoft Works running on my 4MB Mac at the office.
|
||
|
||
I should also mention that AppleWorks 5.0 comes from Quality with
|
||
more goodies and enhancements than I have been able to explore in several
|
||
weeks of part-time perusal. There are tons of macros, Randy's Free
|
||
Patcher, TimeOut Paint, the TimeOut Updater (to make those favorite TO
|
||
utilities run under AW5), the TO Ultra Compiler, and Steven Beville's
|
||
excellent "DB Link" Utility. Next month, we'll turn our attention more to
|
||
the AppleWorks 4.x engine that runs inside of AW5. The features of
|
||
AppleWorks 4.x, together with the new features of AppleWorks 5.0, make the
|
||
$79.95 upgrade to AW5 from earlier versions undoubtedly the greatest
|
||
software value that has ever been offered to Apple II users.
|
||
|
||
[*][*][*]
|
||
|
||
|
||
APPLEWORKS 5 ON THE MAC: THE FUTURE OF APPLEWORKS? For any Macintosh
|
||
""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""" users who happen to
|
||
be reading this, the answer is "Yes." AW5 runs nicely on LC-style MACs
|
||
with the IIe card. VERY nicely. However, you should configure your system
|
||
for 1MB of RAM in Apple II mode and install a minimum 10MB ProDOS HD
|
||
partition on your Mac hard drive. Set your display to "Monochrome" and
|
||
your system speed to "Fast" for best performance. Mac users will find that
|
||
there are a number of things that they can do with AppleWorks 5.0 that they
|
||
simply cannot do with most Mac integrated software products, and most
|
||
certainly NOT for the price of AW5.
|
||
|
||
The exciting news is that you will soon be able to run AppleWorks 5
|
||
without a IIe card. This new method will almost certainly outperform the
|
||
IIe card! During a recent interview with Randy Brandt, this writer was
|
||
given an opportunity to SEE AppleWorks 5.0 running in emulation on Brandt's
|
||
Centris 610. The emulation has been code-named the "Phoenix II" by Randy
|
||
Brandt and his collaborator, veteran AppleWorks programmer Mark Munz. The
|
||
emulation requires Macintosh System 7 and a 68020 Mac or newer. Randy
|
||
explained that I was only the third person besides himself and Mark to
|
||
actually see the emulation. He said that it was approximately the
|
||
thirtieth revision of the "Phoenix II" since they had begun working on it.
|
||
|
||
I asked Randy how he and Mark Munz had been able to license the Apple
|
||
II ROMs for their emulation. He grinned and explained that NO Apple II ROM
|
||
code had been used to develop the emulator. The emulator runs in a window
|
||
on the Mac desktop and has been designed specifically for use with
|
||
AppleWorks 5.0. It translates 65c02 assembly code that AW5 is written in,
|
||
and the ProDOS calls, directly to Mac code and System 7 calls, bypassing
|
||
the need to emulate an Apple II ROM altogether. The emulator takes up only
|
||
120k of additional disk space and is placed in a folder on the Mac hard
|
||
drive together with AW5.
|
||
|
||
Because Phoenix II makes no attempt at full Apple II emulation, it is
|
||
a much faster way of running AW5. Additionally, running AW5 under Phoenix
|
||
II is also considerably faster than running the program on an Apple IIe PDS
|
||
card which, in effect, provides IIe performance. One other advantage over
|
||
the PDS card, according to Brandt, is that AW5's operation on the Mac
|
||
desktop is virtually "seamless," just like any other Mac application.
|
||
|
||
As promised, speed was indeed blindingly fast. All of the AW5
|
||
functions that Randy demonstrated on his Centris left my unaccelerated IIgs
|
||
in the dust. Randy launched AW5 from an icon on his Mac hard drive. The
|
||
program opened, displayed the familiar sequence of screens and arrived at
|
||
the AppleWorks main menu in a fraction of the time it takes for my
|
||
RamFAST-equipped IIgs to run through the same sequence from ProSEL. Given
|
||
that there are both native Mac AND Power Mac versions of the emulation,
|
||
Randy said that AppleWorks' speed will only increase as more of the Mac
|
||
operating system is converted to Power Mac code, and the Power Mac moves
|
||
beyond the 601 RISC processor to the 604 and above. He said confidently
|
||
that the speed gains for AW5 running on a Power Mac will soon surpass even
|
||
the fastest ACCELERATED IIgs or IIe.
|
||
|
||
Like any other Mac program, the AW5 window can be moved around on the
|
||
Mac desktop, and the Mac menu bar remains visible at all times. AW5 can be
|
||
left to run in the background while other Mac programs are accessed.
|
||
Imagine... AppleWorks running in the background!
|
||
|
||
With standard white fonts on a black background, its appearance on
|
||
the Mac was virtually the same as it normally appears on an Apple II.
|
||
However, users will be able to change the appearance of the emulation
|
||
somewhat by changing the font types and by using the Mac's reverse,
|
||
black-on-white screen. UltraMacros, TimeOut and other modifications run
|
||
the same under the Mac emulation as they do on any Apple II. Users will be
|
||
able to write and record their macros or add TimeOut features just as they
|
||
always have done.
|
||
|
||
The old 1MB memory barrier for running AppleWorks on the Apple IIe
|
||
PDS card has been surpassed by Phoenix II. Randy demonstrated how he could
|
||
allocate up to 4MB of space to AppleWorks on his Centris, and he also
|
||
demonstrated the "save snapshot" feature from the Mac menu bar. If you
|
||
don't like to go through the continual hassle of saving your files back to
|
||
disk, shutting down, then rebooting and trying to remember which files you
|
||
wanted to call up and where they were located, you will no longer have to
|
||
bother with all of this. You can "save a snapshot" of your session back to
|
||
your Mac hard drive instead. That means that you can instantly save all 36
|
||
files from your 3 desktops, 1MB or more of stuff if that's what you've got,
|
||
back to your hard drive. You can do this in the middle of a spreadsheet
|
||
recalculation or a database sort if you like. Reboot your snapshot at some
|
||
later time and you can come right back to where you were in your earlier
|
||
AppleWorks session.
|
||
|
||
When I shook hands with Randy at the end of the interview, my head
|
||
was absolutely spinning. I couldn't stop grinning from ear to ear even
|
||
after I had left. As Randy had said, AppleWorks running on a Mac is "not a
|
||
novelty." Mark Munz, Randy and the others have really done it; they've
|
||
created a serious integrated software program that will now run on Mac
|
||
systems, and it possesses features that make it a tough competitor. Randy
|
||
said that a PC version of the Phoenix II is also planned.
|
||
|
||
The native Mac and Power Mac versions will be supplied together for
|
||
the same cost, and should be available by summer according to Brandt.
|
||
Additionally, although no formal price has yet been set for AW5 bundled
|
||
with the Phoenix II, Randy indicated that the emulator by itself will
|
||
likely sell for a fraction of the price of a IIe PDS card. It sounds
|
||
strange to say, but unless Claris and Microsoft pay attention here, they
|
||
could easily get blindsided in their integrated software business by none
|
||
other than AppleWorks 5.0 and Phoenix II. These days, it's a topsy-turvy
|
||
world of emulation software and RISC-based computing where ANYTHING can
|
||
happen and probably will. More information from my interview with Randy
|
||
Brandt about AW5 will be available in future installments.
|
||
|
||
[*][*][*]
|
||
|
||
|
||
(1) The AW5 delta manual says that, strictly speaking, AW5 "will load with
|
||
only 192K of memory." However, "little or no desktop memory" would be left
|
||
over for documents with just 192K (p. 89).
