3393 lines
167 KiB
Erlang
3393 lines
167 KiB
Erlang
|
||
|
||
|||||| |||||| || || |||||| ||||||
|
||
|| || ||| || || ||
|
||
|| ||| |||| |||||| || |||| Your
|
||
|| || || || ||| || ||
|
||
|||||| |||||| || || |||||| |||||| GEnieLamp Computing
|
||
|
||
|| |||||| || || |||||| RoundTable
|
||
|| || || ||| ||| || ||
|
||
|| |||||| |||||||| |||||| RESOURCE!
|
||
|| || || || || || ||
|
||
||||| || || || || ||
|
||
|
||
~ WELCOME TO GEnieLamp APPLE II! ~
|
||
"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
|
||
~ BEGINNER'S CORNER: Polishing Green Apples ~
|
||
~ PD_QUICKVIEW: ShadowWrite NDA ~
|
||
~ APPLE ARCHIVES: A2 History ~
|
||
~ HOT NEWS, HOT MESSAGES, HOT FILES! ~
|
||
|
||
\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\////////////////////////////////////
|
||
GEnieLamp Apple II ~ A T/TalkNET OnLine Publication ~ Vol.2, Issue 17
|
||
""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
|
||
Publisher...............................................John F. Peters
|
||
Editor..................................................Douglas Cuff
|
||
Copy-Editor...........................................Bruce Maples
|
||
\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\////////////////////////////////////
|
||
~ GEnieLamp IBM ~ GEnieLamp ST ~ GEnieLamp [PR] ~ GEnieLamp TX2 ~
|
||
~ GEnieLamp A2Pro ~ GEnieLamp Macintosh ~ LiveWire Online ~
|
||
~ Member Of The Digital Publishing Association ~
|
||
GE Mail: GENIELAMP Internet: GENIELAMP@GENIE.GEIS.COM
|
||
////////////////////////////////////\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\
|
||
|
||
>>> WHAT'S HAPPENING IN THE APPLE II ROUNDTABLE? <<<
|
||
""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
|
||
~ August 1, 1993 ~
|
||
|
||
FROM MY DESKTOP ......... [FRM] APPLE_TALK .............. [TAL]
|
||
Notes From The Editor. Apple II Corner.
|
||
|
||
HEY MISTER POSTMAN ...... [GEN] HUMOR ONLINE ............ [HUM]
|
||
Is That A Letter For Me? Fun & Games On GEnie.
|
||
|
||
REFLECTIONS ............. [REF] BEGINNER'S CORNER ....... [BEG]
|
||
Online Communications. Polishing Green Apples.
|
||
|
||
CowTOONS! ............... [MOO] PD_QUICKVIEW ............ [PDQ]
|
||
Stock Footage. ShadowWrite NDA
|
||
|
||
THE ONLINE LIBARY ....... [LIB] PROFILES ................ [WHO]
|
||
Yours For The Downloading. Who's Who On GEnie.
|
||
|
||
SEARCH_ME ............... [FUN] CONNECTIONS ............. [CON]
|
||
Yours For The Downloading. Online Thoughts.
|
||
|
||
APPLE II ................ [AII] LOG OFF ................. [LOG]
|
||
Apple II History, Part 14. GEnieLamp Information.
|
||
|
||
[IDX]"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
|
||
|
||
READING GEnieLamp GEnieLamp has incorporated a unique indexing
|
||
""""""""""""""""" system to help make reading the magazine easier.
|
||
To utilize this system, load GEnieLamp into any ASCII word processor
|
||
or text editor. In the index you will find the following example:
|
||
|
||
HUMOR ONLINE ............ [HUM]
|
||
[*]GEnie Fun & Games.
|
||
|
||
To read this article, set your find or search command to [HUM]. If
|
||
you want to scan all of the articles, search for [EOA]. [EOF] will take
|
||
you to the last page, whereas [IDX] will bring you back to the index.
|
||
|
||
MESSAGE INFO To make it easy for you to respond to messages re-printed
|
||
"""""""""""" here in GEnieLamp, you will find all the information you
|
||
need immediately following the message. For example:
|
||
|
||
(SMITH, CAT6, TOP1, MSG:58/M475)
|
||
_____________| _____|__ _|___ |____ |_____________
|
||
|Name of sender CATegory TOPic Msg.# Page number|
|
||
|
||
In this example, to respond to Smith's message, log on to page
|
||
475 enter the bulletin board and set CAT 6. Enter your REPly in TOPic 1.
|
||
|
||
A message number that is surrounded by brackets indicates that this
|
||
message is a "target" message and is referring to a "chain" of two
|
||
or more messages that are following the same topic. For example: {58}.
|
||
|
||
ABOUT GEnie Effective July 1, GEnie's non-prime time connect rate drops
|
||
""""""""""" to $3.00 per hour, a reduction of 50% from the current rate.
|
||
The monthly fee has been restructured, and moves from $4.95 to $8.95, for
|
||
which up to four hours of non-prime time access to most GEnie services,
|
||
such as software downloads, bulletin boards, GE Mail, an Internet gateway,
|
||
multi-player games and chat lines, are allowed without charge. To sign up
|
||
for GEnie service, call (with modem) 1-800-638-8369. Upon connection type
|
||
HHH. Wait for the U#= prompt. Type: XTX99014,DIGIPUB and hit RETURN. The
|
||
system will then prompt you for your information. Need more information?
|
||
Call GEnie's customer service line (voice) at 1-800-638-9636.
|
||
""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
|
||
|
||
|
||
//////////////////////////////////////////////// GEnie_QWIK_QUOTE ////
|
||
/ "Can you imagine the abuse it would take to jar chips out of their /
|
||
/ sockets packed in a styrofoam case, inside a box, inside a larger /
|
||
/ box full of styrofoam peanuts! It's hard enough to pull one out /
|
||
/ on purpose. :-)" /
|
||
///////////////////////////////////////////////////////// REALM ////
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
[EOA]
|
||
[FRM]//////////////////////////////
|
||
FROM MY DESKTOP /
|
||
/////////////////////////////////
|
||
Notes From The Publisher
|
||
""""""""""""""""""""""""
|
||
By John Peters
|
||
[GENIELAMP]
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
TOP OF THE PAGE To know me personally, is to know how fanatical I can be
|
||
""""""""""""""" when it comes to Digital Publishing. Convincing people
|
||
that there are definite positive advantages to publishing electronically
|
||
has been a long and frustrating battle, and unfortunately, the battle is
|
||
far from over. However, that doesn't slow me down any, it just makes me a
|
||
little more fanatical about spreading the word. Lately, I have been
|
||
reading articles about Digital Publishing in high-profile publications like
|
||
Time, Newsweek and the New York Times so clearly, all is not lost. Digital
|
||
Publishing is finally starting to find its place in the computing world.
|
||
|
||
Along these lines, the Digital Publishing Association (a group of
|
||
folks who are just as fanatical as I am :) are coming out with their second
|
||
annual Digital Quill awards competition. Take a look...
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
>>> DPA ANNOUNCES SECOND ANNUAL "DIGITAL QUILL" AWARDS COMPETITION <<<
|
||
""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
|
||
Birmingham, Alabama - July 19, 1993: The Digital Publishing Association,
|
||
the first and only trade organization for the electronic publishing
|
||
industry, announced the Second Annual "Digital Quill" Awards for Excellence
|
||
in Electronic Publishing.
|
||
|
||
In making the announcement, Ron Albright, founder and director of the
|
||
DPA, defined "electronic publishing" as the publication of literature and
|
||
graphic material in computer-readable, digital format; specifically,
|
||
materials created on computer and distributed in digital format for other
|
||
to read through their computers. According to Albright, the term
|
||
encompasses "everything from plain ASCII text, which can be read on any
|
||
computer, to complex, hypertext publications that rely on machine-specific
|
||
programs to view and navigate."
|
||
|
||
The Quill Award competition is open to all authors and publishers,
|
||
regardless of DPA membership status. The only requirement is that the
|
||
materials submitted for judging must have been previously published in
|
||
electronic format. Submitted materials must either have been uploaded to an
|
||
online system or distributed on disk for reading by computer as digital
|
||
materials. In clarifying, Albright said "materials that were simply created
|
||
on computer - most writers use those for composition anyway - do not meet
|
||
the criteria of having been electronically published for reading and are
|
||
ineligible."
|
||
|
||
Award Categories
|
||
""""""""""""""""
|
||
|
||
o Serial Publication - a weekly, monthly or otherwise regularly-
|
||
scheduled publication that has been issued for at least 6 months (or
|
||
at least 3 editions) available prior to July, 1993. This category
|
||
will include both fiction and non-fiction magazines and newsletters.
|
||
|
||
o New Serial Publication - a weekly, monthly or otherwise regularly-
|
||
scheduled publication that has been issued for less than 6 months
|
||
but has been published at least for two issues. This category will
|
||
include both fiction and non-fiction magazines and newsletters and
|
||
is proposed to recognize and encourage new issues.
|
||
|
||
o Fiction Book - an original (eliminating reprints of the "classics"
|
||
in digital format - who among us can hope to compete with a digital
|
||
edition of Shakespeare's classics?) electronically published novel.
|
||
Length: 50,000 words, minimum.
|
||
|
||
o Non-Fiction Book - an original non-fiction book in digital format.
|
||
Length: 35,000 words minimum.
|
||
|
||
o Short Story - a single original story appearing either alone or as
|
||
part of an anthology or magazine and published in digital format.
|
||
This category shall exclude reprints of stories originally published
|
||
in a paper publication. Length: 1000 words, minimum.
|
||
|
||
o Non-fiction article - a single originally article appearing either
|
||
alone or as part of a magazine and published in digital format. This
|
||
category shall exclude reprints of articles originally published in
|
||
paper. Length: 1500 words, minimum.
|
||
|
||
o Publishing software - a software program (Shareware or traditionally
|
||
marketed) designed for publishing text and/or graphics and
|
||
facilitating their distribution and viewing. Nominations will be
|
||
accepted from users as well as original authors.
|
||
|
||
o Miscellaneous - this niche will encompass poetry, graphic
|
||
collections, comics, and other publications outside the standard
|
||
categories.
|
||
|
||
PRIZES A certificate, suitable for framing, will be awarded to first,
|
||
"""""" second, third winners in each category. In cases where the number
|
||
and/or quality of submissions warrants, Certificates of Merit will also be
|
||
awarded. Additional prizes, including cash awards, are under consideration.
|
||
If available, these will be announced in the future.
|
||
|
||
DEADLINES Submissions will be accepted from original authors or from the
|
||
""""""""" editors of a publication in which the submitted material
|
||
appeared. Submissions must be made in digital format (via modem or on
|
||
disk) to any of the "electronic addresses" listed below. Deadline for
|
||
submissions is September 30, 1993. Winners will be announced in conjunction
|
||
with the DPA activities surrounding "Electronic Publishing Month" which is
|
||
annually celebrated in November.
|
||
|
||
Submit materials to any of the following addresses:
|
||
|
||
GEnie: RALBRIGHT / DigiPub RoundTable (M1395)
|
||
CompuServe: 75166,2473
|
||
MCI Mail: 370-7474 (RALBRIGHT)
|
||
PRODIGY: DXBD80A
|
||
|
||
You can also upload submissions to the Disktop Publishing Association
|
||
BBS at 205-854-1660 (1200/2400/9600; 24 hours/day).
|
||
|
||
Materials can be submitted on disk by mailing to:
|
||
|
||
The Digital Publishing Association
|
||
1160 Huffman Road
|
||
Birmingham, AL 35215
|
||
|
||
Ron Albright Contact: Ron Albright
|
||
Digital Publishing Association
|
||
1160 Huffman Road
|
||
Birmingham, AL 35215
|
||
|
||
Voice: 205-856-9510
|
||
FAX: 205-853-8478
|
||
BBS: 205-854-1660
|
||
|
||
[*][*][*]
|
||
|
||
|
||
If you are interested in learning more about the awards or digital
|
||
publishing, drop by the DigiPub RoundTable on page 1395.
|
||
|
||
Until next month...
|
||
John Peters
|
||
GEnieLamp/DigiPub RoundTable
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
[EOA]
|
||
[TAL]//////////////////////////////
|
||
APPLE_TALK /
|
||
/////////////////////////////////
|
||
Apple II Corner
|
||
"""""""""""""""
|
||
By Douglas Cuff
|
||
[D.CUFF]
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
BIRTHS, DEATHS, AND MARRIAGES With all the activity in the Apple II world
|
||
""""""""""""""""""""""""""""" this month, I began to realize that the
|
||
reports of its demise have, once again, been greatly exaggerated. Trying
|
||
to come to grips with it all in this, my first month as editor, I think I
|
||
have an idea why it's called a social WHIRL. If it gets any more frantic,
|
||
it'll be a social whirlpool.
|
||
|
||
I'd like to outline for you some of the recent births, deaths, and
|
||
marriages, but it's not an easy task. Sometimes what seem to be births are
|
||
rebirths or adoptions, or even marriages. Sometimes the deaths are
|
||
divorces. Oh, to heck with the semantic classification, it's all pretty
|
||
exciting! You'll find the details within, but here are a few items to
|
||
pique your interest:
|
||
|
||
BIRTHS: With a title like SHAREWARE SOLUTIONS II, it might sound like
|
||
""""""" a rebirth, but it's a bona fide newcomer all right. Shareware
|
||
champion Joe Kohn has started publishing his own Apple II newsletter, and
|
||
the title, he cautions, was chosen for name recognition and may be
|
||
misleading, because it deals with much more than shareware. The premiere
|
||
issue arrived this month, and I have a feeling that Joe Kohn will be
|
||
passing around a few metaphorical cigars in the first few issues.
|
||
Something to celebrate indeed!
|
||
|
||
There are other new arrivals, or rather, shortly-to-arrivals: TypeSet
|
||
from WestCode Software, Addressed for Success from Econ Technologies, and
|
||
Bottom Line from Quality Computers. Look for the details in this month's
|
||
HEY MISTER POSTMAN!
|
||
|
||
|
||
DEATHS: As those who read the past month's issue of GEnieLamp A2 know,
|
||
""""""" INCIDER/A+ folded with their July issue. This month, the Apple
|
||
II world was shocked and saddened to hear that the June issue of A2-CENTRAL
|
||
was the last PAPER issue. A2-CENTRAL will continue to publish a disk
|
||
magazine... so perhaps it's not a death, just a divorce. It's not good
|
||
news, though.
|
||
|
||
|
||
MARRIAGES: The most exciting news in quite a while comes from a marriage
|
||
"""""""""" between Quality Computers and AppleWorks guru Randy Brandt:
|
||
The WORKS 4.0, code-named Quadriga, will be an AppleWorks add-on that is
|
||
rumoured to be the equivalent of an upgrade. At least, it will require
|
||
that you have AppleWorks 3.0 to take advantage of it. It's not really
|
||
AppleWorks 4.0, but the point is, AppleWorks isn't going to be allowed to
|
||
die!
|
||
|
||
Now if only we had an AppleWorks GS guru to work on The GaSWORKS 2.0,
|
||
code-named Lazarus.... (NOTE: This is NOT a rumour, it's just me being
|
||
silly.)
|
||
|
||
The social event of the season has just concluded -- the Fifth Annual
|
||
A2-Central Summer Reunion -- and the reports are still rolling in. Look
|
||
for more coverage of this great marriage of minds next issue. Let's hope
|
||
it's not to be the last, as rumor predicts.
|
||
|
||
One other entry for the marriages column: GEnieLamp A2 and me. I
|
||
mentioned briefly above that this is my first month as editor. I felt I'd
|
||
better slip that in quietly so that loyal readers wouldn't goggle at the
|
||
new name in front of them and figure they'd missed an issue. At the same
|
||
time, I didn't want to begin with this minor news, since there was so much
|
||
major news to deal with.
|
||
|
||
Darrel Raines has moved from editor to a position that will allow him
|
||
to write more articles for GEnieLamp A2. What's more, Phil Shapiro is
|
||
looking to hand his co-editor position over to someone else, now that he'll
|
||
be producing his own disk-based publication, Helium Balloons, and staff
|
||
writer Mel Fowler has been off nursing a sick modem. Mel's back now,
|
||
though, I hasten to add!
|
||
|
||
All these changes at GEnieLamp A2 mean two things:
|
||
|
||
First, because Darrel and I were forced to change horses in midstream,
|
||
the A2 Profile interview had to be abandoned this month. It'll be back,
|
||
never fear! This month, time was just too short.
|
||
|
||
Second, if you've been thinking that you'd like to write for GEnieLamp
|
||
A2, then now is the time to step forward. If you haven't been thinking
|
||
about writing for GEnieLamp A2, then now would be a good time to start!
|
||
Contact me via GEnie mail (my address is D.CUFF).
|
||
|
||
I'm just as pleased as I can be to be the new editor of GEnieLamp A2.
|
||
I've been an Apple II user for some time: I started using an Apple ][+
|
||
late in 1982, and upgraded to an Apple IIe just a few months later, thanks
|
||
to an extraordinarily obliging dealer, and got my first IIGS in late 1986.
|
||
The point I'm laboriously trying to make is that I love the li'l devil too!
|
||
You are not alone.
|
||
|
||
I've been absent from GEnie for a number of months, and it was
|
||
GEnieLamp that led me back. I started downloading GEnieLamp A2 from a
|
||
local BBS and was so impressed that I reactivated my dormant GEnie account,
|
||
unable to bear missing out on GEnie any more.
|
||
|
||
By way of a tribute to outgoing editor Darrel Raines, allow me to
|
||
quote from a message I read on another network recently, not long before I
|
||
signed on as editor, posted by shareware author John L. Graham: "One
|
||
bright spot in the Apple II world is GEnie's online magazine, GEnie Lamp."
|
||
The credit for this belongs to Darrel, and to Jim Couch, editor of
|
||
GEnieLamp A2Pro, but I hope to be able to do as well... with your help.
|
||
|
||
[*][*][*]
|
||
|
||
|
||
Before we turn you over to your regularly scheduled GEnieLamp, Darrel
|
||
has a few words of his own to add:
|
||
|
||
As you've read, we have a new editor this month. It is with regret
|
||
that I give up that position for this fine publication. However,
|
||
circumstances dictate that someone else carry on. I am sure that Doug will
|
||
lead us on to bigger and better things in the world of electronic
|
||
publishing. I wish him well as editor of GEnieLamp A2.
|
||
|
||
I want to take a moment and tell each of you that I have enjoyed
|
||
bringing this newsletter to you on a monthly basis. I learned a lot of
|
||
things along the way. I hope that as I was learning the ropes, we were
|
||
giving you the information you needed to use your computer and the GEnie
|
||
Information System as efficiently as possible. It has always been my
|
||
intent to make this newsletter one of the best sources of information for
|
||
the Apple II community. If we have succeeded in meeting any of these needs
|
||
for even a few users, then I consider the effort to have been worthwhile.
|
||
|
||
One of my major objectives was always this: I did not want to print a
|
||
whole newsletter of old or recycled information. This presented a real
|
||
challenge to us since a large part of the newsletter content is excerpts
|
||
from the A2 bulletin board system. The way that we handled this was to
|
||
insist on printing a large number of original articles that had never
|
||
appeared in any other format before: the monthly columns such my
|
||
editorials, our game reviews, Phil's "think" piece, profile interviews, the
|
||
shareware and upload reviews, and all of our one-time feature articles. I
|
||
sincerely hope that you found some nugget of new information in each issue.
|
||
|
||
I will still be writing for GEnieLamp. My major focus will be on
|
||
gaming, but I will be touching on other topics. -Darrel Raines
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
[EOA]
|
||
[HEY]//////////////////////////////
|
||
HEY MISTER POSTMAN /
|
||
/////////////////////////////////
|
||
Is That A Letter For Me?
|
||
""""""""""""""""""""""""
|
||
By Douglas Cuff
|
||
[D.CUFF]
|
||
|
||
o A2 POT-POURRI
|
||
|
||
o HOT TOPICS
|
||
|
||
o WHAT'S NEW
|
||
|
||
o THROUGH THE GRAPEVINE
|
||
|
||
o MESSAGE SPOTLIGHT
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
>>> A2 POT-POURRI <<<
|
||
"""""""""""""""""""""
|
||
\_/
|
||
FREE APPLE CATALOG AND NEWSLETTER |ou can get a FREE copy of the latest
|
||
""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""" Apple Catalog by simply calling
|
||
1-800-795-1000 and asking for it. Be sure to tell them that you're an
|
||
Apple II user! While you're at it, you may wish to call 1-800-776-2333 and
|
||
ask for a free copy of the Apple II Software Newsletter, as well.
|
||
(A2.LUNATIC, CAT5, TOP2, MSG:203/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
|
||
WHAT KIND OF MAC IS THAT? I understand price wars more than you know.
|
||
""""""""""""""""""""""""" and I know the IIgs-//e are not the main reason
|
||
for Apples woes, but it saddens me when such a good product is dumped.
|
||
(especially when I bought one).
