2548 lines
		
	
	
		
			126 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Erlang
		
	
	
	
	
	
			
		
		
	
	
			2548 lines
		
	
	
		
			126 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Erlang
		
	
	
	
	
	
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     |||||| |||||| ||  || |||||| ||||||
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     ||     ||     ||| ||   ||   ||
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     || ||| ||||   ||||||   ||   ||||               Your
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     ||  || ||     || |||   ||   ||
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     |||||| |||||| ||  || |||||| ||||||             GEnieLamp Computing
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     ||    |||||| ||    || ||||||                   RoundTable
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						||
     ||    ||  || |||  ||| ||  ||
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     ||    |||||| |||||||| ||||||                   RESOURCE!
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     ||    ||  || || || || ||
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     ||||| ||  || ||    || ||
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                    ~ WELCOME TO GEnieLamp APPLE II! ~
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                      """"""""""""""""""""""""""""""
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     ~ APPLEWORKS ANNEX:  AppleWorks 5 Takes on the (Mac) Competition
 | 
						||
         ~ FOCUS ON...:  The Internet, Australia, and the Apple II
 | 
						||
                       ~ PROFILES:  Tom Zuchowski ~
 | 
						||
              ~ THE TREASURE HUNT:  Top 20 Eamon Adventures ~
 | 
						||
                   ~ HOT NEWS, HOT FILES, HOT MESSAGES ~
 | 
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 | 
						||
\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\////////////////////////////////////
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						||
 GEnieLamp Apple II     ~ A T/TalkNET Publication ~      Vol.4, Issue 38
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""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
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Publisher................................................John F. Peters
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 Editor...................................................Douglas Cuff
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\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\////////////////////////////////////
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						||
          ~ GEnieLamp IBM ~ GEnieLamp ST ~ GEnieLamp PowerPC ~
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						||
        ~ GEnieLamp A2Pro ~ GEnieLamp Macintosh ~ GEnieLamp TX2 ~
 | 
						||
         ~ GEnieLamp Windows ~ GEnieLamp A2 ~ LiveWire (ASCII) ~
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						||
            ~ Member Of The Digital Publishing Association ~
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						||
 GE Mail: GENIELAMP                       Internet: genielamp@genie.com
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////////////////////////////////////\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\
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						||
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           >>> WHAT'S HAPPENING IN THE APPLE II ROUNDTABLE? <<<
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           """"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
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						||
                              ~ May 1, 1995 ~
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 FROM MY DESKTOP ......... [FRM]        FROM MY MAILBOX ......... [MAI]
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						||
  Notes From The Editor.                 Notes To The Editor.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 HEY MISTER POSTMAN ...... [HEY]        HUMOR ONLINE ............ [HUM]
 | 
						||
  Is That A Letter For Me?               Is That Funny or Scary?
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 FOCUS ON... ............. [FOC]        APPLEWORKS ANNEX ........ [ANX]
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						||
  The Internet.                          In This Corner, AppleWorks 5.
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						||
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						||
 ASCII ART GALLERY ....... [ASA]        PROFILES ................ [PRO]
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						||
  Menagerie.                             Who's Who:  Tom Zuchowski.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 THE TREASURE HUNT ....... [HUN]        LOG OFF ................. [LOG]
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						||
  Best 20 Eamon Adventures.              GEnieLamp Information.
 | 
						||
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						||
[IDX]"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
READING GEnieLamp   GEnieLamp has incorporated a unique indexing system to
 | 
						||
"""""""""""""""""   to help make reading the magazine easier.  To utilize 
 | 
						||
this system, load GEnieLamp into any ASCII word processor or text editor.  
 | 
						||
In the index you will find the following example:
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
                   HUMOR ONLINE ............ [HUM]
 | 
						||
                    GEnie Fun & Games.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     To read this article, set your find or search command to [HUM].  If 
 | 
						||
you want to scan all of the articles, search for [EOA].  [EOF] will take 
 | 
						||
you to the last page, whereas [IDX] will bring you back to the index.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
MESSAGE INFO   To make it easy for you to respond to messages
 | 
						||
""""""""""""   re-printed here in GEnieLamp, you will find all the 
 | 
						||
information you need immediately following the message.  For example:
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
                    (SMITH, CAT6, TOP1, MSG:58/M475)
 | 
						||
        _____________|   _____|__  _|___    |____ |_____________
 | 
						||
       |Name of sender   CATegory  TOPic    Msg.#   Page number|
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     In this example, to respond to Smith's message, log on to page 475 
 | 
						||
enter the bulletin board and set CAT 6. Enter your REPly in TOPic 1.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     A message number that is surrounded by brackets indicates that this 
 | 
						||
message is a "target" message and is referring to a "chain" of two or more 
 | 
						||
messages that are following the same topic.  For example: {58}.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
ABOUT GEnie   GEnie's monthly fee is $8.95 which gives you up to four hours
 | 
						||
"""""""""""   of non-prime time access to most GEnie services, such as 
 | 
						||
software downloads, bulletin boards, GE Mail, an Internet mail gateway, and 
 | 
						||
chat lines. GEnie's non-prime time connect rate is $3.00.  To sign up for 
 | 
						||
GEnie service, call (with modem) 1-800-638-8369 in the USA or 
 | 
						||
1-800-387-8330 in Canada.  Upon connection type HHH.  Wait for the U#= 
 | 
						||
prompt.  Type:  JOINGENIE and hit RETURN.  When you get the prompt asking 
 | 
						||
for the signup/offer code, type: DSD524 and hit RETURN.  The system will 
 | 
						||
then prompt you for your information. Need more information?  Call GEnie's 
 | 
						||
customer service line (voice) at 1-800-638-9636.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
SPECIAL OFFER FOR GEnieLamp READERS!   If you sign onto GEnie using the
 | 
						||
""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""   method outlined above you will 
 | 
						||
receive $50.00 worth of credit.  Want more?  Your first month charge of 
 | 
						||
$8.95 will be waived! Now there are no excuses!
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
                        *** GET INTO THE LAMP! ***
 | 
						||
"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
           //////////////////////////////////////// GEnie_QWIK_QUOTE ////
 | 
						||
          /  "IIGS is a nice machine; I have one but we have to be     /
 | 
						||
         /   realistic.  When is the last time you went into a store  /
 | 
						||
        /    and found any software for it?"                         /
 | 
						||
       /                                                            /
 | 
						||
      /      "Yesterday!!!"                                        /
 | 
						||
     ////////////////////////////////////  S.HEWES & R.PASOLD  ////
 | 
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[EOA]
 | 
						||
[FRM]//////////////////////////////
 | 
						||
                 FROM MY DESKTOP /
 | 
						||
/////////////////////////////////
 | 
						||
Notes From The Editor
 | 
						||
"""""""""""""""""""""
 | 
						||
by Douglas Cuff
 | 
						||
    [EDITOR.A2]
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
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						||
     I don't own many hats, but I sure wear a lot of them.  The hats are 
 | 
						||
of course metaphorical, and are just my roundabout way of announcing that 
 | 
						||
I've been appointed editor of II Alive magazine, which is published by 
 | 
						||
Quality Computers.  When I started my career as editor, I was working in 
 | 
						||
print, and it's nice to in print again.  That doesn't mean I'll be giving 
 | 
						||
up my career as videotext editor, though.  You're stuck with me for another 
 | 
						||
month at least, and for as long as I can continue to juggle both II Alive 
 | 
						||
and GEnieLamp A2.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     However, this month the double duties mean that my editorial is a 
 | 
						||
little "abbreviated" (which I'm informed is the politically correct term 
 | 
						||
for "short").
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
                                 [*][*][*]
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     It looks as though KansasFest 1996 is a go!  I've omitted all 
 | 
						||
messages that give sign-up info from this issue of GEnieLamp A2, though, 
 | 
						||
because I understand that the messages posted to the A2 RoundTable are no 
 | 
						||
longer accurate (partly because the organizers need a minimum number of 
 | 
						||
participants).  If you're interested in paying the $200 attendance fee, and 
 | 
						||
can get to Kansas City this July 27-29, just drop me a line and I'll 
 | 
						||
forward your message to the organizers.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
                                 [*][*][*]
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     Did you know that you can earn free time on GEnie by writing for 
 | 
						||
GEnieLamp A2?  Each article accepted for publications gets you a credit for 
 | 
						||
three non-prime time hours!
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     Of course, that leaves me a little puzzled about how to pay Kevin 
 | 
						||
Noonan this month.  Kevin's from Australia, and can't afford a GEnie 
 | 
						||
account, but he's written an article about the Internet in Australia for 
 | 
						||
us.  At least I know how to pay Jay Curtis for his continuing AppleWorks 5 
 | 
						||
series....
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
-- Doug Cuff
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
GEnie Mail:  EDITOR.A2                       Internet:  editor.a2@genie.com
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
        __________________________________________________________
 | 
						||
       |                                                          |
 | 
						||
       |                   REPRINTING GEnieLamp                   |
 | 
						||
       |                                                          |
 | 
						||
       |   If you want to reprint any part of GEnieLamp, or       |
 | 
						||
       |   post it to a bulletin board, please see the very end   |
 | 
						||
       |   of this file for instructions and limitations.         |
 | 
						||
       |__________________________________________________________|
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
                                                           ASCII ART BEGINS
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     _____ ______       _      _                              ___  ___  
 | 
						||
    / ____|  ____|     (_)    | |                            / _ \|__ \ 
 | 
						||
   | |  __| |__   _ __  _  ___| |     __ _ _ __ ___  _ __   | |_| |  ) |
 | 
						||
   | | |_ |  __| | '_ \| |/ _ \ |    / _` | '_ ` _ \| '_ \  |  _  | / / 
 | 
						||
   | |__| | |____| | | | |  __/ |___| (_| | | | | | | |_) | | | | |/ /_ 
 | 
						||
    \_____|______|_| |_|_|\___|______\__,_|_| |_| |_| .__/  |_| |_|____|
 | 
						||
                                                    | |                 
 | 
						||
                                                    |_|                 
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
                                                             ASCII ART ENDS
 | 
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 | 
						||
 | 
						||
[EOA]
 | 
						||
[MAI]//////////////////////////////
 | 
						||
                 FROM MY MAILBOX /
 | 
						||
/////////////////////////////////
 | 
						||
Notes To The Editor
 | 
						||
"""""""""""""""""""
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     >>> BOOK ANNOUNCEMENT--"THINKING ABOUT ONLINE COMMUNICATIONS" <<<
 | 
						||
     """""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     For the past three years I've been writing a GEnieLamp column titled 
 | 
						||
"Thinking About Online Communications."  The aim of this column has been to 
 | 
						||
reflect upon the nature of the online experience by taking a closer look at 
 | 
						||
the social and psychological aspects of online communication.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     E-mail feedback about these essays has been far more positive than I 
 | 
						||
expected.  Several loyal readers have recently suggested that I compile an 
 | 
						||
anthology of the essays.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     With the third anniversary of GEnieLamp A2 occurring last month, I 
 | 
						||
felt the time was ripe to act on these suggestions.  In the past two weeks, 
 | 
						||
I've collected together about twenty five of these essays into a anthology, 
 | 
						||
and am in the process of locating an publisher.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     GEnieLamp readers interested in seeing excerpts from this book can 
 | 
						||
find them in file number 3646 in the Digipub library.  In assembling these 
 | 
						||
excerpts from the book, I've tried to collect the most central passages 
 | 
						||
from each of the essays in the book.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     In a way, the excerpts contain virtually all the core ideas of the 
 | 
						||
book.  The rest of the book just elaborates upon these core ideas.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     Thanks, again, to all those who've sent encouraging feedback about 
 | 
						||
this column.  Your e-mail has served as vital sustenance to the creative 
 | 
						||
process.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
Cheers,
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     - Phil Shapiro
 | 
						||
       [GEnie: p.shapiro1]
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
[EOA]
 | 
						||
[HEY]//////////////////////////////
 | 
						||
              HEY MISTER POSTMAN /
 | 
						||
/////////////////////////////////
 | 
						||
Is That A Letter For Me?
 | 
						||
""""""""""""""""""""""""
 | 
						||
by Douglas Cuff
 | 
						||
    [EDITOR.A2]
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     o BULLETIN BOARD HOT SPOTS
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
          o A2 POT-POURRI
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
                    o HOT TOPICS
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
                         o WHAT'S NEW
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
                              o THROUGH THE GRAPEVINE
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
                                   o MESSAGE SPOTLIGHT
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
                     >>> BULLETIN BOARD HOT SPOTS <<<
 | 
						||
                     """"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     [*] CAT3, TOP25 ................... NinjaForce Mega demo