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
[EOA]
|
||
[ASA]//////////////////////////////
|
||
ASCII ART GALLERY /
|
||
/////////////////////////////////
|
||
Easter Showers
|
||
""""""""""""""
|
||
by Susie Oviatt
|
||
[SUSIE]
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
ASCII ART BEGINS
|
||
,;;,
|
||
;;;;;;
|
||
;;;;;;;;
|
||
;;;;;;;;
|
||
`;;;;;;'
|
||
''''
|
||
|
||
..,,,..
|
||
.,;;;;;;;;;;;,.
|
||
;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
|
||
,;-=*=- -=*=- -=*=- -;,
|
||
;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
|
||
;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
|
||
;-=*=- -=*=- -=*=- -=*=- -=*;
|
||
;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
|
||
.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.
|
||
;-=*=- -=*=- -=*=- -=*=- -=*=- -;
|
||
;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
|
||
;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
|
||
`;-=*=- -=*=- -=*=- -=*=- -=*=-;'
|
||
`;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;'
|
||
`;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;'
|
||
`;-=*=- -=*=- -=*=- -=;;'
|
||
`;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;'
|
||
'''''''''''''
|
||
|
||
,;;,
|
||
;;;;;;
|
||
;;;;;;;;
|
||
;;;;;;;;
|
||
`;;;;;;'
|
||
''''
|
||
|
||
.;, ,;.
|
||
`;;; ;;;'
|
||
`;;,;;'
|
||
;;;;;;;
|
||
`;;;;;'
|
||
.;;;;;;;.
|
||
;;;;*;;;;
|
||
`;;;;;;;'
|
||
|
||
,;;,
|
||
;;;;;;
|
||
;;;;;;;;
|
||
;;;;;;;;
|
||
`;;;;;;'
|
||
''''
|
||
|
||
,;;,
|
||
;;;;;;
|
||
;;;;;;;;
|
||
;;;;;;;;
|
||
`;;;;;;'
|
||
''''
|
||
|
||
..,,,..
|
||
.,;;; " ;;;,.
|
||
;;;;;;;;. .;;;;;;;;
|
||
,;; " ;;;;;;; " ;;,
|
||
;;;;;. .;;;;;;;;;. .;;;;;
|
||
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|
||
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|
||
;;; " ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; " ;;;
|
||
.;;;;. .;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;. .;;;;.
|
||
;;;;;;;;;;;;;; " ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
|
||
;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;. .;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
|
||
;;; " ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; " ;;;;
|
||
`;;;. .;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;. .;;;;'
|
||
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|
||
`;;;;;;;;;;;;. .;;;;;;;;;;;;'
|
||
`;;; " ;;;;;;; " ;;;'
|
||
`;. .;;;;;;;;;. .;'
|
||
'''''''''''''
|
||
|
||
,;;,
|
||
;;;;;;
|
||
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|
||
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|
||
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|
||
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|
||
|
||
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|
||
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|
||
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|
||
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|
||
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|
||
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|
||
|
||
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|
||
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|
||
;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
|
||
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|
||
;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
|
||
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|
||
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|
||
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|
||
.;;;;;;;;;; ( ) ;;;;;;;;;;.
|
||
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|
||
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|
||
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|
||
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|
||
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|
||
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|
||
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|
||
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|
||
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|
||
|
||
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|
||
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|
||
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|
||
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|
||
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|
||
''''
|
||
|
||
,,..,,,,..,,,..,
|
||
.,%%%%%;;%%%;;%%%%;;%%,.
|
||
.;;%%%"""""''""''"""''";%%%;;,
|
||
.;%%%%' `;;%%%,
|
||
.%%%%;' `%%%%;
|
||
.%%%;;' ,;;;;;, %%%;;,
|
||
%%;;%' .oooo. ;;;;;;;;; `%;;%%
|
||
.;;%%% oooooo.a@@@@a;;;;;;;;; ;;%%%,
|
||
%%%%;' ^^^^^^ .@@@@@@@@.;.xxxxx. `%%%;;
|
||
%%;;% ^^^^^^^^@@@@@@@@@@.xxxxxxx. %%;;%
|
||
;;%%% ^^`^^^^^@@@@@@@@@@xxxxxxxxx ;;%%%
|
||
a@@a@@a@@a@@a@@a@@a@@a@@a@@a@@a@.sOOOOSs.sSSs.SOOOOs.
|
||
`;%%%;|;%%%;|;%%%;|;%%%;|;%%%;|,SSssssSSsSSSSsSSsssSS
|
||
.%;|;%%%;|;%%%;|;%%%;|;%%%;|;%%,SSSSSSSSsSSSSsSSSSSSS
|
||
`;%%%;|;%%%;|;%%%;|;%%%;|;%%%;|;`SSSSSS'^ssss^`SSSSS'
|
||
.%;|;%%%;|;%%%;|;%%%;|;%%%;|;%%%;|;%,sssSS'`SSSsss,
|
||
`;%%%;|;%%%;|;%%%;|;%%%;|;%%%;|;%%%,SSSSSS' `SSSSSS
|
||
.;|;%%%;|;%%%;|;%%%;|;%%%;|;%%%;|,SSSSSS' ,SSSSSS
|
||
`%%%;|;%%%;|;%%%;|;%%%;|;%%%;|;,SSS^SS'% ,SSSSSS'
|
||
`|;%%%;|;%%%;|;%%%;|;%%%;|;%%,S';%%`S' ,SSS^SSS
|
||
`;|;%%%;|;%%%;|;%%%;|;%%%;|;%%%;|;' `S' `S'
|
||
``````````````'''''''''''''
|
||
|
||
,;;,
|
||
;;;;;;
|
||
;;;;;;;;
|
||
;;;;;;;;
|
||
`;;;;;;'
|
||
''''
|
||
|
||
..,,,..
|
||
.,;;;;;;;;;;;,.
|
||
;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
|
||
,;;;;;;;aaaaaaa;;;;;;;,
|
||
;;;;;;a@@@@@@@@@@@a;;;;;;
|
||
;;;;;;@@' `@@@@@' `@@;;;;;;
|
||
;;;;;;@@@a. `@@@' .a@@@;;;;;;
|
||
;;;;;;@@@@@@a " a@@@@@@;;;;;;
|
||
;;;;;;@@@@@@@' `@@@@@@@;;;;;;
|
||
;;;;;;@@@@@@@a. .a@@@@@@@;;;;;;
|
||
;;;;;;@@@@@@' `@@@@@@;;;;;;
|
||
;;;;;;@@@@@@ (*) @@@@@@;;;;;;
|
||
`;;;;;;@@@@@a,. .,a@@@@@;;;;;;
|
||
`;;;;;;@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@;;;;;;
|
||
`;;;;;;;@@@@@@@@@@@@@;;;;;;;'
|
||
`;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;'
|
||
`;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;'
|
||
'''''''''''''
|
||
|
||
,;;,
|
||
;;;;;;
|
||
;;;;;;;;
|
||
;;;;;;;;
|
||
`;;;;;;'
|
||
''''
|
||
|
||
a@@@a
|
||
@@@@@@
|
||
`OOOO'
|
||
oaaa@@@a, ..,,,..