|
||
|
||
BTW all the people who dump on the gs, I had a friend over the other
|
||
day that is currently programming Macs, it took me 15 min to convince him
|
||
that my computer is an Apple II!
|
||
(EW.CHRISTIAN, CAT5, TOP2, MSG:211/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
|
||
VIDEO OVERLAY CARD I have some pretty basic questions about the
|
||
"""""""""""""""""" capabilities of the VOC...
|
||
At my local user group, the IIGS is connected, of course, to the GS's
|
||
RGB monitor, and also connected to a standard TV via the Composite Out
|
||
jack. During demos, people have a real hard time seeing the images on the
|
||
RGB because it's so small, and on the TV because it's so blurry.
|
||
|
||
This is presenting a real problem to the group, and we want to resolve
|
||
it. It seems we don't have enough money to buy some type of overhead
|
||
projector ($1500 or so), so it's been suggested that we get a VOC. People
|
||
seem to believe that connecting a VOC will improve the resolution of a
|
||
standard composite TV monitor.
|
||
|
||
Will it, or is this a myth? If it will, can you supply some details? A
|
||
club member has said that he saw a deal for an inexpensive large screen
|
||
monitor that had 600 line resolution (whatever that means) and thought
|
||
that by connecting a VOC to that monitor, that we'd get crystal clear
|
||
resolution. Would we?
|
||
|
||
In a similar vein, the TV I own has both analog and digital RGB
|
||
inputs, but being in another part of the house, I've never connected it to
|
||
the GS. Theoretically, if we were to buy a large screen TV with analog RGB
|
||
inputs, it should be similar in resolution to the GS RGB. In reality, is
|
||
it? I bought that TV 7-8 years ago, and the club member who is looking at
|
||
monitors said that he hasn't run across one with an analog RGB. Are those
|
||
still made, or is he just running into TV salespeople ignorance?
|
||
(J.KOHN, CAT26, TOP13, MSG:29/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
>>>>> The VOC does marginally increase the quality of the IIGS composite
|
||
""""" video output (key word: marginally), but you have to have a pretty
|
||
good monitor to notice the difference.
|
||
|
||
A better option is, as you said, to use a TV/monitor that has RGB
|
||
inputs. While it's not likely to be as sharp as the Apple RGB monitor, it
|
||
WILL be considerably sharper than the composite signal. (Also, the fact
|
||
that your TV even HAS RGB inputs tells me that it's a good set and should
|
||
show up the difference quite nicely.)
|
||
|
||
There are electronic reasons for the difference in picture quality,
|
||
which I won't go into here, but they're also the reason that we always use
|
||
the S- Video inputs on OUR big show monitor whenever possible. The more
|
||
wires, the better the signal CAN be. (Doesn't guarantee it will be better,
|
||
just that it can be. <grin>)
|
||
(QUALITY, CAT26, TOP13, MSG:30/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
|
||
APPLESOFT REBORN? The July 12th issue of PC Week says Apple is renaming
|
||
""""""""""""""""" its Mac OS unit to......AppleSoft! Does this mean
|
||
System 7 was really written in Basic? <grin>
|
||
|
||
And from Spencer F. Katt in the same issue:
|
||
"....sources said emulation of Mac software on the 601 RISC chip won't be
|
||
as fast as some of the new 040 Macs."
|
||
(A.COUGHLIN, CAT5, TOP2, MSG:226/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
|
||
APPLE IIE STILL IN PRODUCTION ][n general, the way IIe<49>s are bought
|
||
""""""""""""""""""""""""""""" now (i.e. by schools), they will get large
|
||
orders in batches. So they don't get a large stock of IIe<EFBFBD>s sitting around
|
||
in warehouses, and they don't run the assembly line continuously. When
|
||
they get a few large orders, they fire up the assembly line, make 'em, and
|
||
ship 'em right out. They may have enough sitting around to fill one or two
|
||
orders at a time, so they'd send those out while firing up the production
|
||
line.
|
||
___
|
||
|he bottom line is that the IIe _IS_ still in production, though not
|
||
continuously, and they are NOT just trying to unload warehouses full of
|
||
them. And consider this: Has Apple EVER had some kind of consumer
|
||
promotion just to unload warehouses full of computers? No. You've never
|
||
seen it with any Mac models, you didn't see it with the IIc, IIc+, or IIgs,
|
||
and you're not going to see it with the IIe. What they usually do with
|
||
excess inventory is sell them to a remarketer, like Sun or Shreve (or Price
|
||
Club, in the case of the Mac PowerBook 100). They have also: Bulldozed
|
||
them into a hole in the ground (Lisa/Mac XL), and sold them at a major
|
||
discount to Apple EMPLOYEES (Mac IIsi, I believe).
|
||
_
|
||
(_
|
||
__)imply put, if Apple is still publicly advertising or offering
|
||
something, and/or it's still on the dealer price lists, it is still in
|
||
production. (A2.LUNATIC, CAT5, TOP2, MSG:131/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
|
||
APPLE NASDAQ AD NASDAQ (the over-the-counter stock exchange) is using
|
||
""""""""""""""" Apple in its ads now, talking about how it started in a
|
||
garage, put computers in every school, and so on. Then "Where can you
|
||
find companies like that? Actually newspapers publish a list of them every
|
||
day." The idea is to show progressive NASDAQ companies are, and what good
|
||
investments they can be. Previously-featured companies include Microsoft
|
||
and MCI. (L.DEVRIES, CAT5, TOP3, MSG:47/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
|
||
WATCH YOUR PATHNAME LENGTH! > There seems to be a problem with ProTerm
|
||
""""""""""""""""""""""""""" > and over long pathnames. We haven't QUITE
|
||
> figured it out yet.
|
||
|
||
The problem is simple, ProTerm runs under ProDOS 8, NOT GS/OS. Because
|
||
of this, ProTerm can have a total pathname length of 63 characters.
|
||
|
||
Let's say your drive is names "MyRealCoolStuff", ProTerm is in a
|
||
directory called "Communications/ProTerm3.1", and your data is in a
|
||
directory in ProTerm3.1 called "MyNewestStuff", This path now is...
|
||
|
||
/MyRealCoolStuff/Communications/Proterm3.1/MyNewestStuff/
|
||
|
||
That is 57 characters!! Your data files only have 6 characters left
|
||
before ProDOS 8 has heartburn!!!
|
||
|
||
So any ProDOS 8 applications (AppleWorks Classic too!!) will choke if
|
||
you use verbose directory names...
|
||
|
||
"Burger" Bill Heineman
|
||
(BURGERBILL, CAT10, TOP11, MSG:227/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
>>>>> Well, it isn't quite THAT simple. This problem doesn't hit TIC and
|
||
""""" PtP users. There is SOME specific problem with PT3 that does not
|
||
affect those two programs. Once pathnames exceed about 36 characters, odd
|
||
things start to happen. However, it appears that not everyone is afflicted
|
||
with this problem, so we don't quite know what to think. We have received
|
||
some fixes for the scripts from users who have beaten this, but we need to
|
||
understand just what the heck is going on here before we start fixing
|
||
scripts, or we are likely to create new problems.
|
||
|
||
>>"So any ProDOS 8 applications (AppleWorks Classic too!!) will choke
|
||
if you use verbose directory names..."
|
||
|
||
Too true, but PT3 is apparently more sensitive. There may be some
|
||
other factor here that we haven't figured out yet.
|
||
(GARY.UTTER, CAT10, TOP11, MSG:233/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
|
||
BEST CACHE SIZE What is the recommended size for the RAM Cache in the RAM
|
||
""""""""""""""" Control Panel?
|
||
The System 6.0 manual does not make any recommendation.
|
||
I have read in a tech note that it is set by default at 32k.
|
||
I have 4.25 megabytes of RAM.
|
||
(R.LEROUX1, CAT9, TOP12, MSG:138/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
>>>>> A setting of 16K or 32K is usually best. The GS/OS cache isn't
|
||
""""" particularly fast; I think it still uses a linear search instead of
|
||
some form of hashing, which means that the bigger it is, the longer it
|
||
takes to search it. Beyond a certain point, it will actually take longer
|
||
to search the cache to see if the desired block is already in RAM than to
|
||
just go read the block from disk again!
|
||
(QUALITY, CAT9, TOP12, MSG:139/M645;1)
|
||
___
|
||
>>>>> |he cache is used for _ALL_ GS/OS programs, not just the Finder,
|
||
""""" unless you have something installed like the RamFAST driver, which
|
||
bypasses it. Prosel 16 is a strange beast, which does a lot of low-level
|
||
disk operations by itself, so it may bypass the GS/OS cache, as well.
|
||
|
||
|\|ote that having the RamFAST driver installed bypasses the cache for
|
||
your hard drive, but it's still being used for your floppies and anything
|
||
else appropriate. (A2.LUNATIC, CAT9, TOP12, MSG:150/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
|
||
IIGS ROM HISTORY
|
||
""""""""""""""""
|
||
1. The original, ROM 0 MB was released with all the parts
|
||
needed to install it in a //e as a conversion unit. The
|
||
conversion kit itself was a backplane for the //e, plus
|
||
the MB, plus a mouse (although I think that was
|
||
optional).
|
||
|
||
2. The ROM 01 MB was released as a NON-convertible board
|
||
(possibly in the initial runs, possibly later). This
|
||
board had neither the dual power supply plugs, nor any of
|
||
the other internal plugs for //e equipment.
|
||
|
||
3. The original (convertible) design was mandated as THE
|
||
ONLY service replacement for defective ROM 01 GS
|
||
motherboards. This created a problem, eventually, since
|
||
non-convertible boards were coming in for replacements.
|
||
The non-convertible boards were upgraded to
|
||
convertibility in the process of refurbishing, and put
|
||
into the repair stock. I believe that this all happened
|
||
before the ROM 03 was released.
|
||
|
||
4. Whether the ROM 03 MBs ever shipped without the internal
|
||
ports I don't know. Certainly the ROM 03s were never
|
||
intended to be put in a //e case, but I know of no reason
|
||
why they COULDN'T be, and, come to think of it, I know of
|
||
at least one that WAS. :)
|
||
|
||
I know that it makes no sense to have designed and built boards that
|
||
HAD the circuitry on them to accept the plugs, but no plugs. Nevertheless,
|
||
that was done, and there are lots and lots of them out there. Whether your
|
||
board has them or not is entirely dependent on when it was produced. If
|
||
the MB on your machine has ever been replaced it almost certainly does have
|
||
the plugs. MY MB has been replaced, but it was taken out of a brand new
|
||
machine from the dealers stock because I needed it RIGHT NOW, and the
|
||
dealer likes me. :) (And was out of stock on GS replacement boards.)
|
||
(GARY.UTTER, CAT6, TOP2, MSG:120/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
|
||
SPEAK WELL OF THE DEAD I talked to someone once who was not an Apple II
|
||
"""""""""""""""""""""" user and never was, but who made an interesting
|
||
observation about the machine. He said that when it came out, the Mac
|
||
still wasn't gaining a very significant foothold, and that it looked to a
|
||
lot of people in the industry like Apple was hedging its bets with the
|
||
IIgs, that in making it so very Mac-like they were positioning it to take
|
||
over for the Mac if the Mac really did fail.
|
||
|
||
And the original Mac was going to be based on the 6502. It was only
|
||
near the end of the design stage that they switched to the 68000.
|
||
|
||
All that means nothing now, but it's interesting to think about.
|
||
-Dean Esmay (A2.DEAN, CAT5, TOP3, MSG:45/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
|
||
PROTERM MACRO TRACKS FREE HOURS Since GEnie has changed its rate
|
||
""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""" structure and we now get 4 hrs free for
|
||
our $ 8.95 monthly fee, I decided to write a macro to track hours and costs
|
||
for the current month (to make sure I don't let a month go by without using
|
||
all 4 of those hours :)
|
||
|
||
To use this macro, you need to set the "Log Calls to Disk" parm in the
|
||
dialing system(s) you are using to call GEnie. If your dial system name
|
||
starts with anything other than "GEnie", you will need to modify the search
|
||
string used in the line after the INput statement. I have 2 dial systems
|
||
to log into GEnie, one is called "GEnie-Automatic" and the other
|
||
"GEnie-Manual", so I just check the first 5 bytes of each log record for
|
||
"GEnie".
|
||
|
||
The macro gets the current month, then reads through the PT3.LOG file
|
||
looking for records that match the dial system name and the current month.
|
||
Hours and minutes are accumulated for each record that matches. GEnie's
|
||
rate is then applied. If the total time is 4 hours or less, a cost of $
|
||
8.95 is displayed. When the time goes over 4 hours, the $3 per hour rate
|
||
is applied and added to the $ 8.95. Current cost, hours, minutes and the
|
||
month are displayed.
|
||
|
||
I've hooked this macro up to the @@2 label in ProTerm 3.1's
|
||
PT3.GLOBALS file, so that the macro is invoked when I click on the time in
|
||
the menu bar while at the main menu. In PT3.Globals, find label @@2 and do
|
||
the following:
|
||
|
||
@@2
|
||
IF !$d,{ CHain "GENIE.COSTS" } * run macro GEnie.Costs *
|
||
EXit * if in terminal mode *
|
||
|
||
Here's the macro (GEnie.Costs)
|
||
|
||
* Macro to Track Monthly GEnie Costs *
|
||
* $ 8.95 + $3 per hr for time > 4 hrs *
|
||
* Art Coughlin *
|
||
SEt $0 = 0
|
||
SEt $1 = 0
|
||
SEt $4 = 0
|
||
SEt &1 = <MId <DAte>,3,3> * get month *
|
||
* *
|
||
OPen #5,"PT3.LOG" * open log file & read *
|
||
WHile !(EO #5),{ * until eof *
|
||
INput #5, "%s", &0
|
||
IF (ANd (SEqual <LEft &0,5>, "GEnie"), * check for system name *
|
||
(SEqual <MId &0,35,3>, &1)) { * and current month match*
|
||
SEt $0 = $0 + (VAlue<MId &0,56,2>) * accumulate minutes *
|
||
SEt $1 = $1 + (VAlue<MId &0,53,2>) } } * accumulate hours *
|
||
CLose #5
|
||
* *
|
||
WHile (GT $0, 59),{ * convert mins > 59 to hrs*
|
||
SEt $0 = $0 - 60
|
||
SET $1 = $1 + 1 }
|
||
* *
|
||
IF (OR (LT $1, 4), (ANd (EQual $1, 4), (EQual $0, 0))), {
|
||
SEt $2 = 8 * if time <= 4 hrs, charge*
|
||
SEt &3 = "95" },1,{ * is $ 8.95. *
|
||
SEt $2 = 0 * Else calc. the charge: *
|
||
SEt $4 = 0
|
||
SEt $4 = ($1 - 4) * all hours over 4 are *
|
||
WHile (GT $4, 0),{ * multiplied by $3 *
|
||
SEt $4 = $4 - 1
|
||
SET $2 = $2 + 3 }
|
||
SEt $2 = $2 + 8 * add the monthly $8 *
|
||
SEt $3 = 0
|
||
SEt $4 = $0
|
||
WHile (GT $4, 0),{ * multiply minutes by $.05*
|
||
SEt $4 = $4 - 1
|
||
SET $3 = $3 + 5 }
|
||
SET $3 = $3 + 95 * add the monthly $.95 *
|
||
WHile (GT $3, 99), { * check for cents > 99 *
|
||
SEt $2 = $2 + 1 * and convert to dollars *
|
||
SEt $3 = $3 - 100 }
|
||
IF (LT $3, 10), { SEt &3 = "0" + <STring $3> },1, <<< Correction
|
||
{ SEt &3 = <STring $3> } } <<< is here!
|
||
SEt &4 = " " + &1
|
||
SEt &0 = "Current Accumulated ^M GEnie Time & Cost ^M ^M"
|
||
SEt &1 = " $ " + <STring $2> + "." + &3 + "^M ^M"
|
||
SEt &2 = " Hours: " + <STring $1> + " ^M"
|
||
SEt &3 = " Minutes: " + <STring $0> + " ^M ^M"
|
||
NOte &0+&1+&2+&3+&4
|
||
|
||
>>>>> A correction to the macro I posted to calculate GEnie time and
|
||
""""" costs. The macro will blow up when you have cents less than 10.
|
||
The statement to do the zero filling of the cents is to blame. Evidently,
|
||
PT doesn't like it when you set a string variable equal to itself. :(
|
||
|
||
Replace:
|
||
|
||
SEt &3 = <STring $3>
|
||
IF (LT $3, 10), { SEt &3 = "0" + &3 } } * zero fill cents if < 10 *
|
||
|
||
With:
|
||
|
||
IF (LT $3, 10), { SEt &3 = "0" + <STring $3> },1,
|
||
{ SEt &3 = <STring $3> } }
|
||
(A.COUGHLIN, CAT24, TOP3, MSG:6/203/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
|
||
WHY CAN'T JOHNNY LEARN? A little while back, I did a review in inCider/A+
|
||
""""""""""""""""""""""" of an astronomy program for kids. When I first
|
||
ran the program, some of the data about the planets of our solar system
|
||
didn't look quite right to me. So, I looked at some recent material I had
|
||
about the Voyager missions that listed the number of moons each planet had.
|
||
I compared that to the number of moons that the program said each planet
|
||
had, and realized that the facts and figures presented in the software was
|
||
incorrect. I called the company to report this, and they said something
|
||
like "but, we've been selling the program for two years, and no one else
|
||
has said anything to us before". I was adamant, and demanded that if they
|
||
were going to sell "educational" software, they<EFBFBD>d better fix their program.
|
||
After much haggling, I got them to consult an Almanac, and eventually they
|
||
released a free update to the software.
|
||
|
||
I wonder how often things like that happen? Probably about as often as
|
||
someone uses the excuse of "computer error".
|
||
-Joe Kohn (J.KOHN, CAT15, TOP4, MSG:24/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
>>> HOT TOPICS <<<
|
||
""""""""""""""""""
|
||
|
||
A2-CENTRAL MAGAZINE DROPS PAPER EDITION > Wait 'til you get your new
|
||
""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""" > A2-Central and we'll talk about
|
||
> it.
|
||
|
||
OK - I've gotten mine (A2C-On-Disk). I read the letter to A2C-OD
|
||
Subscribers and know that you have discontinued the Paper Edition. One
|
||
thing that was missing from the letter was any comments about rebating the
|
||
$34 a year (pro-rated) that the Paper Edition cost. Are there any plans to
|
||
do so (or extend the Disk Subscription). Also, what are you doing about the
|
||
Paper-Only Subscribers? (HAL-9001, CAT23, TOP3, MSG:182/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
>>>>> Gosh, why all the long faces? Resource Central is still here, and
|
||
""""" A2-Central will still live on, albeit in modified form, on
|
||
A2-Central On Disk. And we've got lots of other publications we're working
|
||
on.
|
||
|
||
It's just reached the point where we aren't getting enough new
|
||
subscribers and the paper edition is way too expensive to put out. By
|
||
doing this we'll be able to keep doing Apple II support and publishing
|
||
magazines, albeit disk based, for a long time to come!
|
||
-Dean Esmay (A2.DEAN, CAT23, TOP3, MSG:196/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
>>>>> > Gosh, why all the long faces?
|
||
"""""
|
||
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
|
||
|
||
Open-Apple has evolved into A2-Central, a highly respected,
|
||
internationally renowned, prize-winning journal of Apple II news, technical
|
||
information, tips and ideas.
|
||
RC.ELLEN
|
||
June 1991
|
||
|
||
The A2-Central paper and Fishhead's Children subscribers all got
|
||
letters telling them how much we owe them in unshipped issues...
|
||
|
||
TOM.W
|
||
JUNE 1993
|
||
|
||
As the Apple II nears the end of its life-cycle, renewals to our
|
||
flagship publication, the paper version of A2-Central, have fallen to less
|
||
than 20 per cent.
|
||
RESOURCE CENTRAL
|
||
June 1993
|
||
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
|
||
-Hank (H.WESSEL3, CAT23, TOP3, MSG:198/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
|
||
...BUT NOW, WITH ADVERTISING! Today I received the latest A2 Central On
|
||
""""""""""""""""""""""""""""" Disk. Although there was no Resource
|
||
Central catalog included I was very happy with the announcement in the
|
||
small RC-advertisement that on the next disk a overview will be given of
|
||
all the products Resource Central carry. With an overview like that you can
|
||
have it always 'on-line' after putting it on your hard disk.
|
||
|
||
I think it is a very good idea to have an advertisement folder on the
|
||
disk. In that way the whole Apple II community (we are all subscribing to
|
||
A2COD, aren't we?) will be informed of all the new products coming out and
|
||
their prices.
|
||
|
||
Peter van Dongen / Netherlands / Europe {Co-Pilot 2.1.1 + PT 3.1}
|
||
(P.DONGEN1, CAT23, TOP3, MSG:21/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
>>>>> In short - free advertising on A2 On Disk. I'll accept short AWP
|
||
""""" files of 5-15K (or less) in length from anyone with a commercial
|
||
business selling Apple II product of some sort (must be a business, this is
|
||
not a personal ads section). I reserve the right to cut the ad as I see
|
||
fit; I'm less likely to do it the shorter the ad is.