 | 
						||
     [*] CAT8, TOP24 & CAT12, TOP 13 ... PostScript breakthroughs
 | 
						||
     [*] CAT10, TOP10 .................. GEnie's new Internet service
 | 
						||
     [*] CAT11, TOP16 .................. IOMEGA Zip drives
 | 
						||
     [*] CAT17, TOP20 .................. AppleWorks 5 and Phoenix II
 | 
						||
     [*] CAT42, TOP29 .................. Bug in AW4/5 spelling checker?
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
                           >>> A2 POT-POURRI <<<
 | 
						||
                           """""""""""""""""""""
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
TWO "NEW" COMPANIES   I called Apple Computer the other day and learned of 
 | 
						||
"""""""""""""""""""   two mail order companies that specialize in Apple II 
 | 
						||
software which I had never heard of before.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     Perhaps these would be of use to someone.  I have requested 
 | 
						||
catalogs/flyers and when I received them, I'll post some additional 
 | 
						||
information.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
          B & R (in San Diego)
 | 
						||
          (619) 225-8281
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
          CCV Software (somewhere on the East Coast)
 | 
						||
          (800) 843-5576
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
          They specialize in educational products.  Their main customers 
 | 
						||
          are schools but they will sell to individuals.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
                  (E.WAGNER10, CAT15, TOP9, MSG:3/M645;1)
 | 
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 | 
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 | 
						||
REPORTS OF HIS DEMISE...   Hello there! Long time no type. This is Bill 
 | 
						||
""""""""""""""""""""""""   Tudor (formerly W.TUDOR here on GEnie).  I'll be 
 | 
						||
a guest over in A2Pro tonight (hence this account).  I have not read all 
 | 
						||
the previous posts, but I read about 20-30 of them.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     (1) I left GEnie because I am working on a non-Apple IIgs project 
 | 
						||
that requires large file xfers at least 4 times a week.  On GEnie I was 
 | 
						||
limited to 2400 bd, on AOL I use 14400 for <$10/month, so, I bought a new 
 | 
						||
modem and jumped ship. I do miss the traffic over here on GEnie.  Of 
 | 
						||
course, if GEnie did give me 14400 (from Albany, NY) for $10/month, I'd be 
 | 
						||
right back here! (Yes, I did write and tell them this).
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     (2) I hardly get any e-mail anymore! My address is "WTudor@aol.com". 
 | 
						||
Note the lack of a "period" after the "w".  It's just as easy to e-mail me 
 | 
						||
as before... just send to "WTudor@aol.com@inet#" (I think). I reply back by 
 | 
						||
sending to XXXX@genie.geis.com. Easy as that. 
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     (3) Sorry I can't be on the BBS a here and in A2Pro anymore. I will 
 | 
						||
talk via email, though, if you have any problems/questions with any of my 
 | 
						||
stuff.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
Thanks,
 | 
						||
Bill Tudor
 | 
						||
[WTudor@aol.com]
 | 
						||
                 (A2U.PROF2, CAT13, TOP23, MSG:54/M645;1)
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
HANGING VS. CRASHING   This is a much different problem than "crashing". 
 | 
						||
""""""""""""""""""""   I'd like to take a moment to suggest everyone keep 
 | 
						||
the following definitions handy:
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     CRASH = Computer went "bonk".  The mouse pointer still moves, but 
 | 
						||
clicking or typing doesn't do anything.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     HANG/INFINITE LOOP = No "bonk".  The mouse pointer still moves, but 
 | 
						||
clicking or typing doesn't do anything.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     HANG/IN THE WEEDS = No "bonk".  The mouse pointer is frozen (won't 
 | 
						||
move).  In some cases the speaker sometimes "clicks", or the screen fills 
 | 
						||
with lovely colors.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     OTHER PROBLEM = The computer is still working, but the program isn't 
 | 
						||
behaving as you expected it to.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     These definitions are helpful to know because saying "crash" or 
 | 
						||
"hang" sends me off in one direction.  For example, there isn't any known 
 | 
						||
cause for Express v2 to crash or hang, so I'll be hunting for/suggesting 
 | 
						||
other causes.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     But saying, "Whenever I print something with AWGS, Express prints 
 | 
						||
part of the page then starts printing garbage" gets me right on your 
 | 
						||
specific problem. :)
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     NOTE: I'm not "scolding" anyone; I'm just trying to help everyone get 
 | 
						||
better service from all us software publishers! :)
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     Back to the problem at hand....
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     [text omitted]
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
Thanks,
 | 
						||
--Dave
 | 
						||
                (SEVENHILLS, CAT43, TOP10, MSG:284/M645;1)
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
>>>>>   If 'crash' won't do, how about FREEZES
 | 
						||
"""""
 | 
						||
     FREEZES = No "bonk".  Mouse doesn't move, hitting any key or 
 | 
						||
combination of keys does nothing.  Everything is frozen.  Only shutting off 
 | 
						||
the computer will get everything up and running again.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     This is what usually happens to me regardless of what program I am 
 | 
						||
using.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
Ron
 | 
						||
                 (RON.ROYER, CAT43, TOP10, MSG:286/M645;1)
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
AUDIOZAP AND .AU FORMAT SOUNDS ON THE IIGS   > I don't know of any GS 
 | 
						||
""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""   > programs that can
 | 
						||
> play/convert .au sounds.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     All it takes is a (ahem) shareware solution....
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     .Au files are sound files that were created on Sun work stations.  I 
 | 
						||
believe that they are very closely related to what we in the GS world would 
 | 
						||
call "raw binary sounds."  I'm also pretty sure that any GS sound player 
 | 
						||
will play them back, but as noted, they won't sound very good.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     Enter the IIGS sound man, Ian Schmidt, and his AudioZap.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     AudioZap is a $20 shareware program.  When you pay Ian your fee, he 
 | 
						||
will mail you a different version - AudioZap v2 - that does an excellent 
 | 
						||
job of playing back and/or converting .au sound files, as well as just 
 | 
						||
about every other foreign file format sound you'll ever encounter on the 
 | 
						||
net.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     I did an audio test a few months back with some .wav sound files. 
 | 
						||
Every GS sound program I tried did play the sounds, but it was almost like 
 | 
						||
listening to old scratchy records.  Using AudioZap v2, the sounds were CD 
 | 
						||
quality.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     It's just another case of having the right tool to do the job.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     Ian recently moved.  I'll drop him an e-mail to find out his current 
 | 
						||
address.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
Joe (Shareware Solutions r Us) Kohn
 | 
						||
                 (JOE.KOHN, CAT10, TOP10, MSG:220/M645;1)
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
>>>>>   I thought I heard that Ian was no longer taking shareware payments
 | 
						||
"""""   for AudioZap.  It could be nothing more than faulty memory on my 
 | 
						||
part, so please let me know if this is not the case.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
- Tony Ward
 | 
						||
                   (A2.TONY, CAT6, TOP7, MSG:63/M645;1)
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
<<<<<   Oh, oh
 | 
						||
"""""
 | 
						||
     I didn't remember in which category we'd been discussing AudioZap, so 
 | 
						||
I followed up on it in Cat 28/Top 4.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     Ian Schmidt wrote to me the other day and says that once his current 
 | 
						||
work project is completed, he's going to re-release AudioZap v2 as 
 | 
						||
freeware.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
Joe
 | 
						||
                   (JOE.KOHN, CAT6, TOP7, MSG:73/M645;1)
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
LI'L LEAK IN BALLOON   I was using Balloon to unshrink some files, and 
 | 
						||
""""""""""""""""""""   discovered that if I had a file that was already 
 | 
						||
existing, and selected "skip" the skipped file was deleted.  I tried it 
 | 
						||
several times with the same result.  Choosing to overwrite caused no 
 | 
						||
problems, but skipping would delete the skipped file every time.  If you 
 | 
						||
unshrink a file, then unshrink it a second time and answer "skip" to each 
 | 
						||
report of an already existing file, then delete the original archive, you 
 | 
						||
will find you have nothing left and will have to re-download the archive. 
 | 
						||
If you just cancel, all is well, also.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
Carl Knoblock - Telephone Tech
 | 
						||
                 (C.KNOBLOCK, CAT33, TOP9, MSG:28/M645;1)
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
>>>>>   That's a known problem with Balloon.  It silently slipped by beta
 | 
						||
"""""   testing. When we get around to putting out a Balloon update (I 
 | 
						||
don't know when this will be... probably not for a while) this will be 
 | 
						||
fixed.
 | 
						||
                   (WANKERL, CAT33, TOP9, MSG:29/M645;1)
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
EXTENDED POSTSCRIPT GRAPHICS   Great News!  This probably belongs in Cat8 
 | 
						||
""""""""""""""""""""""""""""   Top13 (PS) but it was here that the issue 
 | 
						||
came up.  Mentioned that Steve had sent me an EPS graphic last night & that 
 | 
						||
I was having trouble.  All is well & very exciting!
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     In the dead of night I changed the FT from UNK to TXT, reviewed it in 
 | 
						||
ShadowWrite, and all _seemed_ well and complete, but when I fed it to PI4 
 | 
						||
all he could say was "getting errors trying to read file".  Took a closer 
 | 
						||
look today & found it contained a resourse fork.  Could not decipher what 
 | 
						||
was in that resource.  It was not PS code and it was not the author's 
 | 
						||
message (at least I don't think so).  It may have been a bit-mapped version 
 | 
						||
for the screen or something?
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     Next I tried to delete the resource fork, but Reslin threw up and 
 | 
						||
said it was not formatted properly.  MAC?  Since ShadowWrite could deal 
 | 
						||
with the data portion I simply saved it under another name (yet another 
 | 
						||
_great_ for SW).  Voila!  The next thing that emerged from my printer was a 
 | 
						||
full-page sized image of Beethoven in splendid, true-blue PostScript-drawn 
 | 
						||
form ;-)
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     And yes, we -can- scale EPS graphics, simply be reducing the size of 
 | 
						||
the text window which contains the PS code on the PI4 page (and the reduced 
 | 
						||
image is as clear as ever)!  You can even change LVB's apparance by making 
 | 
						||
the window square instead of rectangular.  So NOW, I'm off to spend some 
 | 
						||
money on EPS files in order to have some graphics available.  Isn't life 
 | 
						||
wonderful?!  Bless you Steve, & =thanks=. Anyone gave any good (cheap) 
 | 
						||
sources for this stuff?
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   Margot (20:23 PST  -  Fri 4/7/95)  Spectrum v1.0/CoPil v2.50  
 | 
						||
                (M.TAYLOR66, CAT12, TOP13, MSG:237/M645;1)
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
MEGA DEMO BY NINJA FORCE REQUIRES ACCELERATOR   here's a statement from 
 | 
						||
"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""   NinjaForce regarding the 
 | 
						||
Mega Demo:
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     Hi folks on GEnie,
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     seems some of you are having problems with our demo.  Sorry!  Well, 
 | 
						||
the disk exchange problem is indeed a ROM 03 incompatibility.  The ROM 03 
 | 
						||
patch fixes this problem.  This has NOTHING to do with the AE Drive.  The 
 | 
						||
Ninjaforce Megademo HAS BEEN DEVELOPED ON AN AE 800K DRIVE!
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     However, the demo won't run with the latest Apple disk controller 
 | 
						||
supporting High Density drives or the Blue Disk controller card.  There may 
 | 
						||
be problems with AE High Density drives.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     Speed problems:  TransWarp users MUST turn off the AppleTalk delay. 
 | 
						||
Users reporting problems with their ZIP:  The demo has been developed on a 
 | 
						||
ZIP 8/16 and 9/32 configuration.  The ZIP MUST be configured as follows, or 
 | 
						||
the demo will complain that your GS is too slow:  AppleTalk IRQ delay MUST 
 | 
						||
be off, Counter Delay MUST be on.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     Do not try to boot the demo from ProDOS 8 if you're under GS/OS.  The 
 | 
						||
demo will crash (our fault, sorry!).  The best way to launch the demo is to 
 | 
						||
set the startup slot to slot 5 and making a warm boot.  If you cold boot 
 | 
						||
into the demo, remember that the DIP switch settings of the ZIP override 
 | 
						||
the settings from the ZIP CDA!
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     Why did it take us 2 years to do?  Well, after all, it wasn't really 
 | 
						||
two years.  We just don't hack the GS all the time!!  However, we had to 
 | 
						||
develop a whole programming enviroment which contains the Ninjaforce 
 | 
						||
Assembler (ProDOS 8 based, as fast as Merlin 16, macro support and nice 
 | 
						||
editor), the Ninjaforce Debugger (works in conjunction with the Assembler), 
 | 
						||
the NinjaTracker (music player based on the Soundsmith player, heavily 
 | 
						||
enhanced to handle most Amiga MOD effects correctly), MOD Convert (Amiga 
 | 
						||
Module converter to NinjaTracker), and other stuff...
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     Also, please do not compare the Ninjaforce Megademo to Brutal Deluxe 
 | 
						||
software.  While we have a very good relationship to Brutal Deluxe, they 
 | 
						||
just do very SIMPLE games.  SIMPLE does not mean they are bad, but from a 
 | 
						||
coding, graphic and music standpoint, they are nothing amazing at all.  
 | 
						||
Anyway, they do something, and they do it for free.  Something we highly 
 | 
						||
appreciate.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     Ahh, speaking of games...
 | 
						||
                ...we'll strike back!
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
Ninjaforce / Germany
 | 
						||
                   (U.HUTH, CAT3, TOP25, MSG:54/M645;1)
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
                            >>> HOT TOPICS <<<
 | 
						||
                            """"""""""""""""""
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
IOMEGA ZIP 100 DRIVES:  EARLY REPORTS   Mercer County Community College 
 | 
						||
"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""   received 25 IOmega Zip 100 drives 
 | 
						||
today. The extra carts we ordered are on backorder.  I took a driver home 
 | 
						||
for evaluation purposes and:
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     Plugged in the Wall Wart 5V 2A variety
 | 
						||
     Turned termination switch ON
 | 
						||
     Set SCSI ID switch to 5 (6 was already taken)
 | 
						||
     Fired the muther up
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     RamFast screen came on indicating a new device has been attached.  In 
 | 
						||
the RamFast SCSI Utilities screen the device uses a non standard block 
 | 
						||
size.  Must format device to use, Format the drive (very slow).  98272K 