|
||
.oO@@@@@@@@@@, a@@@@@@@@@@@a .,%%%%%%%,..
|
||
.OO@@@@@@@@@@@@@a oO@@@@@@@@@@@@@@o %%%;;;;;%%%'
|
||
OO@@@@@OOOOOOOOOO,O@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@O;;;;;:::;'
|
||
.O@@@@OOo%%%%%%%%;O@@@;%%%%%%%%%%%;@@@O;;:::'
|
||
OO@@@OO%%%%;;;;;;;O@@;%%%%%%%%%%%%%;@@O;;'
|
||
O@@@@@@Oo:::::;;;;;O@O;%% ,%%% ,%%;O@@''
|
||
OO@@@@@@@OOOo:::::::O@O;%%%, ,%%%;O@@'
|
||
.O@@@@@@@@@OOOOOOOOOO`@O;%%% %%%;O@'
|
||
OO@@@@@@'OO@@@@@@OOOOOO`@@aaaaa@@'
|
||
O@@@@@@ `OOOO@@@@@@@OOOOooooooo.
|
||
O@@@@@' `OOO,@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@a
|
||
,O@@@@@ o@@@@@@@@@ O@@@@@@a
|
||
O@@@@@@ .O@@@@@@@@'OO@@@@@@@
|
||
,O@@@@@@ oO@@@@@@@@ OO@@@@@@@a
|
||
,OO@@@@@@ .OO@@@@@@@' `O@@@@@@@@
|
||
,OOO@@@@@@@. oO@@@@@@@@, OO@@@@@@@a
|
||
OOOOOO@@@@@@ .OO@@@@@@@@@, `O@@@@@@@@a
|
||
`OOOOOOOOOO' oOO@@@@@@@@@@ OO@@@@@@@@a
|
||
(_____) OOO@@@@@@@@@@ .OOO@@@@@@@@
|
||
OOOOO@@@@@@@@ oOOOOOO@@@@@
|
||
`OOOOOOOOOOO' `OOOOOOOOOO'
|
||
(_______) (______)
|
||
|
||
ASCII ART ENDS
|
||
|
||
[FOR VISUALLY IMPAIRED READERS: The preceeding was a shower of Easter
|
||
eggs, some large and some small, a basket of Easter Eggs, and a lamb.]
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
[EOA]
|
||
[HUN]//////////////////////////////
|
||
THE TREASURE HUNT /
|
||
/////////////////////////////////
|
||
Yours For the Downloading
|
||
"""""""""""""""""""""""""
|
||
by Charlie Hartley
|
||
[A2.CHARLIE]
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Welcome back to the Treasure Hunt! With the Easter season upon us,
|
||
we will first take a look at some Easter related downloads. Then we will
|
||
take a brief look at a variety of new treasures.
|
||
|
||
[*][*][*]
|
||
|
||
|
||
CROSS.PIC.BXY File #22297 5888 bytes SHR Graphic
|
||
|
||
This is a Super Hi-Res graphic of Jesus on the cross. It is suitable
|
||
to use as a background picture on your desktop. Rather nicely done.
|
||
Uploaded by R.ADAMS48.
|
||
|
||
[*][*][*]
|
||
|
||
|
||
EASTERSHR.BXY File #24528 56448 bytes SHR Graphics
|
||
|
||
Seven SHR cartoon-style Easter pictures in PNT format. These were
|
||
collected from various sources such as ads, etc. Scanned by Quickie;
|
||
edited and colored with Platinum Paint. You may use a paint program to
|
||
modify colors to suit your own needs. Uploaded by B.NEUMAN.
|
||
|
||
[*][*][*]
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHRISTIAN.BXY File #24529 31872 bytes SHR Graphics
|
||
|
||
Five SHR pictures of Christian interest in PNT format. Scanned by
|
||
Quickie from various sources, such as Christian literature, church
|
||
bulletins, etc. Edited and colored with Platinum Paint. You must have a
|
||
viewing program which will scroll the Apple Preferred Format full screen to
|
||
see all of the graphics. Uploaded by B.NEUMAN.
|
||
|
||
CHRISTIAN2.BXY File #24530 37760 bytes SHR Graphics
|
||
|
||
Four SHR pictures of Christian interest in PNT format. Like the ones
|
||
above, these were uploaded by B.NEUMAN. I think you might be pleased with
|
||
these.
|
||
|
||
[*][*][*]
|
||
|
||
|
||
EASTER1.SHR.BXY File #24603 248200 bytes SHR Graphics
|
||
|
||
Pat Kern has just uploaded this collection of 38 Easter Super High
|
||
Resolution single screen graphics. They are mostly in color. You can view
|
||
them on the screen or import them into a desktop publishing program,
|
||
including Publish It, import or edit them in paint programs, or import them
|
||
to hypermedia programs. This collection includes several graphics found in
|
||
some of the other files listed in this article. However, Pat has changed
|
||
most of them into single screen graphics. This is a nice collection.
|
||
|
||
[*][*][*]
|
||
|
||
|
||
EASTER.DESK.BXY File #24592 161792 bytes Desktop Backgrounds
|
||
|
||
Pat Kern continues to provide us with desktop background screens. Add
|
||
these seasonal Easter desktop files to the Desktop program #23867 and you
|
||
can change your startup screens each bootup or each day, or find one or
|
||
several screens that you like and use only those that you desire. 26 new
|
||
screens give you a wide range of choices.
|
||
|
||
[*][*][*]
|
||
|
||
|
||
EASTER.ART.BXY File #14536 17640 bytes DHR Graphics
|
||
|
||
Originally uploaded by Lee.Raesly as XMAS.PICS.BXY, T.Konczal broke
|
||
the file into 3 Christmas and multiple holiday files. This file contains 6
|
||
double hires Easter graphics. These pictures work with Publish It! 4 and
|
||
GraphicWriter III, but not with AppleWorks GS.
|
||
|
||
[*][*][*]
|
||
|
||
|
||
EASTER.BXY File #20526 19456 bytes DHR Graphics
|
||
|
||
Easter Double High Resolution graphics that were scanned with a
|
||
Quickie scanner. Useful in Publish It! or other programs that use double
|
||
hires graphics. Uploaded by Cindy Adams.
|
||
|
||
[*][*][*]
|
||
|
||
|
||
EASTER1.DHR.BXY File #17796 72832 bytes DHR Graphics
|
||
|
||
24 B&W graphics for Easter. Pat Kern, Cindy Adams, and Lee Raesly
|
||
worked together to scan a variety of double high resolution graphics and
|
||
prepare them for use with such programs as Publish It, Dazzle Draw, Tutor
|
||
Tech, GraphicWriter, and various DHR paint programs. This is the first of
|
||
eight uploads of these graphics.
|
||
|
||
The other 7 files in this series include the following:
|
||
|
||
Name File # Bytes Description
|
||
'''' '''''' ''''' '''''''''''
|
||
EASTER2.DHR.BXY 17797 87296 24 B&W graphics for Easter.
|
||
EASTER3.DHR.BXY 17798 63872 21 B&W graphics for Easter.
|
||
EASTER4.DHR.BXY 18078 75008 24 B&W graphics of bunnies & Easter baskets.
|
||
EASTER5.DHR.BXY 18079 47360 19 B&W graphics of bunnies.
|
||
EASTER6.DHR.BXY 18080 22656 9 B&W graphics of chicks, geese & ducks.