|
||
|
||
There's no cost, it's free, but you're at my mercy in terms of when
|
||
I'll publish it, its content and its length. ;-)
|
||
-Dean Esmay (A2.DEAN, CAT23, TOP3, MSG:30/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
|
||
APPLE LAYOFFS Word on the news this evening is that Apple is planning to
|
||
""""""""""""" layoff 2,500 employees (between 15%-16% depending on the
|
||
new service) over the next 12 months.
|
||
|
||
Hopefully this layoff will bypass all of my good friends that work there!
|
||
-- HangTime [Script-Central] B-)>
|
||
(A2.HANGTIME, CAT5, TOP3, MSG:213/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
___
|
||
SYSTEM 6.0.1 GOODIE #1: ALIASES |he point of having an alias to a file
|
||
""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""" is not that it's smaller than the
|
||
original file. In many cases you may wish to make aliases to many small
|
||
files. The point is that you can now access those files from more than one
|
||
place. For instance, many files may absolutely REQUIRE that they be in a
|
||
special specific place, such as items within the System folder. Or, you
|
||
may have several programs that require a large number of extra files in the
|
||
same directory as themselves, such as dictionary files, startup screens
|
||
and/or music, etc. (Plato mentioned a good example: games.) Now, with
|
||
aliases, you can organize all your most used files in such a way that it
|
||
makes good sense, instead of being restricted to the requirements of each
|
||
file (location, secondary files, etc.). Aliases are simply a convenience
|
||
to help you manage your disk volumes better. That's all.
|
||
(A2.LUNATIC, CAT9, TOP15, MSG:148/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
|
||
GOODIE #2: MS-DOS FST If you use Tulin's Floptical driver and do an Easy
|
||
"""""""""""""""""""""" Update for System 6.0.1, don't forget to remove the
|
||
SCSIHD.Driver from your drivers folder before rebooting....just a reminder.
|
||
:)
|
||
|
||
I read my first 1.44 meg MSDOS disk in the Floptical drive last
|
||
night. In fact, this was written on my 386 at work, saved to disk
|
||
and read into the IIgs via the Floptical. Works as advertised!
|
||
(A.COUGHLIN, CAT11, TOP16, MSG:78/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
>>>>> GREAT NEWS for us Floptical/Apple II owners who must also work with
|
||
""""" MAC and IBM systems! Once they get the WRITE portion of that FST
|
||
finished, we'll be set. Moving information between systems will be a
|
||
breeze. I could be using my GS for a LONG time to come now. The next great
|
||
thing would be some file translation utilities, i.e. WordPerfect or
|
||
Microsoft Word to AppleWorks, etc.
|
||
|
||
No one's ever completely satisfied are they?? :)
|
||
|
||
J-Bird <<WHO GOT THE LAST GS?!>>
|
||
(J.CURTIS8, CAT11, TOP16, MSG:83/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
>>>>> With System 6.0.1 you can now read the following disks: 720K
|
||
""""" MS-DOS, 1.44M MS-DOS, 1.44M HFS, 1.44M ProDOS. (On a Floptical
|
||
drive). You can still read 800K HFS and ProDOS disks with a normal
|
||
Smartport 3.5 inch drive (Apple 3.5 or Superdrive).
|
||
|
||
Tim 'JoaT' Tobin
|
||
Lost Classics Coordinator
|
||
(A2.TIM, CAT11, TOP16, MSG:101/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
>>>>> Amazing...
|
||
""""" Using System 6.0.1's MSDOS FST, my PCT 5.25 disk drive will read
|
||
MSDOS-formatted disks under GS/OS. When I tried this, I really did not
|
||
expect it to work. But it does. My GS even makes the proper insert
|
||
disk/eject disk sounds when I close/open the disk drive latch.
|
||
|
||
The old problem of the PCT 5.25 drive continuously polling when
|
||
"active" under GS/OS is annoying. Besides using PC.SWAP to deactivate the
|
||
drive, has anyone found a way to keep the drive from being polled
|
||
continuously? I have AEPC System 2.0.4.
|
||
|
||
Does the PCT 3.5 add-on drive also get polled continuously (under
|
||
GS/OS) when active? Has anyone successfully used a PCT 3.5 drive to read
|
||
MSDOS 3.5 (720K) disks under GS/OS?
|
||
-Ken (K.WATANABE5, CAT14, TOP12, MSG:115/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
>>>>> One of the people at Apple who works on this stuff said that yes,
|
||
""""" the new MS-DOS FST automatically supports drives attached to the
|
||
PC Transporter. Apparently it was very easy to arrange.
|
||
|
||
I would expect anyone who tries it will come back and confirm that it
|
||
works. It's supposed to. :-)
|
||
-Dean Esmay (A2.DEAN, CAT14, TOP12, MSG:119/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
|
||
GOODIE #3: 8 MEGS *PLUS* RAMDISK Is it true that system 6.0.1 will allow
|
||
"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""" ROM 3 users to have a total of 8megs AND
|
||
create a RAM5 disk?
|
||
|
||
I haven't seen this mentioned anywhere on GEnie, but "think" I read it
|
||
somewhere on a local bbs. Or at least I think that's what was being talked
|
||
about. (R.MALTZ, CAT9, TOP6, MSG:138/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
>>>>> Yep, with 6.0.1, ROM 03 owners can finally have 8 MB of memory and
|
||
""""" be able to create a RAM5 disk...
|
||
-Bryan (SOFTDISK.INC, CAT9, TOP6, MSG:139/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
|
||
GOODIE #4: FIXES > A2.LUNATIC [Lunatic]
|
||
"""""""""""""""" > The Find File patch, Sound CP patch, and Finder patch
|
||
> files should all no longer be needed with System 6.0.1.
|
||
|
||
The ROM3MouseFix patch is also no longer needed.
|
||
(P.CREAGER, CAT9, TOP6, MSG:140/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
|
||
SYSTEM 6.0.1 NON-CHANGE
|
||
"""""""""""""""""""""""
|
||
>>> J.CARR20 [LumiTech] writes:
|
||
|
||
> >>> A2.LUNATIC [Lunatic]
|
||
>
|
||
>> Since with System 6.0.1 the Fonts and synthLAB disks barely changed at
|
||
>> all
|
||
|
||
> Since you qualified this sentence with the word "barely", can
|
||
> you enlighten me as to what _has_ changed with these two disks? :-)
|
||
|
||
With System 6.0.1, we made no code-level changes to synthLab, and the
|
||
Fonts disk is exactly as that from System 6.0. If you have System 6.0 and
|
||
want to skip getting these two disks, you won't be missing anything at all.
|
||
|
||
-Jim Murphy, Still employed Apple guy
|
||
(MURPH, CAT9, TOP6, MSG:196/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
|
||
GIVE UP ON APPLE? I have come to the conclusion that it is time to give
|
||
""""""""""""""""" up on Apple and switch to DOS. I have used DOS at work
|
||
for the past 6 years, but continued to remain a loyal Apple II user at
|
||
home. I have used the Apple II since 1984. But recent developments have
|
||
made me decide to switch. It has become increasingly difficult to get
|
||
any type of support on hardware or r software for the Apple II, so this is
|
||
good-bye for me. (D.CAVANAUGH, CAT5, TOP8,MSG:1/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
>>>>> Apple computer is not the evil corporation that everyone makes it
|
||
""""" out to be. In fact, they are one of the best companies in the
|
||
industry.
|
||
|
||
Try this experiment. Call a Packard Bell retailer and tell them you
|
||
have a Legend II computer. You don't know much about it but a friend told
|
||
you that it needs a new motherboard. They will refer you to Packard Bell's
|
||
800 number. You will need to send it to a service center. The service
|
||
center will probably not be able to fix it with the legend II motherboard.
|
||
Instead you will receive a notice that says "Not economical to repair."
|
||
That's a catch-all phrase that I used to see on even some Tandy computers
|
||
and other equipment when I worked at a Radio Shack.
|
||
|
||
What the hell.....Try it out with a few brands. You'll be surprised
|
||
at the outcome.
|
||
|
||
Now, Call an Apple dealer and give them the same story. They will
|
||
offer to look at it, and if the motherboard is in need of replacement, they
|
||
will do it. "Not economical to repair" is not in the vocabulary of most
|
||
good authorized service centers. They will repair it.
|
||
|
||
CompUSA is a really bad example. They won't even give it a chance.
|
||
But smaller non-corporate dealers will do it.
|
||
|
||
Another example of the much finer (yeah right!) computer companies is
|
||
Leading Edge. If you purchased an early 286 machine, you will discover that
|
||
there were problems with the ROM bios. This ROM is only found in the
|
||
Leading Edge (pre-Diawoo days). Will they fix it? No! Can you get a ROM 0
|
||
GS updated to a ROM 01? Absolutely!
|
||
|
||
If you are unsatisfied with the policy of an Apple dealer regarding
|
||
the servicing, be aware of this fact. If you're to be an authorized Apple
|
||
repair center, you M U S T service any and all Apple equipment made. The
|
||
Apple //GS, //e, and //c logic boards are R E Q I R E D stock items. All
|
||
Apple parts can be ordered overnight, provided Apple has them in stock. A
|
||
backorder on an Apple service part is rare. As a former Apple technician,
|
||
the only time Apple had a problem with stock of repair parts was when they
|
||
moved the entire operation to Texas. I'm sure they've got it straightened
|
||
out by now.
|
||
|
||
Final exercise: Tell them your Lisa screen is burned out and ask how
|
||
much for the part and labor if it truly is. Answer.... About $250.00
|
||
|
||
Quality Computers --- Power for Performance.
|
||
(W.CARVER1, CAT5, TOP8, MSG:3/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
>>> WHAT'S NEW <<<
|
||
""""""""""""""""""
|
||
|
||
WestCode Announces TypeSet:
|
||
A TrueType Productivity Package For Your Apple IIGS
|
||
"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
|
||
San Diego, California: WestCode Software, Inc. is pleased to announce
|
||
TypeSet, a powerful three-part TrueType font management and productivity
|
||
package for the Apple IIGS. TypeSet provides Apple IIGS users with several
|
||
essential tools currently missing from their TrueType toolbox, including: a
|
||
What-You-See-Is-What-You-Get (WYSIWYG) Font menu, font sets, and font
|
||
reporting. WestCode spokesman Tony Gentile said, "If you're working with
|
||
TrueType fonts on the Apple IIGS, you need TypeSet."
|
||
|
||
TypeSet is a IIGS New Desk Accessory (NDA) which easily installs on a
|
||
startup disk. The first and most dramatic TypeSet feature is its ability to
|
||
display fonts in their own typeface inside the Font menu of IIGS desktop
|
||
software. Apple IIGS users will now be able to see what a font looks like
|
||
before selecting it. This feature works with most popular desktop
|
||
applications, such as: AppleWorks GS, BeagleWrite GS, and Platinum Paint.
|
||
Users may specify whether the font names appear in 10 or 12 pt.
|
||
|
||
TypeSet also provides users with another powerful feature: font
|
||
management. Font management is accomplished by allowing users to define
|
||
font Sets composed of specific user selected fonts. Grouping fonts into
|
||
different Sets allows the user to control the number of fonts in their Font
|
||
menu, making font selection easier and reducing clutter. Users may define
|
||
as many sets with as few or as many fonts as desired in each set.
|
||
|
||
Finally, the last point in TypeSet's triad of features is its ability
|
||
to generate reports. TypeSet allows users to generate reports in any of
|
||
four layouts, including: All Characters, Keystroke Equivalents, Line
|
||
Showings, and Various Sizes. These reports are perfect for building a user<EFBFBD>s
|
||
personal font catalog. The reports generated with TypeSet can be output to
|
||
both the screen and printer. WestCode CEO Rob Renstrom said, "TypeSet
|
||
continues WestCode's tradition of bringing state-of- the-art,
|
||
Macintosh-like technology to the Apple IIGS."
|
||
|
||
TypeSet is the latest outstanding software product by the programming
|
||
team of Steven Disbrow and Joe Wankerl of EGO Systems, publishers of GS+
|
||
Magazine and authors of the ever popular EGOed Desk Accessory text editor.
|
||
|
||
Founded in 1990, WestCode Software has earned a reputation for
|
||
excellence through the success of their innovative InWords OCR program, as
|
||
well as the award-winning Pointless TrueType interpreter program. With
|
||
additional products forthcoming and a steadfast commitment to improving
|
||
existing products, WestCode continues to fulfill its pledge to provide
|
||
high-quality, low-priced software.
|
||
|
||
System requirements for TypeSet are an Apple IIGS with 1.25 megabytes
|
||
of RAM, GS/OS System 5.0.4 or later, and Pointless 2.0 or later.
|
||
|
||
TypeSet will be available in late July, at a suggested retail price of
|
||
$49.95.
|
||
|
||
WestCode Software, Inc.
|
||
15050 Avenue of Science, Suite 112
|
||
San Diego, CA 92128
|
||
|
||
Sales and Information: (619) 487-9200
|
||
Technical Support: (619) 487-9233
|
||
FAX: (619) 487-9255
|
||
(WESTCODE, CAT37, TOP7, MSG:1/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
|
||
ECON Announces Addressed For Success GS/OS Desktop Address Database
|
||
"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
|
||
Oviedo, FL - Econ Technologies Inc. announced the addition of a new
|
||
member to its line of software. "Addressed For Success" is a GS/OS,
|
||
desktop-based database management package that elegantly manages large
|
||
lists of names and addresses. It includes powerful features not found in
|
||
any other software package, wrapped up in a friendly, easy-to-use
|
||
interface.
|
||
|
||
Addressed For Success supports a variety of methods to create an
|
||
address database. Addresses can be entered using the built-in editor or
|
||
imported directly from AppleWorks Classic database files. Additionally,
|
||
any database that has been saved as a standard ASCII file can also be
|
||
imported.
|
||
|
||
Filling a void in the Apple IIgs' productivity software, Addressed
|
||
For Success allows one to easily print addresses, graphics, and postal
|
||
barcodes on any kind of label form, including envelopes. One can instantly
|
||
view exactly how labels or envelopes will appear before printing,
|
||
eliminating guesswork. Addressed For Success contains features found
|
||
nowhere else, such as: automatic return address generation, a 65,000-
|
||
character memo field, selection by example, bulk sortings, full support of
|
||
the clipboard, and automatic PostNet barcode generation. Addressed For
|
||
Success also comes with over 30 predefined label templates supporting
|
||
virtually every standard Avery label format.
|
||
|
||
Addressed For Success is the first GSOS-based program to come as a
|
||
result of the recent expansion of ECON Technologies' programming staff. It
|
||
is a testament to the firm commitment ECON has made to bring useful,
|
||
productivity-oriented software to the Apple IIgs.
|
||
|
||
Requirements: Apple IIgs with 1Mb of memory and System Software 6.0
|
||
or greater. Compatible with The Manager from Seven Hills.
|
||
|
||
Addressed For Success will be available this summer with a suggested
|
||
retail price of $49.95.
|
||
(ECON, CAT35, TOP11, MSG:1/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
|
||
SHAREWARE SOLUTIONS II:
|
||
AN EXCITING APPLE II JOURNEY INTO THE FUTURE
|
||
""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
|
||
(San Rafael, CA.) Joe Kohn and Shareware Solutions is proud to
|
||
announce a brand new publication for the Apple II family of computers -
|
||
Shareware Solutions II: The Newsletter. Written and published entirely by
|
||
long-time inCider/A+ Contributing Editor Joe Kohn, the premiere issue of
|
||
Shareware Solutions II is scheduled to debut in July, 1993, just a few
|
||
short weeks after the final issue of inCider/A+ is published.
|
||
|
||
As a long time supporter of the Apple II family of computers, Joe Kohn
|
||
has worked in a number of capacities in the Apple II world, including
|
||
holding positions as Sysop of the Apple II Forums on The Source Information
|
||
Network and as the Freeware and Shareware Librarian for Big Red Computer
|
||
Club. He has been a Contributing Editor for The Apple IIGS Buyer's Guide
|
||
and inCider/A+ and has had more than 150 articles about the Apple II
|
||
published in those magazines, as well as in GS+ Magazine, Call-A.P.P.L.E,
|
||
Softdisk G-S and Big Red Computer Club's Scarlett. His freeware
|
||
"Connections" column has been reprinted by scores of User Groups
|
||
world-wide, and his work with Apple II computers has been written about in
|
||
GS+, Nibble, The AppleWorks Forum, Texas II, and the San Francisco
|
||
Examiner.
|
||
|
||
Shareware Solutions II will provide timely information about new and
|
||
classic public domain, freeware and shareware software, and will continue
|
||
to provide subscribers with low cost access to that software via the mail.
|
||
Shareware Solutions II, however, will include much more information than
|
||
Shareware Solutions: The Column. Shareware Solutions II will also provide
|
||
general information and solutions that will help Apple II users, educators,
|
||
and hobbyists continue to use their current computer systems well into the
|
||
next millennium.
|
||
|
||
In each issue, Joe Kohn will share useful hints and tips about using
|
||
the Apple II family of computers, will offer insightful reviews of hardware
|
||
and software products, will provide money saving advice, and will offer
|
||
tutorials and "how to" articles. All issues of Shareware Solutions II will
|
||
include in-depth articles designed to help readers get more bytes for their
|
||
bucks. Subscribers will learn how to take control over their Apple II's
|
||
for increased productivity and more fun. Shareware Solutions II will offer
|
||
information that computer novices will understand and computer hobbyists
|
||
will marvel at. Shareware Solutions II will offer an on-going source of
|
||
news and views for the Apple II community, and will be an on-going Apple II
|
||
resource guide.
|
||
|
||
Available by subscription only, Shareware Solutions II will provide
|
||
readers with at least 12 pages of fact filled and professionally written
|
||
articles in each issue. There will not be any advertising. The North
|
||
American subscription price is only $25 for 12 issues; for overseas air
|
||
mail delivery, the cost for a subscription is $40.
|
||
|
||
In the beginning, Shareware Solutions II will be mailed to subscribers
|
||
on a bi-monthly schedule, with the eventual goal of publishing one issue
|
||
per month.
|
||
|
||
Make all checks or money orders out to Joe Kohn. US Funds Only.
|
||
Sorry, but no charge cards, purchase orders or COD orders will be accepted.
|
||
|
||
Apple II Forever!
|
||
|
||
Subscribe to Shareware Solutions II today!
|
||
|
||
Joe Kohn
|
||
166 Alpine Street
|
||
San Rafael, CA 94901
|
||
USA
|
||
(J.KOHN, CAT28, TOP4, MSG:14/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
|
||
PMPUNZIP UPATE RELEASED Parkhurst Micro Products is proud to announce
|
||
""""""""""""""""""""""" the latest revision of its popular PMPUnzip
|
||
utility: PMPUnzip Version 2.0! Version 2.0 is now compatible with the new
|
||
PKZIP Version 2.0x archive files and works better with multitasking
|
||
software and text files.
|
||
|
||
FEATURES
|
||
''''''''
|
||
o Access to all files stored in ZIP archives, including files
|
||
that were stored, shrunk, reduced, imploded, or deflated
|
||
(NEW!!).
|
||
o Access to full pathnames stored in ZIP archives, including any
|
||
subdirectories in the archive.
|
||
o All ZIP file extraction routines are written in 65816 assembly
|
||
language for speed.
|
||
o Multiple ZIP files may be open at one time.
|
||
o Multiple info windows may be brought up on any of the files in
|
||
any open archive. Info windows contain more information on the
|
||
file, including modification date and time, compressed size,
|
||
and more.
|
||
o Archive comments! Using a proprietary PC character font,
|
||
PMPUnzip will display in the IBM character set any comment
|
||
included in the ZIP archive. Many PC bulletin boards will have
|
||
information screens included inside ZIP files using PC graphic
|
||
characters. These will show up as they were meant to look.
|
||
o The last modified time and date (as stored with the ZIP
|
||
archive) will be retained in the extracted file.
|
||
o NEW!! Version 2.0 will now automatically convert text files
|
||
created on other platforms to the Apple's CR-delimited text
|
||
file format.
|
||
o NEW!! PMPUnzip now has an option for extracting files in the
|
||
background. This allows you to use NDAs while extracting, and
|
||
allows you to use other applications at the same time when
|
||
operating under multitasking software, such as The Manager(tm)
|
||
by Seven Hills Software.
|
||
o NEW!! PMPUnzip now keeps preferences so you can customize how
|
||
you want the program to work.
|
||
o Disk functions. PMPUnzip includes the ability to format or
|
||
erase a volume and change the attributes on a file.
|
||
o MessageCenter aware! PMPUnzip will allow opening of ZIP files
|
||
from The Finder(tm) (or any Finder-like program that passes
|
||
file information between applications via the MessageCenter) by
|
||
either double-clicking on the file's icon or by choosing the
|
||
file and selecting "Open" from the Finder's "File" menu. You
|
||
can also have multiple ZIP files selected when you select
|
||
"Open" and PMPUnzip will open them all.
