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[HEA]
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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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Lighting Your Apple II Path On Delphi | |
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>>> WELCOME TO THE LAMP! <<<
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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SIZZLING SHAREWARE: FontPimp 1.0
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AND THE BEST OF THE A2 AND A2PRO MESSAGE BOARDS
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"Teaching the Apple II user how to fish since 1998"
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::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
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The Lamp! An Onipa'a Software Production Vol. 2, No. 2
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::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
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Publisher & Editor.......................Ryan M. Suenaga, M.S.W., L.S.W.
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Internet Email....................................thelamp@sheppyware.net
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::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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February 15, 1999
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OPENING PITCH
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State Of The II, 1999 ------------------------------------------ [OPN]
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A FUNNY THING HAPPENED [FOR]
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The Heat Is On ------------------------------------------------- [HET]
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Miscellanea [MSC]
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Rumor Mill ----------------------------------------------------- [RMR]
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Public Postings [PUB]
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Best Of The Best ----------------------------------------------- [BOB]
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A2Pro_DUCTIVITY
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Checking out A2PRO on Delphi ----------------------------------- [A2P]
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SIZZLING SHAREWARE
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FontPimp 1.0 --------------------------------------------------- [SIZ]
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EXTRA INNINGS
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About The Lamp! ------------------------------------------------ [INN]
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[*] [*] [*]
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READING THE LAMP! The index system used by The Lamp! is designed to make
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""""""""""""""""" your reading easier. To use this system, load this
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issue into any word processor or text editor. In the index you will find
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something like:
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EXTRA INNINGS
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About The Lamp! ------------------------------------------------ [INN]
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To read this article, simply use your search or find command to locate
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[INN]. There is a similar tag at the end of each article: [EOA].
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:: DISCUSSED ON DELPHI ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
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: :
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: We just act as mentors toward each other until :
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: there's just one person standing. :
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: :
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:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: D_CUFF :::::::::
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[EOA]
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[OPN]------------------------------
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OPENING PITCH |
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-----------------------------------
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From The Editor
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"""""""""""""""
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by Ryan M. Suenaga, B.A., M.S.W., L.S.W.
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[thelamp@sheppyware.net]
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STATE OF THE II, 1999
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Last month I declared that it was time for the Apple II Community to
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seize the day like we did in the late 1970's, my point being that _GSoft
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BASIC_ gave us the tool we needed to do just that. This month, it's still
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time to seize the day--this time by voting with our wallets for the
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continued development of Apple II products.
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It's now been 22 years since the Apple II was first sprung on an
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unexpecting world--a virtual generation of computer users has been raised
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on this most humble of platforms. At every turn, you'll still find those
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who use the II (or used the II) in every aspect of life. Today, the
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teenagers of yesteryear who hacked 8-bits in the Monitor of the Apple //e
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are system administrators at Internet Service Providers, and authors of
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Apple II software from the early 1980's are putting out packages for the
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Macintosh or Windows. Those of us with an Apple II in our past find that
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the skills we learned back then have translated well in the information age
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of today.
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The future of the Apple II is now assured, thanks to the work of F.E.
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Systems. _Bernie ][ The Rescue_ and _Sweet 16_ will run on the two major
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hardware platforms available today, with abilities mostly equal to (and
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speed far in excess of) even the most hot rodded Apple IIgs around.
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So do we honor the Apple IIs of our past and ensure the Apple IIs of
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our future--but what of the present?
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We stand at a crossroads with the Apple II--again.
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1998 could have been the year of the Apple II comeback--and in fact,
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we had enough new and exciting software (at least for the Apple IIgs) to
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make it so.
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But it wasn't.
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Almost a year ago in this publication, I wrote these words:
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"The hard questions beg to be asked: if 2,000 Apple IIgs users on the
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'Net can download the most highly anticipated game in recent memory, why
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don't we have more subscribers to _Shareware Solutions II_ or _Juiced.GS_?
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Why is _The Apple Blossom_ ending its run? Why are our shareware authors
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struggling to justify another Apple II project? Sadly, while the Apple II
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appears alive on the 'Net, its vital signs elsewhere appear weak.
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"Still, two thousand downloads is an exciting number, and hopefully
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those two thousand files translate into two thousand excited Apple II users
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who will keep the faith well into the next century and do what they need to
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do to keep Apple II support alive.
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"In the meantime, I'll continue to check for vital signs from time to
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time, and keep an eye out for other signs of Apple II Life on the 'Net."
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Those other signs of Apple II life stayed weak.
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Since the time I wrote those words, we've had a large influx of new
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and exciting products (introductions were centered largely around
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KansasFest)--from freeware and shareware to commercial software to
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reclassifications of classic favorites. Yet almost a year later, the Apple
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II marketplace continues to struggle.
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Those Apple II developers and publishers who continue to produce
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software and hardware do so mostly as a labor of love, but without enough
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financial support to keep them in business, how long will that last?
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Will we learn from the lessons that the last year has taught us?
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There's still time to seize the day. Make 1999 the year that 1998
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could have been--the year of the Apple II comeback.
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[*] [*] [*]
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Guess I'll Pack My Bags And Run Away Department: Kevin Noonan, aka
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GSWOMBAT@delphi.com produced a fabulous little printed newsletter called
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_Apple II Update_, based in Australia. I was lucky enough to get a few
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issues and was thoroughly entertained by it. Sadly, the January 1999 issue
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was the last. Although it was little-known outside of Australia, it will
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definitely be missed.
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Thanks, Kevin. For everything.
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[*] [*] [*]
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This Just In Department: Per Devin Reade, Head Geek and Tool Push, the
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long-awaited GNO 2.0.6 has just been released! Head over to
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http://www.gno.org/~gno to take a look. We'll try to have some GNO
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coverage next month.
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[*] [*] [*]
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Blatant Plugs 'R Us Department: Time for your monthly dose of
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KansasFest information.
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For the most fun you won't sleep through, follow the Yellow Brick Road
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to KansasFest 1999, being held from July 21-25 on the campus of Avila
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College in Kansas City, Missouri. Registration information is coming soon,
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and you can get the news hot off the press at the KFest Home Page
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(http://www.kfest.org).
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It's time. Take the present of the Apple II in your hands.
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And I'll see you in a month.
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Ryan
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thelamp@sheppyware.net
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ASCII ART BEGINS
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_________ _ _ _
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|__ __| | | | | | |
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| | | | | | | |
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| | | |___ ____ | | _____ __ ___ _ _ _____ | |
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| | | ___ \ / __ \ | | /____ \ | v v | | v ___ \ | |
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| | | | | | | /__\ \ | | ____| | | /\ /\ | | / \ \ | |
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| | | | | | | _____| | | / ___ | | || || | | | | | |_|
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| | | | | | | |_____ | |____ | |__| | | || || | | \___/ / _
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|_| |_| |_| \______| |______| \____^_| |_||_||_| | |\____/ |_|
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ASCII ART ENDS
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[EOA]
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[OPN]------------------------------
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A FUNNY THING HAPPENED. . . . |
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-----------------------------------
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Checking out A2 on Delphi
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"""""""""""""""""""""""""
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by Ryan M. Suenaga, B.A., M.S.W., L.S.W.
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[thelamp@sheppyware.net]
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* The Heat Is On
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* Miscellanea
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* Rumor Mill
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* Public Postings
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* Best Of The Best
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THE HEAT IS ON
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""""""""""""""
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[*] General Chatter ....... Apple Manuals Online?
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[*] Entertainment Software ....... SMB and SSII?
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[*] Telecommunications ....... Using Delphi As An ISP
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[*] General Chatter ....... Fine Tuning Harmonie
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MISCELLANEA
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"""""""""""
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ZIP ACCELERATOR UTILITIES MAKE IT INTO A2 Good news! I found out today
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""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""" that we =do= have permission to
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upload the Zip accelerator utilities disk to our Database.
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To make life easier on everyone, I'm going to apply Greg Templeman's freely
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available patches to the Zip CDev and CDA (which are buggy in their
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original form) and upload the files as a disk archive. This is necessary
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because the installer program requires a specific disk name, which can only
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be preserved by archiving the entire disk.
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Look for it in a few days.
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- Tony Ward, A2 Database Manager
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(TONYW1, 19754, GO COM A2)
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NOW THAT I CAN TELNET, WHERE DO I GO? You could try:
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"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
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lost-gonzo.com
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This is a BBS that you can telnet to and one of the "doors" on the BBS will
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connect you to a IIgs running Apple II BBS software. You need to sign up
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for an account but it only took a day for me to get mine.
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Heck, the sysop even called me (long distance I might add) when he saw me
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having problems logging on one night. Mind you, the problem wasn't with
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his BBS but was due to me beta testing Marinetti. :-)
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Jeff Blakeney - Dean of the Apple II University in A2Pro
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** HyperCard IIgs Course now in session! **
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(JBLAKENEY, 19009, GO COM A2)
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BERNIE BONES UP AGAIN We're not fixing this bug in Bernie. It's already
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""""""""""""""""""""" fixed. :) There will be a maintenance release (aka
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MS service pack :) this evening or tomorrow latest that will address the
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SpeedNanny bug as well as the earlier completed but unreleased Marinetti
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fix. If you are subscribed to the Bernie news mailing (a very low traffic
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mailing list), you will learn about the maintenance release as soon as it's
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out.
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(http://www.magnet.ch/emutech/Bernie/List)
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Woof,
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henrik
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(GUDATH, 19884, GO COM A2)
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MUSCLING UP WITH MARINETTI Well, this might not help much but it never
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"""""""""""""""""""""""""" hurts to try. Have you set the serial port
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speed in Marinetti to 57600 bps? This might be a little fast even for your
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accelerated IIgs so dropping to a slower speed like 38400 or even 19200 bps
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might help and make sure that your modem is set to not connect at a speed
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faster than the serial port speed.
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I don't think the serial port speed is really the problem but your
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mentioning that your modem uses a Rockwell chipset might mean your modem is
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an RPI modem. This type of modem expects the computer to handle data
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compression and, more importantly, error correction. If modems have
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difficulty talking to each other they try to do error correction to make
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sure the data gets through. If your modem is an RPI one, then your modem,
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connected to your IIgs, is incapable of doing the error correction and you
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will most definitely get line noise and such when running at higher speeds.
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Now, I'm sure others will come along and mention that Marinetti does error
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correction by virtue of the fact that TCP/IP is an error correcting
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transfer protocol. However, if Marinetti or the machine it is connected to
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keep getting errors, they have to request that the data get resent and the
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errors can occur in this data again and so on.
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The faster your modem is set to go, the more errors you will usually run
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into and the more time that will be wasted by Marinetti requesting packets
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be resent as well as resending packets. This could end up causing your
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Domain Name Server and connection requests to "time out". This would also
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explain why it works some times and doesn't others because the telephone
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line conditions can be better some times than others which would mean less
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errors some times than others.
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I hope this helps. Otherwise, I just spent a lot of time typing for
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nothing. :-)
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Jeff Blakeney - Dean of the Apple II University in A2Pro
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** HyperCard IIgs Course now in session! **
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(JBLAKENEY, 19994, GO COM A2)
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THIS MONTH'S BLATANT HARDWARE PLUG FWIW, Paul Lawson recently offered a
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"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""" few 1/3 height IBM SCSI drives (model
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DSAS-3720) for sale at an excellent price. I ordered a couple and have
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been fooling with them for about three days now.
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These are very very very nice drives particularly for the price, speedy and
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spacious with built in active termination (if you want it). Specs on the
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drives are available at:
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http://www.storage.ibm.com/techsup/hddtech/dsas/dsasjum.htm
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Although you can probably figure everything out using Lynx or SIS, a
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graphical browser would be best to see the accompanying diagrams.
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To make a long story short, the question was posed to me:
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"Do these drives work with an Apple II?"
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With the standard qualifications, the answer is yes.
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What qualifications am I talking about?
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1) The drive does -not- supply terminator power, so you must have some
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other SCSI device supply it. If you have a RamFAST, set the jumper on
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the Rev. D card or the DIP switch on the Rev. B/C cards to supply power;
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if you have an Apple High Speed or Rev. C SCSI card, do the term power
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modification; or use a drive on the chain that does supply terminator
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power.
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2) If you use this drive with a RamFAST, you are limited to 12 partitions
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on the drive. As you can see, that's at most 11 ProDOS partitions, with
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about 350 megs or so left over which can be made a single HFS partition
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if you'd like.
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Aside from that, this drive is a great deal for Apple II users, as well as
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for users of other platforms who can use a relatively small boot drive or a
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drive to master CDROMs with. I think Paul will be getting more soon
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although maybe not at quite a good a price as last time. Rest assured that
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even at double, maybe even triple the price of his previous offer, these
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are a total steal.
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(Unsolicited Blatant Plug, copyright 1999).
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-
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Ryan -- rsuenaga@apple2.org -- http://lamp.sheppyware.net
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Posted by ProTERM Mac and PTMM v2.5 - The integrated information solution
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(RSUENAGA, 18910, GO COM A2)
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ASCENDING ACCENTIT This is a Temporary Initialization File that always
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"""""""""""""""""" checks the GS keyboard translation preference to make
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sure it is set to "Standard" at boot time and when changing applications.
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This has been a valuable system extension for me, because Spectrum does
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adjust keyboard translation when online, and under certain rare
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circumstances (like a system hang or crash) might leave your translation
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preferences changed, thereby forcing you to manually go into the General
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Control Panel and change it back from "None" to "Standard."