 | 
						||
total size, Install 3 partitions, 32768K 32768K and 32736K.  Name them and 
 | 
						||
quit RamFast utility and Finder sees them just fine.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
Started testing, 
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     Disk to Disk copy 65535 blocks
 | 
						||
         From                 To                Time
 | 
						||
     Quantum LP240S      Syquest 44meg          3:00
 | 
						||
     Quantum LP240S      IOmega Zip 100         3:40
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     Verify 65535 blocks
 | 
						||
       Device          Time
 | 
						||
     Quantum LP240S    0:44
 | 
						||
     Syquest 44meg     1:15
 | 
						||
     IOmega Zip 100    0:50
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     Validate 1544 files
 | 
						||
       Device          Time
 | 
						||
     Quantum LP240S    3:23
 | 
						||
     Syquest 44meg     4:10
 | 
						||
     IOmega Zip 100    3:47
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     Boot AWGS
 | 
						||
       Device          Time
 | 
						||
     Quantum LP240S    0:19
 | 
						||
     Syquest 44meg     0:20
 | 
						||
     IOmega Zip 100    0:20
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     It takes 7 seconds for the first disk icon to appear on the desktop 
 | 
						||
after a disk insertion.  Then another 10 seconds for the other 2 icons.  
 | 
						||
The disks that come from IOmega are not recognized by the RamFast/Finder 
 | 
						||
probably because the first partition on the cart is a driver or a map.  The 
 | 
						||
drives are dark blue and are very light and quiet.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     The disk eject button works fine to remove a cart and dim the icons 
 | 
						||
on the desktop.  The drive is ejected on shutdown.  There are two lights on 
 | 
						||
the cart, a green power LED and a amber activity LED.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     It is hard to tell here when the drive stops spinning but it clicks 
 | 
						||
when it restarts.  IOmega says that the drive spins down to preserve media 
 | 
						||
life in the manual.  It comes with Mac and IBM software.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     The carts are about the size of a 3.5" floppy but twice as thick.  
 | 
						||
The shutter is about one fifth the size of the shutter on the 3.5" floppy. 
 | 
						||
Each cart comes in a jewel case and is warrantied for the life of the 
 | 
						||
cartridge.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     I like IT!!!
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
Binary Bear
 | 
						||
                (BINARY.BEAR, CAT11, TOP16, MSG:195/M645;1)
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
<<<<<   Here's some info on the ZIP I'm writing for an newsletter article.
 | 
						||
"""""   I will be uploading a couple of SHR's later tonight as well.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
Using a ZIP Drive with an Apple IIGS   The ZIP drive by Iomega Corporation,
 | 
						||
''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''   maker of Bernoulli drives, is a 
 | 
						||
small, removeable SCSI drive unit that uses 3.5" cartridges (well, more 
 | 
						||
like 3.6S) in 25 MB and 100 MB densities.  The drive comes in two models, a 
 | 
						||
SCSI model for use with PC's or Mac's (or Apple IIGS's, as we have now 
 | 
						||
found) or a Parallel port model for use with PC's.  The unit is quite 
 | 
						||
small, only 7 by 5.5 by 1.75 inches, has a termination switch and a SCSI ID 
 | 
						||
selector switch (it can only be set to ID 5 or 6), and dual 25 pin SCSI 
 | 
						||
ports.  There is no power switch on the unit, which draws power from a very 
 | 
						||
bulky power block.  The ZIP drive can be laid flat or stood horizontally 
 | 
						||
(there are rubber feet attached for this)  The front has an eject button 
 | 
						||
and dual LEDs, a green one to indicate power on and an amber one to 
 | 
						||
indicate disk access.  The unit sells for $199.00 in most of the Macintosh 
 | 
						||
mail-order catalogs like MacMall, MacWarehouse or MacConnection, and the 
 | 
						||
media cost about $19.95 for the 100 MB cartridges (less if you buy 5 packs) 
 | 
						||
and $9.95 for the 25 MB cartridges.  However, at the present time, the 
 | 
						||
cartridges (except for the 100 Mb cartridge that ships with the unit) are 
 | 
						||
seriously back-ordered.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     I tried out a ZIP drive with two Apple IIGS configurations.  Both 
 | 
						||
were ROM 01 GS's with 4.25MB of RAM, hard drives and Apple CD-ROM drives.  
 | 
						||
Computer #1 has a TransWarp GS accelerator and an Apple HighSpeed SCSI 
 | 
						||
card, and Computer #2 has a RamFAST SCSI card with 256K cache.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     On the first GS, I started up with my Hard Drive at SCSI ID set to 6, 
 | 
						||
the ZIP drive set to 5 and the CD-ROM drive set to 0.  The ZIP disk was the 
 | 
						||
last drive in the SCSI chain and was terminated.  Once in Finder, the drive 
 | 
						||
mounted (the cartridge was a 100 MB disk with HFS formatting), but I twice 
 | 
						||
got a message saying that with the installed file system translators the 
 | 
						||
device could not be read.  I was given the choice to initialize or eject.  
 | 
						||
I twice chose eject, and the drive remained mounted.  I was able to copy to 
 | 
						||
and from the ZIP disk with no problems.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     I ejected the ZIP disk (dragging the disk to the trash unmounted it 
 | 
						||
but did not eject the disk...I had to do that manually) and started up GS 
 | 
						||
ShrinkIt to decompress a file...but with the ZIP disk ejected, I was unable 
 | 
						||
to navigate disks and partitions in the open file dialog box.  Inserting 
 | 
						||
the ZIP disk solved the problem.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     I then connected the ZIP drive to my PowerBook 170 and turned 
 | 
						||
FileSharing on.  I went to AppleShare in the Control Panels NDA on my IIGS 
 | 
						||
and linked with the PowerBook, and mounted the ZIP disk on the IIGS 
 | 
						||
desktop...it worked like a charm, and I was able to open the first part of 
 | 
						||
this review, which I had exported from WordPerfect 3.1 in RTF format, in 
 | 
						||
EGOed 2.0.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     Next, I hooked up the ZIP drive to my RamFAST equipped IIGS.  This 
 | 
						||
procdure took a little more time, although this was not all due to the 
 | 
						||
RamFAST.  As owners of a RamFAST probably know, when you add or subtract a 
 | 
						||
device from the SCSI chain, the RamFAST Utilities are presented upon 
 | 
						||
booting up so that you can add the disk/partitions to the cards "map" of 
 | 
						||
volumes.  It will be worth your time to get the manual out if you don't do 
 | 
						||
it very often.  The problem for me came in the area of SCSI ID's.  The ZIP 
 | 
						||
drive, as a cost-cutting measure I suppose, only has two ID's selectable, 5 
 | 
						||
or 6.  Since the computer boots from the highest numbered SCSI device, that 
 | 
						||
means that your IIGS hard drive needs a SCSI ID of 6 or 7.  Mine, of 
 | 
						||
course, were numbered 1 and 3, so I had to dig out a manual to reconfigure 
 | 
						||
the DIP switches on my old CMS drive and set it to 6.  My other drive is 
 | 
						||
even older, and you need to open the unit up to change its SCSI ID, which I 
 | 
						||
wasnUt about to do at 12:30 am! After doing that, I finally managed to get 
 | 
						||
the ZIP disk mounted on the desktop, and from there it was treated like any 
 | 
						||
other disk...except that it was a large one.  In fact, I opened this review 
 | 
						||
from the cartridge in the ZIP drive in EGOed 2.0 to finish typing this 
 | 
						||
segment.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     Just how cost effective is this drive.  Well, for the initial 
 | 
						||
investment of $199.00, you get a 100 megabyte hard drive.  For less than 
 | 
						||
$100.00 you can add 5 cartridges and now have 600 MB of disk space...which 
 | 
						||
can grow along with your storage needs.  These may even work with IIe's, 
 | 
						||
especially if using the 25 MB cartridges, which could be formatted as 
 | 
						||
single ProDOS volume.  So as backup, or even a second, expandable hard 
 | 
						||
drive, this seems to be a worthwhile investment.  It is not as sturdy as a 
 | 
						||
hard drive, however, with its plastic case, and I would not recommend it 
 | 
						||
for use around young children who might decide to play with it.  It may be 
 | 
						||
sturdy enough, but it certainly doesn't have the steel case that my hard 
 | 
						||
drives do.
 | 
						||
               (S.CAVANAUGH1, CAT11, TOP16, MSG:201/M645;1)
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
APPLEWORKS 5 ON THE MAC [Continued from last month]   We could ship a lot 
 | 
						||
"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""   sooner if we didn't 
 | 
						||
try to print from within Phoenix.  Since we have a "wp clip-to-mac clip" 
 | 
						||
feature, would most of you settle for printing from within a normal Mac 
 | 
						||
application?
 | 
						||
                   (BRANDT, CAT17, TOP20, MSG:21/M645;1)
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
>>>>>   "Settle"? Yes, if it means getting Phoenix faster.  But I know that
 | 
						||
"""""   I would want direct printing from Phoenix before too long.  
 | 
						||
Speaking of which, what printers will Phoenix (when it has direct printing) 
 | 
						||
print to?  LaserWriters (he asks hopefully)?
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     And if LWs will be supported, would that have any bearing on AW5's 
 | 
						||
ability to print directly to a LaserWriter via Appletalk?  It seems that if 
 | 
						||
you can get the Mac version to do it, you might learn something that would 
 | 
						||
allow it on a GS.  If I could access the Appletalk network at work for file 
 | 
						||
sharing and/or printing directly from AW on my GS, I would be several steps 
 | 
						||
closer to heaven.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     Whatever, I can barely wait for Phoenix.  Thanks.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
:: Dan ::
 | 
						||
                 (D.CRUTCHER, CAT17, TOP20, MSG:25/M645;1)
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
<<<<<   If Phoenix supports "direct" printing, it will be an ImageWriter
 | 
						||
"""""   emulator sending an image to any Mac printer.  You'd have a lot 
 | 
						||
more flexibility just dumping the text into another app for fancy fonts and 
 | 
						||
the like.  One other possibility is setting up AppleEvents to send a file 
 | 
						||
to Kitchen Sink's AW to RTF, which would then generate a file for another 
 | 
						||
Mac app like Word or ClarisWorks, with most of the formatting still intact.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
> And if LWs will be supported, would that have any bearing on AW5's
 | 
						||
> ability to print directly to a LaserWriter via Appletalk?
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     None at all.  The Phoenix emulator and the Mac toolbox would be doing 
 | 
						||
the work.  AW5 would think it was printing to a directly-connected 
 | 
						||
ImageWriter, so there's nothing to be learned that could apply to the IIgs.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     It's just too difficult to get information on AppleTalk.  I spent 
 | 
						||
money on books and made several serious efforts, and was unable to acquire 
 | 
						||
enough information to do anything beyond identifying that AppleTalk was 
 | 
						||
present and active.  People at Apple would say things like, "Try this and 
 | 
						||
see what happens.  If that doesn't work, I can't really help you."  Of 
 | 
						||
course, when I tried their suggestions, nothing useful ever happened.
 | 
						||
                   (BRANDT, CAT17, TOP20, MSG:26/M645;1)
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
<<<<<   Thanks for the printing feedback.  We won't rule it out for v2.0
 | 
						||
"""""   (if sales warrant such a beast), but for now we'll go with saving 
 | 
						||
text files or using the Mac clipboard to transfer data.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     UltraMacros now includes new dot commands to get and set the text and 
 | 
						||
background colors, the font name, and the font size.  You can also play 
 | 
						||
sounds, get the Mac time with seconds, and call various external Macintosh 
 | 
						||
commands.  Ultra can also save or open snapshots, which are images of the 
 | 
						||
entire session.  On Mark's PowerMac, it takes about 2 seconds to restart a 
 | 
						||
session with 27 files on the desktop!
 | 
						||
                   (BRANDT, CAT17, TOP20, MSG:29/M645;1)
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
<<<<<   Phoenix is currently for AW 5.1 only (upgrade files are included
 | 
						||
"""""   for 5.0 owners).  Mark has contemplated making a similar program 
 | 
						||
which will let you launch any ProDOS system file, but the problem is ROM 
 | 
						||
support.  AppleWorks doesn't use any ROM routines (except for printing, 
 | 
						||
which we're not currently supporting), so there are no legal complications.
 | 
						||
                   (BRANDT, CAT17, TOP20, MSG:36/M645;1)
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
II ALIVE ISSUE COMING SOON...   The March/April issue is currently in 
 | 
						||
"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""   production.  We're thinking of renaming it 
 | 
						||
at this point.  %)
 | 
						||
                 (II.ALIVE, CAT42, TOP10, MSG:156/M645;1)
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
...THANKS TO THE NEW EDITOR!   I'm now in charge of theLINQ and no longer 
 | 
						||
""""""""""""""""""""""""""""   am able to devote the time II Alive 
 | 
						||
deserves.  For this reason, the March/April issue (and subsequent issues) 
 | 
						||
will be edited by Doug Cuff, who will also be using this account.  If you 
 | 
						||
need to e-mail me, I'll still be online; my other account is JERRY.K.
 | 
						||
                 (II.ALIVE, CAT42, TOP11, MSG:149/M645;1)
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
                            >>> WHAT'S NEW <<<
 | 
						||
                            """"""""""""""""""
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
ANNOUNCING THE COOLEST IIGS ICON EDITOR YET!   EGO Systems is pleased to
 | 
						||
""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""   announce the release of ICE!  
 | 
						||
ICE is the  first and ONLY IIGS icon editor that allows you to edit both 
 | 
						||
old Finder Icon files as well as rIcons!  With ICE, you can finally  get 
 | 
						||
at, and CHANGE, all those icons that have been out of  reach since System 
 | 
						||
6.0 was introduced!
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     Sound good?  Just check out these features:
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 - * - ICE can edit old-style Finder Icon files.
 | 
						||
 - * - ICE can edit ANY rIcon from ANY type of IIGS file.
 | 
						||
 - * - ICE can have as many Finder Icon and rIcon files open as memory will 
 | 
						||
       allow.
 | 
						||
 - * - ICE can copy and paste icons between Finder Icon and rIcon files.
 | 
						||
 - * - ICE can create new Finder Icon files and new files containing 
 | 
						||
       rIcons.
 | 
						||
 - * - ICE can append rIcons from one file onto another file.
 | 
						||
 - * - ICE can save icons (either kind) out to disk as REZ source code.
 | 
						||
 - * - ICE allows you to paste a PICTURE from the IIGS clipboard for use as 
 | 
						||
       an icon!
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     But, the best thing about ICE is the price!  ICE is just eight bucks!
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     That's right!  ICE is only $8!  And that price includes printed 
 | 
						||
documentation!  In fact, at $8, ICE costs less than the shareware fee  for 
 | 
						||
an older icon editor, and ICE isn't shareware, and it isn't old!   It's a 
 | 
						||
brand-new, commercial-quality program from a company that's  been 
 | 
						||
supporting the IIGS for almost six years!
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     So, what's the catch?  Well, the only catch is that ICE is part of 
 | 
						||
the latest issue of GS+ Magazine.  That means that not only do you get the 
 | 
						||
ICE program and its documentation, you also get an issue of GS+ Magazine 