|
||
o Appleshare and other FST compatible. Since PMPUnzip uses
|
||
GS/OS and the toolbox for all of its disk and file access, it
|
||
will just as easily open a ZIP archive on an HFS or Appleshare
|
||
volume as it will a ProDOS volume.
|
||
o Single-disk friendly. PMPUnzip was designed to work with
|
||
single-disk users. You will be prompted for which disk to
|
||
insert during an extraction.
|
||
o Most text used in PMPUnzip is stored as resources and can be
|
||
modified by any resource editor. For instance, text can be
|
||
translated into different languages without having to write an
|
||
entirely different version of the program.
|
||
|
||
SHAREWARE PMPUnzip 2.0 is SHAREWARE. The shareware fee is only $15.
|
||
''''''''' For this, you will get a diskette with the most current
|
||
version of PMPUnzip 2.x, free updates in the mail for Version 2.x, and a
|
||
20% discount on ANSITerm Version 2.0. If you have sent in your shareware
|
||
fee for a previous version of PMPUnzip (1.0, 1.0.1, or 1.0.2), the
|
||
shareware fee for Version 2.0 is only $5.
|
||
(PMP, CAT38, TOP3, MSG:2/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
|
||
Announcing "Helium Balloons" Balloons Software is proud to announce a
|
||
"""""""""""""""""""""""""""" new bi-monthly disk-based publication for
|
||
Apple-using parents, teachers, and librarians. Commencing Sept. 1993,
|
||
Helium Balloons will include how-to articles, software reviews, book
|
||
reviews, first-person anecdotes, general education news, along with
|
||
selected creative writings by and for children. The Apple II version will
|
||
be distributed on two double-sided 5.25 inch disks. The Macintosh (tm)
|
||
version will be distributed on a single 800K floppy. Each issue will be
|
||
accompanied by a short hard-copy newsletter.
|
||
|
||
The content will include regular columns on creative expression,
|
||
low-end classroom solutions, special needs computing, telecommunications,
|
||
gifted/talented topics, emergent literacy, problem solving, community
|
||
involvement in schools/libraries, student community service, public access
|
||
computing, and computer equity issues.
|
||
|
||
Helium Balloons will cover a broad range of subjects of interest to
|
||
parents, teachers, librarians, and educators. Educational computing will
|
||
be just one facet of the publication's coverage.
|
||
|
||
In a related development, Helium Balloons will be picking up the
|
||
existing Apple II subscribers of the Teachers' Idea and Information
|
||
Exchange, as well as subscribers to The AppleWorks Educator newsletter.
|
||
|
||
Important note: The Teachers' Idea and Information Exchange will
|
||
continue publishing its quarterly publication for Macintosh and IBM users
|
||
of Microsoft Works. And David Chesebrough, former publisher of The
|
||
AppleWorks Educator, will continue to commercially distribute his books on
|
||
the educational uses of AppleWorks. Fashioned in the style of a user group
|
||
publication, Helium Balloons' central aim is to create and foster a
|
||
participatory, rather then exclusory, publication. The editorial staff
|
||
extends an invitation to all like-minded souls to join us on this journey.
|
||
|
||
5 issues per school year. Sept./Oct., Nov./Dec., Jan./Feb.,
|
||
March/Apr., May/June.
|
||
|
||
Subscription rates: $35/yr. for United States and Territories;
|
||
$40/yr. for Canada and Mexico; $50/yr. Overseas air mail subscriptions
|
||
|
||
School site license: $60/yr. Includes both Apple II and Mac versions
|
||
of Helium Balloons.
|
||
|
||
Balloons Software, 5201 Chevy Chase Pkwy. NW, Washington DC 20015.
|
||
(202) 244-2223. GEnie: p.shapiro1; America Online: pshapiro
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
>>> THROUGH THE GRAPEVINE <<<
|
||
"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
|
||
|
||
APPLEWORKS 4.0? ALMOST! The WORKS 4.0 is a major enhancement for
|
||
"""""""""""""""""""""""" AppleWorks 3.0 that adds vast amounts of
|
||
functionality to the popular integrated package. Programmed by Randy
|
||
Brandt and Dan Verkade and published by Quality Computers, The WORKS 4.0 is
|
||
the result of years of "wouldn't it be neat" daydreaming. Upgrades to
|
||
every module are incorporated. I'll be posting a complete list tomorrow.
|
||
(There are so many new features that I simply refuse to even try to list
|
||
them all without the sheet that Randy sent us close by. <g>)
|
||
|
||
For the record, Claris is not involved in producing this upgrade.
|
||
What you will get when you buy The WORKS 4.0 is a disk that modifies your
|
||
AW3 disk, sort of like a TimeOut application on steroids. YOU MUST have
|
||
AW3 to use The WORKS 4.0.
|
||
|
||
Also for the record, the code-name for this product (before it was
|
||
announced) was Quadriga. The product's real name is The WORKS 4.0. (This
|
||
disclaimer is included to make Apple's lawyers happy. I've heard some
|
||
rumblings that "Quadriga" and "Quadra" sound too much alike for their peace
|
||
of mind. <grin>)
|
||
|
||
The WORKS 4.0 will be released on October 1, 1993 and will sell for
|
||
$79.95. For a limited time, you can pre-order it and save $10. Call
|
||
1-800-777-3642 to order.
|
||
|
||
Oh yes. Apple and Quadra are registered trademarks of Apple Computer,
|
||
Inc. AppleWorks is a registered trademark of Apple Computer, Inc. licensed
|
||
to Claris Corporation. Claris is a registered trademark of Claris
|
||
Corporation. The WORKS 4.0 is a trademark of Quality Computers, Inc. And
|
||
of course, Quadriga is a registered trademark of Ben Hur.
|
||
(QUALITY, CAT42, TOP29, MSG:1/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
>>>>> TheWorks 4.0 Specifications
|
||
"""""
|
||
Desktop >>>
|
||
"""""""
|
||
Three desktops allow loading of 36 files
|
||
Lists up to 255 files instead of old 170-file limit
|
||
Lists text files at "Add Files" menu and automatically loads them to WP
|
||
Add to clipboard option adds data without replacing existing contents
|
||
Disk and file maintenance included under Other Activities
|
||
Alarm clock feature
|
||
Auto-save files after preset number of minutes
|
||
Five printers may be defined (instead of 3)
|
||
Hewlett-Packard DeskJet support built-in
|
||
QuickPath allows you to choose from a pre-defined list of pathnames
|
||
Change Disk menu shows volume names when OA-? is pressed
|
||
|
||
Data Base >>>
|
||
"""""""""
|
||
60 categories per record (instead of 20)
|
||
30 reports instead of 20
|
||
Get selection rules from a report
|
||
Faster display on large files with selection rules
|
||
Lightning-fast finds in sorted categories
|
||
Reports can auto-sort before printing
|
||
Date categories support dates from AD 1000 to AD 9999
|
||
Export/import character-delimited text files
|
||
Formulas allow spreadsheet-style math in DB
|
||
Data from other files can be automatically imported
|
||
Data can be automatically exported to other files
|
||
|
||
Word Processor >>>
|
||
""""""""""""""
|
||
Split-screen lets you view one part of a file while working elsewhere
|
||
Improved mail-merge & find functions
|
||
New symbols instead of carets make it easier to identify formatting
|
||
New glossary feature allows easy entry of addresses and other info from DB
|
||
|
||
Spreadsheet >>>
|
||
"""""""""""
|
||
Other desktop files may be accessed (as in @SUM("OtherFile":B4...B9))
|
||
Date math (and Julian dates) are supported
|
||
Titles in the file are printed at the top of each page
|
||
New Find options allow searches for numbers, formulas; by row or column
|
||
A pop-up list makes it easy to enter functions in a formula
|
||
New functions include ALERT, DATE, FIND, JOIN, LC, LEN, MID, TEXT, UC, VAL
|
||
|
||
System >>>
|
||
""""""
|
||
Runs on 128K 6502-based IIe or better; prefers 256K and 65C02 processor
|
||
UltraMacros playback module included (macro files appear in TimeOut menu)
|
||
TimeOut & Init Manager built-in
|
||
|
||
SPECIFICATIONS SUBJECT TO CHANGE WITHOUT NOTICE
|
||
(QUALITY, CAT42, TOP29, MSG:21/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
|
||
HYPERSTUDIO FESTIVAL Well day 1 of the HyperStudio Festival is now
|
||
"""""""""""""""""""" history. Highlights included the opening session
|
||
with reluctant introducer Pam Wagner ("I've never done this before."),
|
||
followed by a five-minute video made entirely with HyperStudio and produced
|
||
by a French filmmaker (whose name escapes me for the moment). Not to be
|
||
outdone by the film, Roger appeared and "bantered" for about 45 minutes (as
|
||
only Roger can), only to be upstaged in the end by the appearance of
|
||
HyperMascot Addy (who did an admirable job of holding her water in front of
|
||
a crowd of over 200 attendees, as did Roger ;). The eighteen 50-minute
|
||
sessions ranged from Mac HS topics on video spigot and HyperLogo to IIGS
|
||
topics on HS in special education, SimpleScripting and animation. A teacher
|
||
from southern Cal even brought a few of her students to show of their stack
|
||
making skills. Presenters included Jim Hirsch, Sheldon Davids, Mike
|
||
Westerfield and Bill Lynn. The day was capped off by a 3-hour beach party
|
||
(that I was unable to attend, unfortunately, so use your imagination). Day 2
|
||
is dawning as I write so I'll continue my report later today.
|
||
|
||
-Cheers... Bill Lynn
|
||
(W.LYNN2, CAT32, TOP11, MSG:2/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
>>>>> That's it! The First Annual HyperStudio Festival is now a part of
|
||
""""" history and one that I will not soon forget. The more than 200
|
||
people in attendance represented a unique cross-section of HyperStudio
|
||
users who shared at least one thing in common... a love for HyperStudio. It
|
||
isn't often that I present at a conference where everyone is already
|
||
familiar with HS and can share their own unique insights and experience. It
|
||
was truly a worthwhile event and I, for one, hope that RWP begins making
|
||
plans for next year's event as soon as possible.
|
||
|
||
Fifteen hour-long sessions were completed today with topics that
|
||
included using LaserDisc players effectively, how to make money selling
|
||
your stacks, using Lego with HyperStudio (neat!), HyperStudio and special
|
||
education, and Stupid Button Tricks (my session). I was completely taken by
|
||
surprise with the attendance at the Stupid Button Tricks session (standing
|
||
room only) and I have to admit that I may be a bit stigmatized by SBT since
|
||
I was being referred to as "that stupid button guy" (just don't forget the
|
||
"button" part, OK?). The day was capped off with an "Ask The Experts" panel
|
||
that consisted of Roger, Mike O'Keefe, Mike Westerfield, Dave Cochran, and
|
||
Bill Lynn (that stupid button guy). Some "hot" news from RW included the
|
||
fact that a PC version of HyperStudio may well be a reality by this time
|
||
next year, and I was successful in getting Mike O'Keefe to admit that the
|
||
animation procedures in the IIGS version will look a lot more like those in
|
||
the Mac version soon (i.e. much easier to use, like importing clip art). In
|
||
fact, don't be surprised if you see HS 4.0 in the not too distant future
|
||
(once the Mac version is filled out a bit more). Look for stand-alone
|
||
versions of Mike Westerfield's "HyperLogo" for the IIGS and the Mac very
|
||
soon (perhaps the IIGS version at KansasFest? Perhaps.).
|
||
|
||
Look for the HyperStudio Mac Preview Disk (available soon from RWP)
|
||
which is a fully-implemented version of HyperStudio for the Mac that will
|
||
run for 30 days.
|
||
|
||
Well, I'm completely exhausted from jet lag, my ingrown toenail is
|
||
killing me and I've got to get up at 4:30am to get on a plane :(. Watch
|
||
for info on HyperFest for next year and don't miss it. I know I won't.
|
||
|
||
Cheers... Bill Lynn (the stupid button guy)
|
||
(W.LYNN2, CAT32, TOP11, MSG:3/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
|
||
HYPERSTUDIO 4.0? PROBABLY! Gosh that sounds great. Wish I could have
|
||
""""""""""""""""""""""""""" been there.
|
||
|
||
So Bill, did Roger really say that there might be a HyperStudio 4.0?
|
||
-Dean Esmay (A2.DEAN, CAT32, TOP11, MSG:4/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
>>>>> Yep! You can corner him at Avilla and ask him yourself.
|
||
"""""
|
||
-Cheers... Bill Lynn
|
||
(BILL.LYNN, CAT32, TOP11, MSG:5/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
>>>>> Corner him at Avilla? It's not hard to get a question to Roger, the
|
||
""""" problem is scheduling time for his answer <GRIN!> --KFest '92
|
||
(A2.HANGTIME, CAT32, TOP11, MSG:6/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
|
||
WHERE'S RELIEFWARE? Hi there. Just thought I'd post a request for you
|
||
""""""""""""""""""" BBS'ers and user's group librarians. I have just
|
||
moved from Clarksville, TN to Midland, GA (courtesy of the U. S. Army), and
|
||
therefore need to let the world know that ReliefWare Central has moved.
|
||
Revised versions of OneArm Battle, Plunder!, and Milestones 2000 are in the
|
||
library, along with a small file (RW.UPDATER) that edits the resources on
|
||
Version 1.5 of these games to show the new address and a version number of
|
||
1.5.1.
|
||
If you have these games (or know someone who does), please help me
|
||
update the version. The forwarding order on the Puyallup address has
|
||
expired, and the Clarksville forwarding order will die similarly soon.
|
||
However, ReliefWare is still alive. Thank you!
|
||
|
||
---7273 E. Wynfield Lp, Midland GA 31820-9025---
|
||
If you run a BBS, or know someone who does, puh-leeeze replace your
|
||
1.5's with these new ones. Or, better yet: download RW.UPDATER, and it will
|
||
convert your 1.5's to 1.5.1's. (And it's a quick DL...) :)
|
||
|
||
The game play is identical; it just changes the address. And no, I
|
||
doubt I'll update them again (the Army PROMISES they won't move me for
|
||
several years... and the check is in the mail). ;)
|
||
|
||
I have started work back on Monster Lab again (I know, I know, it's
|
||
more than a year past its vapor point) :( and I'll try to finish it
|
||
this time.
|
||
|
||
God bless!
|
||
|
||
---Ken (better late than MS-DOS) Franklin
|
||
(KEN.FRANKLIN, CAT6, TOP3, MSG:145 and CAT3, TOP25, MSG:50/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
|
||
WHILE WE'RE AT IT, WHERE'S DTUILS? A discussion occurred not too long ago
|
||
"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""" concerning the whereabouts of DTUtils
|
||
and its authors, Robert Mueller and Tony Morton. I believe the discussion
|
||
occurred in the Seven Hills BB area... I thought it more appropriate here.
|
||
I recently contacted Rob via the Internet and he replied within 24 hours.
|
||
The text of his response is contained here for those of you interested.
|
||
|
||
>Development of Desktop Utilities 4.0 is still continuing. I have not
|
||
>sent out letters to any people for quite some time as V3.3 is still
|
||
>the latest completed version and the cost of sending out over 50
|
||
>letters (most international) would be quite expensive from Australia.
|
||
>Thus, I have basically remained silent, except for any computer
|
||
>networks I have access to (i.e. Internet) where I have said that
|
||
>work on DTU 4.0 is continuing, albeit, slowly. It has taken MUCH longer
|
||
>than expected to modularize DTU, and all of the modules are being
|
||
>totally rewritten to fit into this new modular structure. We
|
||
>currently have no idea what the expected completion date is. If
|
||
>you know of any other people who have sent in shareware fees, and
|
||
>are also wondering what is happening, could you please pass this
|
||
>message on to them.
|
||
>
|
||
>We thank you for your support of Desktop Utilities, and hope that
|
||
>your patience does not run out, development IS continuing.
|
||
>
|
||
>Rob
|
||
>
|
||
>--
|
||
>| Robert Mueller - robm@ecr.mu.oz.au - 2nd year Sci/Eng Melbourne Uni
|
||
>student |
|
||
>|Ask me about Desktop Utilities 3.3 and the 'soon to be released' version
|
||
>4.0 |
|
||
>Critic, n.:
|
||
> A person who boasts himself hard to please because nobody tries
|
||
> to please him.
|
||
> -- Ambrose Bierce, "The Devil's Dictionary"
|
||
|
||
Contact him at the Internet address he shows above and let him know
|
||
that I told you so. Internet now costs the same as GEmail so no problem
|
||
there. If you don't know how to access the Internet, p. 207 will help you
|
||
with it. This letter to Rob was my first try at the Internet gateway and I
|
||
had no problems. -Rick
|
||
(R.ADAMS48, CAT2, TOP7, MSG:21/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
|
||
SHAREWARE SOLUTIONS II SPECIAL OFFERS In the initial press release that
|
||
""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""" I'd posted (and re-posted) about
|
||
Shareware Solutions II, I'd made mention that Shareware Solutions II
|
||
subscribers would be able to take advantage of some money saving offers.
|
||
|
||
Among some of the offers that will be made to subscribers in Issue #1
|
||
is a nearly 50% discount on software from Seven Hills, and the low cost
|
||
($15) availability of System 6.0.1 via the mail.
|
||
|
||
Through the arrangements I have made, these special offers are only
|
||
open to subscribers.
|
||
|
||
In addition to the deals, Issue #1 will include a guided tour of Apple
|
||
Expo West, a technical article offering step-by-step instructions on how to
|
||
use your IIGS custom icons with System 6 (even when an application contains
|
||
its own rIcon bundle that generally takes precedence), an article entitled
|
||
Modem Madness that includes info that any modem user should enjoy (with a
|
||
special offer for GEnie users and soon-to-be GEnie users), a continuation
|
||
of inCider's Grapevine hint/tips/rumor column, a listing of dozens of
|
||
freeware and shareware disks available through the mail, a first look at
|
||
System 6.0.1, and an update on what next to expect from Burger Bill
|
||
Heineman.
|
||
|
||
It's not too late to subscribe. The first issue should be in the mail
|
||
no later than July 15, 1993, barring no further delays. Apple II Forever!
|
||
-Joe Kohn (J.KOHN, CAT28, TOP4, MSG:111/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
|
||
THE (FINANCIAL) BOTTOM LINE Allow me to leak a rumor... Sometime later
|
||
""""""""""""""""""""""""""" this month Quality Computers will be
|
||
releasing a program called Bottom Line. It is a nice compromise between
|
||
YMM and Quicken. It provides budgeting capabilities along with checkbook
|
||
management (something Quicken added to their IBM and Mac versions, but not
|
||
the Apple II). But it is not as comprehensive as YMM. It is easy to set
|
||
up and use and allows you to use the same Quicken checks you've always
|
||
used. It also includes a nifty export utility that allows you to dump your
|
||
account data into an AppleWorks spreadsheet.
|
||
|
||
It does have one drawback however... it is not hard drive installable.
|
||
It runs on either 3.5" or 5.25" disk and runs quickly. It is an 8-bit
|
||
program so it runs on a //e as well as a IIGS.
|
||
|
||
Sound interesting?
|
||
-Walker (W.ARCHER2, CAT8, TOP11, MSG:95/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
|
||
BUT SHE *LIKES* THE IIGS... Hey all you big hearted GSers! I wonder if
|
||
""""""""""""""""""""""""""" any one out there can help me out.
|
||
I have a old friend who is disabled and is not able to leave her home. She
|
||
has been kinda living her life vicariously through the use of a IIgs from
|
||
my work that I was able to loan her. Though she was given a Mac SE with
|
||
one meg, two 800k drives, and a Imagewriter I printer, she was never very
|
||
happy with it, but she has fallen in love with the IIgs <Thanks to Joe Kohn
|
||
and all his Shareware Solutions!> It has really made a difference in her
|
||
whole outlook on life!
|
||
|
||
Unfortunately, the IIgs has to go back to work, and we have been
|
||
trying to locate her a IIgs. She is on a extremely limited income, and I
|
||
am a California Public School Teacher <which should tell you something
|
||
about my financial status> She can't afford much.
|
||
|
||
She definitely wants a IIgs, and would be willing to swap the Mac and
|
||
printer for a basic IIgs set up. <I have another ImageWriter I she can
|
||
have.>.
|
||
|
||
Anyone out there have any suggestions or can offer any help? We can
|
||
provide you documentation that she really is disabled so you will know this
|
||
is not a scam, and can probably swing some sort of receipt through social
|
||
services for any donations that you could write off.
|
||
|
||
It is amazing the difference the "dead" Apple II has made in her life.
|
||
I really want to get her a system of her own.
|
||
|
||
Thanks!
|
||
|
||
-Pax!