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Max Jones, Juiced.GS
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http://www.wbwip.com/juiced.gs
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Delivered by Spectrum 2.2 and Crock O' Gold 3.0b5 beta
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(JUICEDGS, 18984, GO COM A2)
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IRONTOOTH'S SPEAKERPHONE SCRIPT Well, I was going to post this to the
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""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""" database, but if you would like to try
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it, and let me know if you have any problems...
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The following is an ANSITerm script for Rockwell-based modems with
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speakerphone capability (look for a microphone and speaker jack on the
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modem). I have to adjust the settings a bit to reduce feedback on my
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system using the microphone that came with my Phoebe V1456VQE modem (from
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JAMECO) and its internal speaker.
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If you copy this script, make sure that labels (e.g. #intro) that are alone
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in a line don't have any spaces preceding them.
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**************************
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*| SPEAKERPHONE |*
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*| |*
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*| By Don V. Zahniser |*
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**************************
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*
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* ANSITerm script for controlling a Rockwell-chipset modem with
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* speakerphone capabilities
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*
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* - Adjust defaults for your modem/microphone performance
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*
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* Mute Parameter
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* (0 = Microphone off, 1 = Microphone on, 2 = Room monitor)
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as n0 1
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*
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* Speaker Attenuation
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* (0 to 15 in 2dB steps - 0 to 30dB attenuation, 16 is Speaker Mute)
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as n1 5
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*
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* Microphone Gain
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* (0 to 3 - 0, 6dB, 9.5 dB, 12dB gain)
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as n2 1
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#intro
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if off #intro2
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no "Can't use the phone while online!"
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go #exit
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#intro2
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fo wh ba bl de me "^L"
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re "at#cls=8^M"
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wa "OK"
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#menu
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de me "^L" ba db wi 10 7 60 12
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lo 12 8 me "1 - Dial"
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lo 12 9 me "2 - Pick up/Answer"
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lo 12 11 me "0 - Exit"
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key n0 str s0 n0 up s0
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if s0 == "1" #dial
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if s0 == "2" #answer
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if s0 == "0" #exit
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#dial
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de me "^L"
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re "at#vrn=0^M" wa "OK"
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re "at#vls=6^M" wa "OK"
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ge "Phone number to dial:" s9
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re "atdt" s9 "^M" wa "VCON"
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go #menu2
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#answer
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de me "^L"
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re "at#cls=8^M" wa "OK"
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re "at#vls=6^M" wa "OK"
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re "ATA^M" wa "VCON"
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go #menu2
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#menu2
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re "at#spk=" n0 "," n1 "," n2 "^M"
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wa "OK"
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de me "^L" ba db wi 10 7 60 12
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lo 12 8 me "Change Speaker Level (+/-)"
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lo 12 9 me "Change Microphone Gain (
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)"
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lo 12 10 me "Microphone Mute Toggle (M)"
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lo 12 11 me "0 - Hang up & Exit"
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key n9 str s0 n9 up s0
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if s0 == "+" #volup
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if s0 == "-" #voldn
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if n9 == 11 #micup
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if n9 == 10 #micdn
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if s0 == "M" #micmute
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if s0 == "0" #exit
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#volup
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if n1 == 0 #fullvol
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sub n1 1 go #menu2
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|
|
|
#voldn
|
|
if n1 == 16 #voloff
|
|
add n1 1 go #menu2
|
|
|
|
#fullvol
|
|
no "Speaker at maximum Volume" go #menu2
|
|
|
|
#voloff
|
|
no "Speaker is muted" go #menu2
|
|
|
|
#micmute
|
|
if n0 == 0 #micon
|
|
as n0 0 no "Microphone Muted..." go #menu2
|
|
|
|
#micon
|
|
as n0 1 go #menu2
|
|
|
|
#micup
|
|
if n2 == 0 #gainup
|
|
add n2 1 go #menu2
|
|
|
|
#micdn
|
|
if n2 == 3 #gaindn
|
|
sub n2 1 go #menu2
|
|
|
|
#gainup
|
|
no "Microphone at full gain..." go #menu2
|
|
|
|
#gaindn
|
|
no "Microphone at lowest gain..." go #menu2
|
|
|
|
#exit
|
|
de me "^L"
|
|
re "ath^M" wa "OK"
|
|
re "atz^M" wa "OK"
|
|
exit
|
|
* ch at+"/olright"
|
|
|
|
|
|
- Don (IronTooth)
|
|
|
|
Delivered by my ANSITerm off-line reader scripts...
|
|
|
|
They're OLRight!
|
|
(DZAHNISER, 18932, GO COM A2)
|
|
|
|
|
|
OLRIGHT! 4.0 ODDS AND ENDS I don't think I mentioned that OLRight! v4.0
|
|
"""""""""""""""""""""""""" directly supports most of ANSITerm's
|
|
Command-keys, so can be used as a default script for start-up of ANSITerm
|
|
for general use. As an example, the ANSITerm dial menu is now accessible
|
|
from OLRight!'s menus and by using Command-D.
|
|
|
|
I just added preferences for _not_ archiving mail online each time and for
|
|
_not_ checking for Delphi Binary Mail each time. Saves a few seconds on
|
|
each online session...
|
|
|
|
- Don (IronTooth)
|
|
|
|
Delivered by my ANSITerm off-line reader scripts...
|
|
|
|
They're OLRight!
|
|
(DZAHNISER, 18933, GO COM A2)
|
|
|
|
|
|
DOES BABELFISH NEED SFUTILITY? It was indeed written to be used with
|
|
"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""" Babelfish, but it is not necessary for the
|
|
current version. It is reported by some people to cause problems, but
|
|
others see none. We have never been able to track down why it should on
|
|
some machines but not on others.
|
|
|
|
It is safe to remove it.
|
|
|
|
Ewen Wannop - Speccie - Mon 4 Jan 1999 - 198 days till KFest '99
|
|
Delivered without using a IIgs by Spectrum 2.2 & Crock O' Gold 2.6
|
|
Bernie ][ the Rescue 2.0 woofing on a PowerMac 8200/120
|
|
http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/ewannop/
|
|
(EWANNOP, 19030, GO COM A2)
|
|
|
|
|
|
A POTPOURRI OF TELECOMM THOUGHTS II Not Disturb will help if you are
|
|
"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""" launching ProTerm after starting GS/OS,
|
|
but to get the optimum speed out of ProTerm, with the minimum dropped
|
|
characters, you should not be launching it from GS/OS in the first place.
|
|
|
|
All P8 telecomm programs will run screamingly fast if you boot directly
|
|
into P8 then run the application. There will be no interrupts generated
|
|
that might interfere with the data, and even a stock unaccelerated IIgs
|
|
should connect cleanly at 57600 baud.
|
|
|
|
Under GS/OS there can be a whole chain of things in the interrupt loop that
|
|
either grab system time, or just take too long to execute. It is for these
|
|
reasons that desktop telecoms programs like Spectrum, need as clean an
|
|
environment as possible to get high baud rates with no dropped characters.
|
|
The faster your IIgs is, the less this is will be a problem. So an
|
|
accelerator helps things enormously.
|
|
|
|
Running Spectrum under Bernie ][ the Rescue on a G3 PowerMac, emulating a
|
|
40Mhz IIgs, means you can have whatever extras you like on the system, and
|
|
can even forget II Not Disturb, and still get 57600 baud cleanly!
|
|
|
|
Ewen Wannop - Speccie - Sat 9 Jan 1999 - 193 days till KFest '99
|
|
Delivered without using a IIgs by Spectrum 2.2 & Crock O' Gold 2.6
|
|
Bernie ][ the Rescue 2.0 woofing on a PowerMac 8200/120
|
|
http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/ewannop/
|
|
(EWANNOP, 19198, GO COM A2)
|
|
|
|
|
|
TEXT VERSUS WEB ON DELPHI A2--BUILDING BRIDGES For those of us who do
|
|
"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""" (most of) our access via
|
|
the web-side, ASCII art tends to end up as a compressed, unreadable jumble
|
|
because the nicely formatted monospace text displays in a proportional
|
|
font. So I really have no idea what you posted!
|
|
|
|
I'm not sure if it works when posting from the telnet side, but I've had
|
|
some success when I need to retain the format of a posting, by enclosing
|
|
part (or was it "all") of the text in <PRE>...</PRE> (which is HTML for
|
|
PREformatted data). This tends to work pretty well, since most browsers
|
|
display this in a monospace font.
|
|
|
|
I'd love to be able to get the joke!
|
|
|
|
While I'm up on my soapbox... As other web-side users may have noticed, if
|
|
you "Preview" your post before posting, what little formatting you get by
|
|
default (for example, paragraphs usually stay as separate paragraphs) goes
|
|
completely out the window! If you must preview the post, go back to the
|
|
standard "Compose" screen and post from there directly.
|
|
|
|
--
|
|
Peter Watson
|
|
-- Write to MSDOS disks on the Apple IIgs?
|
|
-- Impossible! ;-)
|
|
(PETERWATSON, 19048, GO COM A2)
|
|
|
|
>>>>> From the text side (dial-up or telnet), you can do the same thing
|
|
""""" with dot-commands (a period preceding the command alone on the
|
|
line). The command for <PRE> is '.pre' and the command for </PRE> is '.end
|
|
pre'
|
|
|
|
I use these for the Topic/Subject lists (Yes, I know one is overdue...).
|
|
The preceding paragraph was formatted using these commands.
|
|
|
|
- Don (IronTooth)
|
|
|
|
Delivered by my ANSITerm off-line reader scripts...
|
|
|
|
They're OLRight!
|
|
(DZAHNISER, 19049, GO COM A2)
|
|
|
|
|
|
WHAT'S UP WITH PRODOS 8 Y2K COMPLIANCE ON THE IIGS? This is what I
|
|
""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""" believe to be the
|
|
case, although I haven't yet fully checked it out:
|
|
|
|
The officially supported ProDOS clock, and we're talking ProDOS, pre-ProDOS
|
|
8, pre-ProDOS 16, pre-GS/OS is the Thunderclock, which does not support
|
|
years.
|
|
|
|
In order to figure out years, ProDOS uses the date and day of week along
|
|
with an internal year table, so every seven years it needs to be patched
|
|
and updated.
|
|
|
|
The IIgs clock -does- support years, and the only person to report the 1993
|
|
issue is a //e user, so I do not believe it's needed for IIgs users at this
|
|
point.
|
|
-
|
|
Ryan M. Suenaga, M.S.W., L.S.W. -- rsuenaga@apple2.org
|
|
Editor and Publisher, _The Lamp!_, published monthly on Delphi
|
|
Posted by PTMM v2.5 - The integrated information solution
|
|
(RSUENAGA, 19162, GO COM A2)
|
|
|
|
|
|
DESKJET AND IIGS COMPATIBILITY UPDATE I have good DeskJet news and I have
|
|
""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""" bad DeskJet news.
|
|
|
|
First, the good news. HP has recently released the DeskJet 420, a IIGS
|
|
compatible color capable ink jet printer which costs $119 Retail.
|
|
|
|
Now, for the bad news...
|
|
|
|
The following DeskJet 700 series are not compatible with the IIGS: 710,
|
|
712, 720 or 722.
|
|
|
|
During the past few years, HP has offered several models of DeskJet that
|
|
could not be used with the IIGS. Those printers (such as the short-lived DJ
|
|
820CSe) had a silkscreen designation on the front of them that said: "For
|
|
Windows."
|
|
|
|
The 700 series of IIGS incompatible printers no longer have the silkscreen
|
|
"For Windows" designation. And, to make things even more confusing, the
|
|
722c comes in two different boxes; the older box clearly states that the
|
|
printer is for use with Windows only, but the newer box doesn't.
|
|
|
|
There _is_ information listed on the side of the boxes and in HP's
|
|
literature which indicates which DeskJets will work on the IIGS, but only
|
|
if you know exactly what you are looking for.
|
|
|
|
ALL DeskJet printers which work on the IIGS have two things in common: they
|
|
support HP's PCL Level 3 printer language, and they are compatible with
|
|
MS-DOS. Since PCL is backwards compatible, PCL Level 4 and 5 printers can
|
|
also be used on a IIGS.
|
|
|
|
It appears as if all other current models of DeskJet (aside from the 710,
|
|
712, 720, 722) do support PCL3 and are MS-DOS compatible, and so they are
|
|
IIGS compatible.
|
|
|
|
So, if you are looking for a new DeskJet, you are going to have to look at
|
|
the box and/or at HP's literature. If the box says MS-DOS (or DOS 3.3 and
|
|
later) and PCL, then it'll work on the IIGS, with Harmonie. If it says only
|
|
Windows, Windows 95, Windows 98 or Windows NT, it will not work with a
|
|
IIGS.
|
|
|
|
Joe Kohn
|
|
Publisher of Harmonie
|
|
(The GS/OS printer drivers which work with HP printers.)
|
|
http://www.crl.com/~joko
|
|
(JOE_KOHN, 19149, GO COM A2)
|
|
|
|
|
|
<<<<< Considering that the vast majority of DeskJets work great on the
|
|
""""" IIGS, it would be much more efficient to simply list the models
|
|
that do not work, as I already did with the 710, 712, 720 and 722. IOW,
|
|
every DeskJet currently sold by HP, except for these four models, work
|
|
great on a IIGS.
|
|
|
|
To save Barry and any one else some time and effort, I already have the
|
|
answers I was looking for, and have posted the information.