 | 
						||
complete with two MORE programs, reviews of four IIGS products, and a whole 
 | 
						||
bunch of other great stuff crammed inside it!  (It also means that if you 
 | 
						||
already subscribe to GS+ Magazine, you'll be getting ICE as part of your 
 | 
						||
regular subscription!)
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     And it's all just eight bucks!
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     So, what are you waiting for?  If you want to order ICE with your 
 | 
						||
VISA or MasterCard, we'll even pay for the phone call!  But hurry!  After 
 | 
						||
June 30th, 1995 the price of ICE goes up to $10!
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     Pricing & Shipping
 | 
						||
          ICE (GS+ V6.N5 Magazine & Disk) - $8 ($10 after June 30th, 1995)
 | 
						||
          Delivery to Canada or Mexico - $2 extra
 | 
						||
          Surface mail delivery outside North America - $2 extra
 | 
						||
          Air Mail Delivery outside North America - $5 extra
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     VISA & MasterCard Orders Only:  800-662-3634 (9 am - 5 pm Eastern 
 | 
						||
       Time)
 | 
						||
     FAX:  615-332-2634 (24 Hours a day)
 | 
						||
     Delphi:  GSPlusDiz
 | 
						||
     GEnie:  Diz
 | 
						||
     Internet:  Diz@genie.geis.com
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     Checks or Money Orders
 | 
						||
          ICE Offer
 | 
						||
          c/o GS+ Magazine
 | 
						||
          P. O. Box 15366
 | 
						||
          Chattanooga, TN 37415-0366
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     Need More Information?
 | 
						||
          Call 615-332-2087. (9 am - 5 pm Eastern Time)
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
Steven W. Disbrow
 | 
						||
Publisher of GS+ Magazine
 | 
						||
                    (DIZ, CAT33, TOP5, MSG:235/M645;1)
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
KANSASFEST '95 (TENTATIVE)   For everyone who is interested in attending 
 | 
						||
""""""""""""""""""""""""""   KansasFest '95, here is a tentative list of 
 | 
						||
seminars (times are not set yet):
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
A Fireside Chat with Joe Kohn   Discuss the future of the Apple II in the 
 | 
						||
'''''''''''''''''''''''''''''   90's and beyond with Joe Kohn, publisher of 
 | 
						||
Shareware Solutions II.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
The Apple II and the Internet: Part II (Joe Kohn)   Discuss the World Wide 
 | 
						||
'''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''   Web and the internet, 
 | 
						||
it's uses, and it's applicability and use on an Apple II.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
Building an Apple IIGS Portable (Tony Diaz)   Find out how to put the most 
 | 
						||
'''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''   powerful Apple II into a form 
 | 
						||
that can be taken with you!  Tony Diaz tells all!
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
Connecting Real World Devices (Erick Wagner)   The name says it all -- how
 | 
						||
''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''   to connect real world 
 | 
						||
devices to an Apple II.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
Animation and 3D on the Apple IIGS (Michael Lutynski)   Michael Lutynski, 
 | 
						||
'''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''   author of Animasia 
 | 
						||
3D, the premier three-dimensional modeling and animation program for the 
 | 
						||
Apple IIGS, tells how to apply three-dimensional strategies to make 
 | 
						||
presentations more powerful and how to use Animasia 3D.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
HyperStudio and Education (Roger Wagner)
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     Explore the possibilities of the powerful HyperStudio environment and 
 | 
						||
what it can do for you, your classroom, and your productivity.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
So far that is the list, but there are two other seminars being worked on:
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     Second Sight and DiscQuest Demo
 | 
						||
     GNO and the Apple IIGS
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
                (A.RAHIMZADEH, CAT4, TOP12, MSG:44/M645;1)
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
PRINT SHOP REPLACEMENT EDITOR   I have written an 8-bit program that lets 
 | 
						||
"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""   you create full color graphics for the New 
 | 
						||
Print Shop, and I would like to get a few people to beta test it before I 
 | 
						||
release it.  If any one would like to try it out and inform me if they find 
 | 
						||
bugs or if I have left out some essential feature, please contact me by 
 | 
						||
sending me a GEnie E-mail.  The program requires a IIc or an enhanced IIe 
 | 
						||
with an 80 column card, and a color monitor.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     This program is the result of an effort to "fill in the gaps" in the 
 | 
						||
graphics editor included with the New Print Shop.  That graphics editor 
 | 
						||
only lets you create monochrome graphics, and does not display them on the 
 | 
						||
screen at the same aspect ratio as the printed pictures.  People with a 
 | 
						||
IIgs can create the low resolution full color graphics with the Print Shop 
 | 
						||
gs Companion, and export them to the New Print Shop format, but I was 
 | 
						||
unable to find any software for the IIc/IIe to do this.  Version 1 of the 
 | 
						||
program I wrote lets you only make the low resolution full color graphics 
 | 
						||
for NPS, but I plan to upgrade it to be capable of the high resolution full 
 | 
						||
color graphics.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
Gerry (the Applesoft-aholic)
 | 
						||
                 (G.WRIGHT12, CAT6, TOP34, MSG:157/M645;1)
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
ANIMASIA MOVES TO A NEW ADDRESS   Effective May 1, 1995, Animasia's new 
 | 
						||
"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""   mailing address will be:
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     Animasia
 | 
						||
     12175 Science Drive, #3
 | 
						||
     Orlando, FL 32826
 | 
						||
     USA
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     The change in address reflects a need for additional space to 
 | 
						||
accommodate business operations.  Support for Animasia 3-D will continue 
 | 
						||
unabated.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     The phone number, 407-380-9932, and Internet e-mail address, 
 | 
						||
animasia@genie.geis.com, will not change.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
Contact: Michael Lutynski
 | 
						||
                  (ANIMASIA, CAT13, TOP41, MSG:49/M645;1)
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
                       >>> THROUGH THE GRAPEVINE <<<
 | 
						||
                       """""""""""""""""""""""""""""
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
MORE ON PMPFAX   Well, to answer some of Steve's questions...
 | 
						||
""""""""""""""   
 | 
						||
     You'll basically be able to view, print, and export received faxes. 
 | 
						||
For sending, I will probably write a fax translator to import received fax 
 | 
						||
pages as a send page, so you will be able to import them directly into a 
 | 
						||
send job. As for editing received fax pages...  not sure how I'd go about 
 | 
						||
doing that... cover sheets will basically be an object- oriented page 
 | 
						||
layout program.  They will have the ability to import SHR and APF files as 
 | 
						||
picture objects, and have the ability to export coversheets as APF files, 
 | 
						||
so theoretically you could use the coversheet generator to edit a fax page. 
 | 
						||
All coversheets will be b&w (for obvious reasons), but you could view a 
 | 
						||
received page, export it to an APF file, then open a coversheet, import the 
 | 
						||
APF, edit the layout (add text, rects, ovals, lines, etc), then export that 
 | 
						||
to an APF file, THEN import it using the APF fax translator when you send 
 | 
						||
(quite a few steps).  However, i'm still not sure about the actual format I 
 | 
						||
will be using for received files yet (they will be stored as raw T.4 
 | 
						||
encoded data, but I may do some translating first... not sure yet), so all 
 | 
						||
this might change :)
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     As for "printing"... to send a print job as a fax, you will just hold 
 | 
						||
down the Option key while you choose the Print menu item.  That's it. 
 | 
						||
Instead of the JobDialog, you'll get the PMPFax dialog.  Page Setup will be 
 | 
						||
the same (that is, it will be the same for whatever printer you have 
 | 
						||
currently chosen); PMPFax will get all page information from the print 
 | 
						||
record created by your actual print driver.  This method has a couple of 
 | 
						||
benefits... 1) you don't have to go into the Control Panel and choose 
 | 
						||
another print driver, and 2) you don't have to reformat your document to 
 | 
						||
work with whatever paper sizes happen to be available with a fax driver. 
 | 
						||
You can have your document formated for, say, an Imagewriter, and when you 
 | 
						||
fax it, it will use the paging information that the Imagewriter driver 
 | 
						||
uses. If, the next time, you actually want to print, just choose Print 
 | 
						||
without the Option key and you'll be printing as usual.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     As for the outside line thing... because the method for using long 
 | 
						||
distance, and accessing outside lines varies so much, what I will be doing 
 | 
						||
instead is having a single dial prefix string definable in the station 
 | 
						||
setup dialog.  This prefix will be sent before any phone number before 
 | 
						||
dialing. So, if you want to put in your LD service number, you can.  I will 
 | 
						||
probably also add a check box for each phone entry so you can tell it to 
 | 
						||
use the dial prefix or not when dialing. This is so you can have local 
 | 
						||
numbers that will be dialed normally, and LD numbers that use your prefix, 
 | 
						||
etc...  its still not too late to change any of this, so if anyone has any 
 | 
						||
suggestions, let me know.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     As for phone books... I could add a comment field if you like.  Right 
 | 
						||
now, I have First Name, Last Name, Organization, Fax Phone, and Voice 
 | 
						||
Phone. Entries will be displayed sorted by any of the above fields. Since 
 | 
						||
they are displayed in lists, just typing the first few letters of a name 
 | 
						||
will bring that name up, so no extra indexing is necessary.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     One of the substitution fields for cover sheets is a Memo.  You will 
 | 
						||
be able to edit a memo whenever you have chosen a coversheet with the send 
 | 
						||
job. I will also have a Quick Fax menu item in the fax center to allow you 
 | 
						||
to just choose a cover sheet, choose a receipient, and edit a memo, and 
 | 
						||
send that imediately as a single-page fax.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     I don't know about any laws requring sender info on each sheet in a 
 | 
						||
fax, but you will be able to add Titles (headers and footers) to each page. 
 | 
						||
Titles are broken down into six zones, three at the top and three on the 
 | 
						||
bottom, left, center, and right.  You can edit the text you want displayed 
 | 
						||
in any of these zones, and choose whether you want top titles, bottom 
 | 
						||
titles, or both.  The text can use any font style, and size (as long as it 
 | 
						||
fits into the box defining the zone) and can be justified however you want 
 | 
						||
it to be.  PMPFax includes quite a number of substution fields that can be 
 | 
						||
used in titles (more can be used in coversheets), such as all station ID 
 | 
						||
information, page number, total pages, time, date, etc.  This allows you to 
 | 
						||
customize how you want the titles of each of your fax pages to look like.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     Anyway, that's a bit of how things work.  I've been getting quite a 
 | 
						||
lot done on this lately, so I'm hoping to get it to beta test in a month or 
 | 
						||
two. This turned out to be a much larger project than I had anticipated (it 
 | 
						||
does quite a bit).  Note PMPFax will also support external modules that 
 | 
						||
other parties can support, such as fax translators, import/export 
 | 
						||
facilities for phone books and received faxes, "Extras" in the fax center 
 | 
						||
menu, etc.  So, if PMPFax lacks some feature, someone can always just write 
 | 
						||
a module to do that function.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
Paul
 | 
						||
                    (PMP, CAT38, TOP15, MSG:205/M645;1)
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
WOLFENSTEIN HELD UP   Unfortunately, we are still involved in a contract 
 | 
						||
"""""""""""""""""""   dispute regarding Wolfenstein. We have been using the 
 | 
						||
extra time to do a lot of testing and I can tell you that the game looks 
 | 
						||
and sounds fantastic! It will be well worth the wait.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     It does look like we might be resolving the dispute shortly, but 
 | 
						||
don't hold your breath...
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
Lowell Erbe
 | 
						||
Vitesse, Inc., Technical Support
 | 
						||
                   (VITESSE, CAT40, TOP6, MSG:61/M645;1)
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
THE COLLABORATORS / II NOT DISTURB   Are you interested in helping the 
 | 
						||
""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""   Apple II world, but don't know what 
 | 
						||
you have to contribute?
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     Are you a writer? an artist? a musician? or an avid user who'd like 
 | 
						||
to test?  Do you have great ideas for software?  Perhaps you like to lay 
 | 
						||
out menus and windows in Genesys, even if you don't program?  Do you have 
 | 
						||
some spare time and a willingness to lend a hand?
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     If so, I'd like you to join the ranks of The Collaborators:  
 | 
						||
individuals contributing what they can toward new software for the 
 | 
						||
AppleII. Right now, it looks like I'll have 4 months of free time to write 
 | 
						||
software for the Apple II.  Let's make this a group effort to maximize the 
 | 
						||
results!
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     Right now, I'm working on a program called II Not Disturb.  It's 
 | 
						||
designed to make more system add-ons work with telecom software.  If you're 
 | 
						||
a Spectrum user, and have had problems with certain extensions (like clock 
 | 
						||
DAs) while online, let me know right away.  I particularly need testers 
 | 
						||
with high-speed modems, but anybody who's had trouble in the past should 
 | 
						||
let me know.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     Even if we can't use your talents right this minute, sign up for 
 | 
						||
future reference and we'll try to make use of your talents on future 
 | 
						||
programs.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
-G.T. Barnabas [Greg Templeman]
 | 
						||
                   (BARNABAS, CAT13, TOP9, MSG:1/M645;1)
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
<<<<<   OK, I've sent II Not Disturb v1.0d2 out to volunteer testers who
 | 
						||
"""""   have Spectrum.  Get cracking, folks!  I'm curious to see the 
 | 
						||
improvement (I've never had problems with clock software and Spectrum... so 
 | 
						||
why am I writing this?!? er... because other people needed it, I guess! :)
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
:::walking away in disgust, knocking self on the forehead for writing a
 | 
						||
   program that I don't personally need right now...::: ;)
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
-G.T. Barnabas
 | 
						||
                  (BARNABAS, CAT13, TOP9, MSG:31/M645;1)
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
                         >>> MESSAGE SPOTLIGHT <<<
 | 
						||
                         """""""""""""""""""""""""
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
Category 45,  Topic 3
 | 
						||
Message 149       Thu Apr 06, 1995
 | 
						||
BYTEWORKS                    at 22:12 EDT
 | 
						||
 