|
||
-=- Plato -=- (A.HUTCHINSON, CAT4, TOP14, MSG:91/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
|
||
STAR TREK RSOUNDS Now that I'm in the publishing business, I really had
|
||
""""""""""""""""" wanted an exclusive "scoop", but after seeing all the
|
||
posts here recently about Star Trek sound files, I decided to give up my
|
||
scoop, and save you all a lot of trouble.
|
||
|
||
A Mr. Bill Moore of Tennessee contacted Sound Source Unlimited last
|
||
year and asked about availability of Trek sounds for the GS. After being
|
||
greeted with the usual questions (which Mac is a IIGS?), and supplying all
|
||
the correct answers, Mr. Moore was contracted to convert to IIGS format,
|
||
the following: Star Trek (Classic) Volume 1, Star Trek: The Next
|
||
Generation Volumes 1 and 2, Terminator 2: Judgement Day, and 2001: A Space
|
||
Odyssey.
|
||
|
||
According to Mr. Moore: "Pricing is unavailable because no release
|
||
date has been set; I will recommend an SRP of about $39.95 each, meaning
|
||
places like LRO and Quality will sell it for about $25 to $30 each."
|
||
|
||
So, just sit tight. They're coming.
|
||
-Joe Kohn
|
||
Publisher, Shareware Solutions II
|
||
(J.KOHN, CAT6, TOP7, MSG:139/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
|
||
NEW TALK IS CHEAP COMING How to get version 4.00? Stay tuned... I'll
|
||
"""""""""""""""""""""""" have details on that once the program is
|
||
actually shipping (probably a few weeks away).
|
||
|
||
Do you need it? Probably.
|
||
|
||
-Don Elton (delton) or delton@pro-carolina.oau.org
|
||
(DELTON, CAT13, TOP3, MSG:125/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
>>> MESSAGE SPOTLIGHT <<<
|
||
"""""""""""""""""""""""""
|
||
|
||
Apple II RoundTable
|
||
Category 5, Topic 8
|
||
Message 2 Wed Jun 30, 1993
|
||
MORGAN-DAVIS at 20:00 EDT
|
||
|
||
Apple hasn't been involved in actively supporting the Apple II since
|
||
1986 when the last real engineering was done to solidify the IIGS design.
|
||
Ever since then, Apple's given very little attention to the Apple II
|
||
series, compared to the Macintosh. The time to give up on Apple Computer
|
||
was about eight years ago.
|
||
|
||
However, Apple computer is not what makes Apple II computing what it
|
||
is. It's the developers and third-party companies that have made the Apple
|
||
II a venerable and productive machine today. We're just lucky that we
|
||
continue to get new operating system software every now and then from
|
||
Apple. I don't feel that the future of the Apple II even depends on that.
|
||
|
||
Don't give up on the Apple II developers, which is what you're really
|
||
doing. If the remaining Apple II users replaced their machines with PCs, it
|
||
wouldn't hurt Apple at all, they wouldn't even notice. Unfortunately, the
|
||
migration would completely decimate the Apple II developers who would
|
||
surely suffer from it.
|
||
|
||
[*][*][*]
|
||
|
||
|
||
While on GEnie, do you spend most of your time downloading files?
|
||
If so, you may be missing out some excellent information in the Bulletin
|
||
Board area. The messages listed above only scratch the surface of
|
||
what's available and waiting for you in the bulletin board area.
|
||
|
||
If you are serious about your Apple II, the GEnieLamp staff strongly
|
||
urge you to give the bulletin board area a try. There are literally
|
||
thousands of messages posted from people like you from all over the
|
||
world.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
[EOA]
|
||
[HUM]//////////////////////////////
|
||
HUMOR ONLINE /
|
||
/////////////////////////////////
|
||
Fun & Games On GEnie
|
||
""""""""""""""""""""
|
||
By Juan Jimenez
|
||
[J.JIMENEZ]
|
||
|
||
|
||
WARNING:
|
||
|
||
GEnie PC Aladdin has been determined to be harmful to your health and
|
||
mental stability. House mice routinely placed in front of a keyboard
|
||
and given Aladdin and a GEnie account have demonstrated wildly aberrant
|
||
behavior after short terms of exposure, ranging from increasing the
|
||
sizes of their paw signatures to 10x times the normal size, to engaging
|
||
in cage-to-cage flame wars regarding the issue of illegal use of
|
||
mousetraps in protected rug-covered areas, something which has already
|
||
been demonstrated to be deleterious to the living conditions and
|
||
environmental stability of the rodent population in the western
|
||
hemisphere. Withdrawal symptoms after termination of the test sessions
|
||
have also ranged from simple begging to have their modems returned to
|
||
their little computer hutches to finding patch lines running from their
|
||
cages to the closest RJ-11, connected to stolen Hayes Personal Modems,
|
||
which were themselves connected to the gerbil cages (the gerbils were
|
||
more than happy to provide power with little generators hooked up to the
|
||
running hoops in exchange for a share in the lettuce rations).
|
||
|
||
In one particular case, lightning struck near the testing facility on a
|
||
dark wednesday night, opening a large tear in the time/space continuum,
|
||
from which an uncontrollable Aladdin Lag emerged, destroying every water
|
||
bottle in sight. The rodents were found the next day with their little
|
||
tongues sticking out, completely dehydrated. Small notes folded in the
|
||
shape of tiny paper airplanes were found near the fish tank, begging for
|
||
Evian resupplies.
|
||
|
||
Secondary effects were also observed on the cat population in the
|
||
testing facility. As far as we can tell from the evidence (notes of
|
||
paper with the numbers 1 through 9, with the numerals 1 through 8
|
||
crossed out, and small vials of pure catnip next to their bodies) they
|
||
were completely freaked out at the sight of mice playing Air Warrior, at
|
||
which point they decided to do away with their entire supply of
|
||
reincarnations.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
[EOA]
|
||
[REF]//////////////////////////////
|
||
REFLECTIONS /
|
||
/////////////////////////////////
|
||
Thinking About Online Communications
|
||
""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
|
||
By Phil Shapiro
|
||
[P.SHAPIRO1]
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
>>> EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES <<<
|
||
""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
|
||
|
||
IS IT POSSIBLE? Online communications have already changed many facets
|
||
""""""""""""""" of workplace interactions. Much has been said already
|
||
about how electronic mail flattens out a corporation's management
|
||
hierarchy. Online communications might change the hiring process in a
|
||
similarly revolutionary fashion. Is it possible that "online interviews"
|
||
will totally supplant face-to-face hiring interviews?
|
||
|
||
The purpose of any employment interview is for employees and
|
||
employers to find out as much as possible about each other. Both sides are
|
||
trying to minimize the risks of getting involved in an employment situation
|
||
that later proves to be unfulfilling.
|
||
|
||
Job interviewing today is flawed only in the respect that it totally
|
||
lacks logic. About the worst possible way of finding out about a human
|
||
being (or a company) is to sit down for a casual twenty-minute chat.
|
||
Admittedly, you can draw some general conclusions about a person's demeanor
|
||
and character by looking them over from head to toe. But to delve deeper
|
||
into a person's character you need to probe further below the superficial
|
||
social surface.
|
||
|
||
Online communications offers an opportunity for both employers and
|
||
employees to do just that. Instead of sitting down for a twenty-minute
|
||
chit-chat, prospective employers and employees can engage in a more
|
||
involved, deeper, long-lasting online dialogue.
|
||
|
||
Chances are that online communications will dramatically extend the
|
||
time-span of the interviewing process. Prospective employers might court
|
||
potential employees by asking them to send e-mail comments and feedback
|
||
about goings-on in that particular industry.
|
||
|
||
To gain further insight into a person's patterns of thought,
|
||
employers might ask to see current writing samples. But instead of asking
|
||
to see just "three recent writing samples," employers can take advantage of
|
||
online communications to make more rigorous demands. It's not too
|
||
far-fetched to imagine an information-age employer asking prospective
|
||
employees to send everything they have written in the past two years.
|
||
|
||
In the situation where the job opportunity involves some measure of
|
||
creative talent, an employer might reasonably request a potential employee
|
||
to send a variety of writing samples. Companies such as Microsoft or Apple
|
||
might realistically ask interviewees to send five pieces of original
|
||
fiction, five poems, five non-fiction articles, and five recent business
|
||
letters. Looking at these combined writings should give employers a
|
||
rounded picture of prospective employees.
|
||
|
||
On the other side of the coin, potential employees can use online
|
||
communications technology to probe deeper into the working of corporations
|
||
they're considering working for. If a corporation is serious about
|
||
courting a prospective employee, the corporation should be more willing to
|
||
reveal more of itself.
|
||
|
||
The resulting courtship might very well last several months, or even
|
||
more than a year, before becoming formalized into an employer-employee
|
||
relationship. The employment interviewing process, therefore, will take on
|
||
some of the traits of the age-old process whereby two human beings get to
|
||
know one another.
|
||
|
||
Many advantages would result from this innovation in hiring practices.
|
||
Employers would have a very good sense of the character and talents of the
|
||
employees they're hiring. Employees, likewise, would have a better sense
|
||
of the company they're going to work for.
|
||
|
||
The moral of all this? Brush up on your dating skills. You might
|
||
need them in courting your next employer. And forget about polishing up
|
||
your resume. More important to have several dozen writings samples on hand
|
||
to send prospective employers.
|
||
|
||
In the coming Information Age, the written word will reign supreme.
|
||
Those who can best mold raw ideas into sterling sentences will be able to
|
||
write their own tickets.
|
||
|
||
[*][*][*]
|
||
|
||
[The author takes a keen interest in the social dimensions
|
||
of communications technology. He can be reached on GEnie
|
||
at: p.shapiro1; on America Online at: pshapiro]; on
|
||
Internet: p.shapiro1.genie.geis.com
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
[EOA]
|
||
[BEG]//////////////////////////////
|
||
BEGINNER'S CORNER /
|
||
/////////////////////////////////
|
||
Polishing Green Apples
|
||
""""""""""""""""""""""
|
||
By Steve Weyhrich
|
||
[S.WEYHRICH]
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
>>> GETTING STARTED WITH THE APPLE IIGS <<<
|
||
"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
|
||
|
||
BACK TO THE BASICS This is the beginning of a series in which I plan to
|
||
"""""""""""""""""" focus on helping the user who has just acquired his
|
||
or her Apple II computer. This article, and subsequent ones, will assume
|
||
that the reader knows NOTHING about their computer beyond how to turn it
|
||
on. I hope that the information will be useful to someone who is not
|
||
currently able to use their computer to its fullest, but wants to learn
|
||
more. Reader feedback is welcomed and encouraged, as I am no longer a
|
||
beginner myself, and have only a certain dwindling understanding of what
|
||
information would be useful to the beginner; understanding what YOU want to
|
||
learn more about will make this monthly feature more valuable for all of us.
|
||
|
||
I have chosen to start with the Apple IIGS, rather than with the older
|
||
versions of the Apple II (the ][, ][+, IIe, and IIc), because I've recently
|
||
begun to use this model, and the "beginner" experience for it is most fresh
|
||
in my mind. I plan to turn the discussion eventually to the older models,
|
||
but the IIGS is more complicated and I believe it to be a somewhat more
|
||
difficult computer on which to get "up to speed".
|
||
|
||
Some of you may not own an Apple IIGS, and you wonder whether there
|
||
is any reason to make the change. Some have made the change, but just
|
||
can't get the hang of it, and can't really do what they'd like to with it.
|
||
This article and the ones to follow should help you out.
|
||
|
||
(By the way, in the course of this article I make reference to
|
||
"8-bit" and "16-bit" computers. This relates to the amount of information
|
||
that the microprocessor is able to handle at one time. The models from the
|
||
original Apple ][ up through the IIc Plus are 8-bit computers; the Apple
|
||
IIGS is a 16-bit computer. The IIGS can handle up to 8 megabytes of RAM in
|
||
a single block; the older Apple II's can only handle 64K bytes of RAM in a
|
||
single block, though some programs can use switch-banks of memory to make
|
||
use of extra memory.)
|
||
|
||
|
||
FINDING THE RIGHT IIGS FOR YOU Okay, so you've been thinking for a while
|
||
"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""" about getting one of those Apple IIGS
|
||
systems. You've been envying all those neat features that the IIGS users
|
||
are always talking about on the A2 Roundtable on GEnie, or at the Apple
|
||
User Group meeting. Or you feel frustrated that there are just not that
|
||
many new applications (besides educational games) being released for your
|
||
Apple IIe or IIc. What steps can you follow to make the move to 16 bits?
|
||
|
||
Most of the decision depends (as usual) on how much money you have to
|
||
spend. The ideal Apple IIGS system, fully decked out, may require more
|
||
disposable cash than you have sitting around. That was where I was about
|
||
18 months ago, when I first began to seriously consider changing from my
|
||
souped-up Apple IIc to a IIGS. I had gone as far as I could with my IIc.
|
||
It had an 8 MHz Zip Chip, a one-meg Apple RAM card, and a Chinook 40 meg
|
||
hard drive (the CT-40c, which plugs into the disk port on the back of the
|
||
IIc). This gave me a nice, fast machine, both in terms of speed of disk
|
||
access and speed of the programs I ran on it.
|
||
|
||
The system that I REALLY wanted was one with 4 megs of memory
|
||
(minimum), an RGB color monitor, a fast SCSI card (for a hard disk, and
|
||
possibly a tape drive), an accelerator card, one or maybe two Apple 3.5
|
||
drives, and one Apple 5.25 drive. I decided I could stick with my old
|
||
reliable ImageWriter I printer for the time being. But the COST of getting
|
||
my ideal IIGS system seemed prohibitive. I had to try another approach to
|
||
achieve my goal.
|
||
|
||
|
||
IT COSTS >>HOW<< MUCH?! Let's look at the expenses involved in getting
|
||
""""""""""""""""""""""" a IIGS. You can't buy it from Apple dealers any
|
||
more (assuming they even know ABOUT the Apple IIGS), since it was dropped
|
||
from the dealer list in December 1992. There may be a few new systems out
|
||
there that you CAN buy from dealers that want to clear out their old
|
||
inventory, but most people today will have to look to the resale market.
|
||
If you can find someone who wants to sell his or her entire SYSTEM for a
|
||
good bundle price, and if you have that much cash available, that is the
|
||
best way to go. You'll have most (if not all) of the pieces you need to
|
||
comfortably run the most popular software, and very possibly some of the
|
||
IIGS programs you've been drooling over. But to know if the price someone
|
||
is asking for their system is reasonable, you need to know what it costs to
|
||
buy the pieces via commercial mail order businesses.
|
||
|
||
The most consistently available sources for refurbished Apple II and
|
||
IIGS systems are Sun Remarketing in Logan, UT (800-821-3221), and Shreve
|
||
Systems in Shreveport, LA (800-227-3971). Both Sun and Shreve have been
|
||
selling Apple computers (usually discontinued or refurbished models) for
|
||
some time. There have been modest changes over time for the prices on
|
||
pieces necessary to create a basic Apple IIGS system; here are their prices
|
||
as of June 1993:
|
||
|
||
Sun Shreve
|
||
--- ------
|
||
Apple IIGS CPU, ROM 01 $449 $349
|
||
with 256K RAM
|
||
Apple RGB Monitor (for IIGS) $249 $229
|
||
Apple 3.5 Drive $199 $169
|
||
Apple 5.25 Drive $139 $169
|
||
---- ----
|
||
$1036 $916
|
||
|
||
(NOTE: prices are for used equipment)
|
||
|
||
Shreve seems to be the less expensive source of an Apple IIGS basic
|
||
system. I do not know anything about the relative quality of the equipment
|
||
available from Shreve compared to Sun. I DO know that the IIGS CPU that I
|
||
ordered from Sun in February 1992 appeared to be a never-used computer; if
|
||
it WAS used, it was SO well restored and refurbished that I could not tell
|
||
the difference (with the exception that the system disks supplied with the
|
||
computer had Sun's label on them). If you're about to call Sun, however,
|
||
you will be out of luck: They are currently completely out of IIGS
|
||
computers as of June 1993, and have a waiting list of about 38 names.
|
||
Shreve DOES have them in stock (as of mid-June). Neither company is
|
||
supplying the ROM 03 IIGS, which has 1 meg of memory built-in, instead of
|
||
the 256K built into the ROM 01 version. Also note that the above prices do
|
||
not include shipping charges, so allow for that. There are probably
|
||
differences as well in the warranty offered by either company.
|
||
|
||
|
||
MOVIN' ON UP Now with this set of building blocks, you do have a IIGS
|
||
"""""""""""" computer, but you will be VERY limited in what IIGS software
|
||
you can use on it. To have a computer that is capable of running System 6,
|
||
the latest version of Apple's powerful 16-bit operating system for the
|
||
IIGS, you need a minimum of 2 megabytes of memory to do anything useful.
|
||
You can upgrade the memory on this 256K computer most inexpensively at this
|
||
time by either buying it used, as with the computer, or new from the major
|
||
Apple II mail order houses. Since there were other items I originally
|
||
wanted on my ideal IIGS system, let's price these as well:
|
||
|
||
Sequential Systems RAM GS 4 meg $115
|
||
Zip GS Card, 8MHz/16K cache $173
|
||
RamFAST/SCSI card, 256K cache $139
|
||
127 meg SCSI hard drive $304
|
||
----
|
||
$731
|
||
|
||
(NOTE: prices are for new equipment)
|
||
|
||
These prices were taken from the ad for LRO Computer Sales of
|
||
Woodstock, IL (800-275-4576, or 800-ASK-4LRO) in the July issue of inCider.
|
||
Very similar prices can be found in the ad for TMS Peripherals of Boca
|
||
Raton, FL (800-275-4867, or 800-ASK-4TMS), so shop around. These items,
|
||
along with the cost of the basic system itself, brings the price of my
|
||
ideal IIGS complete system to $1650-$1770 (again, excluding shipping
|
||
charges).
|
||
|
||
These prices were approximately the same when I started to build up my
|
||
system last year, though the hard drive, memory, and SCSI card prices were
|
||
higher then. Consequently, I immediately ruled out the idea of getting my
|
||
ideal system all at once; I couldn't afford that. With this information,
|
||
however, it did make it easier to determine what systems being sold in
|
||
classified ads REALLY should cost.
|
||
|
||
|
||
BUILD A GS ON A BUDGET It would be best to find a complete system being
|
||
"""""""""""""""""""""" sold used by someone who is changing computer
|
||
platforms to something else. That way, not only can you get all the basic
|
||
pieces you want, but there may be some nice additional goodies (such as a
|
||
hard disk or accelerator). If you decide that even a used system is not
|
||
affordable because you cannot come up with the full price all at once, ask
|
||
if the seller is willing to have the payments spread out over several
|
||
months.
|
||
|
||
If not, then the next best solution is to collect the components one
|
||
by one. You will not necessarily spend LESS over the long run (and you
|
||
might possibly spend more), but you will at least be able to get a IIGS and
|
||
begin enjoying the benefits of a more powerful computer.
|
||
|
||
The most basic, stripped-down Apple IIGS you can get is simply the CPU
|
||
(ROM 01 or ROM 03), keyboard, and mouse. You will then need to add a
|
||
monitor and disk drives. This is where those who are moving up from an
|
||
earlier Apple II such as the IIe or IIc will find the going easy. For a
|
||
monitor, you can use the monochrome monitor from your Apple II Plus, IIe,
|
||
or IIc. You will find, however, that a composite color monitor, although
|
||
it worked well for graphics, will not display 80-column text clearly.
|
||
|
||
For a disk drive, you can usually use the ones from your existing
|
||
Apple II. The disk drives used on the IIc, either the Disk IIc or the
|
||
UniDisk 3.5, will plug directly into the disk port on the IIGS. The older
|
||
style Disk ][ drives used on the II Plus and IIe can be used also; you can
|
||
just put the same disk card in slot 6 on the IIGS. You can also buy or
|
||
build a converter plug to allow an older style 5.25 drive to plug into the
|
||
IIGS disk port. The only disadvantage to the UniDisk 3.5 on the IIGS is
|
||
that it will run slower than an Apple 3.5 drive, due to a different
|
||
interleave. (To get a better explanation of "interleave", see the segment
|
||
on advances in disk drives in Part 9 of my Apple II History, in the
|
||
February 1993 issue of the A2 GEnieLamp.) However, the UniDisk 3.5 will
|
||
not run any slower than it did on your earlier Apple II, so you haven't
|
||
lost anything by going with the slower drive.
|
||
|
||
With a ROM 01 IIGS, you now have the equivalent of an Apple IIe that
|
||
runs at 2.8 MHz (instead of 1 MHz), and has 256K of memory (instead of the
|
||
maximum 128K memory on the IIe or IIc). If your IIe or II Plus had a
|
||
slot-based RAM card, that can be used on a IIGS as a RAMdisk.
|
||
(Unfortunately, the memory cards used with the IIe auxiliary slot or with
|
||
the IIc memory expansion cannot be used on the IIGS.) With this
|
||
arrangement, you have something that is close to what you had before, and
|
||
you can continue to upgrade from there.
|
||
|
||
When I was finished with my initial conversion, I had a ROM 01 IIGS,
|
||
using my Monitor IIc (the "ET" monitor). For disk storage, I used my
|
||
UniDisk 3.5, a non-Apple brand 5.25 drive, and my Chinook CT-40c hard disk,
|
||
all of which plugged into the disk port on the IIGS just as it had on the
|
||
IIc. Because I REALLY needed more memory, I added a C.V.Tech memory card,
|
||
and installed 3 megs of chips on it, giving me a total of 3.25 megs of
|
||
usable RAM -- almost three times as much memory as my 1.125 meg IIc. I had
|
||
lost the speed of the 8 MHz Zip Chip (which I noticed most when using
|
||
certain AppleWorks macros), but I finally had an Apple IIGS. It was a
|
||
start.
|
||
|
||
For those readers who plan to move beyond this start with their IIGS,
|
||
what you add at this point depends on what you want to do with your new
|
||
computer. Are you still going to use lots of 8-bit applications? Adding
|
||
more memory may help with certain programs (AppleWorks, Publish-It!, and
|
||
ProTerm are examples that come to mind). Want to avoid the floppy shuffle?
|
||
Getting a hard disk will ease your way. Graphics or games? If you want to
|
||
get into 16-bit quality, you will eventually need to get that color RGB
|
||
monitor. Music? A sound board will let you plug your IIGS into stereo
|
||
sound. And any of these things will enhance the GS operating system,
|
||
GS/OS, which can be used when you pass the 1 meg barrier: older versions
|
||
like v5.0.4 will run with 1 meg; newer versions like System 6.0 or 6.0.1
|
||
will require 2 megs or more to run well.
|
||
|
||
In the next edition of Polishing Green Apples, I would like to take a
|
||
closer look at what you can do with a REALLY bare-bones IIGS system (i.e.,
|
||
256K RAM and one 5.25 drive), and what it takes to continue upgrading it
|
||
into a good, productive system.
|
||
|
||
(If you have any comments or questions that you would like to have
|
||
addressed in a future Polishing Green Apples column, please send stamped,
|
||
self-addressed E-mail to S.WEYHRICH. If you cannot find a place to put a
|
||
stamp on your E-mail, then just send it anyway.)
|
||
|
||
-Steve Weyhrich
|
||
[*][*][*]
|
||
|
||
|
||
[Disclaimer: The mention of Shreve Systems, Sun Remarketing,
|
||
TMS Peripherals, and LRO Computer Sales is NOT to be taken as
|
||
an endorsement of these companies by Steve Weyhrich, General
|
||
Electric Information Services, A2 GEnieLamp, or the staff and
|
||
employees of any radio or TV station you might think of. As
|
||
with ANY mail order company, the buyer should take proper
|
||
precautions to inquire about warranty, return guidelines, and
|
||
other such issues. I have no reason from personal experience
|
||
to believe that any of these companies would treat you
|
||
poorly; however, I've only ordered from two of them and
|
||
cannot comment on any others with any assurance.]