|
|
|
|
And, if all works out, I should soon have a list of ALL DeskJets which are
|
|
incompatible with the Apple IIGS. There are only a couple, though. And, all
|
|
the others say on the front of the printer: "For Windows."
|
|
|
|
But, in short, if it's designated as a For-Windows, Windows-Only, or as a
|
|
WinPrinter, then it's just not going to work on a IIGS. Or a II, II+, IIe,
|
|
IIc or IIc+. Or, on any of Tony Diaz's prototypes.
|
|
|
|
Joe
|
|
(JOE_KOHN, 19177, GO COM A2)
|
|
|
|
<<<<< In my quest to get answers, I visited three local stores yesterday
|
|
""""" that sell HP printers, and fortunately, managed to avoid talking to
|
|
any salespeople. Since I knew exactly what I was looking for, I looked at
|
|
all the printers, grabbed all the HP sales brochures I could find, and
|
|
looked at the actual boxes that the DJs come in.
|
|
|
|
To that end, I can assure everyone that the current DeskJets that work with
|
|
the IIGS are noted on both the literature and the boxes as being MS-DOS
|
|
compatible.
|
|
|
|
Or, you could just say the heck with the reading of fine-print, and just
|
|
buy the DeskJet 420 for $119. When used on a IIGS, even the newest, top of
|
|
the line DeskJet is only going to operate as a PCL Level 3 printer, which
|
|
is what the 420 is. Aside from print speed, there is nothing to be gained
|
|
by buying a more expensive DJ if all you have is a IIGS.
|
|
|
|
Joe
|
|
(JOE_KOHN, 19179, GO COM A2)
|
|
|
|
<<<<< Two other IIGS incompatible DeskJets are the 820C and 1000C series
|
|
""""" printers. Neither of these models are currently available; they
|
|
have both been discontinued.
|
|
|
|
In the case of the DJ 820Cse, I know for a fact that this one has the "For
|
|
Windows" designation silkscreened on the front. I have not seen the DJ
|
|
1000c printer to know whether it carries that silkscreen designation.
|
|
|
|
So to re-cap, the following won't work on the Apple II: DeskJets 710c,
|
|
712c, 720c, 722c, 820c and 1000c.
|
|
|
|
There may be just one or two others, but I need to do a little more
|
|
research before I can say for sure.
|
|
|
|
Joe Kohn
|
|
(JOE_KOHN, 19180, GO COM A2)
|
|
|
|
|
|
THE FUTURE OF THE IIGS ONLINE These days, I generally continue to use
|
|
""""""""""""""""""""""""""""" ProTerm 3.1 for manual logins, and Spectrum
|
|
for its script-driven add-ons like SIS and COG.
|
|
|
|
But yesterday, for the first time ever, I actually imagined that at some
|
|
point in the future, I might be retiring ProTerm.
|
|
|
|
I spent some time yesterday getting Spectrum v2.2 all set up, and finally
|
|
got around to installing and trying Sheppy's gsAIM (I'm JoeKohn99) and
|
|
Geoff's ftp-client. And, then it struck me...
|
|
|
|
Unless I make the switch to Spectrum as my exclusive telecomm program, I'm
|
|
not going to be able to take full advantage of all these really neat
|
|
Marinetti-aware apps. After all, in order to get gsAIM Instant Messages,
|
|
you need to be online with GS/OS.
|
|
|
|
I'm typing this message off-line using COG. But, by having flat-rate
|
|
unlimited access to the net, I could just as easily be typing this message
|
|
in COG, while still connected to the net with TCP/IP...and be chatting with
|
|
a gsAIM "Buddy" at the same time! Multi-tasking (of sorts) has arrived, and
|
|
the full impact of that just didn't hit me until yesterday! Thanks for
|
|
opening my eyes to that Richard, Sheppy, Geoff and Sir Ewen! ;-)
|
|
|
|
At some point, when we have a full suite of Marinetti-aware apps, I imagine
|
|
that ProTerm will lose some of its allure for me. Old habits are hard to
|
|
break, and I do really like ProTerm, but...
|
|
|
|
I'm now 100% convinced: Marinetti and Spectrum are the future of the IIGS
|
|
online.
|
|
|
|
Then again, bringing it back to the subject of NiftySpell and Spectrum, I'm
|
|
sure glad that NiftySpell picked up that typo a few paragraphs upstream ;-)
|
|
|
|
Joe
|
|
(JOE_KOHN, 19430, GO COM A2)
|
|
|
|
|
|
NIFTYSPELL TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE One NiftySpell...coming right up.
|
|
"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
|
|
In a response to my e-mail request, Chris Vavruska says that he'll put
|
|
together some technical info so that other programmers can call up
|
|
NiftySpell's spell check functions directly, without having to first open
|
|
up the NiftySpell NDA. I do not know how long that will take.
|
|
|
|
As it is now, all it takes to spell check an outgoing gsAIM message is to
|
|
access the NiftySpell NDA and click on the Check Window function.
|
|
|
|
By providing direct support for NiftySpell in gsAIM, you'll save users from
|
|
having to access the NDA directly. But, aside from "the cool factor" of
|
|
having a Spell Check button in gsAIM, the two already work together quite
|
|
well.
|
|
|
|
Speaking of "the cool factor," let me ask a question...does AOL's Instant
|
|
Messenger have the ability to spell check messages, or is that something
|
|
only the IIGS can perform?
|
|
|
|
Joe Kohn
|
|
(JOE_KOHN, 19456, GO COM A2)
|
|
|
|
|
|
THE FUTURE OF THE II IS IN EMULATION Speaking as a developer, it is
|
|
"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""" important for us to have a level
|
|
playing field before we start to do any coding. This is one of the reasons
|
|
why you have seen very little written for the Second Sight display, as it
|
|
is not stable, and very few are in use.
|
|
|
|
If everyone was using an emulated IIgs under Bernie, then we could indeed
|
|
improve the resolution or screen size of the IIgs. But then we might as
|
|
well just write the programs for the Mac, as it already has those
|
|
attributes without expanding Bernie any further.
|
|
|
|
The level playing field for me is a IIgs, preferably accelerated, with at
|
|
least 4Mb of Memory, a hard disk drive, and running System 6.0.1. Anything
|
|
less than that will not necessarily work with any of my software. I think
|
|
the same will be true of most other developers.
|
|
|
|
I did make the plea some time ago that everybody should have that minimum
|
|
specification. Certainly it is necessary for most of the new software
|
|
issued within the last year.
|
|
|
|
Ewen Wannop - Speccie - Tue 12 Jan 1999 - 190 days till KFest '99
|
|
Delivered without using a IIgs by Spectrum 2.2 & Crock O' Gold 2.6
|
|
Bernie ][ the Rescue 2.0 woofing on a PowerMac 8200/120
|
|
http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/ewannop/
|
|
(EWANNOP, 19292, GO COM A2)
|
|
|
|
>>>>> Actually, the reason I want to see extra features added to Bernie
|
|
""""" above a real IIgs is this:
|
|
|
|
I like programming the GS more than anything else. The more power I can get
|
|
out of GS apps running on Bernie, the less Mac programming I have to do to
|
|
write the apps I want to write. :)
|
|
|
|
Eric "Sheppy" Shepherd
|
|
Macintosh & PowerPC Programmers Forum
|
|
(SHEPPY, 19295, GO COM A2)
|
|
|
|
>>>>> I thought I'd throw in a few cents.
|
|
"""""
|
|
It is rather simple to add a few extra features. However, Bernie is an
|
|
emulator in first place, and it will be measured against a physical Apple
|
|
IIgs. As long as Bernie is not considered a "stand-alone" platform (the
|
|
little Bill Gates inside me is already cheering :-), it doesn't make much
|
|
sense offering software that is limited to Bernie-specific features. (With
|
|
the notable exception of Woofenstein 3D.) Of course, there will be sporadic
|
|
lapses on our part, and if a developer depends on non-standard features
|
|
there's a chance it will be implemented. As long as there are Apple IIgs
|
|
features missing, such as SmartPort bus support, we better get our job done
|
|
in that department.
|
|
|
|
- henrik
|
|
|
|
woof woof
|
|
(GUDATH, 19296, GO COM A2)
|
|
|
|
>>>>> As far as I'm concerned, Bernie is a real IIgs. I do most of my
|
|
""""" work and testing on Bernie (with the notable exception that I test
|
|
my 'netti apps on a real GS, because it has a modem and my Mac doesn't).
|
|
|
|
To be honest, I figure that if Bernie adds some special features that I
|
|
want, I'm likely to stick around as a IIgs programmer longer, because I
|
|
have new challenges. The real IIgs is too limiting for some of the projects
|
|
I want to do.
|
|
|
|
Eric "Sheppy" Shepherd
|
|
Macintosh & PowerPC Programmers Forum
|
|
(SHEPPY, 19306, GO COM A2)
|
|
|
|
>>>>> I'm pretty much in agreement with this.
|
|
"""""
|
|
There are occasional compatibility glitches between Bernie and a IIgs, but
|
|
consider: as much compatibility as we have with the Apple II series, we
|
|
don't have perfect backward compatibility. Even the ROM_3 IIgs doesn't
|
|
perfectly emulate a ROM_01 (or ROM_00 for that matter), an enhanced //e
|
|
isn't 100% compatible with unenhanced //e's, the ][+ isn't 100% compatible
|
|
with the original ][, and so on. The difference the other way is larger.
|
|
|
|
Let's do a hypothetical: say Apple released a computer with a G3 processor
|
|
that looked just like the new PowerMac G3 mini towers, had MacOS 8.5.1,
|
|
_Bernie_, the IIgs ROM image, and System 6.0.1 bundled and set up, and sold
|
|
it under the name "Apple IIg3". Would we call this an Apple II? Well,
|
|
Apple itself would call it a II, and it would run Apple II software under
|
|
Bernie, as well as Macintosh software. Are there things it's not
|
|
compatible with on the Apple II side? Sure. 5.25 inch floppies would be
|
|
the first thing we could point out.
|
|
|
|
But if it's just like the G3 that Apple started selling, it would be
|
|
missing serial ports and 3.5 inch floppy disks too, among other things.
|
|
|
|
People still call those G3's Macs. I call those G3's Apple II's :)
|
|
|
|
The newest Macs aren't 100% compatible with older Macs, and similarly, the
|
|
newest Apple IIs aren't going to be 100% compatible with older Apple II's.
|
|
It's the price to pay of progress.
|
|
-
|
|
Ryan M. Suenaga, M.S.W., L.S.W. -- rsuenaga@apple2.org
|
|
Editor and Publisher, _The Lamp!_, published monthly on Delphi
|
|
Posted by PTMM v2.5 - The integrated information solution
|
|
(RSUENAGA, 19310, GO COM A2)
|
|
|
|
>>>>> You know, it's a long time since anyone has been able to make me
|
|
""""" say (about the Apple II), "Gee, I've never thought of it that way
|
|
before!". He's right - it *would* be an Apple II!
|
|
|
|
I've always looked at upgrades using a variation of the 80/20 rule
|
|
(hopefully closer to 95/5!) which says that if I can get all the shiny new
|
|
features (80% benefit) in exchange for losing some backwards compatibility
|
|
(20% cost) then the change is worth it.
|
|
|
|
So each time I upgraded, ][+ to //e to IIgs, some of the old software or
|
|
hardware no longer ran. For that matter, even installing my SuperDrive card
|
|
cost me the ability to run some software. But it was always worth it, and
|
|
it was always still an Apple II.
|
|
|
|
As I think Ryan was saying, I believe a G3 based "Apple IIg3" would be as
|
|
much an Apple II as the original PowerPC were Macs. It was all done with
|
|
smokescreens and mirrors anyway!
|
|
|
|
All we need now is for someone to put together some stick-on labels, create
|
|
an appropriate appearance manager "theme" (what is the Mac terminology for
|
|
this?) and take a "made-over" G3 system to a trade show. I think the
|
|
reactions (from horror to joy) would be beyond price! B-)
|
|
--
|
|
Peter Watson
|
|
-- Write to MSDOS disks on the Apple IIgs?
|
|
-- Impossible! ;-)
|
|
(PETERWATSON, 19323, GO COM A2)
|
|
|
|
|
|
DEALING WITH COLOR GRAPHICS IN GRAPHICWRITER III So, do you have
|
|
"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""" something against
|
|
psychedelic? :-)
|
|
|
|
I don't do much color work in GW III, but I don't believe there is a way to
|
|
do what you want. Maybe others will know more on this topic.
|
|
|
|
Max
|
|
(JUICEDGS, 19308, GO COM A2)
|
|
|
|
>>>>> Richard may certainly correct me, but I've tried many things in
|
|
""""" GWIII with color, and it seems to me that the palette is fixed.
|
|
|
|
There are two things you might want to try. Both involve a lot of work, and
|
|
I've had marginal success.
|
|
|
|
The first thing is to make a "palette document" in GWIII, using every color
|
|
on the GWIII palette and print it out, giving you a color reference chart
|
|
for printing on whatever your printer is.
|
|
|
|
The other (tougher) part, is to copy your objects into Platinum paint, and
|
|
save it as a paint file. Now you have a "reference document" in Platinum
|
|
paint... (Gee, it's been a while since I did this, please forgive any
|
|
lapses I might have)
|
|
|
|
You can use this reference document as a template to create new pictures
|
|
that should carry their colors over to GWIII.