 | 
						||
     Dave, I understand your points about wanting to do serious work on 
 | 
						||
the GS, and agree (although I like to have fun, too).  I also know that 
 | 
						||
there are a lot of people who still buy for their GS.  That's why we're 
 | 
						||
still here.  The issue for me is, and always has been, whether there are 
 | 
						||
_enough_ people who would buy the word processor.  In terms of the needed 
 | 
						||
raw numbers, I haven't seen very much to encourage me lately, but I'm still 
 | 
						||
on the lookout for good signs.  :)
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
Mike Westerfield
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
                                   -/-/-
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
Category 45,  Topic 3
 | 
						||
Message 150       Thu Apr 06, 1995
 | 
						||
BYTEWORKS                    at 22:33 EDT
 | 
						||
 
 | 
						||
> No offense but my GS is not a hobby computer it is my business
 | 
						||
> computer.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     Good.  But understand that 100 customers won't tempt me to write a 
 | 
						||
word processor.  While you are not unique, though, surely you know that you 
 | 
						||
are unusual.  About 2/3 of all GSs were sold to schools, and most of those 
 | 
						||
were actually used as accelerated //e computers.  I've had zilch luck 
 | 
						||
selling into that market.  About 1/3 were sold into homes, where it's fair 
 | 
						||
to call them hobby computers--even though a lot of people do serious things 
 | 
						||
with their hobby.  (And that's what I meant--to characterize the market, 
 | 
						||
not to demean a particular use.)  The number of GSs sold as business 
 | 
						||
computers were a minor blip.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     So does that mean there is no need for serious tools?  Of course not. 
 | 
						||
But there's also little call for Word and Lotus 1-2-3.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
> I hate to see someone as well respected as yourself referto this 
 | 
						||
> computer as anything but a real computer.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     I never said it wasn't a real computer.  But hobbiests are real 
 | 
						||
people who use real computers, too, and there are a lot of them.  I would 
 | 
						||
characterize the vast majority of my customers as hobbiests.  That may 
 | 
						||
change as more and more of you come to our company for productivity tools, 
 | 
						||
but _very_ few of the people who are using our other products are using 
 | 
						||
them to earn a living.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     Also, FWIW, I find hobbiests to be more informed and more likely to 
 | 
						||
use their computers for a variety of reasons that business users.  To me, 
 | 
						||
hobbiest is _not_ a dirty word.  Hobbiests are the people who _enjoy_ their 
 | 
						||
computer, who stay after work to play games, who read technical magazines, 
 | 
						||
who learn to program, who learn to repair or even build parts for thoer 
 | 
						||
computer--not because they get paid to, but because they love it!
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     Finally, sitting here at my desk, I have a PowerMac, a fairly 
 | 
						||
heavy-duty Compaq, and an Apple IIGS.  I program on all of them.  I do my 
 | 
						||
business work on the Mac.  But when I want to have fun--after work, when 
 | 
						||
it's time to program or play just for myself--it's invariably the GS you'll 
 | 
						||
find on!  And at that point in time, I'd call myself a hobbiest... maybe an 
 | 
						||
overqualified one, but a hobbiest none the less.  :)
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
Mike Westerfield
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
                                 [*][*][*]
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
    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 /
 | 
						||
/////////////////////////////////
 | 
						||
Dept. of I Can't Tell if that's Funny or Scary
 | 
						||
""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
 | 
						||
by Andrew Burke
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
            >>> MICROSOFT UNVEILS NEW JOE-BOB(tm) SOFTWARE <<<
 | 
						||
            """"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     REDMOND, Wash. -- April 10, 1995 -- Microsoft today announced the 
 | 
						||
release of Joe-Bob(tm), a new software package that the company hopes will 
 | 
						||
open up a huge untapped computer market.  With the motto "The software for 
 | 
						||
the rest of y'all(tm)," Joe-Bob reaches out to the same demographic group 
 | 
						||
that buys 4x4s, supports the gun lobby, and drinks Miller Lite.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     "Computers have been commonly seen as for leftists and 
 | 
						||
intellectuals," explains Microsoft spokesperson Willy Maclean, "but we've 
 | 
						||
recently seen people like Newt Gingrinch embracing new technology -- the 
 | 
						||
time is right for the rest of America to get wired!"
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     Instead of a desktop or office metaphor, Joe-Bob(tm) puts the user in 
 | 
						||
a garage.  "Click on the Lynyrd Skynyrd tapes, and get a complete music 
 | 
						||
library in digital stereo.  Click on the pinups, and get hooked up to the 
 | 
						||
Internet's hottest gifs," the promotional materials explain.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     The package does not include a word processor or spreadsheet, but 
 | 
						||
does have software that keeps track of the football season, lists the best 
 | 
						||
roadhouses between Florida and Nevada, and can even order spareribs and 
 | 
						||
beer at the click of a mouse.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     "This is righteous software, man," says beta-tester Billy Grugg.  "It 
 | 
						||
thinks like I think."  Brad Cunningham agrees: "I take it everywhere," he 
 | 
						||
says, pointing to a Pentium laptop racked under his 12-gauge in his pickup 
 | 
						||
truck.  Microsoft is offering desktop users a special clip-on beer holder 
 | 
						||
for their monitors.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     "Look at what's popular out there," says Microsoft Chairman Bill 
 | 
						||
Gates.  "Four of the top-10 Usenet newsgroups are about sex, and splatter 
 | 
						||
video games like Doom and Mortal Kombat are bestsellers.  We're just 
 | 
						||
catering to a demand, that's all."
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     Microsoft is reportedly distributing badges and bumper stickers 
 | 
						||
saying things like "Joe-Bob: Make Your Disk Hard," "Go Microsoft -- Go 
 | 
						||
Intel - - -- Go America," and "QuickTime is for Pinko Hippie Wimps."
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     Apple declined to comment.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
[EOA]
 | 
						||
[FOC]//////////////////////////////
 | 
						||
                     FOCUS ON... /
 | 
						||
/////////////////////////////////
 | 
						||
The Internet
 | 
						||
""""""""""""
 | 
						||
by Kevin Noonan
 | 
						||
(knoonan@cleese.apana.org.au)
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   >>> THE WIZARDS OF OZ--THE INTERNET AND THE APPLE II IN AUSTRALIA <<<
 | 
						||
   """""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     Australia is a big, empty place--roughly 4000 km by 4000 km with a 
 | 
						||
population of only around 18 million.  Cities are separated from one 
 | 
						||
another by up to 2500 km.  In these days of a rapidly shrinking Apple II 
 | 
						||
community, the sensible way for denizens of Oz to keep in touch with each 
 | 
						||
other is by e-mail.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     Of course we do things differently here in Australia so a brief 
 | 
						||
report might assist:  Technically we "Internet" users in Oz use the 
 | 
						||
AARnet--the Australian Academic Research Internet.  The American term 
 | 
						||
Usenet is unknown in Oz.  This Internet is "owned" by the collective heads 
 | 
						||
of our universities.  We have an British-style university system, with a 
 | 
						||
chancellor in charge of each university.  This is a largely ceremonial 
 | 
						||
position; the real power lies with the vice-chancellors.  This Internet was 
 | 
						||
set up for research communication and the like but has grown as rapidly in 
 | 
						||
Australia as in other parts of the world.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     Our university system is almost totally funded by government out of 
 | 
						||
taxation revenue.  There are only a handful of privately-owned universities 
 | 
						||
in Oz and they have all come into being in the last few years.  As with 
 | 
						||
many other government-funded institutions, it is considered politically 
 | 
						||
expedient to decrease the level of this funding and expect the universities 
 | 
						||
to find the money in other ways.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     The explosion in Internet usage has led the vice-chancellors to bring 
 | 
						||
in a new "pay-for-use" system to make money for other areas of university 
 | 
						||
life.  This create some limits for those in Australia who use the Internet.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     Let me give an example based on my own experience.  I am a member of 
 | 
						||
a public access network called APANA, which charges me $50/year for access.  
 | 
						||
My local server, a machine called cleese, also charges me $50.  (I use 
 | 
						||
dial-up access, but I could use SLIP for the same price.)  I get unlimited 
 | 
						||
hours, unlimited access to all Internet facilities:  telnet, ftp, WWW, irc, 
 | 
						||
etc.  That is a good deal!
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     We expect charges to rise based on our usage.  This will tend to 
 | 
						||
dampen the enthusiasm for growth in Oz, but it will also create a 
 | 
						||
marketplace for commercial Internet suppliers which will probably tend to 
 | 
						||
oppose that dampening.  There are a number of such companies that have 
 | 
						||
sprung up in the last year or two (DIALix, ozemail, iinet, connect.com, and 
 | 
						||
pegasus to name a few) and all are apparently doing quite well.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     I guess I should also explain to our rather more libertarian northern 
 | 
						||
hemisphere friends that there is almost no history of public works being 
 | 
						||
paid for by commercial companies.  Almost all of Australia's infrastructure 
 | 
						||
has been paid for by taxation, and built by government.  There are 
 | 
						||
exceptions but they are few.  The commercial aspect of the Internet in the 
 | 
						||
USA (in particular) is a brand new venture in Oz.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     No matter what many may say about the Internet, I suspect that it is 
 | 
						||
more of a dirt track than an information superhighway and will remain that 
 | 
						||
way until the technology takes another step.  Programs like Mosaic (sadly 
 | 
						||
not available for the Apple II) and the whole World Wide Web system may yet 
 | 
						||
make a liar of me.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     One aspect of USA support that I wish we had in Oz is the support of 
 | 
						||
politicians.  (That statement may cause some sharp intakes of breath!)  
 | 
						||
Whatever his faults, US Vice-President Al Gore at least knows about and 
 | 
						||
uses the Internet.  In Oz we know of no politician who uses the 
 | 
						||
Internet--certainly none have ever said anything that indicates this, 
 | 
						||
though they do talk in vague generalities (since when do politicians do 
 | 
						||
otherwise?).  Certainly our Prime Minister, Paul Keating, has made a small 
 | 
						||
amount of funds available for things like CD-ROM technology support... but 
 | 
						||
for the Internet, only indirect cut-backs.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     Nonetheless the place of Australia in the Internet is important.  
 | 
						||
Recently the head of the Internet Society (structured to allow for better 
 | 
						||
planning of the Internet's future) was an Australian.  I also believe that 
 | 
						||
in terms of computers connected to the Internet, Australia ranks in second 
 | 
						||
place (though a very distant second to the USA).
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     The main news gateway for Australia is at the University of 
 | 
						||
Melbourne.  There is apparently no censorship of newsgroups but for reasons 
 | 
						||
I have not been able to discern, we don't get the thousands of newsgroups 
 | 
						||
that the USA apparently has (last count on my server was around 4500 
 | 
						||
groups--friends on the Internet in the USA often speak of 10000 groups).  
 | 
						||
I know many of the USA newsgroups are local to particular communities or 
 | 
						||
states and have no wider interest base.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     Which brings me to a troublesome point for we Oz users.  I read many 
 | 
						||
newsgroups and subscribe to many list server newsgroups and every few weeks 
 | 
						||
I read statements that show that many forget that the Internet is not 
 | 
						||
exclusively for US citizens.  No serious criticism is intended but it would 
 | 
						||
be good if some of the more smaller minded Internet users did not assume 
 | 
						||
that everyone using the Internet is an American.  Also, it is possible on 
 | 
						||
most systems to limit the distribution of your message--"world" is often 
 | 
						||
the default distribution, but it isn't always appropriate.  Try using 
 | 
						||
"local", "usa", and "na" (North America) as appropriate.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     As with everything else, PCs dominate the Internet in Oz, there are a 
 | 
						||
smaller number of Macs, and I am sure other "serious" computers such as 
 | 
						||
Suns.  We Apple II users make do with our usual programs (I use both 
 | 
						||
ProTERM and GNO/ME as my means of connecting) which means we miss out on 
 | 
						||