|
||
EASTER7.DHR.BXY 18081 21376 9 B&W graphics of Easter eggs.
|
||
EASTER8.DHR.BXY 18082 12928 5 B&W graphics of lambs.
|
||
|
||
[*][*][*]
|
||
|
||
|
||
RELIG.1.DHR.BXY File #17808 59008 bytes DHR Graphics
|
||
|
||
Religious clipart. Part 1 of 4. 24 B/W religious graphics to import
|
||
to Publish It, Dazzle Draw, Graphic Writer, Tutor Tech, or DHR paint
|
||
programs. Use as-is for church newsletters, programs, announcements, or
|
||
colorize or edit as you desire. Scanned by Pat Kern and Cindy Adams for
|
||
AzApple User Group. Copy freely.
|
||
|
||
The other uploads in this series:
|
||
|
||
Name File # Bytes Description
|
||
'''' '''''' ''''' '''''''''''
|
||
RELIG.2.DHR.BXY 17809 46720 24 B/W religious graphics
|
||
RELIG.3.DHR.BXY 17810 27392 10 B/W religious graphics
|
||
RELIG.4.DHR.BXY 17954 63232 20 B/W religious graphics
|
||
|
||
[*][*][*]
|
||
|
||
|
||
EASTERCARDS.BXY File #18300 14848 bytes Publish It! Templates
|
||
|
||
This requires Publish It! It includes one Easter card and one Easter
|
||
brunch invitation. It was designed by Vivian Lynes for AzApple User Group.
|
||
The clipart was scanned by Pat Kern. Load it into Publish It! Install
|
||
Kenilworth.12 font if you have it; otherwise Wilmette.12 or even Ravinia.18
|
||
works nicely for the Easter card. The inside text for the Easter brunch is
|
||
only a sample; rewrite it to suit your needs.
|
||
|
||
|
||
EAS.REC.TWO.BXY File #20555 16896 bytes Publish It! Templates
|
||
|
||
This also requires Publish It! Just unpack the file and load it into
|
||
Publish It! Install the Itasca.72 font (included in upload). It prints
|
||
out 4 pages. The layout uses a dot-matrix printer. Text and graphics have
|
||
been placed for you. Several Easter recipes for two servings--meat, side
|
||
dishes, breakfast, and beverages. Also, a recipe to use chopped hard
|
||
cooked eggs in Mexican style dish. Even how to hard cook eggs. Clipart &
|
||
layout were done by Pat Kern. Score another plus for Pat. :)
|
||
|
||
EAS.RECIPES.BXY File #20508 32384 bytes Publish It! Templates
|
||
|
||
Use Publish It! and print out a three-page Easter recipe document.
|
||
The text and graphics have been placed for you. Setup for dot matrix
|
||
printers. Install Itasca font (included in upload). Also uses various
|
||
sizes of Desplaines and Deerfield, which are included in main Publish It!
|
||
program. The layout is by Pat Kern. The graphics were scanned by Pat Kern
|
||
and Cindy Adams. (Where have I heard those names before?)
|
||
|
||
[*][*][*]
|
||
|
||
|
||
EASTER.EGGS.BXY File #9231 12600 bytes AppleWorks 3.0 data base
|
||
|
||
Before we leave the subject of Easter altogether, let's talk about
|
||
Easter eggs. No, not the kind that the Easter bunny leaves, but the hidden
|
||
messages and features that programmers build into their programs. These
|
||
goodies are hidden, and you have to hunt for them... unless someone has
|
||
compiled a list Easter eggs, and someone has! (NOTE: The file is only
|
||
partly concerned with Easter eggs. It also explain how to makes copies of
|
||
programs that are copy-protected, how to cheat at games, and hints.) This
|
||
file was last updated on December 14, 1989, but it contains a lot of
|
||
goodies. You'll be amazed just how easy it is to cheat at the original
|
||
LodeRunner game... you'll think the programmer _wanted_ you to cheat!
|
||
|
||
[*][*][*]
|
||
|
||
|
||
The latest versions of CoPilot scripts are out and available! Changes
|
||
since Version 2.5 include direct support for SprintNet, 14.4/19.2 support,
|
||
improved fonts, alternate dial changes allow both SprintNet and GEIS nodes
|
||
to be included, user configurable dialog delay times, ability to skip
|
||
RoundTable access while online, configure mail to be auto-retrieved or not,
|
||
save your postings for one call, forever, or not at all, get port data
|
||
automatically, "Save & Mark" at end of mail works! Bugs fixed include
|
||
making Binary II work properly, adding Binary II to packed disks and more.
|
||
|
||
EVERYONE SHOULD READ THE DOCS _BEFORE_ INSTALLING! This applies
|
||
ESPECIALLY current to CoPilot users!!
|
||
|
||
Here are the versions available:
|
||
|
||
CP.TIC.V255.BXY File #24481 251648 bytes CoPilot for Talk is Cheap
|
||
|
||
This archive contains CoPilot V2.5.5 for TIC. Discussion and
|
||
questions are welcome in Category 29, Topic 16 of the Apple II bulletin
|
||
board.
|
||
|
||
CP.SPC.V255.BXY File #24480 257792 bytes CoPilot for Spectrum
|
||
|
||
This archive contains CoPilot V2.5.5 for Spectrum. Discussion and
|
||
questions are welcome in Category 29, Topic 17.
|
||
|
||
CP.PT3.V255.BXY File #24479 320896 bytes CoPilot for ProTERM
|
||
|
||
This archive contains CoPilot V2.5.5 for ProTERM. Bugs fixed allow
|
||
you to download up to 10 files without error, all versions of PT 3.0 should
|
||
now work without mods. CPS achieved during downloads are recorded in the
|
||
message file for evaluation. Discussion and questions are welcome in
|
||
Category 29, Topic 15.
|
||
|
||
CP.FIX.V255.BXY File #24478 31616 bytes CoPilot Update Fixes
|
||
|
||
If you've downloaded CoPilot before, or the version you have is not
|
||
v2.5.5, then you don't need this file! This archive contains some minor
|
||
fixes for the earlier releases of CoPilot v2.5.5. If you were one of the
|
||
approximately 230 people who downloaded these archives, these script
|
||
replacements will make your CoPilot installation consistent with the full
|
||
archives currently in the A2 Library. If you have the ProTERM version and
|
||
have fixed the GetBill problem, you DON'T need this. Only downloaders of
|
||
the now deleted earlier uploads need to download this archive. The archive
|
||
accommodates GEnie's new prompts in the BILLING area and provides fixes for
|
||
TIC and Spectrum bugs that have shown up since the earlier offerings.
|
||
|
||
CP.REPLCMNT.BXY File 24552 103168 bytes Spectrum 2.0 Replacement
|
||
Scripts
|
||
|
||
These are not "official" scripts, but Ken Lucke's special scripts that
|
||
allow CoPilot to take advantage of the features of Spectrum 2.0. You MUST
|
||
be using CoPilot v2.5.4 or later and Spectrum v2.0--these scripts will NOT
|
||
work with earlier versions of EITHER program. This is v1.1 of these
|
||
scripts, some new features added since v1.0 as well as the bug fixes.
|
||
Unpack using GSHK or Balloon to the folder that contains your GECoPilot
|
||
program file, with overwrite mode turned on. DO NOT mix these files with
|
||
v1.0 of Ken Lucke's scripts. Discussions of these scripts takes place in
|
||
Category 29, Topic 24.