|
|
|
|
Bring your picture with the custom palette into Platinum Paint. (here's
|
|
where my memory is real fuzzy) I don't remember if there is a load palette
|
|
option, or if I went through and wrote down the rgb values for each color
|
|
in my GWIII palette.
|
|
|
|
Anyway, in your new picture, edit the palette, and change the colors to the
|
|
values in the reference picture, then remap the picture to the (now-edited)
|
|
palette.
|
|
|
|
This explanation is most certainly be incomplete, but it might Give you
|
|
enough to go on and experiment with.
|
|
|
|
__________
|
|
| homas
|
|
(TCOMPTER, 19330, GO COM A2)
|
|
|
|
>>>>> In a word. No. If the colors in the graphic are not a match or
|
|
""""" close match, GWIII substitutes the closest color which may render
|
|
undesirable results. The closest color from GWIII's own color palette. I
|
|
would love to see palette switching in GWIII, but for now I use AppleWorks
|
|
GS to accomplish graphic imports if I can't get a good match with
|
|
GraphicWriter III.
|
|
|
|
Barry
|
|
|
|
Delivered with the help of Marinetti v2.0.
|
|
(BARRY_REES, 19339, GO COM A2)
|
|
|
|
>>>>> Yep, unfortunately the palette is fixed. Also a lot of the internal
|
|
""""" conversions routines between formats, especially cut/paste system
|
|
clipboard have reverse mapping palette tables, making it harder to patch.
|
|
|
|
If you have a specific requirement, then perhaps we could look at a
|
|
possible solution.
|
|
|
|
Regards,
|
|
Richard
|
|
(RICHARD_B, 19391, GO COM A2)
|
|
|
|
|
|
HARMONIE AND INDEPENDENCE--COMPARING TWO GREAT PACKAGES Harmonie and
|
|
""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""" Independence are
|
|
both simply Printers Drivers. They both work with programs that support the
|
|
GS/OS Print Manager.
|
|
|
|
Personally, I find that Harmonie yields acceptable results with standard
|
|
320 or 640 mode graphics if I use Harmonie's External Rendering option.
|
|
That said, sometimes it takes a bit of fiddling within a paint program to
|
|
get the graphic 'just right.' For those who read Shareware Solutions II,
|
|
the NiftySpell / GShisen graphic that appeared on the back cover of the
|
|
latest issue took more than 25 attempts before I deemed it "a keeper."
|
|
|
|
Printing 3200 color graphics is, in a sense, a very special case because
|
|
3200 color graphics aren't exactly standard.
|
|
|
|
There is a freeware program available, written by my former associate John
|
|
Wrenholt, that is called Print3200. But, because Print3200 does not work
|
|
with GS/OS's Print Manager, it only prints to an ImageWriter II. But,
|
|
surprisingly, it does do a real good job.
|
|
|
|
DreamGraphix does work with the Print Manager, so you can print 3200 color
|
|
graphics on a DJ if you own that program. But, the results you get will
|
|
vary, and to be truthful, most of them will not look very good when printed
|
|
out.
|
|
|
|
OTOH, most 3200 color graphics really only contain 256 distinct colors. So,
|
|
it's always possible to convert a 3200 mode graphic to 256 colors, and then
|
|
that can be loaded into a IIGS paint program such as Platinum Paint, and
|
|
the results will be much more visually pleasing. I should add, in my humble
|
|
opinion.
|
|
|
|
Since I'm the publisher of Harmonie, I'll answer your questions about
|
|
pricing and ordering, but because I'm obviously biased, I should perhaps
|
|
let users of the two sets of Printer Drivers answer your question about
|
|
which is best or better.
|
|
|
|
Joe Kohn
|
|
(JOE_KOHN, 19347, GO COM A2)
|
|
|
|
>>>>> Both are acceptable, but Harmonie is superior. If you're going to
|
|
""""" have just one, Harmonie is definitely the way to go.
|
|
|
|
That said, I use Independence when I need real nice detail on a black and
|
|
white graphic. I find it easier to get what I need without a lot of
|
|
fiddling around.
|
|
|
|
Still, if I had to choose, Harmonie would win out without question.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Max Jones
|
|
http://www.wbwip.com/juiced.gs
|
|
Delivered by Spectrum 2.2 and Crock O' Gold 3.0b7
|
|
From a Virtual GS running Bernie ][ the Rescue 2.0 -- Woof Woof
|
|
(JUICEDGS, 19356, GO COM A2)
|
|
|
|
>>>>> I'm not sure I could say one is "better". I own both. Harmonie
|
|
""""" does color, and supports more printers. Independence hasn't been
|
|
updated as recently. Both are from quality publishers.
|
|
|
|
I'd get both. Actually, I did that already :)
|
|
-
|
|
Ryan M. Suenaga, M.S.W., L.S.W. -- rsuenaga@apple2.org
|
|
Editor and Publisher, _The Lamp!_, published monthly on Delphi
|
|
Posted by PTMM v2.5 - The integrated information solution
|
|
(RSUENAGA, 19361, GO COM A2)
|
|
|
|
>>>>> I have both Harmonie and Independence, which I use with a DeskJet
|
|
""""" 500. I would deal with the issue of which is 'better' this way:
|
|
|
|
Advantage: Harmony
|
|
|
|
o External rendering - Gives you the ability to print text-based files
|
|
using the fonts that are built into the printer - MUCH faster than any
|
|
printing that Independence can do. You can also use software print buffers
|
|
(several are available) to dump the external rendered text to a print
|
|
buffer of up to 64K through the GS Serial Port.
|
|
|
|
o Speed - No matter which way you print, Harmonie is faster.
|
|
|
|
o Color - If you have a color printer
|
|
|
|
o Flexibility - Lots of settings and controls to get printing to come out
|
|
exactly the way you like.
|
|
|
|
Advantage: Independence
|
|
|
|
o Accuracy - Working with the Page Layout module of AWGS or with GWIII, the
|
|
objects and margins are printed with Independence exactly where the
|
|
software indicates. On my system, Harmonie offsets the printing by almost
|
|
1/8" along the long axis of the paper from where indicated. This is not
|
|
really that noticeable in portrait layout, but I do a lot of 2-column
|
|
'booklet' landscape printing for a church bulletin, and it is _really_
|
|
noticeable then. Also, with _some_ print sizes and aspect ratio
|
|
selections, Harmonie can't seem to calculate the character/line widths
|
|
correctly. Margins and justified text can be far from where indicated in
|
|
the software that I am printing from. This does not happen with
|
|
Independence.
|
|
|
|
o Simplicity - Fewer controls and easier to use, (but see flexibility,
|
|
above)
|
|
|
|
I use Harmonie as my general-purpose printer driver, and Independence for
|
|
the really critical work.
|
|
|
|
If I _had_ to do without one, it would be a difficult choice.
|
|
|
|
- Don (IronTooth)
|
|
|
|
Delivered by my ANSITerm off-line reader scripts...
|
|
|
|
They're OLRight!
|
|
(DZAHNISER, 19403, GO COM A2)
|
|
|
|
|
|
SWEET-16 BEOS INTEL RELEASED As the marketing schmuck I'm only interested
|
|
"""""""""""""""""""""""""""" in shareware fees, potential Y2K law suits,
|
|
Ryan's commission, the cost of my internet connection and taking Sheppy's
|
|
RC5 crack team to place 1 for some extra PR.
|
|
|
|
It is true that Sweet-16/BeoS/Intel ("BetelBernie") has been released. I
|
|
must pass full credit to Andre who has done it completely on his own.
|
|
Granted, I bet he warezed a few things from Bernie :), but Sweet-16 is
|
|
Andre's work and not mine, and maybe this 50% manpower also explains why
|
|
Bernie is somewhat ahead. Due to my pitiful arsenal of Macs I couldn't even
|
|
help him with testing.
|
|
|
|
I'm still glad you like it and hope you'll spend a great time with it! If
|
|
you would like to e-mail comments on Sweet16, I'm sure Andre would
|
|
appreciate a copy. You can contact both of us by using the woof@kagi.com
|
|
address.
|
|
|
|
- henrik
|
|
(GUDATH, 19227, GO COM A2)
|
|
|
|
>>>>> After a few days of playing with the Be/Intel version of Sweet 16
|
|
""""" on my (shudder) Cyrix 233, I can say that while it has a ways to
|
|
go, it's very impressive and most promising.
|
|
|
|
The BeOS, otoh, is extremely impressive.
|
|
|
|
Aside from various versions of UNIX, I've never seen an OS for the consumer
|
|
that is so network-ready and Internet-ready from the get-go, and the GUI is
|
|
definitely something that any Mac or Apple IIgs fan can get accustomed to
|
|
quickly.
|
|
|
|
Yes, I did buy the BeOS primarily to test _Be_rnie, but it does shine in
|
|
its own right. Anyone who has the equipment to try it out ought to (and
|
|
while Be has a somewhat small list of compatible systems on its web page,
|
|
if it works with this incredibly generic clone I built with cost as the
|
|
primary object, it ought to work with most anything, graphic cards
|
|
notwithstanding :)
|
|
|
|
-
|
|
Ryan M. Suenaga, M.S.W., L.S.W. -- rsuenaga@apple2.org
|
|
Editor and Publisher, _The Lamp!_, published monthly on Delphi
|
|
Posted by PTMM v2.5 - The integrated information solution
|
|
(RSUENAGA, 19957, GO COM A2)
|
|
|
|
>>>>> Sweet16 should improve greatly over the coming months. As soon as
|
|
""""" gsAIM 1.0 is out the door, my attention will focus fully on
|
|
Sweet16.
|
|
|
|
Eric "Sheppy" Shepherd
|
|
Macintosh & PowerPC Programmers Forum
|
|
(SHEPPY, 19998, GO COM A2)
|
|
|
|
|
|
CDRW ON AN APPLE IIGS? I have a Yamaha CDRW drive here, but I've never
|
|
"""""""""""""""""""""" attached it to a IIgs.
|
|
|
|
Even if I did, at most it would only work as a read-only drive.
|
|
|
|
CDR and CDRW drives don't function (from a user's point of view) like hard
|
|
drives. You need to prep a hard drive or removable drive cartridge with
|
|
the data you want and then use specialized software (such as Toast) to burn
|
|
the CDR or CDRW. The IIgs does not have this type of software.
|
|
|
|
-
|
|
Ryan M. Suenaga, M.S.W., L.S.W. -- rsuenaga@apple2.org
|
|
Editor and Publisher, _The Lamp!_, published monthly on Delphi
|
|
Posted by PTMM v2.5 - The integrated information solution
|
|
(RSUENAGA, 19512, GO COM A2)
|
|
|
|
|
|
PATCHING PRODOS 8 FOR Y2K. . . MINUS ONE A post on comp.sys.apple2
|
|
"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""" reminded me that the year
|
|
look-up table in ProDOS 8 expires periodically. Specifically, the look-up
|
|
table in version 2.0.3 (the last version released by Apple) was only good
|
|
through 1998. 1999 is here, of course...I don't know if this subject has
|
|
been brought up on Delphi, but if you're using a clock card in a IIe, your
|
|
computer now thinks it's 1993 again!
|
|
|
|
Here's some of the text from a message I posted to comp.sys.apple2 on this
|
|
subject:
|
|
|
|
ProDOS will need to be updated once every five or six years. Apple
|
|
released a version of ProDOS specifically to deal with this problem
|
|
happening once before, in 1992. I found a directory on my hard drive
|
|
that I'd forgotten about; it had a version "1.9A" of ProDOS that I had
|
|
hacked on New Year's '92 to get the clock to work right again (I was
|
|
running a BBS on my IIe at the time, so having the right date was
|
|
important). ProDOS 8 v2.0.1, which fixed the problem, was released on
|
|
4 Mar 92 (I don't recall if there was a v2.0 that was released
|
|
earlier).
|
|
|
|
Since ProDOS was designed with the Thunderclock (a clock card that
|
|
didn't keep track of the year at all) in mind, it used a look-up table
|
|
to determine the year. I haven't looked at the actual code, but I
|
|
imagine it uses the current Julian date mod 7 and the day of the week
|
|
to index into the table. I found the table in the then-current version
|
|
of ProDOS and changed it to cover a different range of years.
|
|
|
|
Here's something I came up with on my own to figure the current year
|
|
from the current month, date, and day of the week. First, convert the
|
|
month and date to a single number. Add the date to the appropriate
|
|
number from this table:
|
|
|
|
Jan=0 Jul=181
|
|
Feb=31 Aug=212
|
|
Mar=59 Sep=243
|
|
Apr=90 Oct=273
|
|
May=120 Nov=304
|
|
Jun=151 Dec=334
|
|
|
|
Divide this number by 7. Subtract from the remainder the day-of-week
|
|
number; the day-of-week number is a simple progression where Sunday is
|
|
0, Monday is 1, and so on up to 6 for Saturday. If the difference is
|
|
positive, it's your offset into the look-up table. If it's negative,
|
|
add 7 and use that as your offset into the look-up table. I'm guessing
|
|
that the Thunderclock driver inside ProDOS does something similar; I
|
|
crunched the numbers, and they agree with the tables I've found in
|
|
different ProDOS versions.