things like live sound and graphics via the WWW.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     We in the state of South Australia have tried to convince the last 
 | 
						||
few Apple II users here to use the Internet as source of help and news.  So 
 | 
						||
far out of the 10-15 Apple II members of the South Australian Apple Users 
 | 
						||
Club, we have managed to persuade 8 to use the Internet.  Many are lurkers 
 | 
						||
(they read all the news but make no postings of their own), but a few are 
 | 
						||
active in asking and answering questions.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     We also maintain regular e-mail contacts with Apple II users in the 
 | 
						||
rest of Australia.  We still have a sense of community even though we have 
 | 
						||
never met face-to-face.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     One problem I have found at times is that with the sheer volume of 
 | 
						||
electronic traffic on Australia's links to the rest of the world, we get 
 | 
						||
very slow links for things like ftp and I often find that chatting on the 
 | 
						||
irc can sometimes be pointless as there can be lags of over 5 minutes.  
 | 
						||
Even news can suffer.  I have seen some news take a week to get to my site 
 | 
						||
(so much for instantaneous communications).
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     Maybe I am being too picky.  The ability to connect to a computer at 
 | 
						||
Caltech to get the latest Apple II public domain files at no cost is rather 
 | 
						||
impressive.  If it takes 20 minutes to get a file instead of 5 minutes I 
 | 
						||
guess I can still manage to wait!
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     One of the very important uses of the Internet for those of us 
 | 
						||
outside North America is that it can now be used to contact companies that 
 | 
						||
maintain a presence on CompuServe, GEnie, and Delphi.  This makes it 
 | 
						||
possible for us to order goods.  Companies often advertise 1 800 telephone 
 | 
						||
numbers but these are of no use to people in Australia (and most other 
 | 
						||
countries as well).  Companies I have dealt with have taken the sensible 
 | 
						||
method of allowing me to simply make an order after they have my credit 
 | 
						||
card number on record (NEVER, never send a credit card number via e-mail; 
 | 
						||
it is not entirely safe).  This requires me to make one order via a phone 
 | 
						||
call or snail mail (i.e. the regular postal service).  I have ordered many 
 | 
						||
things from a range of companies and have never had any worries with this 
 | 
						||
method.  It has required some detective work at times as companies always 
 | 
						||
quote a 1 800 number but rarely give an e-mail address.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     I know it is now possible to telnet to GEnie and get a GEnie account 
 | 
						||
(I tried it late last year).  It works well and is a better and cheaper way 
 | 
						||
of accessing GEnie than through our Australian telecommunication companies, 
 | 
						||
but it is still quite expensive with an hourly surcharge applied for telnet 
 | 
						||
users.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     In the end, it needs to be understood that in Australia we have a 
 | 
						||
small, fragmented Apple II community and that for many of us our ability to 
 | 
						||
get help on software or hardware is dependent on the Internet.  We in South 
 | 
						||
Australia do what we can to help our local Apple II users but when the 
 | 
						||
really difficult questions come we resort to the Internet.  People on the 
 | 
						||
Internet have so far been terrific in assisting.  I know that on a good day 
 | 
						||
I can get answers to questions in just a few seconds via the irc, a few 
 | 
						||
hours via e-mail, and a few days via the newsgroups.  These are vital 
 | 
						||
services.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
                                 [*][*][*]
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
                                 GLOSSARY
 | 
						||
                                 """"""""
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
ftp   or file transfer protocol, is a program you can use to transfer files
 | 
						||
'''   from a far-off computer to the local computer that you use to connect 
 | 
						||
to the Internet.  (Keep in mind that once you transfer a file from the 
 | 
						||
far-off computer to your local Internet provider, you still have to 
 | 
						||
transfer the file from your local provider to your own microcomputer.)  
 | 
						||
GEnie's Internet Services now offer this option.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
IRC   or Internet relay chat, is used to talk "live" with other Internet
 | 
						||
'''   users.  On GEnie, the closest equivalent is a RTC, or real-time 
 | 
						||
conference/chat.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
SLIP   stands for Serial Line Internet Protocol, and is a way of allowing
 | 
						||
''''   full Internet access over a normal modem.  Most Internet modem 
 | 
						||
access is _not_ SLIP access.  SLIP allows you to use graphic interfaces 
 | 
						||
like Mosaic and Netscape.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
WWW   or World-Wide Web (also known as w3) is like hypermedia for the
 | 
						||
'''   Internet.  People create documents that contain links to pictures, 
 | 
						||
sounds, and other documents.  For example:  If I create a document about 
 | 
						||
myself, then I might explain that I am interested in the Apple II.  The 
 | 
						||
phrase "Apple II" would be highlighted, indicating that there was a link 
 | 
						||
for that phrase.  If you select that link, you'd be taken to places of 
 | 
						||
interest to Apple II users.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
[EOA]
 | 
						||
[AWX]//////////////////////////////
 | 
						||
                APPLEWORKS ANNEX /
 | 
						||
/////////////////////////////////
 | 
						||
In This Corner, AppleWorks 5
 | 
						||
""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
 | 
						||
by Jay Curtis
 | 
						||
  [J.CURTIS8]
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
               >>> APPLEWORKS 5 TAKES ON THE COMPETITION <<<
 | 
						||
               """""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     In the Apple II world, AppleWorks really has no competitor, 
 | 
						||
especially now that AppleWorks 5 has been released.  As we mentioned last 
 | 
						||
month, JEM Software is preparing to release an emulator that will let you 
 | 
						||
run AppleWorks 5 on a Macintosh.<1>  How will AppleWorks fare when faced 
 | 
						||
with competition from other -Works programs?<2>
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     Although AppleWorks 5 doesn't have the graphic capabilities of either 
 | 
						||
Microsoft Works or ClarisWorks, it DOES have several important advantages 
 | 
						||
that make it competitive with both of them.  Included among these 
 | 
						||
advantages are AW5's relational database, extensive library of utilities 
 | 
						||
and templates and its excellent file access and management features.  AW5's 
 | 
						||
speed, and its economic use of disk space and memory will also help to make 
 | 
						||
it competitive.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     Unlike Microsoft Works and ClarisWorks, AW5 has no menu bar, no 
 | 
						||
scroll bar and no movable and resizable window.<3>  There is no built-in 
 | 
						||
capability for including graphics within text files or for manipulating 
 | 
						||
data and displays through such features as "object linking and embedding" 
 | 
						||
or "publish and subscribe."  AppleWorks has no WYSIWYG (what you see is 
 | 
						||
what you get) interface with changeable and scalable fonts, nor does AW5 
 | 
						||
come with a full drawing and painting module or a telecommunications 
 | 
						||
module.<4>  However, what AppleWorks lacks in its ability to DISPLAY data, 
 | 
						||
it makes up for in its capability to MANIPULATE and PROCESS data with speed 
 | 
						||
and efficiency.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     Many of today's object-oriented, GUI (graphic user interface) 
 | 
						||
applications have become RAM hungry and lethargic.  Unless they are run on 
 | 
						||
the latest hardware and system software and/or with substantially increased 
 | 
						||
memory, they are practically guaranteed to frustrate those users who update 
 | 
						||
their software without upgrading their hardware.  AppleWorks is an 
 | 
						||
exception.  Not only has it remained a character-based product but, over 
 | 
						||
the years, programmers Alan Bird, Dan Verkade, Rob Renstrom, Mark Munz and 
 | 
						||
Randy Brandt have poked and prodded AppleWorks to do more within the 
 | 
						||
65c02's 64K addressing limit.  They have refined the program, fixed the 
 | 
						||
bugs, added new features, made it faster, and made it more efficient.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     The result is that AppleWorks is now a larger program with greater 
 | 
						||
capability, but WITHOUT the bloat and lethargy of many of today's GUI 
 | 
						||
products.  In a recent review of Microsoft Works 4.0 the writer noted, "the 
 | 
						||
recommended full installation fills a whopping 16 MB."<5>  Even the 
 | 
						||
conservatively-sized ClarisWorks 3.0 fills a hefty 9.5 MB on disk.  With 
 | 
						||
software of this size, disk access can slow down a program considerably.  
 | 
						||
In contrast, the requirements for Appleworks 5 are small (around 1 MB for 
 | 
						||
full installation on disk and less than 1/2 MB in RAM).  AppleWorks is also 
 | 
						||
fast because it is coded in assembly language (which also keeps it small).  
 | 
						||
Also, it has been coded to make the best possible use of the Apple II's 
 | 
						||
architecture and it runs without disk access.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     Randy Brandt said that virtually "thousands of lines of code have been 
 | 
						||
added" to AppleWorks since version 3.0 came out.  He said that the only 
 | 
						||
constraint in using Apple II hardware with AppleWorks has been the 
 | 
						||
hardware's limited "graphic capability."  However, "in terms of adding 
 | 
						||
features," he said, "there was no intrinsic impediment" with Apple II 
 | 
						||
hardware.  Brandt added, "We literally spent hours on end pawing through 
 | 
						||
code to squeeze out a few bytes."  He said, "We crammed in code, shoehorned 
 | 
						||
in code everywhere that we could."  According to Brandt, in some places in 
 | 
						||
AW5 the user will notice that messages have been shortened and that this 
 | 
						||
was done "just to get more bytes."
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     Although larger and more feature-packed, AW5 is still an 8-bit, 
 | 
						||
character-based program that continues to possess most of the same, 
 | 
						||
familiar menus, key commands and procedures that it has always had, 
 | 
						||
regardless of whether it is running on an Apple II or on a Mac.  Therefore, 
 | 
						||
although it has changed, anyone who used AppleWorks ten years ago could 
 | 
						||
easily sit down with AppleWorks 5 today and quickly learn how to access its 
 | 
						||
new capabilities.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
DIRECT COMPARISON   Admittedly, many of AW5's newest features are shared
 | 
						||
"""""""""""""""""   by MS-Works and ClarisWorks.  For example, AW5's split 
 | 
						||
window viewing capability in the word processor and spreadsheet is 
 | 
						||
available in all ClarisWorks documents and in the MS-Works spreadsheet.  
 | 
						||
Like AppleWorks 5, ClarisWorks also has a capable outliner available in the 
 | 
						||
word processor.  However, no outliner exists in the most current version of 
 | 
						||
MS-Works.  The ability to embed cell notes and memos in spreadsheets is 
 | 
						||
shared between AppleWorks and MS-Works, but not ClarisWorks (which still 
 | 
						||
lacks this capability in even its most recent version).<6>  Like 
 | 
						||
AppleWorks, both MS-Works and ClarisWorks offer multiple database views.  
 | 
						||
However, neither program offers AppleWorks' MIXED single record layout and 
 | 
						||
multiple record layout display.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     All three programs offer calculated database fields with both logical 
 | 
						||
and numerical operators, and all three offer the considerable power of 3-D 
 | 
						||
referencing, i.e. the ability to reference worksheet cells in other 
 | 
						||
spreadsheets.  All three software packages offer adequate mail merge 
 | 
						||
capability.  However, unlike MS-Works, AppleWorks can call up merged 
 | 
						||
AppleWorks word processor files and display their data independently of the 
 | 
						||
linked database.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     An advantage of both MS-Works and ClarisWorks is that each can link 
 | 
						||
files and to update and share data automatically between the files.  
 | 
						||
Microsoft Works uses what it calls Object Linking and Embedding (OLE) to 
 | 
						||
accomplish data sharing (in version 4.0), while ClarisWorks uses what it 
 | 
						||
calls "frames" with System 7's "Publish and Subscribe" feature to share 
 | 
						||
data between documents.  In both MS-Works and ClarisWorks, linked documents 
 | 
						||
in WP, DB and SS modules can automatically be updated when information is 
 | 
						||
changed in a key document.  This feature can have distinct advantages, 
 | 
						||
especially in documents that include graphic displays and that need to be 
 | 
						||
reposted with new data regularly.  However, the information in these 
 | 
						||
documents is updated in linked files ONLY according to how it is changed in 
 | 
						||
the key file.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     In contrast, AppleWorks provides the capability to link files and 
 | 
						||
share data INTELLIGENTLY (i.e, according to user-defined rules) through its 
 | 
						||
relational database capabilities.  In response to a recalculation or to 
 | 
						||
field input, AW5 can search fields or cells in related files on the desktop 
 | 
						||
(or on disk) and import the variable data in those files.  Data sharing may 
 | 