|
||
|
||
[*][*][*]
|
||
|
||
|
||
A2.LIB.INFO.TXT File #24468 6400 bytes Library Index Info File
|
||
|
||
Tom Zuchowski has produced a series of files to index the entire Apple
|
||
II RoundTable library. The files are available in two main versions, a
|
||
simple ASCII text version, and a version requiring AppleWork 3.0. Here is
|
||
all you need to know to select the files that you need:
|
||
|
||
It can be a very time-consuming chore to search the A2 Library for the
|
||
neat files you want. That's why we have assembled the A2 Library Indexes
|
||
for you. You can download the Index and peruse the files safely offline
|
||
with the billing clock stopped!
|
||
|
||
The A2 Library Index is available in several different configurations
|
||
to meet the needs of different systems. This info file describes the
|
||
complete Index set and offers suggestions on which Index files are right
|
||
for you.
|
||
|
||
AppleWorks 3.0 data base versions:
|
||
|
||
Name File # Description
|
||
'''' '''''' '''''''''''
|
||
A2.LIB.ADB.BXY 24467 AW 3.0 ADB index of libs. 1-48, 50-54, 58-59, & 62.
|
||
A2LIBGS.ADB.BXY 24466 AW 3.0 ADB index of Libs. 1-12, 20-31, & 48.
|
||
A2LIBP8.ADB.BXY 24465 AW 3.0 ADB index of Libs. 13-19, 32-47, 50-54,
|
||
58-59 & 62.
|
||
A2.1319.ADB.BXY 24464 AW 3.0 ADB index of Libs. 13-14 & 16-19.
|
||
A2.15.ADB.BXY 24463 AW 3.0 ADB index of Library 15.
|
||
A2.3238.ADB.BXY 24462 AW 3.0 ADB index of Libs. 32-38.
|
||
A2.3940.ADB.BXY 24461 AW 3.0 ADB index of Libs. 39-40.
|
||
A2.4144.ADB.BXY 24460 AW 3.0 ADB index of Libs. 41-44.
|
||
A2.4553.ADB.BXY 24459 AW 3.0 ADB index of Libs. 45-47 & 50-53.
|
||
A2.5462.ADB.BXY 24458 AW 3.0 ADB index of Libs. 54, 58, 59 & 62.
|
||
|
||
Text versions:
|
||
|
||
Name File # Description
|
||
'''' '''''' '''''''''''
|
||
A2LIBGS.TXT.BXY 24457 TXT index of Libs. 1-12, 20-31, & 48.
|
||
A2LIBP8.TXT.BXY 24456 TXT index of Libs. 13-19, 32-47, 50-54, 58-59 & 62.
|
||
A2.1319.TXT.BXY 24452 TXT index of Libs. 13-14 & 16-19.
|
||
A2.15.TXT.BXY 24450 TXT index of Lib. 15.
|
||
A2.3238.TXT.BXY 24448 TXT index of Libs. 32-38.
|
||
A2.3940.TXT.BXY 24446 TXT index of Libs. 39-40.
|
||
A2.4144.TXT.BXY 24445 TXT index of Libs. 41-44.
|
||
A2.4553.TXT.BXY 24444 TXT index of Libs. 45-47 and 50-53.
|
||
A2.5462.TXT.BXY 24443 TXT index of Libs. 54, 58, 59, & 62.
|
||
|
||
[*][*][*]
|
||
|
||
|
||
EEF's Guide to the Internet 3 ASCII Text Files
|
||
|
||
This is version 3 of EFF's Guide to the Internet (formerly Big Dummy's
|
||
Guide to the Internet) by Adam Gaffin. The original upload in the Internet
|
||
RT has been converted into 3 ASCII text files, and cleaned up for Apple II
|
||
use by B.HANSEN6.
|
||
|
||
The files are:
|
||
|
||
Name File # No of Bytes
|
||
'''' '''''' '''''''''''
|
||
NTG3.0P1.BXY 24570 83456
|
||
NTG3.0P2.BXY 24571 85504
|
||
NTG3.0P3.BXY 24572 59776
|
||
|
||
[*][*][*]
|
||
|
||
|
||
That's it for this month. I hope you have found something here to
|
||
whet your interest. Drop me a line and let me know what you think of this
|
||
column and offer any suggestions you might have about what should be in it.
|
||
|
||
Until next time, happy downloading!
|
||
|
||
-- Charlie Hartley
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
[EOA]
|
||
[SOF]//////////////////////////////
|
||
SOFTVIEW A2 /
|
||
/////////////////////////////////
|
||
Software Review
|
||
"""""""""""""""
|
||
by Douglas Cuff
|
||
[EDITOR.A2]
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
>>> REVIEW: QUICK CLICK CALC v1.2 <<<
|
||
""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
|
||
|
||
Rating: B+
|
||
Price: $60
|
||
Requires: Apple IIgs, 1.125 meg RAM, System 6.0.1, one 3.5" drive
|
||
Publisher: The Byte Works, Inc.
|
||
8000 Wagon Mound Drive NW
|
||
Albuquerque, NM 87120
|
||
phone 505-898-8183
|
||
GEnie mail: BYTEWORKS
|
||
|
||
|
||
Quick Click Calc is a spreadsheet program for the Apple IIgs that
|
||
uses the familiar desktop environment. I can't tell you whether or not you
|
||
need a spreadsheet program, but if you do, then you should seriously
|
||
consider Quick Click Calc. Spreadsheet programs are never glamorous, but
|
||
Quick Click Calc has a solid and a comfortable feel.
|
||
|
||
I can't compare Quick Click Calc with AppleWorks GS; I've never used
|
||
the latter. I'll do my best not to compare Quick Click Calc with the
|
||
spreadsheet in AppleWorks classic, although that's the spreadsheet with
|
||
which I'm most familiar. Quick Click Calc shares a few minor concepts with
|
||
Lotus 1-2-3, too, so anyone familiar with any spreadsheet program should
|
||
feel at home.
|
||
|
||
Quick Click Calc began life as part of the concerted effort to
|
||
produce version 2.0 of AppleWorks GS. Programmer Mike Westerfield
|
||
obviously felt that even if AppleWorks GS wasn't to be revived, this new
|
||
spreadsheet module should. Between you and me, that was the right guess.
|
||
|
||
Re-introducing the Desktop One of the great things about Quick Click Calc
|
||
"""""""""""""""""""""""""" is that it makes sensible use of the desktop.
|
||
I happen to dislike both the graphic user interface and using a mouse, so
|
||
it comes as a pleasant surprise to find that Quick Click Calc makes good
|
||
use of both. It's actually easier to use the mouse than the keyboard to
|
||
select cells. I'm used to the feeling that I'd rather use the keyboard
|
||
instead, if only the programmer would let me. I had none of that hemmed-in
|
||
feeling with Quick Click Calc--it's the first program to make my heart go
|
||
all GUI!
|
||
|
||
One of the aspects that makes the desktop environment work is the
|
||
fact that you can set the size of your spreadsheet. The default size is ZZ
|
||
columns (702) by 999 rows, but it can take quite a while to scroll down 999
|
||
rows. If you set the number of rows to 25 or 50, then scrolling to the
|
||
bottom of a spreadsheet is fast and easy. Another gem is the fact that you
|
||
can select blocks of cells by clicking in the cell that forms one corner of
|
||
the block, then move to the cell that forms the corner diagonally
|
||
opposite... without having the drag your selection. Dragging from one cell
|
||
to another to select a block can take quite a long time. So Quick Click
|
||
Calc allows you to click in one corner, move to the other corner and simply
|
||
press the Shift key before clicking on the opposite corner. This
|
||
demonstrates the difference between a program that's easy to program (easy
|
||
on the programmer) and one that's easy to use (easy on the user)!