|
|
|
|
I diff'd my "v1.9A" and the actual v1.9, which I had backed up on
|
|
floppy. The year table was at offset 0x3276-0x327C in both files. v1.9
|
|
had a table to cover 1986 to 1991 (the decimal value of the last two
|
|
digits of a year is in each byte...the sequence from v1.8 is 0x5A
|
|
(90), 0x59 (89), 0x58 (88), 0x58 (88), 0x57 (87), 0x56 (86), 0x5B
|
|
(91). The revised table I put together covered 1992 to 1996: 0x60 0x5F
|
|
0x5E 0x5D 0x5C 0x5C 0x60. In v2.0.3 (the last version of ProDOS 8),
|
|
the table lives at offset 0xF76-0xF7C and covers 1993 to 1998. Leap
|
|
years appear twice in each table, which is why they're only good for
|
|
five or six years each instead of seven.
|
|
|
|
From this information, you can figure up revised tables for any range
|
|
of five or six years. For instance, here's a sequence that ought to be
|
|
good until 28 Feb 2004 (from 29 Feb 2004 to the end of that year, the
|
|
year would mistakenly be reported as 1999): 0x01 0x00 0x00 0x63 0x04
|
|
0x03 0x02.
|
|
|
|
In case someone hasn't already done this, here are some "cookbook"
|
|
instructions to patch ProDOS 8 v2.0.3 for years beginning with 1999.
|
|
Go to a BASIC.SYSTEM prompt and enter the following commands one at a
|
|
time (snip this out and put it in a script to EXEC if you want):
|
|
|
|
BLOAD PRODOS,TSYS,A$2000
|
|
POKE 12150,1
|
|
POKE 12151,0
|
|
POKE 12152,0
|
|
POKE 12153,99
|
|
POKE 12154,4
|
|
POKE 12155,3
|
|
POKE 12156,2
|
|
BSAVE PRODOS,TSYS,A$2000
|
|
|
|
You might want to make a backup copy of your ProDOS file before you do
|
|
this, of course. When 2004 rolls around, you'll want to make up a new
|
|
table from the "formula" given earlier in this message; I'll leave
|
|
that table as an exercise for the reader. :-)
|
|
|
|
I figured someone might find this useful...wish I'd kept the patch program
|
|
I whipped up in '92 to fix v1.9 as it would've taken less time to figure it
|
|
out this time around. :-)
|
|
|
|
-=IIGS=- Scott Alfter ( {<mailto:salfter@delphi.com> salfter@delphi.com})
|
|
{<http://people.delphi.com/salfter> http://people.delphi.com/salfter}
|
|
(SALFTER, 19250, GO COM A2)
|
|
|
|
|
|
CONTACTING SEVEN HILLS The correct email address for Seven Hills is
|
|
"""""""""""""""""""""" <sales@sevenhills.com>. If you do not hear from
|
|
them within a few days, try again. There is also a voice number
|
|
(850-575-0566) you can try if you still don't get a reply.
|
|
|
|
Ewen Wannop - Speccie - Thu 14 Jan 1999 - 188 days till KFest '99
|
|
Delivered without using a IIgs by Spectrum 2.2 & Crock O' Gold 2.6
|
|
Bernie ][ the Rescue 2.0 woofing on a PowerMac 8200/120
|
|
http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/ewannop/
|
|
(EWANNOP, 19366, GO COM A2)
|
|
|
|
|
|
TONY ON IIGS DMA In my seemingly life-long dealing with hardware, I have
|
|
"""""""""""""""" *NEVER* seen, ANYWHERE I've been, any of these DMA
|
|
'horror stories'. Other than a problem that can be traced to a hardware
|
|
problem.
|
|
|
|
The original above 4MB problem stems from ROM 0. Put simply the Apple IIgs
|
|
will DMA into the first 4MB of EXPANDED RAM. Meaning the first 4MB of RAM
|
|
in the slot.
|
|
|
|
If all these horror stories were true to what the were being told as, then
|
|
every ROM 3 with a 4MB card would be crashing or whatever it is they do.
|
|
|
|
If the RAM area being accessed is higher than the 4MB DMA range the
|
|
computer simply does not DMA there.
|
|
|
|
The original AE RAM cards hated DMA, remember, AE did not necessarily do
|
|
things the simple way. They would go out of the way to make sure their
|
|
supplied software would not work with any other hardware. (Not such a bad
|
|
idea..) but when it gets to your hardware only working with your other
|
|
hardware it's time to stop that practice. :)
|
|
|
|
I have never had to disable DMA simply because I have more than 4MB plugged
|
|
into the memory slot. The original Sirius RAM (4+4 R8) has a problem with
|
|
DMA and Transwarps that did not exist with the prototype cards. In trying
|
|
to eliminate jumpers completely and allow for any number of SIMMs, 1 to 8,
|
|
not just the traditional steps of 1,2,4-8, I used a whole 'complicated'
|
|
mess of boolean logic. Never again. :) It became evident that in some
|
|
systems that card was Plug 'n Pray (that the boolean) logic would work.
|
|
|
|
The CV Tech method of DMA is what I call Force Feed DMA. It's called Hey!,
|
|
here it comes and you better not miss! :)
|
|
|
|
Now take a look at a Focus drive with 16 bit driver installed, damn near
|
|
gives that RAMFast & DMA a run for it's money. In some cases Focus
|
|
statistics beat the RAMFast. This all depends on the drive attached to the
|
|
Focus card, but even so, no controller cache, and it's pretty speedy. The
|
|
down side, it's IDE, 1 drive, no chain, not easy to swap, but you simply
|
|
take the whole drive with you and pop it in a system where your going.
|
|
|
|
Tony
|
|
(T_DIAZ, 19952, GO COM A2)
|
|
|
|
|
|
WHAT'S OLD IS NEW--HOW TO GET A NEW GENIE ACCOUNT I have indeed been
|
|
""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""" investigating your
|
|
questions and have trying to come up with an all-inclusive, accurate answer
|
|
for you. From what I can find so far, it would cost you $23.95 per month,
|
|
and that gives you nine hours before the $2.75 per-hour rate kicks in. What
|
|
I have not been able to find, however, is if the first month is free, as is
|
|
the case with many on-line and Internet services. That's what's delayed me
|
|
posting a reply to you.
|
|
|
|
I would suggest you visit the Genie Internet web site at:
|
|
|
|
http://www.genie.com
|
|
|
|
It might not tell you a lot, but it will tell you a little.
|
|
|
|
Meanwhile, let us know exactly where you would be calling from, and I'll
|
|
check and see what local access numbers are available to you. Once we find
|
|
out if you'd be dialing in to sign up from a SprintNet line or a Genie
|
|
line, I can then give more specific instructions on the signup process.
|
|
|
|
IMHO, if the first month is free (up to nine hours, that is), I would
|
|
suggest you go ahead and try it. You would be absolutely awestruck by the
|
|
size and depth of the library. It's incredible.
|
|
|
|
Max Jones
|
|
Juiced.GS
|
|
http://www.wbwip.com/juiced.gs
|
|
(JUICEDGS, 19619, GO COM A2)
|
|
|
|
|
|
<<<<< This just in ..... :-)
|
|
"""""
|
|
To sign up for Genie, set your telecom software to 8 bits, no parity, 1
|
|
stop bit, and half-duplex. Then dial toll-free to 1-800-331-8544.
|
|
|
|
When you connect, type HHH. When you see the U#= prompt, just type SIGNUP.
|
|
Everything is prompted automatically from there.
|
|
|
|
You can go through the process to see what it's like, then cancel your
|
|
signup at the last moment. You can also obtain info about Genie and their
|
|
pricing plan as you go through the process. I suggest you turn your capture
|
|
buffer on if you decide to experiment with the signup process, then save
|
|
the capture for offline reference.
|
|
|
|
I haven't tested the process, and I probably should, just to make sure it
|
|
still works. But I suspect it will.
|
|
|
|
We currently know of no special signup offers, such as first month free,
|
|
etc. That means unless you find out otherwise during the signup process,
|
|
you would have to pay your first month's fee right out of the chute.
|
|
|
|
Max
|
|
(JUICEDGS, 19665, GO COM A2)
|
|
|
|
|
|
CONTEMPLATING THE GENIE LIBRARY A listing of the entire contents of the
|
|
""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""" Genie A2 Library (two lines per file)
|
|
results in a text file of about 1.5 megs. A listing that includes full file
|
|
descriptions would be at least 5 times larger. If anyone is really
|
|
interested in such a beast, I'll see about uploading it here. It's
|
|
certainly =way= too large to post as a message in the Forum.
|
|
|
|
A much shorter list would be the one that contains Apple II files that are
|
|
not available on Genie. Remember the Genie Library contains over 15,000
|
|
files totalling about 900 megs (compressed.)
|
|
|
|
------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
Tony Ward, A2 Database Manager - Thu Jan 21, 1999 11:03:08 am
|
|
[Delivered with Spectrum v2.2 and Crock O' Gold]
|
|
--
|
|
"Why be a man when you can be a success?" -- Bertold Brecht
|
|
(TONYW1, 19679, GO COM A2)
|
|
|
|
|
|
CONTEMPLATING A GENIE A2 CDROM Well, there is no downloading required. We
|
|
"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""" kept copies of everything. Syndicomm has
|
|
it's own A2 library, and A2Pro library as well. All of those files are safe
|
|
on Syndicomm hard drive space.
|
|
|
|
There are a couple of problems, though. We always kept our backups in the
|
|
same format as the GEnie library, so the file descriptions, etc, are
|
|
identical. Before we could put it on a CD we could distribute, OR do mass
|
|
uploading to Delphi, those file descriptions have to be modified.
|
|
Additionally, there are some files on there that we don't (currently) have
|
|
the right to make available through any other source than the GEnie library
|
|
(Bulletin Board archives, RTC transcripts, etc). AND, there are a number of
|
|
files that have distribution restrictions that would keep them from being
|
|
put on the CD (such as Applewriter, for one example).
|
|
|
|
Sorting through those files and eliminating (from distribution, not our
|
|
archive) the ones we can't upload, then modifying the descriptions, etc on
|
|
the others to avoid copyright questions, is a task of formidable
|
|
proportions. That's why it is not done yet.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Gary R. Utter
|
|
(UTTER, 19808, GO COM A2)
|
|
|
|
|
|
COPY PROTECTION AND HARD DRIVE RESOURCE For those of you who have
|
|
""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""" software that you can not install
|
|
on a hard drive or unable to make a backup of due to copy protection...
|
|
like my situation with having to stick the Printshop GS disk in everytime I
|
|
run it from the hard drive.. I have found a place with the answers...
|
|
|
|
Point your browser to:
|
|
|
|
http://wuarchive.wustle.edu/systems/apple2/umich.edu/Mics.game.stuff
|
|
|
|
There are a few text documents there you can capture and use to help you
|
|
get things working correctly on your hard drive..
|
|
|
|
The only problem I have had is trying to capture the text in a readable
|
|
format for printing... anyone have a suggestion on how to capture this file
|
|
so that it is formated the same when I open it from my Hard drive as it did
|
|
while I was reading it on the screen during capture... seems the file does
|
|
not keep the formating and it all gets jumbled together...
|
|
|
|
Leon
|
|
(SARGENLE, 19027, GO COM A2)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
RUMOR MILL
|
|
""""""""""
|
|
|
|
WILL SIS 1.1 INCLUDE TCP/IP SUPPORT? To the best of my knowledge, there's
|
|
"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""" not a firm commitment to adding
|
|
TCP/IP support for the next upgrade of SIS (1.1). Geoff, of course, is the
|
|
final say on this.
|
|
|
|
-
|
|
Ryan M. Suenaga, M.S.W., L.S.W. -- rsuenaga@apple2.org
|
|
Editor and Publisher, _The Lamp!_, published monthly on Delphi
|
|
Posted by PTMM v2.5 - The integrated information solution
|
|
(RSUENAGA, 19814, GO COM A2)
|
|
|
|
>>>>> Geoff will scold me if I'm wrong on this, but I think this is the
|
|
""""" right answer. :-)
|
|
|
|
SIS 1.1 may or may not include =direct= Marinetti support. I don't know the
|
|
answer to that, although Geoff might. However, you don't need it to use SIS
|
|
1.1, as long as you can Telnet into Delphi.
|
|
|
|
So, Barry, with SIS 1.1, you will be able to use Spectrum 2.2/Marinetti 2.0
|
|
to make a PPP connection with your ISP; then Telnet to Delphi, where you
|
|
will be able to launch SIS and surf the Web. Version 1.1 WILL offer Delphi
|
|
as a new Web connect method. :-) At least that's my understanding.
|
|
|
|
Max
|
|
(JUICEDGS, 19846, GO COM A2)
|
|
|
|
>>>>> Geoff has been having some problems with the direct TCP/IP links
|
|
""""" with SIS 1.1. As a result, he is not promising that direct TCP/IP
|
|
support will be in SIS 1.1, as he does not want to hold up its release much
|
|
longer.
|
|
|
|
But SIS 1.1 has many more connection options than SIS 1.0, and I can
|
|
confirm what Max has just said. If you can make a TCP/IP Telnet connection
|
|
to Delphi, then you can use the Delphi library option in SIS to surf the
|
|
web under an error-free TCP/IP connection.
|
|
|
|
So although this is an indirect way of using Marinetti, it does work. I
|
|
would guess that as soon as Geoff can resolve the problems with direct
|
|
connections, he will make the TCP/IP library available as a freely
|
|
available update.