						||
vary depending on the kind of calculation that was made, the rule that was 
 | 
						||
linked to the cell or field, or the input that a spreadsheet cell or DB 
 | 
						||
field had received.  Additionally, AppleWorks can also EXPORT data to 
 | 
						||
linked files when a rule has been met.  All of this is done not through 
 | 
						||
simple object linking, but according to conditions that the user has 
 | 
						||
prescribed beforehand.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     The relational database capabilities of AppleWorks 5 are regarded by 
 | 
						||
some as its strongest feature.  These capabilities were originally built-in 
 | 
						||
to the AppleWorks 4.x engine that runs inside AW5, and they evolved from 
 | 
						||
the "Total Control" AppleWorks enhancement that was developed for 
 | 
						||
AppleWorks 3.0.  In effect, it is now possible to program AppleWorks to 
 | 
						||
automatically generate sophisticated, full, narrative reports from brief 
 | 
						||
alpha-numerical data alone.  Users of either ClarisWorks or MS-Works may 
 | 
						||
sneer at AppleWorks' 60-category limit per record, but this limitation is 
 | 
						||
really only a limitation of the mind when you consider the power of AW5's 
 | 
						||
true relational capabilities.  More about these capabilities will appear in 
 | 
						||
a future article.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     AppleWorks' file management features are SIMPLY superior to either 
 | 
						||
Microsoft Works or ClarisWorks.  Both of those programs depend totally upon 
 | 
						||
the Mac desktop and operating system to perform such tasks as file 
 | 
						||
deleting, moving, copying, or renaming.  In order to access those 
 | 
						||
capabilities, it is necessary to either close the MS-Works or ClarisWorks 
 | 
						||
window (or quit the application altogether), select the Mac desktop and 
 | 
						||
then manipulate files by selecting and opening file folders from the 
 | 
						||
desktop.<7>  Once the file maintenance activities have been completed, then 
 | 
						||
the program can be reselected or relaunched and program tasks resumed.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     On the other hand, with AppleWorks, all necessary file maintenance can 
 | 
						||
be performed from within the program, including deleting, renaming, 
 | 
						||
copying, moving, lock, unlock and even change of file type.  Additional 
 | 
						||
file and disk management functions available from the "Other Activities" 
 | 
						||
menu include copy, erase, format and verify disks, AND create, copy and 
 | 
						||
rename subdirectories.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     Randy Brandt noted that, when running under Phoenix II on the Mac, 
 | 
						||
"Phoenix disables the Disk Activities menu in AW5."  However, he added, 
 | 
						||
"File activities continue to work."  This means that it will NOT be 
 | 
						||
possible to copy, format, erase, verify, or rename disks from within 
 | 
						||
AppleWorks on the Mac, nor will it be possible to create or copy 
 | 
						||
subdirectories.  However, deleting, renaming, copying and moving files will 
 | 
						||
continue to be possible on the Mac just as it is on the Apple II.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     AppleWorks 5's file access is VASTLY superior to either ClarisWorks or 
 | 
						||
MS-Works.  Neither of those programs, for example, has AW5's capability to 
 | 
						||
remember the last 9 files accessed during a previous session and then make 
 | 
						||
the files available through a desktop organizer when the program is 
 | 
						||
relaunched.  Additionally, neither program allows the user to preselect 
 | 
						||
commonly used data paths for saving and opening files.  This "Quick Path" 
 | 
						||
menu is created through AW5's "Select standard settings for AppleWorks" 
 | 
						||
feature.  Up to 8 data paths can be pre-selected.  Unlike either 
 | 
						||
ClarisWorks or MS-Works, AppleWorks makes it possible to select and open 
 | 
						||
multiple files in one operation instead of opening them one at a time (an 
 | 
						||
extremely time-consuming process when multiple files are required).  Users 
 | 
						||
can select files by scrolling through a subdirectory, checking them with a 
 | 
						||
MouseText check mark then open them with a single key stroke.  
 | 
						||
Additionally, a range of files can be selected with a command-arrow key 
 | 
						||
stroke and then opened.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     Randy Brandt explained that when AW5 is run in emulation under 
 | 
						||
"Phoenix II" and Macintosh System 7.0 and System 7.5, files are written to 
 | 
						||
and read  directly from subdirectories on the Mac's HFS volume(s).  AW5 
 | 
						||
potentially has access to any of the Mac's online volumes.  According to 
 | 
						||
Brandt, AppleWorks itself "can even be run from a directory that doesn't 
 | 
						||
have a legal ProDOS path."  Brandt said, "We've defined /* as the directory 
 | 
						||
or folder where Phoenix resides, so we can ship with things like TimeOut 
 | 
						||
and inits active, since their paths are defined as /*/aw.inits and 
 | 
						||
/*/timeout, allowing them to work no matter what the real path is."
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     Under Phoenix and System 7.0, if the user wishes to copy files to a 
 | 
						||
ProDOS-formatted disk in the Mac's SuperDrive, then it is necessary to run 
 | 
						||
the files through Apple File Exchange before they can be saved to the 
 | 
						||
ProDOS disk.  However, under Macintosh System 7.5, it is possible for AW5 
 | 
						||
to read and write AppleWorks files directly to ProDOS-formatted disks in 
 | 
						||
the Mac's SuperDrive and/or to a ProDOS volume on the Mac's HD, bypassing 
 | 
						||
AFE altogether.  This is made possible by System 7.5's "Macintosh Easy 
 | 
						||
Open" (MEO) file translation capabilities.  Perhaps even more important for 
 | 
						||
some users, "[u]nder System 7.5 you should be able to load and save MS-DOS 
 | 
						||
text files directly, using MS-DOS disks," said Brandt.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     Steven Beville's "ChangeTextType" macro program should come in handy 
 | 
						||
for saving AppleWorks files directly to MS-DOS disks under Phoenix and 
 | 
						||
System 7.5.  This short program can be compiled and saved as a TimeOut 
 | 
						||
application.  It gives the user the opportunity to save files from the 
 | 
						||
AppleWorks desktop as "Word processor, AppleWorks Text and MS-DOS Text."  
 | 
						||
As it has currently been written, the program is designed to save files as 
 | 
						||
ASCII text in MS-DOS format (with added linefeeds).  These files can then 
 | 
						||
be copied to an MS-DOS disk using a GS application such as Peter Watson's 
 | 
						||
MS-DOS utilities or the Mac's Apple File Exchange.  For those running AW5 
 | 
						||
on the Mac under System 7.5 and Phoenix, however, direct access to MS-DOS 
 | 
						||
volumes and text files should make those intermediate steps unnecessary.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     One final advantage to the use of AppleWorks 5 over either 
 | 
						||
ClarisWorks or Microsoft Works is the enormous library of AppleWorks files 
 | 
						||
that is available to users.  Nothing like this library exists for either of 
 | 
						||
the other two integrated software programs.  New and old users alike can 
 | 
						||
potentially save tremendous amounts of time over the creation of their own 
 | 
						||
task files and templates by simply downloading what they need from bulletin 
 | 
						||
board services at no cost beyond online charges.  On GEnie alone, there are 
 | 
						||
more than 800 AppleWorks-related files containing virtually thousands of 
 | 
						||
utilities, database and spreadsheet templates, macro programs, payroll, 
 | 
						||
home finance and small business worksheets, and organizational management 
 | 
						||
templates that can be used directly with AW5 or converted to AW5 use.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     Many of the AppleWorks utilities and files available online are from 
 | 
						||
the National AppleWorks User Group (NAUG) and many others are from 
 | 
						||
independent AppleWorks users and enthusiasts.  New AppleWorks users, 
 | 
						||
whether they choose to run AppleWorks on a Macintosh or an Apple II, should 
 | 
						||
consider the potential value of this library when comparing programs.  
 | 
						||
Eventually, if Brandt and Munz can produce a DOS version of Phoenix II, 
 | 
						||
users may be able to save or access AppleWorks files with full formatting 
 | 
						||
and control characters directly to MS-DOS disks for use with AppleWorks 
 | 
						||
running on DOS systems.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     In effect, AW5 may eventually run nearly everywhere, with full file 
 | 
						||
interchange and access between systems, as a completely 
 | 
						||
hardware-independent program.  It's ideal for people who must work on 
 | 
						||
multiple platforms.  If you are a dedicated AppleWorks 5 user, it may not 
 | 
						||
matter what kind of computer you use; you will have access to AppleWorks 
 | 
						||
and its extensive library of files wherever you are.  This amazing 
 | 
						||
possibility is very real.  In the next installment, we'll talk more about 
 | 
						||
AW5's capabilities and about ways in which these amazing capabilities can 
 | 
						||
be used.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
                                 [*][*][*]
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
                                   NOTES
 | 
						||
                                   """""
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     <1>  It was suggested in last month's installment that AW5 might be 
 | 
						||
bundled and sold with the Macintosh "Phoenix II" emulator.  As of this 
 | 
						||
writing, Randy Brandt has indicated that there are no such plans, and that 
 | 
						||
he is only interested in selling the Phoenix II emulator by itself through 
 | 
						||
JEM software.  The emulator will sell for less than the IIe card, but no 
 | 
						||
final price has been determined.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     <2>  Programs such as Microsoft Works and ClarisWorks are in fact 
 | 
						||
descended from AppleWorks.  AppleWorks was there first.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     <3>  This is not entirely accurate if AppleWorks 5 is running in 
 | 
						||
EMULATION on the Mac.  The "Phoenix II" emulation and System 7 provide a 
 | 
						||
menu bar with certain capabilities that can be used with AW5 such as "Save 
 | 
						||
Snapshot."  Also, the window that AW5 runs in can be moved around the 
 | 
						||
desktop.  In emulation, scrolling is done from within the program, however.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     <4>  TimeOut Paint is included with AW5, but it does not function as 
 | 
						||
an integrated part of the program in the same way that the paint and draw 
 | 
						||
modules function in MS-Works and ClarisWorks.  Additionally, previous 
 | 
						||
versions of AppleWorks would allow use of TimeOut TeleComm from within 
 | 
						||
AppleWorks, but use of this feature is no longer available with AW5.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     <5>  Norr, Henry.  "Microsoft Works 4.0."  MacWorld (January 1995), 
 | 
						||
p. 64.  These figures refer, of course, to hard drive space, not space in 
 | 
						||
memory.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     <6>  "ClarisWorks 3.0/ Compact and well integrated, ClarisWorks now 
 | 
						||
costs less and still does it all."  MacUser (April 1995), p. 60.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     <7>  It is also possible to use the desktop's "Find" capability from 
 | 
						||
the "Edit" cascade menu on the Mac's menu bar in order to locate a desired 
 | 
						||
file or set of files.  However, those with older, 4MB Mac systems like the 
 | 
						||
LC-II or LC-III know that even the simple act of performing file 
 | 
						||
maintenance may over-tax the system RAM and result in an out-of-memory 
 | 
						||
error, depending on how many applications have been left open.  For this 
 | 
						||
reason, it may be prudent to quit applications rather than just closing 
 | 
						||
their windows.  Unfortunately, this may mean additional time required in 
 | 
						||
relaunching.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
[EOA]
 | 
						||
[ASA]//////////////////////////////
 | 
						||
               ASCII ART GALLERY /
 | 
						||
/////////////////////////////////
 | 
						||
Menagerie
 | 
						||
"""""""""
 | 
						||
by Susie Oviatt
 | 
						||
        [SUSIE]
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
                                                           ASCII ART BEGINS
 | 
						||
                             ..,,,,,,,,,..
 | 
						||
                      .,;%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%;,.
 | 
						||
                    %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%////%%%%%%, .,;%%;,
 | 
						||
             .,;%/,%%%%%/////%%%%%%%%%%%%%%////%%%%,%%//%%%,
 | 
						||
         .,;%%%%/,%%%///%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%,////%%%%;,
 | 
						||
      .,%%%%%%//,%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%@@%a%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%,%%/%%%%%%%;,
 | 
						||
    .,%//%%%%//,%%%%///////%%%%%%%@@@%%%%%%///////%%%%,%%//%%%%%%%%,
 | 
						||
  ,%%%%%///%%//,%%//%%%%%///%%%%%@@@%%%%%////%%%%%%%%%,/%%%%%%%%%%%%%
 | 
						||
 .%%%%%%%%%////,%%%%%%%//%///%%%%@@@@%%%////%%/////%%%,/;%%%%%%%%/%%%
 | 
						||
 %/%%%%%%%/////,%%%%///%%////%%%@@@@@%%%///%%/%%%%%//%,////%%%%//%%%'
 | 
						||
 %//%%%%%//////,%/%a`  'a%///%%%@@@@@@%%////a`  'a%%%%,//%///%/%%%%%
 | 
						||
 %///%%%%%%///,%%%%@@aa@@%//%%%@@@@S@@@%%///@@aa@@%%%%%,/%////%%%%%
 | 
						||
 %%//%%%%%%%//,%%%%%///////%%%@S@@@@SS@@@%%/////%%%%%%%,%////%%%%%'
 | 
						||
 %%//%%%%%%%//,%%%%/////%%@%@SS@@@@@@@S@@@@%%%%/////%%%,////%%%%%'
 | 
						||
 `%/%%%%//%%//,%%%///%%%%@@@S@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@S%%%%////%%,///%%%%%'
 | 
						||