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
[EOA]
|
||
[MOO]//////////////////////////////
|
||
CowTOONS! /
|
||
///////////////////////////////// (_|_)
|
||
Stock Footage (o o)
|
||
""""""""""""" ()v()
|
||
By Mike White _| |_
|
||
[MWHITE] \(( ))/
|
||
q( ~ ~ )p
|
||
\ ~ /
|
||
|~|
|
||
^ ^
|
||
|
||
"Fill yer hand you son of a...!"
|
||
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
||
Mooster Cowgburn
|
||
Moo Grit, 1969
|
||
directed by Henry Hathacow
|
||
|
||
|
||
[__] (__)
|
||
(oo) (oo)
|
||
/-------\/ \/------\
|
||
/ |)----|| |( )| \
|
||
* || || ||\__/|| *
|
||
~~ ~~ ~~ ~~
|
||
|
||
Siscow & Ebert
|
||
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
||
Moovie Critics
|
||
|
||
|
||
.:^:.
|
||
_____________________________ .::.::.
|
||
| | .:::::::::::::.
|
||
| Gunfight at the O.K. Corral | .:: ::.
|
||
|_____________________________| .:: The Moovies ::.
|
||
.:: ~~~~~~~~~~~ ::.
|
||
(__) [__] ..:: ::..
|
||
( ) ( ) .::::::Coming Attractions!::::::.
|
||
---- ------ ------ --- :: """"""""""""""""""" ::
|
||
\ / \ / \ / ::* High Moon *::
|
||
------ ------ ------ ::* The Moosic Man *::
|
||
/ \ / \ / \ ::* Calf on a Hot Tin Hoof *::
|
||
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
|
||
|
||
[*][*][*]
|
||
|
||
( )
|
||
\~~~~/
|
||
| OO |
|
||
|_~~_| CowTOONS? Stephen Litwin took us up
|
||
/ \ our offer and sent in this month's
|
||
/| |\ CowTOONS contributor selection.
|
||
/ | | \
|
||
\/ | | \/ If you have an idea for a CowTOON, we
|
||
| | would like to see it. And, if we pick
|
||
\ Q~Q / your CowTOON for publishing in GEnieLamp
|
||
] Q Q [ we will credit your account with 2 hours
|
||
]~~~~~[ of GEnie non-prime time!
|
||
> <
|
||
Mike White
|
||
ROBOCOW - The Udder Cop GEnieLamp CowToonist
|
||
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
||
by Steve Litwin
|
||
S.LITWIN2
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
[EOA]
|
||
[PDQ]//////////////////////////////
|
||
PD_QUICKVIEW /
|
||
/////////////////////////////////
|
||
ShadowWrite NDA (v1.3)
|
||
""""""""""""""""""""""
|
||
By Mel Fowler
|
||
[MELSOFT]
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
>>> REVIEW: ShadowWrite NDA (v1.3) <<<
|
||
"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
|
||
|
||
Program Name : ShadowWrite
|
||
Filename : SHADOW1.3.BXY
|
||
Library Area : 8
|
||
Program Number : 20915
|
||
File Size : 53504
|
||
Program Type : NDA Full-featured Word Processor
|
||
Author : Andre Horstmann [A.HORSTMANN]
|
||
Version Reviewed: 1.3
|
||
File Type : FREEWARE!
|
||
|
||
[*][*][*]
|
||
|
||
|
||
ABOUT THE PROGRAM We have all heard of the great watches and chocolate
|
||
""""""""""""""""" that come from Switzerland. However, did you know
|
||
that one of the best Apple IIGS programmers is also from Switzerland?: the
|
||
genius behind Bright Software, Andre Horstmann. Bright Software has
|
||
produced several outstanding products including two games, Gate and
|
||
Spacefox, both available through distributors here in the United States.
|
||
|
||
One of Andre Horstmann's best efforts for the Apple IIGS is a program
|
||
called ShadowWrite, a full-featured word processor in the form of a New
|
||
Desk Accessory (NDA). What a useful idea; I don't know what I would do
|
||
without one! It is great for opening text files or reading the documents
|
||
for new programs you have just downloaded. You can have a disk or folder
|
||
directory opened on one half the screen and ShadowWrite open on the other
|
||
half. I have used this method to write entries into my database of disk
|
||
catalogs.
|
||
|
||
The ShadowWrite NDA has evolved through the past year or so and
|
||
several versions of the program have been uploaded to the A2 library here
|
||
on GEnie. This review, however, is of version 1.3, the latest to be
|
||
uploaded, which among other new features includes a bright, shiny, new-blue
|
||
ruler, which can be shown or hidden with Apple-E.
|
||
|
||
Generally speaking, here are some features of this latest version of
|
||
ShadowWrite that I especially like:
|
||
|
||
Not only can you launch ShadowWrite as you would any NDA, via the
|
||
Apple menu, but you can specify which file types you want loaded into
|
||
ShadowWrite when you double-click on a file from the Finder. ShadowWrite's
|
||
Preferences option lets you choose to load (by Finder double-clicking) any
|
||
or all of Teach, text, source code, or AppleWorks classic. Whatever your
|
||
Preferences selection, you can still open all four types "manually", when
|
||
using ShadowWrite's Open command.
|
||
|
||
Preferences will also allow you to change the default font for new
|
||
documents and the default font for opening text files, where you might
|
||
prefer a mono-spaced font.
|
||
|
||
Although only one ruler can be assigned to a document, this new ruler
|
||
makes setting tabs, margins, and indentation easy. Also, if you open an
|
||
AppleWorks document, the tabs are automatically set to the AppleWorks
|
||
defaults. Setting justification is just as easy as clicking your mouse
|
||
when the ruler is displayed, or as fast as using the key-equivalents.
|
||
|
||
There are key-equivalents for nearly everything, with different
|
||
key-equivalents available WITHIN key-equivalents: Apple-H, for example,
|
||
selects "Save As" from the files menu, at which point you can press Apple-E
|
||
to save your document as a Teach file, Apple-T for a text file, and Apple-S
|
||
for Source. Key-equivalents are available for setting justification, font
|
||
style, and much more.
|
||
|
||
The fast cursor movement keys are also nice to have, such as
|
||
Option-Left/Right arrows for beginning and end of line. Apple-Up/Down
|
||
arrows for page up/page down, and my favorite Apple-1 through Apple-9 to
|
||
scroll to relative positions in the document, as with AppleWorks.
|
||
|
||
Stability is another strong point. With all the beta testing that
|
||
this program has gone through, this latest version is stable and bug-free.
|
||
I have not experienced a single hang or system crash while using
|
||
ShadowWrite 1.3.
|
||
|
||
Find/Replace has the ability to find returns and replace them with
|
||
spaces, which is especially useful when you download a text file and want
|
||
to put it into a word processor. No more hunting for stray returns!
|
||
|
||
Then there's the ability to Clear Highbits. I have often run across
|
||
problems when the person writing a text file uses the Merlin text editor.
|
||
Merlin is great for writing source code, but not text files. If you try to
|
||
read such a file with ShadowWrite all you get is inverted question marks.
|
||
Try using Clear Highbits and the text will come out perfect... well, at
|
||
least readable.
|
||
|
||
The ShadowWrite documentation is clear and concise in describing
|
||
all the features, menus, and key-equivalents available in the program.
|
||
|
||
Memory usage can be a real problem, and Andre Horstmann is aware
|
||
of it. This full-featured word processor NDA is remarkably small: it only
|
||
takes 66K. Horstmann even asks users to let him know which features
|
||
they could do without to make the program smaller. To my way of
|
||
thinking, ShadowWrite is great just like it is.
|
||
|
||
The thing I like best about the ShadowWrite NDA is that it is free.
|
||
Yes, ShadowWrite is FREEWARE. Use it all you want, give it to your
|
||
friends, just do not sell it. Now, can you beat that? I hardly think so!
|
||
|
||
If you would like to send E-mail to Andre Horstmann, his E-mail
|
||
address right here on GEnie is A.HORSTMANN.
|
||
|
||
[*][*][*]
|
||
|
||
|
||
Important Note! Version 1.3.2 of ShadowWrite was uploaded during the
|
||
""""""""""""""" writing of this review. You can find the new version at
|
||
file #21059. This update fixed a couple of bugs: (1) bug fixed that didn't
|
||
let you count words in documents larger than 64 Kb; (2) bug fixed that
|
||
opened some Teach documents with wrong ruler and menubar colors. Version
|
||
1.3.2 also added several new features. Softdisk Issue Text can now be
|
||
imported, although this feature has not been tested. The Preferences dialog
|
||
box now includes: Save Window Size (Open Apple-A) - Click this button to
|
||
save the current window position and size as default window position and
|
||
size; Scroll Speed - With this pop-up you can set the vertical scroll
|
||
amount field in the text editor. Changes will get activated the next time
|
||
you open SW.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
[EOA]
|
||
[LIB]//////////////////////////////
|
||
THE ONLINE LIBRARY /
|
||
/////////////////////////////////
|
||
Yours For the Downloading
|
||
"""""""""""""""""""""""""
|
||
By Mel Fowler
|
||
[MELSOFT]
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
>>> A2 Library -- Quick Takes <<<
|
||
"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
|
||
_________
|
||
/ . / THE DEAN'S LIST (A2 Menu Item 3 or Move 645;3)
|
||
/___/____/
|
||
| A new selection of great downloads from the A2 libraries
|
||
"
|
||
20995 CCCP.DEMOII.BXY GS+ Magazine's Cool Cursor v2.0 Demo
|
||
20983 POLYSONS5.1.BXY v5.1 of the IIGS MIDI sound program
|
||
+20978 GEM.4.21.BXY The amazing FREEWARE Apple II navigator!
|
||
20975 GS.ENTERTAN.BXY IIGS graphics and sound jukebox
|
||
20968 JUMBODESK21.BXY Get a bigger IIgs Desktop! v2.1
|
||
20967 WINFLATE121.BXY Save desktop space, deflate windows
|
||
+20936 APPLEII.MTS.BXY Meet the A2 SysOps RTC transcript
|
||
+20935 OFFLINE.MGR.BXY Offline cookbook for Modem Mgr
|
||
+20934 OFFLINE.TIC.BXY Offline cookbook for Talk Is Cheap
|
||
+20933 OFFLINE.PT3.BXY Offline cookbook for Proterm 3.0/3.1
|
||
20915 SHADOW1.3.BXY ShadowWrite v1.3: NDA word processor
|
||
+21019 SHARE.SOLUT.TXT Read all about ShareWare Solutions II
|
||
21018 INST.ACC.22.BXY An excellent multi-featured program launcher
|
||
21017 NTV.15.REV3.BXY 3-D Sound demo for ROM 01 IIGS's
|
||
21013 MS2000.151.BXY Milestones 2000. Cool IIGS car race game
|
||
21012 PLUNDER.151.BXY Plunder. A IIGS treasure hunt game
|
||
21011 OAB.151.BXY One Arm Battle. Slot machine game for the GS
|
||
+21003 A2.DOM.0793.BXY A2's Disk of the Month for July, 1993
|
||
+20996 CAF.RESUR.BXY AppleWorks Classic file recovery programs
|
||
21048 PMPUNZIP2.0.BXY Extract ZIP archives on your IIGS!
|
||
Now unZIPs 2.04g archives!
|
||
+21047 RB.PATCH.BXY Raster Blaster patch program
|
||
21041 VIRTUAL.BXY Create a 3-D maze from your own pictures
|
||
+21039 NEWS.9307.BXY A2 news digest for July, 1993
|
||
21034 SAP.V0.7.BXY Apple IIGS freeware animation program
|
||
21031 MORIAGS5.3.BXY Extremely addictive dungeon game for IIGS
|
||
+21029 INTERNETZEN.BXY Tutorial on how to use Internet on GEnie
|
||
21025 A2.LIST.BXY The Apple II List, from Apple Expo West!
|
||
All companies' contact info in one place
|
||
+21021 GE.OFFLINE.BXY CoPilot, GEM, and TCX in one package
|
||
|
||
+ = Works on 8-bit Apples
|
||
(A2.LUNATIC, CAT3, TOP31/M645;1)
|
||
|
||
[*][*][*]
|
||
|
||
|
||
Unfortunately, sometimes files are removed from the library after we
|
||
publish this magazine. In many cases, the removed file has been replaced
|
||
with an updated version of that file. If you can't find one of the files
|
||
listed here, there is a way to check for a newer version. Do a keyword
|
||
search on the library using a word that describes the file you are look-
|
||
ing for. Chances are, you will find a newer version of that file, or
|
||
another file that meets your expectations.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
[EOA]
|
||
[WHO]//////////////////////////////
|
||
PROFILES /
|
||
/////////////////////////////////
|
||
Who's Who On GEnie
|
||
""""""""""""""""""
|
||
By Peter Bogert
|
||
[P.BOGERT1]
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
>>> WHO'S WHO ON GEnie <<<
|
||
""""""""""""""""""""""""""
|
||
~ GEnieLamp Publisher/Senior Editor ~
|
||
|
||
GEnieLamp> Tell us a little about John Peters. Where are you from, what
|
||
""""""""" is your educational background, and what do you do for a
|
||
living?
|
||
|
||
John Peters> Well, I was born in Green Bay, Wisconsin, but I really don't
|
||
""""""""""" remember much about it since I moved to Colorado at an early
|
||
age. Colorado fits me just fine with the mountains and its comfortable
|
||
climate. Strangely enough, I'm living in the state that is known for its
|
||
beautiful ski resorts but I've never been skiing. I hear it's a blast.
|
||
Maybe someday...
|
||
|
||
Education? What's dat? :) My early life was filled with doctors,
|
||
nurses, and hospitals, so I missed out on many experiences I should have
|
||
had as a kid. I don't dwell on that, though, as I'm much too busy making
|
||
up now for what I missed then. I guess you could say I consider myself to
|
||
be a graduate from the, "School Of Hard Knocks" where, by the way, I passed
|
||
with honors. :) Much of my education has come from books I read. I drive
|
||
my wife crazy at times because it is rare that you will see me without a
|
||
book. I read in restaurants, at sporting events, even when I go fishing!
|
||
I am truly fascinated (and at times, frustrated!) by the power of the
|
||
written word. I plan on continuing this love/hate relationship with words
|
||
at a local community college this fall.
|
||
|
||
As to my _real_ job it is right here on GEnie doing the GEnieLamp
|
||
mags, helping out with LiveWire Online and running the DigiPub RoundTable.
|
||
However, to pay the bills, the last 14+ years I've been working for the
|
||
Southland Corp. in a 7-Eleven convenience store here in Colorado Springs.
|
||
|
||
|
||
GEnieLamp> What was your early experience with computers, and how did
|
||
""""""""" you get involved in telecommunications?
|
||
|
||
John Peters> Several years ago I was browsing in a TV/Stereo store and I
|
||
""""""""""" came across a salesman who was showing a customer a computer
|
||
game that was hooked up into a large screen TV. The game was called Star
|
||
Raiders. I knew about home computers as I had my eye on a TRS-80 computer
|
||
at the local Radio Shack. However, after seeing Star Raiders I knew right
|
||
then and there that the Atari computer was for me. So I went to a local
|
||
computer store and talked the owner into letting me make payments on a
|
||
complete system. Several months later, I was the proud owner of a 16K
|
||
Atari 400 computer!
|
||
|
||
I had a lot of fun with my computer playing games and typing in
|
||
programs from magazines (anyone remember Softside Magazine?), but there
|
||
seemed to be something missing. I didn't know it then, but a modem was the
|
||
answer to my problem because that missing something was people.
|
||
|
||
However, modems back then were almost as expensive as the computer
|
||
itself. When the cost of modems finally dropped below $100.00, I bought my
|
||
first one, a real 300 baud screamer! What a difference the modem made in
|
||
my computing hobby. I couldn't believe all the things that were available
|
||
to me with just a simple phone call. Much to my wife's distress, I quickly
|
||
became obsessed with the online world. Truly, the modem had become my
|
||
window to the world.
|
||
|
||
|
||
GEnieLamp> What were the things that shaped your decision to begin the
|
||
""""""""" GEnieLamp magazines?
|
||
|
||
John Peters> After hooking up my new modem, I called my first BBS. I
|
||
""""""""""" then called another, and then another. Within a week I was
|
||
active on several bulletin boards all over town. I've always had an
|
||
interest in writing and it soon became obvious to me that this was the
|
||
perfect opportunity to start up an online newsletter. I contacted a local
|
||
SysOp, told him about my idea and TeleTalk Online Magazine was born.
|
||
Within weeks TeleTalk was being offered on several BBSs around town and it
|
||
became quite popular. Much to my surprise, after several issues were
|
||
published I started receiving Email from BBSs in other states. When I
|
||
received Email from Sweden, I knew I was onto something truly special. I
|
||
hooked up with local BBS SysOp Bob Connors (who is now the editor for
|
||
GEnieLamp IBM), and we created a nationwide network called T/TalkNET. Soon
|
||
TeleTalk was being posted on BBSs and commercial online services
|
||
everywhere.
|
||
|
||
After a couple of years of publishing TeleTalk, I wanted to do
|
||
something a little more computer-specific, so I came up with the idea of
|
||
doing an online magazine which contained nothing but mini-reviews on
|
||
shareware and PD software. I released three issues of PD_Quickview ST here
|
||
in the Atari ST RoundTable. I wasn't satisfied with the new magazine, so
|
||
once again I started looking around for something else to do. While
|
||
visiting the Atari RoundTable one evening, it occurred to me that maybe the
|
||
ST RoundTable would benefit from its own online magazine, so I sent off a
|
||
proposal to the SysOp, Darlah, and two weeks later I published my first
|
||
GEnieLamp ST. And as they say, the rest is history.
|
||
|
||
|
||
GEnieLamp> Most ventures of this nature are limited to one or two
|
||
""""""""" computer platforms. You've ambitiously attempted to offer a
|
||
publication specifically tailored to a rather wide variety of computer
|
||
platforms. Why? In retrospect, was this overly ambitious?