|
||
|
||
Quick Click Calc endeavors to provide a certain amount of flexibility
|
||
by being compatible with The Manager, a desktop-switching program that
|
||
would allow you to have more than one program in memory, but its most
|
||
important capacity for the sharing of data is its publish and subscribe
|
||
capabilities.
|
||
|
||
Publish and Subscribe Publish and subscribe has been described as a
|
||
""""""""""""""""""""" super-powerful version of copy and paste. Publish
|
||
and subscribe allows you to create little reminder files ("editions") that
|
||
tell the computer to copy data from one file into others. Not only does
|
||
this relieve you from having to remember to copy new information each time
|
||
it changes--not to mention to tedium of actually having to do it--but it
|
||
can copy the data to more than one file at a time.
|
||
|
||
Suppose, for example, that you keep track of your outstanding credit
|
||
card charges in one file, your checkbook in another, and your general
|
||
finances in a third file. Publish and subscribe allows you to copy the
|
||
totals of your credit card and your checkbook file into the general
|
||
finances file.
|
||
|
||
Using publish and subscribe also means you can eliminate distracting
|
||
subtotal columns by publishing the information to a separate spreadsheet.
|
||
You could use the data in general finances to publish a table of your
|
||
monthly electricity bills. Don't forget that you can publish to more than
|
||
one spreadsheet at a time: your checkbook balance is a figure that might
|
||
be required by several spreadsheets, and publish and subscribe allows you
|
||
to have an updated figure in all of them.
|
||
|
||
The only problem with publish and subscribe that I can see is that
|
||
doesn't have the immediacy of copy and paste. It's not enough to change a
|
||
file on the desktop; that won't affect the other files. You'll have to
|
||
save the files that "publish" data and reload those that "subscribe" to
|
||
data, or use the built-in commands that force a spreadsheet to update
|
||
manually. This limitation seems to be linked to the very power of publish
|
||
and subscriber. You don't get immediacy, but this lack of immediacy means
|
||
that you don't have to have a file on the desktop in order to use data in
|
||
it. Not a bad trade-off.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Three Types of Graphs The graphing capacities of Quick Click Calc are
|
||
""""""""""""""""""""" quietly impressive. It will produce pie charts,
|
||
line charts, and bar charts. It will even produce three-dimensional line
|
||
and bar charts.
|
||
|
||
The feature I appreciate most about the line chart option is that you
|
||
can plot a curve fit, which allows you to see the general trend of a chart
|
||
as opposed to the plotting of individual values. The feature I like best
|
||
about bar charts is that you can choose a conventional bar chart, or a
|
||
stacked one. This is useful for comparing elements of a trend to an
|
||
overall trend. For example, suppose that you are comparing--month by
|
||
month--how many minutes you spend connected to GEnie, Delphi, and
|
||
CompuServe. In a conventional chart, you look at how the services compare
|
||
to each other ("hey, I use GEnie twice as much as I do the other two put
|
||
together"). In a stack bar chart, you can compare all the time you spent
|
||
online that month on all three services ("uh-oh, I'm spending five hours a
|
||
day tying up the phone line").
|
||
|
||
Anything that helps you visualize a trend or correlation makes for a
|
||
better spreadsheet, and Quick Click Calc's graphing capabilities do a good
|
||
job here. A nice extra is the ability to change the size of the graph by
|
||
dragging the grow box. You'd expect playing with the window size to change
|
||
the size of the _window_ for the graph, but it doesn't. It actually
|
||
changes the size of the graph itself. This means you can have teeny little
|
||
graphs dotted around your desktop as you work, reminding you of the general
|
||
trends. You won't be able to read the labels, but what the heck. You've
|
||
got an overview.
|
||
|
||
More Features Another feature of Quick Click Calc is the cell note. This
|
||
""""""""""""" allows you to attach a comment to a cell, which might
|
||
remind you of the source of a figure, or how it breaks down, or what other
|
||
spreadsheets this cell affects. (Although AppleWorks 5 does feature cell
|
||
notes, Quick Click Calc doesn't know about it, so it doesn't import them.
|
||
However, it's quite an easy matter to retrieve them. AppleWorks 5 stores
|
||
its cell notes as cells in the DR-DW range, and it's quite simple to copy
|
||
them from those cells into a cell note.)
|
||
|
||
Quick Click Calc allows you to choose the font, point size, style,
|
||
and color for each cell individually. All of this means that you can
|
||
produce visually impressive printed versions of your spreadsheets. Owners
|
||
of AppleWorks classic will be particularly impressed at how much more
|
||
attractive Quick Click Calc printouts are. They're also likely to be
|
||
easier to read! Heck, they're even easier to read on the screen.
|
||
|
||
Quick Click Calc's border feature helps here, too--on screen or on
|
||
paper. It allows you to draw separator lines on the top, on the bottom, to
|
||
the left, or to the right of any cell. Of course, you can have as many
|
||
borders as you like--all four, a combination of three or two, just one, or
|
||
none.
|
||
|
||
Valuable options are not necessarily those you use every day. Quick
|
||
Click Calc offers you the chance to encrypt a file, so that it cannot be
|
||
opened or viewed without a password. I've used this feature on just two
|
||
files--ones I rarely update--which means I don't use it a lot, but it sure
|
||
is valuable when I do need it. The encryption provided seems to be
|
||
adequate to stop an honest man. If all you're worried about is some nosy
|
||
parker idly loading your spreadsheet files to find out how much you spend
|
||
on ivory back-scratchers in a year, worry no more... Quick Click Calc's
|
||
encryption will foil them. If you have professional code-breakers on your
|
||
block, then maybe Quick Click Calc won't protect you. But presumably you
|
||
have bigger worries if professional code-breakers have access to your
|
||
computer.
|
||
|
||
Another great feature is the transpose command, which takes a block
|
||
and switches the rows and columns. If your data looks like this (before):
|
||
|
||
1 2 3 4 5
|
||
6 7 8 9 10
|
||
11 12 13 14 15
|
||
|
||
then you can use the transpose command to make it look like this in one
|
||
easy step (after):
|
||
|
||
1 6 11
|
||
2 7 12
|
||
3 8 13
|
||
4 9 14
|
||
5 10 15
|
||
|
||
This is particularly handy in conjunction with line and bar charts. These
|
||
charts assume that the points of data you want to plot are progress in
|
||
rows---that is, if it's a monthly chart, that Jan, Feb, Mar, etc. appear
|
||
down the top of the screen, and not along the left side. If you've created
|
||
a spreadsheet with the months listed on the side, the transpose command
|
||
will save you a lot of trouble in creating a chart.
|
||
|
||
Another little detail that you'll appreciate is that Quick Click Calc
|
||
lets you type 11% exactly that way--it won't balk and complain when you
|
||
type the % part. Such little things can make a big difference.
|
||
|
||
|
||
A Few Quibbles The major drawback to Quick Click Calc is that owners of
|
||
"""""""""""""" unaccelerated IIgses might find the program a little slow.