|
|
|
|
Ewen Wannop - Speccie - Tue 26 Jan 1999 - 176 days till KFest '99
|
|
Delivered without using a IIgs by Spectrum 2.2 & Crock O' Gold 2.6
|
|
Bernie ][ the Rescue 2.0 woofing on a PowerMac 8200/120
|
|
http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/ewannop/
|
|
(EWANNOP, 19853, GO COM A2)
|
|
|
|
|
|
NO GSICQ FROM SHEPPY I have no plans to do an ICQ for the IIgs. I have a
|
|
"""""""""""""""""""" strong dislike of ICQ; it's not very reliable, even
|
|
on machines that are officially supported. I can't imagine that a hack on
|
|
my part would be very good.
|
|
|
|
AIM, on the other hand, is stable and reliable and, frankly, has more
|
|
features (at least on the Mac it does, as compared to ICQ for Mac, which is
|
|
just awful).
|
|
|
|
Eric "Sheppy" Shepherd
|
|
Macintosh & PowerPC Programmers Forum
|
|
(SHEPPY, 19305, GO COM A2)
|
|
|
|
|
|
COG 3.0 APPROACHES COG has no way of deleting a single message within the
|
|
"""""""""""""""""" archive. It would just take far too long to achieve
|
|
this using scripting.
|
|
|
|
If you stop reading, then when you come back, you should pick it up from
|
|
that point.
|
|
|
|
You can archive individual messages separately, and so build a file of your
|
|
favourite messages.
|
|
|
|
COG3 will more powerful message reading facilities, so you can choose to
|
|
read threads, and then pick an individual message from that thread to read.
|
|
COG3 also has a 'Housekeeping' function which 'cleans' your archives into
|
|
more manageable sized files. There is a very powerful search function to
|
|
look through those files for up to two target strings.
|
|
|
|
As a result, as long as you have enough hard disk space, you will not ever
|
|
need to delete anything, as it will be very much easier to find an
|
|
individual message from the archives.
|
|
|
|
COG3 is getting nearer day by day... If you have not already updated to
|
|
Spectrum 2.2, now would be a good time to do it. Without Spectrum 2.2 you
|
|
will not be able to utilise COG3...
|
|
|
|
Ewen Wannop - Speccie - Sun 31 Jan 1999 - 171 days till KFest '99
|
|
Delivered without using a IIgs by Spectrum 2.2 & Crock O' Gold 2.6
|
|
Bernie ][ the Rescue 2.0 woofing on a PowerMac 8200/120
|
|
http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/ewannop/
|
|
(EWANNOP, 19983, GO COM A2)
|
|
|
|
|
|
SSII AND SMB? Let me put it this way...
|
|
"""""""""""""
|
|
A few friends of mine have Nintendo machines, and there's only been one
|
|
Nintendo game that I've played that really grabbed me. That was Super Mario
|
|
Brothers.
|
|
|
|
I really enjoy playing that game, and for the past few years, have actually
|
|
been silently wishing for a IIGS version of the game.
|
|
|
|
So, yes, I would love to become involved in a Super Mario Bros project on
|
|
the IIGS.
|
|
|
|
And, as an added (yet personal) benefit, it might just help me break my
|
|
addiction to GShisen in much the same way that GShisen finally cured me of
|
|
my addiction to Freecell, and how before that, Freecell broke me of my Mah
|
|
Jongg addiction ;-)
|
|
|
|
Joe Kohn
|
|
(JOE_KOHN, 19336, GO COM A2)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
PUBLIC POSTINGS
|
|
"""""""""""""""
|
|
|
|
KFEST 1999 BLATANT PLUG--#1 IN A SERIES, COLLECT THEM ALL For the past 10
|
|
""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""" years, Apple II
|
|
enthusiasts from around the globe have made an annual pilgrimage to Kansas
|
|
City, Missouri, to learn more about their computers, share their knowledge
|
|
with others, and rekindle the spirit that has made their virtual community
|
|
unique and powerful.
|
|
|
|
Kfest has become a rich tradition. We are pleased to announce that in 1999,
|
|
the tradition continues ...
|
|
|
|
From July 21 through July 25, Kfest '99 will be in session on the campus of
|
|
Avila College in Kansas City. Sessions on a wide variety of Apple II topics
|
|
will be conducted July 22-23. A vendor fair and product demos will occur on
|
|
July 24.
|
|
|
|
As always, the Kfest committee is working to make this year's event the
|
|
best ever.
|
|
|
|
Kfest '99 will provide the perfect opportunity for attendees to make new
|
|
friends, renew acquaintances, see the faces of on-line neighbors they've
|
|
chatted with through the years, meet some of the programmers, developers,
|
|
writers and publishers who help keep their computer platform viable in
|
|
today's world, and hear lectures on computer issues and witness
|
|
demonstrations of new and old hardware and software.
|
|
|
|
Most of all, they'll have fun!
|
|
|
|
So, you may ask, does this mean Kfest has everything an Apple II user would
|
|
want? Well, no. There are some things Kfest '99 won't provide. We can
|
|
almost guarantee you won't get much sleep. We can also guarantee that you
|
|
won't mind a bit. In fact, you won't want to sleep much for fear you'll
|
|
miss something!
|
|
|
|
Last year's Kfest was one of the best ever, and was highlighted by a steady
|
|
stream of new product releases, announcements and demonstrations. Among the
|
|
software titles released were GSoft BASIC, WebWorks GS, Disk Access II and
|
|
the TABBS CD-ROM. Among new titles announced were NiftySpell, Marinetti
|
|
2.0, Spectrum 2.2 and Spectrum Internet Suite 1.1
|
|
|
|
It's too early to know what Kfest '99 will produce. Be assured it will once
|
|
again be a special event.
|
|
|
|
Now is the time to make plans for Kfest '99. As always, staying in the
|
|
Avila dorms is the recommended method of attendance. Much of the special
|
|
magic occurs after hours, and being on hand for informal, spontaneous
|
|
events will make your Kfest experience even more enjoyable.
|
|
|
|
Avila College will be providing up to 80 rooms for Kfest '99 attendees. So
|
|
there should be plenty of room for everybody on campus.
|
|
|
|
If you would prefer to stay off-campus, there are a number of hotels and
|
|
motels close by. Off-campus registrations are also available.
|
|
|
|
Ready to sign up? We hope so! You won't regret it.
|
|
|
|
Stay tuned for registration information. It will be posted as it becomes
|
|
available. And that will be very soon!!
|
|
|
|
Meanwhile ...
|
|
|
|
JOIN THE KFEST '99 MAILING LIST!!
|
|
|
|
To subscribe to the Kfest Information Mailing List, send email to
|
|
majordomo@kfest.org. In the BODY of the message, place the following text:
|
|
|
|
subscribe kfest
|
|
|
|
You will receive a confirmation email. In order to be signed up for the
|
|
list, you will have to respond to this confirmation as the instructions
|
|
dictate. You will then be able send and read messages on the mailing list.
|
|
|
|
If you have other questions about KFest, or wish to make suggestions, you
|
|
can find answers via the Internet. Just send an email message to
|
|
kfest@intrec.com or kfest-help@kfest.org, or visit the World Wide Web page
|
|
at http://www.kfest.org.
|
|
|
|
|
|
The Kfest '99 Committee
|
|
Cindy Adams
|
|
(Kfest Big Cheese)
|
|
(JUICEDGS, 18998, GO COM A2)
|
|
|
|
|
|
PROBOOT AND Y2K A ProBOOT-related announcement.
|
|
"""""""""""""""
|
|
Some or all of you may need to use Apple's date patcher to get ProDOS 8 to
|
|
work with dates from 1999 onward. If so, and you have ProBOOT installed,
|
|
you need to REMOVE ProBOOT using the ProBOOT Installer program BEFORE
|
|
running Apple's date patcher utility (otherwise, the utility will tell you
|
|
you're not using a compatible version of ProDOS).
|
|
|
|
Once the update has been completed, you can reinstall ProBOOT.
|
|
|
|
Eric "Sheppy" Shepherd
|
|
Macintosh & PowerPC Programmers Forum
|
|
(SHEPPY, 19063, GO COM A2)
|
|
|
|
|
|
THE SAGA OF GSAIM a gsAIM progress note...
|
|
"""""""""""""""""
|
|
Initial Buddy List support is in place. I'm going to add the buddy list
|
|
editor window today.
|
|
|
|
Status dialogs now display while connecting to the Internet and connecting
|
|
to AIM, and errors are handled better.
|
|
|
|
Icons are now drawn in the buddy list indicating if the buddy is online via
|
|
AOL or AIM, and if they're currently idle.
|
|
|
|
Warning level information is displayed in the buddy list, so you know if
|
|
your buddy has been "warned" by other users for inappropriate behavior.
|
|
|
|
In general, it's coming along really well. I have high hopes of releasing
|
|
the first beta version to the public this month, at which point I'll start
|
|
accepting shareware payments.
|
|
|
|
Eric "Sheppy" Shepherd
|
|
Macintosh & PowerPC Programmers Forum
|
|
(SHEPPY, 19204, GO COM A2)
|
|
|
|
<<<<< I'm pleased to announce that the BETA preview release of gsAIM,
|
|
""""" version 1.0b4, is now available for download from the official
|
|
gsAIM web site at <http://www.sheppyware.net/gsAIM>.
|
|
|
|
gsAIM is an AOL Instant Messenger (AIM) compatible internet messaging NDA
|
|
that lets you hold up to 20 two-way conversations at once with other people
|
|
using AIM compatible software (including AOL's own Windows and Mac
|
|
software).
|
|
|
|
gsAIM is SHAREWARE. Every time you open it, you'll be reminded of this,
|
|
until you pay the $10 shareware fee, which can be paid at
|
|
<http://order.kagi.com/?QGC>. In addition, the preferences and buddy list
|
|
information will not be saved until you register the software.
|
|
|
|
Note that gsAIM 1.0b4 is still in beta testing, and there may be bugs
|
|
(possibly serious bugs) in the software. However, the software now has all
|
|
the features that the 1.0 version will have when it's completed.
|
|
|
|
gsAIM 1.0b4 features:
|
|
|
|
Buddy Lists - Add your friends to your buddy list, and whenever they're
|
|
online they show up in an onscreen window. You can then send them a message
|
|
by double-clicking their name. And if they're away from their computer for
|
|
a few minutes, an icon will indicate that they're away.
|
|
|
|
Talk While You Work - gsAIM is implemented as an NDA, so you can use it
|
|
from any Apple IIgs desktop application, while you work.
|
|
|
|
Talk a Lot - You can have up to 20 conversations going on at a time! Talk
|
|
to lots of your friends! Every conversation appears in its own window, with
|
|
the username of the person you're talking to in the title bar.
|
|
|
|
I hope everyone enjoys gsAIM. Please email sheppy@sheppyware.net if you
|
|
have questions, or if you encounter a bug. Bug reports posted online
|
|
somewhere may not be seen, and we all want this software to be as good as
|
|
possible!
|
|
|
|
Eric "Sheppy" Shepherd
|
|
Macintosh & PowerPC Programmers Forum
|
|
(SHEPPY, 19478, GO COM A2)
|
|
|
|
<<<<< gsAIM 1.0b4 has been uploaded here on Delphi as well. Watch for an
|
|
""""" announcement from the staff when it's released. Until then, you can
|
|
get it from my Web site, or at
|
|
ftp://ftp.sheppyware.net/pub/apple_iigs/gsAIM10b4.bxy.
|
|
|
|
Enjoy!
|
|
|
|
Eric "Sheppy" Shepherd
|
|
Macintosh & PowerPC Programmers Forum
|
|
(SHEPPY, 19479, GO COM A2)
|
|
|
|
<<<<< In a bizarre quirk of poor timing, the day I chose to release
|
|
""""" gsAIM, AOL changed the format of its instant message network data
|
|
packets. :)
|
|
|
|
I just replaced gsAIM on my web site
|
|
(http://www.sheppyware.net/software/gsAIM) with version 1.0b5, which is
|
|
compatible with both the old and new formats, and will probably work if
|
|
they change the format again later.
|
|
|
|
Sorry for the inconvenience. :)
|
|
|
|
Eric "Sheppy" Shepherd
|
|
Macintosh & PowerPC Programmers Forum
|
|
(SHEPPY, 19486, GO COM A2)
|
|
|
|
|
|
LOOKING GOOD IN PRINT AND OTHERWISE WITH SSII Based on an e-mail question
|
|
""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""" just sent to me, it's
|
|
apparent that not everyone reading Delphi's A2 knows about Harmonie, so....
|
|
|
|
Harmonie
|
|
_________________________________________________________________
|
|
|
|
Use An HP LaserJet Or DeskJet On An Apple IIGS
|
|
|
|
An agreement has recently been reached between Shareware Solutions II,
|
|
Vitesse, and Harmonie author Bill Heineman that results in Shareware
|
|
Solutions II becoming the new publisher of the Harmonie set of GS/OS
|
|
printer drivers.
|
|
|
|
Harmonie is a collection of GS/OS printer drivers that permits IIGS
|
|
owners to output data onto the printed page using three different
|
|
types of high performance, high quality printers:
|
|
|
|
1) Laser printers that emulate the widely used Hewlett-Packard
|
|
LaserJet standard, including the LaserJet IIp, III, IV, 5L, 6L and 1100.