|
||
|
||
|
||
John Peters> Good question! Early on I had considered going to other
|
||
""""""""""" SysOps here on GEnie asking if they would like to have a
|
||
GEnieLamp Magazine represent their RT, but I rejected the idea as I knew
|
||
that without GEnie's direct support the magazine would probably fail. But
|
||
as fate would have it, a couple of months later I received a phone call
|
||
from the GEnie Computing RoundTable Product Manager asking me if I would
|
||
like to expand GEnieLamp into other computing areas. Without blinking an
|
||
eye, I agreed.
|
||
|
||
The original idea was to have one magazine which covered all the
|
||
computing RoundTables. But I knew that by doing so I would end up with a
|
||
huge magazine that had a lot of general (i.e., boring) information which
|
||
would be pretty much meaningless to most of the readers here on GEnie. So,
|
||
I went with a separate issue for each computer platform.
|
||
|
||
As with any business, one of the keys to success is having good people
|
||
working for you. Since I'm far from being an expert on all the different
|
||
brands of computers supported here on GEnie, I depend on my editors and
|
||
writers to collect the information that they feel will be of interest to
|
||
their readers. In this respect I've been very lucky and have a great
|
||
support staff for all the magazines.
|
||
|
||
Ambitious? Yes. Overly so? I don't think so. We've had our share
|
||
of problems and yes, most of these problems are due to the sheer size of
|
||
the GEnieLamp organization, but heck, that's what keeps things interesting!
|
||
|
||
|
||
GEnieLamp> What kind of computer equipment do you use personally, and
|
||
""""""""" why have you made the choice to use that kind?
|
||
|
||
John Peters> From day one it's been Atari. I know the system inside and
|
||
""""""""""" out. However, I am not a fanatic Atarian by any means and I
|
||
would publish GEnieLamp if I were on an Amiga, IBM, Macintosh or a
|
||
Sinclair. To me, the computer is nothing more then a tool, a tool that
|
||
allows me to do what I love to do here on GEnie. I may make the "big
|
||
switch" someday, but for now, the ST does what I want it to do.
|
||
|
||
|
||
GEnieLamp> You've spoken quite passionately about your interest in
|
||
""""""""" digital publishing. For people who are not familiar with the
|
||
idea, tell us what digital publishing is all about.
|
||
|
||
John Peters Ahhh.... Digital Publishing is another obsession of mine.
|
||
""""""""""" Digital Publishing, in its simplest form, is what you are
|
||
reading now, an ASCII magazine that is created and distributed
|
||
electronically. Getting a little more complex, there are machine specific
|
||
authoring tools and viewers such as Waldo, Dart, Iris, TX2 and others which
|
||
allow the publisher to include graphics or "hyper" abilities within the
|
||
text.
|
||
|
||
I became interested in Digital Publishing when we didn't even have a
|
||
name for it. Now, Digital Publishing in one form or another is making
|
||
headlines everyday. I truly think that Digital Publishing is going to be
|
||
the next big wave to hit the computer industry. Fortunately for those of
|
||
us on GEnie, we don't have to wait for that to happen as the future is here
|
||
and right now in a new RoundTable called the Digital Publishing RT.
|
||
Apparently I'm not alone in my feelings about Digital Publishing as the
|
||
DigiPub RT libraries are quickly becoming filled with poetry, online
|
||
magazines, newsletters, short stories, mini-novels and even tele-comics.
|
||
|
||
Why the interest? With Digital Publishing, _anyone_ can publish a
|
||
book or a magazine. Like the programmer who tries to sell his or her
|
||
programs commercially, the typical writer faces the same seemingly
|
||
insurmountable odds in finding someone to publish his or her book. But
|
||
programmers have found a way around this problem - they distribute their
|
||
programs as shareware or freeware. Well, why not writers too? In the
|
||
DigiPub RT (M1395) we have the tools, the experts, and the means to help
|
||
the author create and distribute their work, worldwide. Now _that's_
|
||
exciting!
|
||
|
||
|
||
GEnieLamp> Is the route that an "author" needs to take to be "published"
|
||
""""""""" any different than he or she might pursue in a print media
|
||
setting? I mean, I could write something pretty goofy and post it in the
|
||
DigiPub library and say I was "published." Where are the quality controls?
|
||
|
||
John Peters> There are no quality controls. And why should there be?
|
||
""""""""""" The thought of such a thing seems counter-productive to me,
|
||
especially here on GEnie, a public accessed system. If you download
|
||
programs from the Computing RT's you know you're going to end up with a
|
||
"turkey" program now and then. The same goes for Digital Publications.
|
||
The point is, the junior high school student who uploads his or her book
|
||
report is every bit as important as the established writer who uploads a
|
||
professionally written mini-novel.
|
||
|
||
|
||
GEnieLamp> Back to the GEnieLamp. You impress me as a person who wants
|
||
""""""""" to keep doing better. What do you want to see happen with
|
||
GEnieLamp over the next few months?
|
||
|
||
John Peters> Overall, I don't see any major changes in the way we do
|
||
""""""""""" GEnieLamp. However, we will always be fine-tuning the
|
||
issues. For example, I recently added a support column to GEnieLamp IBM
|
||
for the Windows RT and will probably be adding an OS/2 RT support column
|
||
later in the year. The online interview concept (like the one you are
|
||
reading now) will be found in all the issues along with the popular
|
||
Mini_Bytes column now found in the IBM and ST magazine. Also, we have a
|
||
special arrangement with the Newsbytes folks to reprint articles from their
|
||
popular online newsletter, so we will be phasing that into the all the
|
||
magazines in the next couple of months as well.
|
||
|
||
On the downside, we tried to go with two issues a month but it didn't
|
||
work out like I wanted it to and I had to abandon the idea. I still want
|
||
to do two issues a month, but I'm not going to attempt it again until I'm
|
||
sure I can do it successfully.
|
||
|
||
Along the Digital Publishing lines, we are working with the Digital
|
||
Publishing Association in trying to come up with a format that would allow
|
||
all computers to view an online graphics based magazine by using a common
|
||
display language standard. We are doing that now with our GEnieLamp TX2
|
||
and GEnieLamp Mac/Graphics issues. However, the viewers are computer
|
||
specific and not interchangeable among other platforms. I'd like to see
|
||
that limitation disappear.
|
||
|
||
Another possibility I'm currently looking into is doing a hardcopy
|
||
issue of GEnieLamp either in newsletter format or as a magazine.
|
||
|
||
|
||
GEnieLamp> This question is honestly not meant to be promotional. I am
|
||
""""""""" wondering why you choose GEnie as your on-line service?
|
||
|
||
John Peters> GEnie is like an old pair of shoes. It just feels right.
|
||
""""""""""" Although GEnie is a huge system, it has a certain "homey"
|
||
feeling I've found lacking on other services. From day one, I've felt
|
||
comfortable here on GEnie.
|
||
|
||
But to be perfectly honest, I first joined GEnie because of the low
|
||
cost of being here. All the nice people I've met, well, that's an added
|
||
bonus. The bottom line is GEnie was, and still is, one of the best online
|
||
deals around.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
[EOA]
|
||
[FUN]//////////////////////////////
|
||
SEARCH_ME /
|
||
/////////////////////////////////
|
||
Online Puzzle Fun
|
||
"""""""""""""""""
|
||
By Scott R. Garrigus
|
||
[S.GARRIGUS]
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
>>> SEARCH_ME! <<<
|
||
""""""""""""""""""
|
||
|
||
CAN YOU BELIEVE IT? I mean come on... the year just started a little
|
||
""""""""""""""""""" while ago and now it's now half over. Oh well, I
|
||
guess that's just the way things are.
|
||
|
||
Around this time of year, my family and I would be going down to
|
||
Florida to spend a couple of weeks in our time share condo and get some
|
||
sun. This year though, money is kind of tight so we won't be going. Major
|
||
bummer...
|
||
|
||
But I DID get to do the next best thing... Yes, that's right. I
|
||
visited the Florida Roundtable right here on good ol' GEnie! It's very
|
||
easy to get there too! No long and bumpy car or airplane rides. Just type
|
||
FLORIDA and you'll be instantly transported to this wonderful and magical
|
||
place!
|
||
|
||
Here you'll find anything and everything you ever wanted to know about
|
||
Florida and about what's going on down there. It's all in the BBS. There
|
||
are plenty of files to choose from in the software library too. But that's
|
||
not all... I have saved the best for last. Florida just happens to be the
|
||
home of that great and magnificent place; Disney World! Yeah!
|
||
|
||
You'll find everything about Disney World here in the Florida RT.
|
||
Topics to talk about in the BBS and files, files galour! It really IS the
|
||
next best thing to an actual visit!
|
||
|
||
Before you take off though, I've put together another little puzzle
|
||
for you to solve. You can take a crack at it during the trip over there...
|
||
:) Say 'Hi' to Mickey for me, and keep on smilin'!
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
>>> SEARCH-ME ONLINE PUZZLE <<<
|
||
"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
|
||
~ Destination Florida RT / M195 ~
|
||
|
||
E F Z R V U Y C L N A E P A T U Y P L K L D
|
||
Z U F E U F M I H S D V O D L R O W A E S N
|
||
R V D J A I W N P U V V U P N T E E I S Y A
|
||
W L Q L N G U D G K E D L X O Z K X F T T L
|
||
N A U N D I R E L N N O L M E P H Y L Y U R
|
||
J I N Y U N U R Y S T Y O R P L U T O T A O
|
||
S I H T O Y A E U W U R J W O W G C R I E T
|
||
E U D P E T P L Z I R Z C X N W O I I I B A
|
||
N E Q N L C U L Y O E G O O F Y E W D V N G
|
||
Z K S E O O V A W S L M I C K E Y R A Q F U
|
||
T I E T A C D L W H A C N N I X F X U E S F
|
||
D W J V D P A L I P N T G K O M A M R T K V
|
||
W N N Y A N V M N N D B N D L A N O D P U I
|
||
O S Z G D H P Y I Q I Q B A B L T K K P A F
|
||
F D B H O N Z D F S K O G T F M A W P E R X
|
||
K Z L Q H M D R R E R E C R O S S U I M W A
|
||
R I U G A A P E F A A F Q S A E I L O K F K
|
||
B Z Q E L N T Q B E H R L Y B E A S T D J K
|
||
C Y O A E X O U C P Q T D O E K G H Z T V T
|
||
|
||
ADVENTURELAND ALADDIN BEAST
|
||
BEAUTY CINDERELLA DISNEY
|
||
DOLPHIN DONALD EPCOT
|
||
FANTASIA FANTASYLAND FLORIDA
|
||
FUTUREWORLD GATORLAND GOOFY
|
||
MICKEY MINNNIE PLUTO
|
||
SEAWORLD SORCERER TOMORROWLAND
|
||
|
||
[*][*][*]
|
||
|
||
|
||
GIVE UP? You will find the answers in the LOG OFF column at the end of
|
||
"""""""" the magazine.
|
||
|
||
This puzzle was created with a freeware program called
|
||
SEARCH-ME, an Atari ST program by David Becker.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
[EOA]
|
||
[CON]//////////////////////////////
|
||
CONNECTIONS /
|
||
/////////////////////////////////
|
||
Online Thoughts
|
||
"""""""""""""""
|
||
By Al Fasoldt
|
||
[A.FASOLDT]
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
>>> DRIVE G: IS FOR GENIE <<<
|
||
"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
|
||
~ Copyright 1993 by Al Fasoldt. All rights reserved ~
|
||
|
||
Did I ever tell you about the time I used GEnie as a disk drive?
|
||
|
||
You heard it right. I turned this telecomm service into a personal
|
||
hard-disk drive for an entire week a couple of years ago when I was
|
||
traveling with my ancient laptop computer.
|
||
|
||
It all started when I arrived at my hotel in Chicago to cover the
|
||
Summer Consumer Electronics Show. I had driven from New York with the trunk
|
||
of my car filled with everything I needed - clothes, an extra pair of
|
||
shoes, notebooks, my sturdy old Bondwell laptop, the kind with two floppy
|
||
drives and a built-in modem.
|
||
|
||
I couldn't afford the model with a self-contained hard drive, but that
|
||
was no problem. After all, I always carried a box full of support disks,
|
||
containing my word-processing software, my telecomm programs, my notes on
|
||
the electronics industry and my little database of phone numbers and
|
||
industry personnel.
|
||
|
||
That is, I always HAD carried all these support disks. When I unpacked
|
||
my luggage at the Congress Hotel, there was my laptop, ready for action _
|
||
along with one floppy disk. All it had on it was MS-DOS and two utilities,
|
||
a stand-alone Xmodem transfer program and a copy of ARC, the
|
||
file-compression program. I had packed too quickly, and had left all my
|
||
vital support disks at home.
|
||
|
||
Getting blank floppies in downtown Chicago wasn't a problem. I found a
|
||
store across the street that had just what I needed. But what about all the
|
||
software I had been using? Most of it was custom-designed. I had spent
|
||
weeks developing it a few years before, and had been so proud of it I had
|
||
even uploaded it to GEnie.
|
||
|
||
To GEnie! Would my software still be there?
|
||
|
||
More to the point, if they were still there, could I find a way to get
|
||
those files back from GEnie? I needed a way to download them. It was the
|
||
classic chicken-and-egg dilemma: Without a telecomm program, how could I
|
||
get the telecomm software that I needed to send my twice-daily reports on
|
||
the electronics show back to my newspaper office?
|
||
|
||
I had a modem in my laptop, and I had DOS. And the Xmodem software I
|
||
had copied months ago onto the DOS bootup disk was supposed to be used with
|
||
a regular telecomm program. But I doodled around with it and saw that it
|
||
hooked into the modem's serial port even if I ran it all by itself.
|
||
|
||
That was all I needed to know.
|
||
|
||
I got the Chicago-area telephone number for GEnie by calling GEnie's
|
||
800 number. By using DOS to redirect my keyboard commands to the modem, I
|
||
dialed GEnie and navigated over to the PC software library. In a few
|
||
seconds, a search for PROCOMM brought up a listing for the shareware
|
||
version of that familiar telecomm software. I gave the command to GEnie to
|
||
start a download and typed the command to run my Xmodem transfer software
|
||
right from DOS.
|
||
|
||
In a couple of minutes, I was in telecomm heaven. I signed off GEnie
|
||
and let ARC extract the Procomm files to a blank floppy. Then I ran
|
||
Procomm and got back to GEnie, searching the file lists for the special
|
||
Procomm scripts that I had shared with other GEnie users.
|
||
|
||
They were still there. And so was the little text editor that I had
|
||
fallen in love with and uploaded to GEnie in '86 or '87. And so were the
|
||
shareware spelling checker and the other little utilities I had found so
|
||
useful.
|
||
|
||
GEnie even had the little database software I had uploaded. All that
|
||
was missing was my own data _ but I had a solution to that, too. I called
|
||
my office in New York and asked a coworker to find my backup database
|
||
floppy in my desk drawer. She called GEnie and attached the data to an
|
||
email message, and 15 minutes later I had the data, too.
|
||
|
||
The week went by smoothly. I sent my reports back to my office by
|
||
direct transfer into a computer there, but I also sent copies of everything
|
||
by GEmail. And on my last day in Chicago, I compressed all my data and sent
|
||
it via email attachment to my own GEnie mailbox, so I could get it back
|
||
when I got back to the office.
|
||
|
||
Since that time, I've joked about the extra drive I installed on my
|
||
laptop. It's got Drive A:, Drive B: and Drive G:. The first two hold 720
|
||
kilobytes each. The third holds the answer to a forgetful traveler's
|
||
prayers.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
[EOA]
|
||
[AII]//////////////////////////////
|
||
APPLE II /
|
||
/////////////////////////////////
|
||
Apple II History, Part 14
|
||
"""""""""""""""""""""""""
|
||
By Steven Weyhrich
|
||
[S.WEYHRICH]
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
>>> APPLE II HISTORY <<<
|
||
""""""""""""""""""""""""
|
||
Compiled and written by Steven Weyhrich
|
||
(C) Copyright 1991, Zonker Software
|
||
(PART 14 -- DOS)
|
||
[v1.1 :: 12 Nov 92]
|
||
|
||
INTRODUCTION The disk operating system used on the Apple II has an
|
||
"""""""""""" interesting and colorful story, and is a further insight to
|
||
the early days at Apple Computer, Inc. This section of the History deals
|
||
with the original DOS for the Apple II, from its first release, up through
|
||
DOS 3.2.1. -Steven Weyhrich
|
||
|
||
[*][*][*]
|
||
|
||
|
||
APPLE DOS For a computer to be useful, it must have a means of easy
|
||
""""""""" storage and retrieval of data. That storage medium must be
|
||
both convenient and affordable. In the early days of the Apple II
|
||
computer, the best that they could achieve was "affordable". The built-in
|
||
cassette port was THE state of the art for personal computers back in 1977;
|
||
the Apple I computer had a cassette interface available ONLY as an add-on
|
||
item. But, although a cassette storage system may be inexpensive, it is
|
||
not very convenient. The simplistic cassette operating system on the
|
||
Apple II (visual examination of the mechanical index counter on the
|
||
cassette recorder to know the location of the next program) was downright
|
||
frustrating to use for many early Apple II owners. Something better was
|
||
desperately needed.
|
||
|
||
As you may recall from Part 5 of the History, in December of 1977
|
||
Steve Wozniak began a crash effort to develop a floppy disk drive for the
|
||
Apple II computer. To get it ready for the Consumer Electronics Show in
|
||
January 1978, Wozniak and Randy Wigginton made a very simple disk operating
|
||
system that would only load files from fixed locations off the disk in
|
||
response to one-letter commands. But it was not a true disk operating
|
||
system (DOS); their rudimentary control program would not be flexible
|
||
enough for efficient and simple use of the disk drive.
|
||
|
||
|
||
DISK SYSTEM BASICS To create an operating system that would be both
|
||
"""""""""""""""""" simple to use and yet powerful enough for advanced
|
||
file manipulations, Apple had much work to do, building on the device
|
||
driver that Wozniak had written. Among other things, it had to interface
|
||
well with the BASICs in ROM on the Apple II, and be no more complicated to
|
||
use than the cassette system. Although Woz's driver routines were
|
||
efficient in writing and reading data to and from the disk, they could only
|
||
be used from 6502 assembly language.
|
||
|
||
Designing a disk operating system from scratch is no trivial matter.
|
||
On one side is the RAM memory in the Apple II, waiting patiently for a
|
||
useful program to be loaded and executed. On the other side of an
|
||
electronic bridge (interface card and connecting cable) is the floppy disk
|
||
and disk drive hardware itself. The control program the Woz wrote could be
|
||
compared to a narrow rope bridge crossing a chasm; it works, but you can't
|
||
carry much with you, and it is easy to slip and fall (lose data). A
|
||
complete DOS is more like a concrete and steel bridge, capable of carrying
|
||
autos and trucks in both directions over the chasm. Woz's "rope bridge"
|
||
was a foundation, but there was much work yet to do.
|
||
|
||
A disk drive consists of a recording head that is mechanically moved
|
||
across the surface of the floppy disk, tracing the radius of the disk from
|
||
the center to the edge. The disk itself is spinning under the head. This
|
||
is similar to the stylus on a turntable that plays 33 RPM records (remember
|
||
those?), but the head on a disk drive can be given a command to move to a
|
||
different "track" on the spinning disk. Also unlike the turntable, which
|
||
is a "read-only" device, the head on the disk drive can either reads bits
|
||
off or write bits onto the disk. To be able to find where data has been
|
||
stored on a disk, it is "formatted" into a known configuration. A blank
|
||
disk could be compared to empty land that will be filled with new houses,
|
||
but currently has no streets, street signs, or house numbers. The initial
|
||
formatting (called "hard" formatting) of a blank disk is, then, like
|
||
building the streets and assigning lots for future building. The second
|
||
part of disk formatting (called "soft" formatting), involves naming the
|
||
streets, designating addresses, and building houses.
|
||
|
||
In the case of Apple's Disk II, it was designed with 35 concentric
|
||
circles ("streets") called tracks. Each track is subdivided into 16
|
||
segments ("houses") called sectors. Each sector can hold 256 bytes of
|
||
information. In the hardware system that Wozniak designed, the timing hole
|
||
near the center of the floppy disk was not used by the hardware to keep
|
||
track of which sector was passing the head at any particular time. Because
|
||
of that, it was necessary for the software to identify in a different way
|
||
where one sector ended and the next sector began. A complicated method was
|
||
used of specially encoding each of the 256 bytes so they have a standard,
|
||
recognizable appearance to a program that is controlling the disk drive,
|
||
plus some other specialized bytes that identify the start and end of a
|
||
sector. Although it did decrease somewhat the storage capacity of the
|
||
disk, the cost savings in less complicated hardware compensated for it.