|
||
Filling down and filling right are particularly time-consuming. True, some
|
||
actions that seems to slow down the program are taking place in the
|
||
background (a background that takes precedence until the user provides some
|
||
input, but a background nonetheless). However, this requires some getting
|
||
used to.
|
||
|
||
Another aspect that takes some getting used to is the way Quick Click
|
||
Calc handles absolute cell references. I know I promised not to be forever
|
||
comparing Quick Click Calc to AppleWorks classic, but just this once, okay?
|
||
When copying cells in AppleWorks, only after you have made the important
|
||
decisions about what to copy and where to copy it are you forced to deal
|
||
with the lower-priority issue of whether you want formula references copies
|
||
as is, or relatively. That is to say, if a cell contains a reference to
|
||
A1.A3, do you want it to remain exactly the same when copied one column to
|
||
the right? Or do you want it updated so that the reference becomes B1.B3?
|
||
Mike Westerfield has said he will consider adding a "hot key" to force
|
||
absolute values at copying time in a future version.
|
||
|
||
The manual is a little on the sparse side. It begins with a few
|
||
tutorials to get you used both to the use of a spreadsheet program and the
|
||
special details of Quick Click Calc. These specific examples are most
|
||
welcome. After that, the manual seems to be more of a quick reference
|
||
guide. It's perfectly adequate for those familiar with spreadsheets and
|
||
the IIgs desktop interface, but other than that, it's just a sort of
|
||
starting-place to explore Quick Click Calc. Exploring the rest of Quick
|
||
Click Calc seems to be an exercise left to the purchaser.
|
||
|
||
One little bug I observed: Sometimes, when you create split windows,
|
||
you'll find that one window has a thumb of maximum size, which means it
|
||
isn't possible to scroll in that window. Not to worry, because you just
|
||
have to move the split line slightly and all will be will.
|
||
|
||
Little things that I wish Quick Click Calc would change: I wish it
|
||
was possible to configure the colors used to draw the charts. When drawing
|
||
a line chart, your first of four lines is drawn in red, followed by a
|
||
yellow, blue, and green. As editor of GEnieLamp A2, I tend to create line
|
||
graphs that compare A2's popularity compared to the IBM and Mac versions of
|
||
GEnieLamp, and I want red to stand for Apple II, blue for IBM, and pretty
|
||
much any other color for other versions such as Mac. This means I have to
|
||
arrange the rows of data so that Apple II comes first, and IBM third.
|
||
What's worse is that bar charts substitute the two middle colors, blue and
|
||
yellow.
|
||
|
||
Line Bar
|
||
'''' '''
|
||
Color 1 red red
|
||
Color 2 yellow blue
|
||
Color 3 blue yellow
|
||
Color 4 green green
|
||
|
||
You'll have to get used to things more commonly found in spreadsheets
|
||
on other platforms, such as = to indicate the beginning of a formula (not
|
||
+), $ to indicate that a cell reference is absolute, and a cell range
|
||
expressed by A1:A3 instead of A1...A3 or A1.A3.
|
||
|
||
A tip for those importing AppleWorks classic spreadsheets: If you
|
||
run into any difficulty, don't give up. Reboot your IIgs--shift boot, if
|
||
necessary--and try again. I've had a few conversions fail on the first try
|
||
but be successful if I start afresh. Watch out, though, because Quick
|
||
Click Calc will only transfer the values and formulae, and not the
|
||
formatting information of a file. For instance, if you have column widths
|
||
customized, you'll have to recustomize them after you load your files into
|
||
Quick Click Calc.
|
||
|
||
All these drawbacks are quite minor, and I wouldn't be the least bit
|
||
surprised if some were addressed in upcoming revisions. Earlier version of
|
||
Quick Click Calc had some trouble importing AppleWorks classic spreadsheet
|
||
files; as of Quick Click Calc v1.2, the problems seem to be gone. Also,
|
||
v1.2 features more preferences, such as the ability to use European or
|
||
American date formats, decimal formats and money formats.
|
||
|
||
Great Support As with all Byte Works products, I found support to be
|
||
""""""""""""" outstanding, even for a small company... where humanity and
|
||
reasonableness are more often found. (I used electronic mail for my
|
||
support, but I'm sure writing or phoning would result in equally close
|
||
attention being paid.) And let's face it, at $60, the price is sure right.
|
||
|
||
As I said above, the Byte Works listens to customers' suggestions for
|
||
improvements. If enough people use Quick Click Calc to make it worthwhile,
|
||
you can be sure Byte Works will add more custom options, such as letter
|
||
grades (A-F) that don't correspond to the 4.0 grade-point system. (The
|
||
university I attended uses a 3.0 system, worse luck.)
|
||
|
||
Byte Works _listens_ to their users. What more do you want in the
|
||
way of support?
|
||
|
||
More Quick Clicks...? When you look at the cover of the Quick Click Calc
|
||
""""""""""""""""""""" manual, you can't help be struck by the fact that
|
||
the Quick Click logo and the word Calc are separately entities. The Byte
|
||
Works obviously had expansion in mind--possibly a word processor called
|
||
Quick Click Word or Quick Click Write. Indeed, the second product in the
|
||
line, Quick Click Morph, was announced in mid-March.
|
||
|
||
At KansasFest 1994, Mike Westerfield said that Quick Click Calc grew
|
||
out of his efforts to provide an spreadsheet module for Quality Computers'
|
||
proposed release of AppleWorks GS 2.0. I couldn't help but wonder if the
|
||
QC had been transformed from Quality Computers to Quick Click when the
|
||
AppleWorks GS 2.0 project foundered. Mike Westerfield says not: "There is
|
||
no connection between Quick Click and Quality Computer other than an
|
||
accidental correspondence of initials." (But apparently I wasn't the only
|
||
one to ask. :-)
|
||
|
||
Sales of Quick Click Calc have not been good enough to warrant a
|
||
Quick Click word processor. Byte Works is trying again, though, with Quick
|
||
Click Morph. If sales of Morph are more impressive, or if sales of Quick
|
||
Click Calc suddenly pick up, we may indeed see a word processor and
|
||
possibly even a data base in the Quick Click series. Since the Quick Click
|
||
series is designed to use publish and subscribe wherever possible, this
|
||
should mean that data from one module can easily be transported to another.
|
||
|
||
Final Word In summary, Quick Click Calc is a good bet for anyone who
|
||
"""""""""" needs to store or manipulate numeric data, but particularly
|
||
good for those who want to produce sharp charts or attractive printouts.
|
||
Buy it!
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
//////////////////////////////////////// GEnie_QWIK_QUOTE ////
|
||
/ I was trying to write a stack showing the history of /
|
||
/ aviation... but it kept crashing! I tried the same thing, /
|
||
/ showing the history of the penal system... but it kept /
|
||
/ locking up! So I tried to put together a stack on ice /
|
||
/ cream... but it kept freezing up! /
|
||
/ /
|
||
/ Finally, in frustration, I attempted to write a stack on /
|
||
/ the history of civil war-era ironclad warships, and you /
|
||
/ can guess what happened... /
|
||
/ it always crashed into the Monitor! /
|
||
/////////////////////////////////// T.R.ONAN & D.KERWOOD ////
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
[EOA]
|
||
[LOG]//////////////////////////////
|
||
LOG OFF /
|
||
/////////////////////////////////
|
||
GEnieLamp Information
|
||
"""""""""""""""""""""
|
||
|
||
o COMMENTS: Contacting GEnieLamp
|
||
|
||
o GEnieLamp STAFF: Who Are We?