|
|
|
|
2) Inkjet printers that emulate Hewlett-Packard DeskJet printers,
|
|
including the DeskJet (or DeskWriter) 340, 400, 500, 520, 560c, 600,
|
|
660c, 670, 672c, 680c, 682c, 690c and 800 series printers which are
|
|
not designated as Windows only printers (or DeskWriters that are not
|
|
designated as PowerPC Only). Please note that the DeskJet 710, 712,
|
|
720, 722 820 and 1000 series are Windows-only printers and will not work
|
|
on the IIGS.
|
|
|
|
3) 24-pin dot-matrix printers and inkjets that emulate Epson LQ
|
|
printers, including models manufactured by Epson, NEC, Panasonic, and
|
|
many others.
|
|
|
|
Additionally, Harmonie also includes greatly improved GS/OS drivers
|
|
for the ImageWriter II and ImageWriter LQ dot-matrix printers, and for
|
|
Apple's original StyleWriter I printer.
|
|
|
|
Harmonie also provides driver support for several Parallel Interface
|
|
Cards including the Grappler Plus, ProGrappler, AE Parallel Pro, Epson
|
|
APL, FingerPrint G, II Print and the Marcey Parallel card. Harmonie
|
|
also includes a special serial Port Driver that enables printers that
|
|
have a serial interface to be used with Harmonie (Note: Most HP
|
|
printers manufactured in the last few years include only a Parallel
|
|
interface; some older DeskJets included only a serial interface.).
|
|
|
|
Harmonie works with all standard IIGS programs that use the IIGS Print
|
|
Manager, such as AppleWorks GS, Platinum Paint, HyperCard IIGS, and
|
|
Quick Click Calc; the most notable exception of programs that do not
|
|
work with the Harmonie drivers is The Print Shop GS. Aside from The
|
|
Print Shop GS, Harmonie should work just fine with all of your GS/OS
|
|
based software.
|
|
|
|
Harmonie allows you to take full advantage of high quality printers,
|
|
up to a certain point. On HP laser printers, Harmonie will output data
|
|
to the printed page at a maximum of 300 dots per inch resolution, even
|
|
on laser printers that are capable of printing at higher resolutions.
|
|
On DeskJet printers, Harmonie is limited to printing in color at 300
|
|
dots per inch, and at 600 x 300 dots per inch resolution in black and
|
|
white. Despite those limitations, tens of thousands of Apple IIGS
|
|
owners who purchased Vitesse's Harmonie are thrilled with the high
|
|
quality output that they can achieve at 300 dots per inch or at 600 x
|
|
300 dots per inch.
|
|
|
|
Harmonie is, in essence, an extension to the GS/OS Operating System.
|
|
Once the Harmonie drivers are installed and you've gotten used to
|
|
having a high quality ink jet or laser printer connected to your IIGS,
|
|
you'll soon come to think of Harmonie as such an integral component of
|
|
GS/OS that you'll be printing to those high quality printers with nary
|
|
a second thought and with all of the ease of use you now associate
|
|
with the ImageWriter. In other words, thanks to Harmonie, printing on
|
|
laser and ink jet printers is simply a matter of "plug and print."
|
|
|
|
Vitesse has been selling the Harmonie package of printer drivers for
|
|
$29.95, and Shareware Solutions II is very pleased to be able to lower
|
|
the price to $20, which includes postage to anywhere in the world.
|
|
|
|
Because Vitesse's activities in the Apple II world have been
|
|
decreasing for the past year or two, the v2.11 update was never really
|
|
promoted, and many current owners of Vitesse's Harmonie have
|
|
absolutely no idea that Harmonie had ever been updated to support 600
|
|
x 300 dpi printing. For that reason, Shareware Solutions II would like
|
|
to extend a low cost update offer to those of you who have older
|
|
versions of Vitesse's Harmonie. The cost of the update is $7, but in
|
|
order to qualify for that lower cost update, you must return your
|
|
original Harmonie disk for verification (it will be returned to you)
|
|
or submit a copy of your Vitesse receipt.
|
|
|
|
To order Harmonie, send checks or money orders to:
|
|
|
|
Joe Kohn
|
|
Shareware Solutions II
|
|
166 Alpine St
|
|
San Rafael, CA 94901
|
|
(JOE_KOHN, 19186, GO COM A2)
|
|
|
|
|
|
<<<<< Q: What are some of the benefits of being a subscriber to Shareware
|
|
""""" Solutions II?
|
|
|
|
A: The exclusive software available from Shareware Solutions II. In just
|
|
the latest 24 page issue of the newsletter, subscribers were informed
|
|
how they and they alone could purchase the following for $5 each:
|
|
|
|
- The Gate
|
|
|
|
- Space Fox
|
|
|
|
- Martin's Travel Photos - A 2 disk collection of IIGS 3200 color Super Hi
|
|
Res graphics that have been converted from Seattle FilmWorks' digitized
|
|
35 mm photographs.
|
|
|
|
- Beyond Kfest '98: A 2 disk collection including GShisen, an Applesoft to
|
|
ASCII plug-in for Babelfish, the LILAN program launcher, 5 updates to
|
|
Sheppy's IIGS software, press releases issued at Kfest 98, a transcript
|
|
of a Kfest 98 chat, FontPimp, Word Works Pro Unplugged, and six recent
|
|
issues of Delphi's A2 Lamp newsletter.
|
|
|
|
- AWGS Desktop Publishing Disk - A 2 disk collection that includes all the
|
|
winning entries in a Desktop Publishing contest for AppleWorks GS that
|
|
was conducted by Shareware Solutions II.
|
|
|
|
- Telecomm 98: A collection of IIGS freeware that includes Marinetti v2.0,
|
|
Crock O' Gold v2.7, Time Zone Cdev, and DeskTop Alarm NDA.
|
|
|
|
In addition to the above _exclusive_ software titles, Shareware Solutions
|
|
II subscribers learned how they could get non-exclusive software such as
|
|
Bernie ][ The Rescue, HardPressed and Return of Cogito delivered right to
|
|
their door for $5. And, they learned all about the $25 TABBS CD-ROM
|
|
collection. Subscribers were even told how they could get GSoft BASIC - The
|
|
FREE Version delivered to their door for free. And, how to get Brutal
|
|
Deluxe's LemminGS for free.
|
|
|
|
All that, and much, much more appeared in the latest 24 page issue of the
|
|
Shareware Solutions II newsletter.
|
|
|
|
A 6 issue subscription to Shareware Solutions II is $25 for delivery to US
|
|
or Canada; $40 for delivery anywhere else.
|
|
|
|
Joe Kohn
|
|
Shareware Solutions II
|
|
166 Alpine St
|
|
San Rafael, CA 94901
|
|
|
|
http://www.crl.com/~joko
|
|
(JOE_KOHN, 19335, GO COM A2)
|
|
|
|
|
|
LOW COST GS'S FROM FARGO Hey gang,
|
|
""""""""""""""""""""""""
|
|
I received the following e-mail from an Apple user who apparently found the
|
|
Juiced.GS home page on the Web. I wanted to pass it along in case anyone
|
|
is interested on contacting the fellow about his offerings ....
|
|
|
|
Max
|
|
|
|
+++
|
|
|
|
My name is Todd Kaste and I am from Fargo, North Dakota. I am emailing you
|
|
to give you news on a number (around 40) of nice IIgs systems I've bought
|
|
from a local organization. These systems are in great shape, come with
|
|
keyboards, monitor, 3.5 and 5.25 drives. I didn't get much in terms of
|
|
software for these units though, so they just come as is. I'm not a
|
|
business or do not represent one...I'm just a serious mac nut. I'm looking
|
|
to get $20 per system plus shipping. They are fully guaranteed.
|
|
|
|
Thank you for your time.
|
|
|
|
Todd Kaste
|
|
1345 2nd Avenue South
|
|
Fargo, ND 58103
|
|
701-271-0370
|
|
tkaste@forumcomm.com
|
|
|
|
+++
|
|
(JUICEDGS, 19434, GO COM A2)
|
|
|
|
|
|
UPDATED DOWNLOADING OF FREE.GSOFT GSoft BASIC, The FREE Version! is
|
|
""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""" available for download at
|
|
http://www.hypermall.com/byteworks. The download was giving some people
|
|
problems, though.
|
|
|
|
I've made some changes to the download for GSoft BASIC, The FREE Version!
|
|
It seems to work with at least one of the combinations of browser and
|
|
machine that it failed with before.
|
|
|
|
If you had trouble with the download before, or just never got around to
|
|
trying to download the free version of GSoft BASIC, please stop by and give
|
|
the new file a try. Let me know if you can't download this version; if you
|
|
couldn't download the last one, but can download this file, let me know
|
|
that, too.
|
|
|
|
Thanks,
|
|
|
|
Mike Westerfield
|
|
(BYTEWORKS, 19670, GO COM A2)
|
|
|
|
|
|
A THREE RING CIRCUS Several recent additions to the Mother of All Apple
|
|
""""""""""""""""""" II Web Rings
|
|
(http://www.syndicomm.com/a2web/a2webring.html) are highlighted. Of
|
|
particular note is George Wilde's homepage at
|
|
http://www.wilde.org/grwsystems/; Mr. Wilde has made his popular IIgs
|
|
shareware apps UtilityWorks and UtilityLaunch free - the only caveat is
|
|
that you have to register them on his web page.
|
|
|
|
* http://www.haaug.org/a2webring.html
|
|
|
|
HAAUG
|
|
|
|
HAAUG's meetings are held the 3rd Saturday of each month. The Main
|
|
Presentation is held at 11:15AM. Hour-long sessions on topics as diverse as
|
|
Quicken, spreadsheets, ClarisWorks, Powerbooks and Mac fundamentals begin
|
|
at 9:00AM and continue through 4:00PM. Visitors are encouraged to come and
|
|
go according to interest.
|
|
|
|
* http://www.wilde.org/grwsystems/
|
|
|
|
grw Systems
|
|
|
|
Home page for two highly acclaimed Apple IIGS utilities - UtilityWorks
|
|
and UtilityLaunch. UtilityWorks is a do-almost-everything utility that can
|
|
read and display most Apple II file formats and perform numerous Apple II
|
|
file and disk operations, including disk backup. UtilityLaunch is a general
|
|
purpose Apple IIGS launcher that provides launch buttons which can be
|
|
easily customized by the user.
|
|
|
|
* http://nj5.injersey.com/~russell
|
|
|
|
The Official Russell Nielson Software Website
|
|
|
|
Exclusive 8-bit software and Zip disks full of Apple II software.
|
|
|
|
* http://www.cgocable.net/~apple2
|
|
|
|
Terence J. Boldt's Apple II Page
|
|
|
|
This site has the latest updates on a hardware project (ProDOS
|
|
compatible ROM-Drive). It also has some personal Apple II pictures and
|
|
miscellaneous Apple II info.
|
|
|
|
* http://ww2.dixie-net.com/jnaron3/Apple2/index.html
|
|
|
|
Apple II Gaming Resource
|
|
|
|
This site is devoted to gaming on the Apple II platform, whether
|
|
through emulation or on the actual machines. Contains information on
|
|
various genres of games, as well as information on emulation and emulators.
|
|
|
|
Welcome aboard!
|
|
|
|
{<http://www.syndicomm.com/a2web/a2webring.html> Join the Apple II Web
|
|
Ring!}
|
|
David K.
|
|
(DKERWOOD, 19731, GO COM A2)
|
|
|
|
|
|
REVISED A2-WEB CLASSIFIEDS I've had to make one substantial change to
|
|
"""""""""""""""""""""""""" A2-Web (http://www.syndicomm.com/a2web/)
|
|
which hopefully will make visitors happier, and my life easier...
|
|
|
|
The Mother of All Apple II Classified Ads web page was just getting too
|
|
darned popular, and I wasn't able to spend the time on a daily basis
|
|
editing ads and putting them in place manually.
|
|
|
|
To fix that, I've automated the process completely. The same instructions
|
|
still apply:
|
|
|
|
* Ads are restricted for personal and non-profit use only,
|
|
* Each ad is limited to no more than 250 unformatted characters,
|
|
* You can have one email or web link per ad,
|
|
* Your ad can run for one calendar month from the time it is posted.
|
|
|
|
|
|
http://www.wbwip.com/a2web/a2wantad.html
|
|
|
|
{<http://www.syndicomm.com/a2web/a2webring.html> Join the Apple II Web
|
|
Ring!}
|
|
David K.
|
|
(DKERWOOD, 19733, GO COM A2)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
BEST OF THE BEST
|
|
""""""""""""""""
|
|
|
|
|
|
19307 12-JAN 22:11 Productivity Software
|
|
RE: GraphicWriter III V2.0 (Re: Msg 19291)
|
|
From: JUICEDGS To: BARRY_REES
|
|
|
|
|
|
What a fascinating discussion your posts about Bernie have triggered! :-)
|
|
|
|
Here I sit, staring into the screen of a 10-year-old computer on a
|
|
13-year-old platform, reading posts from talented and accomplished
|
|
programmers and dedicated, expert users discussing the FUTURE of the Apple
|
|
IIgs, NOT the past. It does my heart good. :-)
|
|
|
|
I've only explored Bernie's emulation with a few programs so far,
|
|
telecom-related mostly. Those who have not seen the IIgs in operation on a
|
|
Power Mac will be amazed at what this emulator accomplishes. It's almost as
|
|
if the Bernie Boys =have= created an entire new platform because of the way
|
|
it brings our old programs to life.
|
|
|
|
I have been using SIS in Bernie a lot in recent days, and the enhanced
|
|
performance of the web browser is incredible. The display is crisp and easy
|
|
to read, and those scripts really rip at the higher processing speed.