|
||
|
||
|
||
DOS 3.1 - STRUCTURE & FUNCTION WITH BASIC With this background, let's get
|
||
""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""" back to tracing the gap between
|
||
Woz's demo DOS and Apple's first official release, DOS 3.1. Worth and
|
||
Lechner in their book, "Beneath Apple DOS", divided DOS up into four parts
|
||
according to function and location in memory. When a computer needs an
|
||
operating system, it's because there is a need to insulate the user from
|
||
the complexity of trying to control the hardware. Consider the four parts
|
||
of DOS as layers; as you get closer to the bottom layer, you are closer to
|
||
the hardware (the raw data on the disk and direct control of the disk
|
||
drive), but you also increase greatly the difficulty of managing it. The
|
||
farther up you go, the easier it is to manage things on the disk, but the
|
||
less direct is the control of the disk data and hardware.<1>,<2> When
|
||
Wozniak wrote his disk controller (driver) routines, he worked at the
|
||
deepest layer, directly manipulating the disk hardware and raw data. This
|
||
involved some complex timing and error checking for reading and writing
|
||
data to the disk. This section is also where the program lies that erases
|
||
the disk and creates the sectors and their addresses. In memory, this
|
||
layer of DOS started at $B800 on a 48K Apple II.<2>,<3>
|
||
|
||
Randy Wigginton wrote a "front end" for Wozniak's controller routines.
|
||
His part could be considered a thin layer that is part of the lowest layer
|
||
of disk routines. Together, the two layers made up what came to be known
|
||
as "RWTS", or "Read/Write Track/Sector". It could do four things only:
|
||
SEEK (to move the disk arm to the desired track), READ (load a sector from
|
||
disk into memory), WRITE (save a sector to disk from memory), and FORMAT
|
||
(discussed above). This layer of DOS, the Disk II driver, started at
|
||
$B600.<2>,<3>
|
||
|
||
Apple contracted with an outside consultant, Bob Shepardson, to write
|
||
much of the rest of DOS (though modifications were made by Apple
|
||
programmers Dick Huston and Rick Auricchio).<4>,<5>,<6> Shepardson's group
|
||
wrote the layers (parts) of DOS that later became known as the "File
|
||
Manager" and the "Main DOS routines". The File Manager was the next layer
|
||
in memory above RWTS. It started at $AAC9 in memory, and was responsible
|
||
for twelve higher level functions that dealt with files and the disk in
|
||
general. These functions were OPEN, CLOSE, READ, WRITE, DELETE, CATALOG,
|
||
LOCK, UNLOCK, RENAME, POSITION, INIT (format a disk and create an empty
|
||
catalog track), and VERIFY. This set of routines, along with RWTS, would
|
||
be similar to the file PRODOS in the current 8-bit disk operating system.
|
||
It handled the disk at the file level, but knew nothing about BASIC.<2>,<3>
|
||
|
||
The next layer of code above the File Manager contained the Main DOS
|
||
Routines. These routines started at $9D00 in memory, and were responsible
|
||
for interfacing BASIC with the disk. This layer would be similar to the
|
||
file called BASIC.SYSTEM used today in the ProDOS system. Since neither
|
||
Integer BASIC nor Applesoft were specifically modified to handle disk
|
||
commands, this part of DOS kept a constant look at any output PRINTed by
|
||
BASIC. When a BASIC program was running, DOS looked to see if the
|
||
character Ctrl-D (hex $04) was printed immediately after a Ctrl-M (carriage
|
||
return). If that sequence was detected, DOS assumed that the next text
|
||
printed was a command for it. If a BASIC program was not running, then DOS
|
||
examined anything typed directly from the keyboard. If it decided that a
|
||
DOS command had been entered, it would execute that command. If the user
|
||
typed a command that DOS recognized (such as "RUN PROGRAM" or "SAVE
|
||
PROGRAM") but which resulted in a disk error, DOS 3.1 would generate an
|
||
error message. On the other hand, if DOS did not recognize the command, it
|
||
passed it on to the active BASIC for processing.
|
||
|
||
The final, uppermost layer of DOS was not a program code area but a
|
||
set of memory areas called "buffers". One buffer was used by DOS for each
|
||
open file. These buffers ordinarily started at $9600 in memory.
|
||
|
||
Here is an example of how the layers of DOS interacted: When a user
|
||
typed the command "LOAD PROGRAM" at the keyboard, DOS intercepted the
|
||
statement. The Main DOS Routines determined that it WAS a legal DOS
|
||
command. The File Manager was called to 1) OPEN a file named "PROGRAM",
|
||
2) READ all the bytes associated with that file into memory starting at a
|
||
specific location, and then 3) CLOSE the file. The File Manager's OPEN
|
||
command in turn instructed RWTS where to move the disk read/write head, and
|
||
in what order to read the correct tracks and sectors to find the contents
|
||
of the entire file, wherever it happened to be on the disk. Complicated,
|
||
perhaps, but the only thing the user had to know was how to type "LOAD
|
||
PROGRAM".
|
||
|
||
Finally, one piece of trivia: Why was the first DOS released for the
|
||
Apple II called "DOS 3.1" rather than "DOS 1.0"? According to Steve
|
||
Wozniak, it was Bob Shepardson's group that decided on calling it "DOS 3".
|
||
It is unclear why Shepardson decided on "3"; possibly it referred to
|
||
internal revisions done by Shepardson, or perhaps it was a modification of
|
||
some DOS routines done for another computer that had used earlier version
|
||
numbers.<2> (Note: DOS 3 was never actually released to the public; that
|
||
version apparently had a few bugs left to fix, so "DOS 3.1" came with the
|
||
first Disk II drives shipped by Apple to their dealers).
|
||
|
||
|
||
DOS 3.1 - MANUAL When originally introduced with the new Disk II drive in
|
||
"""""""""""""""" 1978, DOS 3.1 had very little documentation. Because
|
||
the demand for the disk drive was so great, the engineers at Apple had
|
||
worked feverishly to produce enough working drives to begin shipping. They
|
||
went out, although there was not time to complete a real manual on how to
|
||
use the disk operating system. They did include a leaflet about some of
|
||
the commands, but there were still, obviously, complaints. One letter to
|
||
Apple president Mike Markkula made these blunt comments: "You [expletive
|
||
deleted]. I bought an Apple with floppy and nobody, I mean nobody, in L.A.
|
||
or San Diego knows how to use the [thing] for random access files. I
|
||
really feel 'ripped off.' Everybody talks about this great manual in the
|
||
sky that is coming out soon??? ... [more expletives]! I need this computer
|
||
now in my business not next year. [Expletive]. I hope your dog dies."<7>
|
||
|
||
It was not until the release of DOS 3.2 in February 1979 that a true
|
||
reference manual was made available. It was given the unwieldy title,
|
||
"Disk II Floppy Disk Subsystem Installation and Operating Manual", and
|
||
subtitled "Apple Intelligent Subsystems (part #030-0011-00)". It was all
|
||
of 38 pages long, with weak jokes and typos, but not much else of
|
||
substance. Instruction on how to READ and WRITE text files was given in a
|
||
mere ten lines, with no programming examples. The EXEC command was given a
|
||
little more description, but was still unclear to many users. The manual
|
||
also talked about " *3D0G ". What it DIDN'T say was that this meant that
|
||
the user was supposed to type "3D0G" from the Monitor prompt (to allow a
|
||
return to the active BASIC with DOS connected).<8>,<9>
|
||
|
||
|
||
DOS 3.1 - FEATURES A catalog of the DOS 3.1 System Master disk would
|
||
"""""""""""""""""" produce this output:
|
||
|
||
I 007 HELLO
|
||
*I 043 APPLESOFT
|
||
I 016 ANIMALS
|
||
I 009 COLOR DEMOS
|
||
*I 004 MASTER.CREATE
|
||
*B 039 RAWDOS
|
||
*I 007 COPY
|
||
*B 007 COPY.OBJ
|
||
|
||
"HELLO" was the startup file executed when the disk was booted. It
|
||
just displayed the following:
|
||
|
||
|
||
DISK II MASTER DISKETTE VERSION 3.1
|
||
|
||
20-JUL-78
|
||
|
||
COPYRIGHT 1978 APPLE COMPUTER INC.
|
||
|
||
>_
|
||
|
||
stopping at the Integer BASIC prompt. "ANIMALS" was an Integer program
|
||
that gave an example of the use of disk files, and "COLOR DEMOS" was a disk
|
||
version of a program that had earlier come on cassette. "MASTER CREATE"
|
||
was a program that could be used to initialize a "master" disk. Using the
|
||
binary file "RAWDOS", it executed the DOS "INIT" command, but put a version
|
||
of DOS on the newly formatted disk that was relocatable.<10> When DOS from
|
||
a "master" disk was booted on an Apple II, it first determined what was
|
||
size of the memory, and then loaded itself into memory as high as possible.
|
||
The INIT command properly formatted a new disk, but created what Apple
|
||
called a "slave" disk; that is, the DOS loaded from a slave disk was fixed
|
||
in memory to the same size as the computer on which DOS had been booted.
|
||
In most cases this would not be a problem. However, the problem would
|
||
surface if someone whose Apple II had only 16K of RAM shared a disk with a
|
||
friend whose computer had, say, 32K of memory. Booting that borrowed disk
|
||
would make the 32K computer appear to have only 16K of RAM (since it forced
|
||
DOS to load at the highest location available to a 16K machine). A
|
||
"master" disk was more versatile, being "intelligent" enough to adapt
|
||
itself to differing memory sizes.
|
||
|
||
The Integer BASIC file "APPLESOFT" was interesting. It was a 43
|
||
sector file that appeared in a catalog as an Integer BASIC program (with
|
||
the "I" filetype code). If you loaded the file and listed lines 10 through
|
||
80, there were lines that would produce the following text:
|
||
|
||
|
||
****************************************
|
||
* *
|
||
* APPLESOFT ][ FLOATING POINT BASIC *
|
||
* APRIL 1978 *
|
||
****************************************
|
||
|
||
|
||
COPYRIGHT 1978 APPLE COMPUTER, INC.
|
||
|
||
COPYRIGHT 1976 BY MICROSOFT
|
||
|
||
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
|
||
|
||
|
||
There were also lines that poked some values into memory, and then jumped
|
||
to a machine language routine that relocated Applesoft into RAM starting at
|
||
$800 (the same place where Cassette Applesoft loaded). If you tried to
|
||
LIST the entire program in memory, the lines after line 80 appeared to be a
|
||
jumble of Integer BASIC commands. This is because a majority of the file
|
||
was actually a machine language program that had been appended to the end
|
||
of the short Integer BASIC program that displayed the title above and did
|
||
the memory pokes. This machine language code was the Applesoft BASIC
|
||
interpreter. Now, if the file "APPLESOFT" was executed by typing "RUN
|
||
APPLESOFT", it would display the title and leave the cursor next to the
|
||
Applesoft bracket prompt. However, DOS was no longer connected; the result
|
||
was much like using Cassette Applesoft. To properly use this file with
|
||
DOS, you had to type "FP" from the Integer BASIC prompt. DOS would then
|
||
load the "APPLESOFT" file and properly initialize the interpreter, leaving
|
||
DOS connected. Since this version of Applesoft still had a few bugs in it,
|
||
this method of using Applesoft was made obsolete by the Applesoft Firmware
|
||
card and the Apple II Plus.<9>
|
||
|
||
Interestingly, the error messages produced by DOS 3.1 were made to
|
||
look similar to those displayed by Integer BASIC. For example, this is
|
||
what happened if an attempt was made to load a type "B" (binary) file with
|
||
the "LOAD" command:
|
||
|
||
>LOAD COPY.OBJ
|
||
***DISK: NOT BASIC PROGRAM
|
||
>_
|
||
|
||
Integer BASIC had error messages that looked like "*** SYNTAX ERR" (with a
|
||
space following the asterisks). The possible error messages in this
|
||
version of DOS that were different from later versions were:
|
||
|
||
SYS ERROR
|
||
CMD SYNTAX ERROR
|
||
NO FILE BUFFS AVAIL ERROR
|
||
NOT BASIC PROGRAM ERROR
|
||
NOT BINARY FILE ERROR
|
||
|
||
|
||
DOS 3.1 - USER EXPERIENCES One problem encountered by early users of the
|
||
"""""""""""""""""""""""""" Disk II was properly connecting the drive to
|
||
the controller card, as discussed in Part 9 of this History. Some quirks
|
||
in DOS that plagued users at the time of the first releases of DOS 3.1
|
||
included one in which LOCKing a file sometimes mysteriously caused the
|
||
length of the first file in the catalog to change. Apple told people not
|
||
to worry about that; in fact, they told people not to pay attention to the
|
||
sector counts in the catalog at all, as there was a bug in that part of the
|
||
catalog routine. Another problem in early versions of DOS 3.1 was an
|
||
inability to execute READ or WRITE statements in an Applesoft program if
|
||
they occurred in program lines that were numbered higher than 256. It also
|
||
wouldn't allow more than one DOS command on the same line of a program, so
|
||
this was not possible:
|
||
|
||
10 ON ERROR GOTO 1000
|
||
20 PRINT D$;"VERIFY FILE": PRINT D$;"OPEN FILE": PRINT D$;"READ FILE"
|
||
|
||
Other bugs in early versions of DOS 3.1 included not being able to
|
||
initialize disks with MASTER.CREATE unless the disk controller was moved to
|
||
slot 7. (Originally, slot 7 was going to be the disk slot, but Apple
|
||
decided to change it to slot 6 and leave slot 7 for video cards. Why the
|
||
various 80-column cards that were eventually released were made to go into
|
||
slot 3 instead of slot 7 is anybody's guess). The A.P.P.L.E. user group
|
||
had patches to MASTER.CREATE and RAWDOS to fix the slot 7 INIT bug, and the
|
||
>255 line number bug in Applesoft.<11> Apple later released a modified
|
||
version of DOS 3.1 that fixed these bugs (without changing the version
|
||
number).
|
||
|
||
|
||
DOS 3.2 - ENHANCEMENTS As mentioned above, DOS 3 and 3.1 had a few
|
||
"""""""""""""""""""""" problems. When the Apple II Plus with the
|
||
Autostart ROM was released, DOS needed to be updated to handle the changes.
|
||
DOS 3.2, released in February 1979, contained several modifications, but
|
||
retained 90 percent of the basic structure of DOS 3.1. One interesting
|
||
change made to plan for the future was a doubling of the number of possible
|
||
filetypes. The original DOS used "I" for Integer BASIC files, "A" for
|
||
Applesoft, "B" for binary files, and "T" for text files. DOS 3.2 added
|
||
types "S", "R", another "A", and another "B". Of those four types, only
|
||
"R" was ever officially designated by Apple, and that for relocatable
|
||
assembler object files.
|
||
|
||
DOS 3.2 included a program called "UPDATE 3.2", which worked much like
|
||
the earlier program "MASTER.CREATE" in changing a "slave" DOS disk into a
|
||
"master" disk. As time went by, and more users had their Apple II's fully
|
||
populated with 48K RAM, the need for such a utility became less and less
|
||
important.<12>
|
||
|
||
|
||
DOS 3.2 - FEATURES A catalog of the DOS 3.2 System Master disk would
|
||
"""""""""""""""""" produce this output:
|
||
|
||
*I 002 HELLO
|
||
*I 043 APPLESOFT
|
||
*I 018 ANIMALS
|
||
*B 009 UPDATE 3.2
|
||
*I 014 COPY
|
||
*I 009 COLOR DEMO
|
||
*B 003 CHAIN
|
||
*A 009 COLOR DEMOSOFT
|
||
*A 028 LITTLE BRICK OUT
|
||
*A 003 MAKE TEXT
|
||
*A 003 RETRIEVE TEXT
|
||
*A 010 EXEC DEMO
|
||
*A 010 RANDOM
|
||
*T 003 APPLE PROMS
|
||
*A 039 RENUMBER INSTRUCTIONS
|
||
*A 014 RENUMBER
|
||
|
||
The file "RAWDOS" that was on the DOS 3.1 disk was no longer needed,
|
||
as its function was included in the "UPDATE 3.2" program.<10> As you can
|
||
see, some of the files from the DOS 3.1 master disk were retained, but some
|
||
others were added. There were now several Applesoft files, including a
|
||
version of the color demonstration ("COLOR DEMOSOFT"), a smaller version of
|
||
the older Integer BASIC game "BRICK OUT" ("LITTLE BRICK OUT"), a couple of
|
||
files to show simple disk access ("MAKE TEXT" and "RETRIEVE TEXT"), and a
|
||
program to exhibit the use of random-access disk files ("RANDOM", with the
|
||
file "APPLE PROMS"). There was finally a program ("EXEC DEMO") that showed
|
||
how to use the EXEC command in DOS. Also found on this disk were two
|
||
utilities for Applesoft. One made it possible to renumber Applesoft
|
||
programs, and the other ("CHAIN") allowed linking between multiple
|
||
Applesoft programs, retaining the value of any variables created by the
|
||
first program. There WAS a CHAIN command built into DOS, but it worked
|
||
properly only with Integer BASIC programs.
|
||
|
||
|
||
DOS 3.2.1 In July 1979, DOS 3.2.1 was released. This was merely a minor
|
||
""""""""" upgrade to make some patches to RWTS and correct a timing
|
||
problem that caused the utility "COPY" to fail when copying disks with two
|
||
disk drives. It also began a system disk version numbering system that
|
||
persists to this day, that of adding a third digit to indicate a minor
|
||
upgrade. (For example, GS/OS 5.0 changed to 5.0.1 with some bug fixes,
|
||
rather than 5.1).<12>
|
||
|
||
This disk contained the new COPY program, and a program called "UPDATE
|
||
3.2.1", which worked just as "UPDATE 3.2" and "MASTER.CREATE" had
|
||
previously. The update program was used to modify existing DOS 3.2 disks
|
||
to the 3.2.1 version. As an bonus, Apple added some programs to this
|
||
Master disk that were just for fun. All written in Integer BASIC, the
|
||
games and graphics demonstrations included "APPLE-TREK", "THE INFINITE
|
||
NUMBER OF MONKEYS", "BRIAN'S THEME", and "BRICK OUT" (which was an Apple II
|
||
version of the arcade game, "Breakout"). The "HELLO" program displayed
|
||
this when the disk was booted:
|
||
|
||
|
||
MASTER DISKETTE VERSION 3.2.1 STANDARD
|
||
|
||
31-JULY-79
|
||
|
||
COPYRIGHT 1979 APPLE COMPUTER INC.
|
||
|
||
[*][*][*]
|
||
|
||
|
||
NEXT INSTALLMENT: DOS 3.3, ProDOS, & Beyond
|
||
""""""""""""""""
|
||
NOTES
|
||
"""""
|
||
<1> Deatherage, Matt. "The Operating System", THE APPLE II GUIDE,
|
||
Fall 1990, pp. 117-125.
|
||
|
||
<2> Wozniak, Stephen. (personal telephone call), Sep 5, 1991.
|
||
|
||
<3> Worth, Don, and Lechner, Pieter. Quality Software, BENEATH APPLE
|
||
DOS, Reseda, CA, 1981, pp. 5.1-5.3, 6.4-6.8, 8.1-8.42.
|
||
|
||
<4> Little, Gary. Addison-Wesley Publishing Company, Inc, EXPLORING
|
||
APPLE GS/OS AND PRODOS 8, Reading, MA, 1988, pp. 2-4.
|
||
|
||
<5> Little, Gary. Brady Communications Co, INSIDE THE APPLE //C,
|
||
Bowie, MD, 1985, pp. 1-7.
|
||
|
||
<6> Auricchio, Rick. (personal telephone call), Sep 4, 1991.
|
||
|
||
<7> Moritz, Michael. William Morrow and Company, Inc, THE LITTLE
|
||
KINGDOM, New York, 1984, p. 211.
|
||
|
||
<8> Worth, Don, and Lechner, Pieter. p. 1.2.
|
||
|
||
<9> Bragner, Bob. "Open Discussion", SOFTALK, Nov 1983, pp. 51-52.
|
||
|
||
<10> Vanderpool, Tom. GEnie, A2 ROUNDTABLE, Mar & Aug 1991, Category
|
||
2, Topic 16.
|
||
|
||
<11> Thyng, Mike. "Apple Source", PEEKING AT CALL-A.P.P.L.E., VOL. 1,
|
||
1978, pp. 7-8.
|
||
|
||
<12> Worth, Don, and Lechner, Pieter. pp. 2.1-2.3.
|
||
|
||
|
||
/////////////////////////////////////////// GEnie_QWIK_QUOTE ////
|
||
/ "I recently tested THREE stand-alone grammar checkers for use /
|
||
/ at our newspaper office. I simply ran their own documentation /
|
||
/ through them, and canned all three when they failed their own /
|
||
/ tests. If the authors of expensive PC software don't believe /
|
||
/ in using their own product, I don't either." /
|
||
//////////////////////////////////////////////// A.FASOLDT ////
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
[EOA]
|
||
[LOG]//////////////////////////////
|
||
LOG OFF /
|
||
/////////////////////////////////
|
||
GEnieLamp Information
|
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|
||
the [return] key. The system will then ask you for your information.
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Call (voice) 1-800-638-9636 for more information.
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[EOF]
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