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
GEnieLamp Information GEnieLamp is published on the 1st of every month
|
||
""""""""""""""""""""" on GEnie page 515. You can also find GEnieLamp on
|
||
the main menus in the following computing RoundTables.
|
||
|
||
|
||
RoundTable Keyword GEnie Page RoundTable Keyword GEnie Page
|
||
"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
|
||
DigiPub DIGIPUB 1395 Atari ST ST 475
|
||
Macintosh MAC 605 IBM PC IBMPC 615
|
||
Apple II A2 645 Apple II Dev. A2PRO 530
|
||
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|
||
BBS BBS 610 CE Software CESOFTWARE 1005
|
||
Mini/Mainframe MAINFRAME 1145 Programming PROGRAMMING 1445
|
||
Data Comm. DATACOMM 1450 IBM PC Prog IBMPCPRO 617
|
||
PowerPC PPC 1435 PowerPCProg PPCPRO 1440
|
||
|
||
GEnieLamp is also distributed on CrossNet and many public and
|
||
commercial BBS systems worldwide.
|
||
|
||
o To reach GEnieLamp on Internet send mail to genielamp@genie.com
|
||
|
||
o Current issues of all versions of GEnieLamp are File Requestable
|
||
(FREQable) via FidoNet (Zones 1 through 6) from 1:239/260 and via
|
||
OURNet (Zone 65) from 65:65/1. SysOps should use the following
|
||
"magic names" to request the current issue of the indicated GEnieLamp
|
||
platform:
|
||
|
||
Platform Magic Name To Use
|
||
"""""""" """""""""""""""""
|
||
GEnieLamp IBM HyperRead ........ GLHYPIBM
|
||
GEnieLamp IBM Multimedia ....... GLMMIBM
|
||
GEnieLamp ST ................... GLST
|
||
GEnieLamp A2Pro ................ GLA2PRO
|
||
GEnieLamp Macintosh ............ GLMAC
|
||
GEnieLamp TX2 .................. GLTX2
|
||
GEnieLamp A2 ................... GLA2
|
||
GEnieLamp PowerPC .............. GLPPC
|
||
|
||
|
||
o Back issues of GEnieLamp are available in the DigiPub RoundTable
|
||
Library #2 on page 1395 (M1395;3).
|
||
|
||
o GEnieLamp pays for articles submitted and published with online GEnie
|
||
credit time. Upload submissions in ASCII format to library #31 in
|
||
the DigiPub RoundTable on page 1395 (M1395;3) or Email it to
|
||
GENIELAMP. On Internet send it to: genielamp@genie.com
|
||
|
||
o We welcome and respond to all E-Mail. To leave comments, suggestions
|
||
or just to say hi, you can contact us in the DigiPub RoundTable
|
||
(M1395) or send GE Mail to John Peters at [GENIELAMP] on page 200.
|
||
|
||
o If you would like to meet the GEnieLamp staff "live" we meet every
|
||
Wednesday night in the Digi*Pub Real-Time Conference at 9:00 EDT
|
||
(M1395;2).
|
||
|
||
o The Digital Publishing RoundTable is for people who are interested in
|
||
pursuing publication of their work electronically on GEnie or via
|
||
disk-based media. For those looking for online publications, the
|
||
DigiPub Software Libraries offer online magazines, newsletters,
|
||
short-stories, poetry and other various text oriented articles for
|
||
downloading to your computer. Also available are writers' tools and
|
||
'Hyper-utilties' for text presentation on most computer systems. In
|
||
the DigiPub Bulletin Board you can converse with people in the
|
||
digital publishing industry, meet editors from some of the top
|
||
electronic publications and get hints and tips on how to go about
|
||
publishing your own digital book. The DigiPub RoundTable is the
|
||
official online service for the Digital Publishing Association. To
|
||
get there type DIGIPUB or M1395 at any GEnie prompt.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
>>> GEnieLamp STAFF <<<
|
||
"""""""""""""""""""""""
|
||
|
||
GEnieLamp o John Peters [GENIELAMP] Publisher
|
||
"""""""""
|
||
|
||
APPLE II o Doug Cuff [EDITOR.A2] EDITOR
|
||
"""""""" o Gina E. Saikin [A2.GENA] A2 Staff Writer
|
||
o Charlie Hartley [C.HARTLEY3] A2 Staff Writer
|
||
|
||
|
||
A2Pro o Tim Buchheim [A2PRO.GELAMP] EDITOR
|
||
"""""
|
||
|
||
ATARI ST o John Gniewkowski [GENIELAMP.ST] ATARI ST EDITOR
|
||
"""""""" o Bruce Smith [B.SMITH123] EDITOR/TX2
|
||
o Mel Motogawa [M.MOTOGAWA] ST Staff Writer
|
||
o Sheldon Winick [S.WINICK] ST Staff Writer
|
||
o Terry Quinn [TQUINN] ST Staff Writer
|
||
o Richard Brown [R.BROWN30] ST Staff Writer
|
||
o Al Fasoldt [A.FASOLDT] ST Staff Writer
|
||
|
||
|
||
IBM o Bob Connors [DR.BOB] IBM EDITOR
|
||
""" o Nancy Thomas [GELAMP.MM] MultiMedia Editor/Writer
|
||
o David Leithauser [D.LEITHASUER] HyperRead Editor
|
||
o Brad Biondo [B.BIONDO] IBM Staff Writer
|
||
o Billy Storey [B.STOREY] IBM Staff Writer
|
||
|
||
|
||
MACINTOSH o Richard Vega [GELAMP.MAC] MACINTOSH EDITOR
|
||
""""""""" o Tom Trinko [T.TRINKO] Mac Staff Writer
|
||
o Bret Fledderjohn [FLEDDERJOHN] Mac Staff Writer
|
||
o Ricky J. Vega [GELAMP.MAC] Mac Staff Writer
|
||
|
||
|
||
POWER PC o Ben Soulon [BEN.GELAMP] POWER PC EDITOR
|
||
""""""""
|
||
|
||
WINDOWS o Bruce Maples GELAMP.WIN EDITOR
|
||
"""""""
|
||
|
||
ETC. o Jim Lubin [J.LUBIN] Add Aladdin Scripts
|
||
"""" o Scott Garrigus [S.GARRIGUS] Search-ME!
|
||
o Mike White [MWHITE] (oo) / DigiPub SysOp
|
||
o Susie Oviatt [SUSIE] ASCII Artist
|
||
o Al Fasoldt [A.FASOLDT] Contributing Columnist
|
||
o Phil Shapiro [P.SHAPIRO1] Contributing Columnist
|
||
o Sandy Wolf [S.WOLF4] Contributing Columnist
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\////////////////////////////////////
|
||
Opinions expressed herein are those of the individual authors, and do
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and T/TalkNet Publishing do not guarantee the accuracy or suitability
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letters and copy.
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||
Material published in this edition may be reprinted under the fol-
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||
lowing terms only. Reprint permission granted, unless otherwise noted,
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||
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||
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|
||
The preceeding article is reprinted courtesy of GEnieLamp Online
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Magazine. (c) Copyright 1995 T/TalkNET Publishing and GEnie Infor-
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mation Services. Join GEnie now and receive $50.00 worth of online
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////////////////////////////////////\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\
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||
[EOF]
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