|
|
Likewise, COG's performance is greatly enhanced, if you can imagine that.
|
|
COG already runs pretty fast on a power GS.
|
|
|
|
I am seriously considering creating the next issue of Juiced.GS via Bernie
|
|
and GW III 2.1, just to see how it goes. (I would have to transfer the
|
|
files from the PowerBook to the GS for printing, but that's not big deal.)
|
|
We'll see. I'll bet GW III rips and snorts under Bernie, just like the
|
|
other apps I've tried do.
|
|
|
|
OK, enough out of me about Bernie. I have only one thing left to say:
|
|
|
|
Woof
|
|
|
|
|
|
Max
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
[EOA]
|
|
[A2P]------------------------------
|
|
A2Pro_DUCTIVITY |
|
|
-----------------------------------
|
|
Checking out A2PRO on Delphi
|
|
""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
|
|
by Ryan M. Suenaga, B.A., M.S.W., L.S.W.
|
|
[thelamp@sheppyware.net]
|
|
|
|
|
|
SHEPPY RELEASES IDLETIME EXTENSION I released my IdleTime extension
|
|
"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""" today. This extension lets
|
|
applications and the like find out how long it's been since the last user
|
|
activity, and what the last event to be posted was.
|
|
|
|
gsAIM uses this to implement the "idle user" feature. I've made it, and the
|
|
developer docs, available so that other developers can use it, and avoid
|
|
having to implement toolbox patches of their own for the same thing.
|
|
|
|
It's freeware, and I will grant just about anyone that asks permission to
|
|
distribute it with their software, but I do ask that you check with me
|
|
first.
|
|
|
|
Hopefully it'll be released here in A2Pro soon, but for now you can get it
|
|
from my FTP site: ftp://ftp.sheppyware.net/pub/apple_iigs/IdleTime10.bxy.
|
|
|
|
Eric "Sheppy" Shepherd
|
|
Macintosh & PowerPC Programmers Forum
|
|
(SHEPPY, 2415, GO COM A2PRO)
|
|
|
|
>>>>> So, what you're saying here is that an application or extension
|
|
""""" (ie. an NDA) could use your IdleTime extension to wait until the
|
|
user hasn't done anything with the system for a predetermined time and can
|
|
then do something?
|
|
|
|
That still doesn't sound very clear but basically what I'm getting at is
|
|
that it lets programs that want to do stuff in the background do so without
|
|
slowing down the application the user is using while the user is actually
|
|
trying to do something with it?
|
|
|
|
That's a little better but I think I'll let you try to understand those
|
|
before trying to do a better job. :-)
|
|
|
|
Jeff Blakeney - Dean of the Apple II University in A2Pro
|
|
** HyperCard IIgs Course now in session! **
|
|
(JBLAKENEY, 2429, GO COM A2PRO)
|
|
|
|
<<<<< Well, there are a few things you can do.
|
|
"""""
|
|
For example, gsAIM uses it to check to see if the user has been idle for 10
|
|
minutes. If they have, gsAIM sends a message to the AIM server that says
|
|
"my user is idle, tell their friends that they're idle." This causes the
|
|
icon next to that user's name to change to a little clock on all the online
|
|
AIM users that have you in their buddy lists.
|
|
|
|
Another use would be this: you're an FTP program, running as an NDA. To be
|
|
nice to the user, your RunAction is scheduled to occur only 5 times per
|
|
second. But this limits your file transfer rate somewhat. You could watch
|
|
IdleTime to see if the user has been idle for five minutes. Once they
|
|
become idle, you change your RunAction time so it gets called 30 times per
|
|
second, so you can do your networking stuff more often.
|
|
|
|
Or you could have a telnet NDA that automatically logs the user off if
|
|
they've been idle for more than 30 minutes.
|
|
|
|
These are just a few Internet-related examples. You could use it for
|
|
non-Internet type stuff. For instance, you write a file backup INIT or DA,
|
|
and use IdleTime to watch for the user being idle for an hour, then
|
|
automatically start a backup at that point.
|
|
|
|
There are lots of uses for it. :)
|
|
|
|
Eric "Sheppy" Shepherd
|
|
Macintosh & PowerPC Programmers Forum
|
|
(SHEPPY, 2431, GO COM A2PRO)
|
|
|
|
>>>>> Think of it as providing the functionality of the Spectrum script
|
|
""""" command 'Set IdleTimer' at a system level, to any application that
|
|
requires it ...
|
|
|
|
Ewen Wannop - Speccie - Sun 24 Jan 1999 - 178 days till KFest '99
|
|
Delivered without using a IIgs by Spectrum 2.2 & Crock O' Gold 2.6
|
|
Bernie ][ the Rescue 2.0 woofing on a PowerMac 8200/120
|
|
http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/ewannop/
|
|
(EWANNOP, 2434, GO COM A2PRO)
|
|
|
|
|
|
DOMODALWINDOW MAYHEM I have code that started crashing under very
|
|
"""""""""""""""""""" specific circumstances yesterday. I traced the
|
|
problem to four bytes of garbage being blasted into the code of the fopen()
|
|
function.
|
|
|
|
I eventually traced down where the blasting occurs -- the DoModalWindow
|
|
call is blasting four bytes of memory.
|
|
|
|
Can anyone think of a reason why? Here's my call:
|
|
|
|
id = DoModalWindow(&eventRec, NULL, NULL, NULL, mwUpdateAll|mwIBeam);
|
|
|
|
id is a local "long", eventRec is a global EventRecord. The window is a
|
|
standard alert-frame dialog box.
|
|
|
|
It happens the very first time DoModalWindow() is called in this code (but,
|
|
oddly, not any of the other times it gets called just like this).
|
|
|
|
Eric "Sheppy" Shepherd
|
|
Macintosh & PowerPC Programmers Forum
|
|
(SHEPPY, 2424, GO COM A2PRO)
|
|
|
|
<<<<< Turns out this was a reentrancy problem. DoModalWindow was calling
|
|
""""" SystemTask, which was causing my NDA's Action handler to get called
|
|
again, which would loop and cause major disaster. :)
|
|
|
|
Eric "Sheppy" Shepherd
|
|
Macintosh & PowerPC Programmers Forum
|
|
(SHEPPY, 2425, GO COM A2PRO)
|
|
|
|
<<<<< I added a mutex (mutual exclusion) flag in my action proc handler:
|
|
"""""
|
|
void doaction(word code, long parm) {
|
|
...
|
|
if (mutexFlag) {
|
|
return;
|
|
}
|
|
mutexFlag = 1;
|
|
... do stuff
|
|
|
|
mutexFlag = 0;
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
This isn't a true semaphore because I'm ignoring recursive calls entirely
|
|
instead of blocking and letting them run. However, in my case, the only
|
|
recursive call that will occur should be runAction, so this should be fine.
|
|
And doing a true blocking semaphore would probably chew up the stack fast,
|
|
especially with doaction() being called six times a second or more to
|
|
handle a runAction code. :)
|
|
|
|
Eric "Sheppy" Shepherd
|
|
Macintosh & PowerPC Programmers Forum
|
|
(SHEPPY, 2447, GO COM A2PRO)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
[EOA]
|
|
[SIZ]------------------------------
|
|
SIZZLING SHAREWARE |
|
|
-----------------------------------
|
|
FontPimp 1.0 by Lysergic Software
|
|
"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
|
|
by Ryan M. Suenaga, B.A., M.S.W., L.S.W.
|
|
[thelamp@delphi.com]
|
|
|
|
FONTPIMP
|
|
~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
Program Name: FontPimp
|
|
File Name: FONTPIMP.BXY
|
|
Database: Utility Software
|
|
File Size: 21632
|
|
Program Type: GS/OS Application
|
|
Author: Lysergic Software
|
|
Version Reviewed: 1.0
|
|
Distribution: Charityware, recommended donation of 10 cents
|
|
per converted font to a charity; see
|
|
documentation for details
|
|
Requirements: 20.5K of drive space, _Pointless_
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Given recent events, it may seem hard to believe, but Apple Computer,
|
|
Inc. and Microsoft teamed up to develop the TrueType font format. This was
|
|
an outline font (as opposed to bitmapped font) format which allowed smooth
|
|
scaling of fonts no matter what size was requested. While Apple itself did
|
|
not build this technology into the IIgs System Software, our friends at
|
|
Westcode Software created the wondrous Control Panel _Pointless_ which
|
|
brought TrueType fonts to the Apple IIgs. Simply use _Pointless_ on
|
|
TrueType fonts developed for the Macintosh and you suddenly have beautiful,
|
|
smoothly rendered fonts on your IIgs.
|
|
|
|
Over time, however, more and more TrueType fonts have become available
|
|
on the Windows platform than have been on the Mac, and there was no
|
|
straight forward way of using these fonts on the IIgs. While both the
|
|
Windows and Mac fonts are TrueType, there are differences in how the data
|
|
that make up the fonts are stored, and _Pointless_ only knows how to deal
|
|
with the Macintosh version TrueType. While there are several Macintosh
|
|
products that can do the font conversion, for the Mac-less among us, what
|
|
to do, what to do?
|
|
|
|
Lysergic Software comes to the rescue with _FontPimp_, their IIgs
|
|
TrueType font utility. _FontPimp_ has several features, but it does one
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thing very well--it converts fonts. It will take a TrueType font ready for
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the Windows platform and make it usable with a IIgs running _Pointless_.
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It opens the door for literally thousands of fonts that were previously
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|
unavailable on the IIgs to liven up those _AppleWorks GS_ and
|
|
_GraphicWriter III_ documents.
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|
|
|
To test _FontPimp_, I simply spent some time downloading some Windows
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TrueType fonts from Delphi's IBM PC & Compatibles Forum Database. Windows
|
|
files usually come packed as .zip archives, analogous to the Binary II and
|
|
NuFX (.bxy) archives that Apple II software is seen in online. To unzip
|
|
the files, I used the shareware _PMPUnZip_. I then started up _FontPimp_
|
|
and let it do its thing.
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|
|
|
Of the six fonts I downloaded, _FontPimp_ was able to convert three of
|
|
them. While a 50% success rate is not impressive, this is far from a
|
|
scientific study, and it's not uncommon to have problems using even
|
|
Macintosh TrueTypes on the IIgs. While the TrueType standard is well
|
|
known, many of the public domain or freeware fonts don't follow it as
|
|
closely as it could, resulting in some incompatibilities which show up when
|
|
you try to convert fonts to different platforms. Others have had more
|
|
success than I did using _FontPimp_ to convert the fonts, and what fonts
|
|
did convert correctly were absolutely stunning.
|
|
|
|
_FontPimp_ has a somewhat hidden feature as well--it allows you to
|
|
convert your IIgs fonts back into the Windows format. You can do this
|
|
using the Edit command in _FontPimp_'s File pulldown menu, then hitting the
|
|
"Save TTF" button. That way you can match up your fonts between your IIgs
|
|
and, say, the Windows box at work.
|
|
|
|
There are several other features of _FontPimp_ for use with fonts,
|
|
many related to such obscure things as a font's ID# and internal name.
|
|
There is documentation included with _FontPimp_ that explains these options
|
|
at some length. You may well learn more than you ever wanted to do about
|
|
fonts on the IIgs just by reading the documentation!
|
|
|
|
So, for those of you who've been looking at the fonts on your office's
|
|
Windows machine in envy, wait no longer--you finally have the tool you need
|
|
in _FontPimp_. And for those who haven't been suffering this way, you now
|
|
have a whole new world of fonts to choose from. Have fun with it.
|
|
|
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|
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|
:: DISCUSSED ON DELPHI ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
|
|
: :
|
|
: WYTYSYDG: What you thought you saw, you didn't get. :
|
|
: :
|
|
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: LUMITECH ::::::
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|
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[EOA]
|
|
[INN]------------------------------
|
|
EXTRA INNINGS |
|
|
-----------------------------------
|
|
About The Lamp! The Lamp! is published on the fifteenth of every month in
|
|
""""""""""""""" the Database of the II Scribe Forum on the Delphi online
|
|
service (GO CUS 11).
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|
|
This publication produced entirely with real or emulated Apple II computers
|
|
using Appleworks 5.1 and Hermes. Apple II Forever!
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|
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|
* The Lamp! is (c) copyright 1999 by Ryan M. Suenaga, M.S.W. All
|
|
rights reserved.
|
|
|
|
* To reach The Lamp! on Internet email send mail to
|
|
thelamp@sheppyware.net
|
|
|
|
* Back issues of The Lamp! are available in the II Scribe Forum on
|
|
Delphi as well as The Lamp! Home Page,
|
|
http://lamp.sheppyware.net.
|
|
|
|
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
|
|
Opinions expressed herein are those of the individual authors, and do not
|
|
necessarily represent the opinions of the Delphi Online Services,
|
|
Syndicomm, Inc., or Ryan M. Suenaga. Forum messages are reprinted
|
|
verbatim and are included in this publication with permission from the
|
|
individual authors. Delphi Online Services, Syndicomm, Inc. and Ryan M.
|
|
Suenaga do not guarantee the accuracy or suitability of any information
|
|
included herein. We reserve the right to edit all letters and copy.
|
|
|
|
Material published in this edition may not be reprinted without the
|
|
expressed written consent of the publisher. Registered computer user
|
|
groups, not for profit publications , and other interested parties may
|
|
write the publisher to apply for permission to reprint any or all material.
|
|
<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<
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[EOF]
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