   %%%%//%%%%/,%%%%%%%%@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@SS@%%%%%%%%,//%%%%%'
 | 
						||
   `%%%//%%%%/,%%%%@%@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@S@@%%%%%,/////%%'
 | 
						||
    `%%%//%%%/,%%%@@@SS@@SSs@@@@@@@@@@@@@sSS@@@@@@%%%,//%%//%'
 | 
						||
     `%%%%%%/  %%S@@SS@@@@@Ss` .,,.    'sS@@@S@@@@%'  ///%/%'
 | 
						||
       `%%%/    %SS@@@@SSS@@S.         .S@@SSS@@@@'    //%%'
 | 
						||
                /`S@@@@@@SSSSSs,     ,sSSSSS@@@@@'
 | 
						||
             ,%%//`@@@@@@@@@@@@@Ss,sS@@@@@@@@@@@'/
 | 
						||
          .,%%%%@@00`@@@@@@@@@@@@@'@@@@@@@@@@@'//%%,
 | 
						||
      .,%%%%%%a%@@@@000aaaaaaaaa00a00aaaaaaa00%@%%%%%,
 | 
						||
   .,%%%%%%a%%@@@@@@@@@@000000000000000000@@@%@@%%%@%%%,
 | 
						||
  %%%%%%a%%@@@%@@@@@@@@@@@00000000000000@@@@@@@@@%@@%%@%%,
 | 
						||
 %%%aa%@@@@@@@@@@@@@@0000000000000000000000@@@@@@@@%@@@%%%%,
 | 
						||
 %%@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@00000000000000000000000000000@@@@@@@@@%%%%%,
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
                                                                         .;'
 | 
						||
                                                                       .;o;
 | 
						||
                                                                     .;;O;;
 | 
						||
                                                                    ,;@O@;;
 | 
						||
                                                                  ,;@O@@;;'
 | 
						||
                                                         .,,,,,.,;@OO@@;'
 | 
						||
                                                     ,;;;;;;;aaa@@@@@O@@;,
 | 
						||
                                                 ,;;;;;::@@@@@@@@@@@@@OO@;;
 | 
						||
                                              ,;;;;;::%%;;;;;;@@@''';@@O@;;
 | 
						||
                                           ,;;;;;:::%%;;;;;a@a;'     ;@@;'
 | 
						||
                                         ,;;;;:::%%;;;;;a@@OO'        `;;
 | 
						||
                                       ,;;;;:::%%;;;;;a@@OO'             `
 | 
						||
                                     ,;;;;;:::%;;;;;a@O@OO
 | 
						||
                                    ,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;@OO@OO'
 | 
						||
             .:                    ;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;a@OO@OO
 | 
						||
           .::;,                  ;;:;;;;;;;a@a;;;@OO@@OO
 | 
						||
          .::;;;,               ,;%:;;;;;;aO@@@;;;@OO@OO'
 | 
						||
          :::;;;;;,           ,%;%:;;;;;@@OO@@@;;;@O@@OO
 | 
						||
          :::;;;;;;;,       ,%;%%::;;;;@@OO@@@;;;;@@@OO'
 | 
						||
          :::;;;;;;;;;,.  ,%;%;%:;;;;;@@OO@@@@;;;;@@@OO
 | 
						||
           `:;;;;;;;:::,;;;%%;%%;;;;;;@@OO@@@@;;;;@@OO'
 | 
						||
            `;;;;;:::,;;;:::;%;%%%;;;;;@@OO@@@@;;;@@OO
 | 
						||
             ;;:::,;;::;;;;;;;;%;%;%;;;;@@OO@@@@;;aOO'
 | 
						||
             ::,;;;:::;;;;;;;;;;;%%;%;;;;;@@O@@@@@@OO
 | 
						||
            :,;;;::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;%%%;;;::;;@@@@@@OO'
 | 
						||
           ,;;;:::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;%;%;;::,%%%%:@@@@OOO
 | 
						||
          ;;;;:::;;;;:;;;;;;;;%;;;::,%;;;;%%:@@@OOO'
 | 
						||
         ;;;;:::;;;:;;;aa;;;;;;::,%;;;;;;;%%:@@@OO'
 | 
						||
        ;;;::::;;::;;;@@@;;;::,%;;;;;;;;;%%:a@OOO'
 | 
						||
       ;;;:::;;::;;;;a@@a;::,%;;;;;;;;;%%:a@@OOO'
 | 
						||
      ;;:::;;;::;;;;@@@@@;::%;;;;;;;%:a@@@@@OOO'
 | 
						||
     ;;:::;;:::;;;;a@@@@@::,%;;;%,:a@@@@@@OOOO'
 | 
						||
    ;;:::;;:::;;;;;@@@@@@;;;;;a@@@@@@@@@OOOO'
 | 
						||
   ;:::%;;::::;;;;;;@@@@;;;a@@@@@@@@@@OOOO'
 | 
						||
  ;::;%;;;;:::;;;;;;;(.);a@@@@@@@@@@OOOO'
 | 
						||
  ;::%;;;;;;::;;;;;;;;;a@@@@@@@@@@OOOO'
 | 
						||
  `;:;;;;;;;::;;;;;;;a@@@@@@@@@@OOO'
 | 
						||
    `;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;a@@@@@@@@OO'
 | 
						||
      `;;;;;;;;;;;;a@@@@OO'
 | 
						||
         `;;;;;;;;a@OO'
 | 
						||
            `;;;;@O'
 | 
						||
                                                             ASCII ART ENDS
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
[FOR VISUALLY IMPAIRED READERS:  The preceding was a picture of a beagle 
 | 
						||
puppy and an Orca whale.]
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
[EOA]
 | 
						||
[PRO]//////////////////////////////
 | 
						||
                        PROFILES /
 | 
						||
/////////////////////////////////
 | 
						||
Who's Who In Apple II
 | 
						||
"""""""""""""""""""""
 | 
						||
by Charlie Hartley
 | 
						||
      [A2.CHARLIE]
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
                            >>> WHO'S WHO? <<<
 | 
						||
                            """"""""""""""""""
 | 
						||
                   ~ GEnieLamp Profile:  Tom Zuchowski ~
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     This month we will profile the man who probably knows more about the 
 | 
						||
Eamon adventures and the world of Eamonauts than anyone else.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
GEnieLamp>   You seem to be the resident Eamon guru on GEnie.  Why don't
 | 
						||
"""""""""    you begin by telling us what the Eamon adventures are, and how 
 | 
						||
you came to be so involved with them?
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
Tom>   Eamon adventures are text-based games of exploration and combat.
 | 
						||
"""    Eamon is similar to, though usually much simpler than, the old 
 | 
						||
Infocom series of games.  Basically, the computer tells you what you see, 
 | 
						||
and you type in simple commands such as GET POTION, GIVE POTION TO FRODO, 
 | 
						||
DRINK POTION, etc.  Eamon is a public-domain gaming system that began as 
 | 
						||
nothing more than a small set of tools for writing Eamon adventures.  Over 
 | 
						||
the years, the tools have become much more sophisticated, and many dozens 
 | 
						||
of people have written some 230 different Eamons.  By the way, nobody knows 
 | 
						||
why Donald Brown named it "Eamon", so don't ask. <grin>
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     I first discovered Eamon back around 1982 or '83 by ordering some 
 | 
						||
from a mail-order public-domain software house.  I become enamoured with 
 | 
						||
the concept of a system that enabled anyone to design and write text 
 | 
						||
adventures, and best of all, they were comparatively cheap to buy.  When 
 | 
						||
John Nelson began the first national Eamon club, I became an active 
 | 
						||
contributor, especially in the bug-fix department.  For some reason, I used 
 | 
						||
to get a lot of entertainment from fixing other people's bugs.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     But it was when I actually wrote my first Eamon that I discovered 
 | 
						||
just how much FUN Eamon can be.  Writing an Eamon adventure is perhaps the 
 | 
						||
most engrossing thing I've ever done with a computer.  Of course, different 
 | 
						||
people like doing different things and everyone won't share my enthusiasm, 
 | 
						||
but I know people who were forced to quit writing Eamons because they 
 | 
						||
became obsessed with them to the point of neglecting their real lives.  I 
 | 
						||
know that feeling well!
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     In 1986, John Nelson bought a PC, and he soon let his Eamon club 
 | 
						||
slide into total neglect.  After many months of nagging him, he transferred 
 | 
						||
the tattered remains of his club to me.  I began the "Eamon Adventurer's 
 | 
						||
Guild" newsletter, and got most of the public-domain vendors on board with 
 | 
						||
me so that we would have a common Eamon numbering system.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     Then Dean Esmay called me in 1989 and got me online with GEnie as 
 | 
						||
A2's "Eamon guy".  I eventually became the "8-bit" guy for the library 
 | 
						||
crew, but Eamon remains my true love in Apple II gaming.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
GEnieLamp>   What are your duties as the "8 bit" guy for the library crew?
 | 
						||
"""""""""
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
Tom>   It might be more accurate to call me A2's "8-bit advocate".  Most of 
 | 
						||
"""    the A2 staff are, or course, hard-core GS enthusiasts.  I sort of 
 | 
						||
appointed myself as the staff voice for 8-bit users, to keep everyone 
 | 
						||
mindful of the needs and limits of the 8-bit platforms.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     As far as the library goes, my area got expanded from just Eamon to 
 | 
						||
include the 8-bit games and utilities libraries back when Dean asked me to 
 | 
						||
handle those areas during the big clean-up project four or five years ago.  
 | 
						||
We went through every file in the library, converting everything to BXY, 
 | 
						||
eliminating redundant files, and removing stuff that just didn't work.  In 
 | 
						||
the course of this, I became familiar with everything we had.  Since then, 
 | 
						||
I made up a few "Best of A2" 8-bit uploads and still try to make sure that 
 | 
						||
we don't release new uploads of things we already have.  I sometimes do 
 | 
						||
things like verify compatibility, or may be called upon to help II+ users 
 | 
						||
with their special problems.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     My main library work these days isn't so much as an 8-bit specialist, 
 | 
						||
but is simply to help A2.TONY out with whatever he asks me to do:  fix 
 | 
						||
descriptions, move files, do research, fill in when he takes off for a few 
 | 
						||
days, and so on.  This takes some of the load off of him and makes it 
 | 
						||
easier to stay ahead of library developments at all times.  I also do the 
 | 
						||
monthly Library Indexes.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     I've always liked using my IIe more than a GS.  This is undoubtedly 
 | 
						||
at least partly because my IIe has a lot of enhancements and my GS does 
 | 
						||
not, but I've never been a huge fan of rodents.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
GEnieLamp>   Tell us about your present project of uploading all of the old
 | 
						||
"""""""""    Eamon adventures to the GEnie library.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
Tom>   Well, there are only two or three public-domain vendors left that
 | 
						||
"""    carry the entire Eamon set, and I recently realized that some Eamons 
 | 
						||
could possibly become lost forever if something wasn't done to preserve 
 | 
						||
them.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     I am uploading everything I have to A2's library.  This way, it will 
 | 
						||
always be available to the public, no matter what happens to me or the 
 | 
						||
Apple II public-domain mail-order business.  A2 will not only have ALL of 
 | 
						||
the DOS 3.3 and ProDOS Eamons, but also a lot of other utilities and stuff 
 | 
						||
that has never been available anywhere.  Sam Ruby's custom Eamon editors 
 | 
						||
for many of his landmark Eamons are one example.  I'll be uploading more 
 | 
						||
reviews and tutorials, too.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     Note that there are DOS 3.3 Eamons, and also ProDOS Eamons in 
 | 
						||
40-column and 80-column format.  People who are looking for specific Eamon 
 | 
						||
stuff should not despair of finding it among the hundreds of files that 
 | 
						||
will eventually reside in the library.  I am using specific file naming 
 | 
						||
conventions so that a search on the keyword EAMON will result in sorted 
 | 
						||
lists that are not only sorted by number but also by operating system and 
 | 
						||
display, too.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
GEnieLamp>   [We asked Tom to list his Top 20 all-time favorite Eamon
 | 
						||
"""""""""    adventures.  They are listed and described in the Treasure 
 | 
						||
Hunt column this month.]
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     How did you first get interested in the Apple II computer?
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
Tom>   My first exposure to computers was a job assembling and reconciling
 | 
						||
"""    computer runs for a big mainframe in a bank.  This got me interested 
 | 
						||
in them, and I learned to work on them in the Air Force back in the late 
 | 
						||
70s.  Getting my own computer was very high on my list of things to do when 
 | 
						||
I became a civilian in 1979, and I bought my first II+ in 1980.  It had 64K 
 | 
						||
and one Disk II floppy drive, and cost me something like $2,500 or so.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     I had originally intended to buy an Ohio Scientific computer, which I 
 | 
						||
judged to be the most interesting and capable computer on the market.  But 
 | 
						||
it happened that one of my co-workers in my new job had an Apple II, and he 
 | 
						||
convinced me that we could have a lot more fun together if we used the same 
 | 
						||
computer.  As it turned out, Visi-Calc killed off all of the Apple II's 
 | 
						||
competitors, so I got lucky.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
GEnieLamp>   What would you consider to be the top five programs ever 
 | 
						||
"""""""""    written for the 8 bit Apple II series of computers?
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
Tom>   These choices are based on my personal experience.  I don't doubt
 | 
						||
"""    that there are some candidates for this list that I've simply never 
 | 
						||
used, and I may have let some worthies slip my mind, but here goes:
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     1) ProTERM 3   The best telecom program I've ever used.  I'm still 
 | 
						||
looking for a program for my 486 that is more than half this good.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     2) AppleWorks   No list would be complete without this program.  
 | 
						||
AppleWorks is the best program I've ever used for "quick and dirty" 
 | 
						||
databases and word processing.  Perhaps I should specifically single out 
 | 
						||
AppleWorks 3.0, the version that (in my opinion) made AW into a serious 
 | 
						||
program.  Having said that, I should perhaps also mention that the later 
 | 
						||
versions are even better!
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     3) Diversi-DOS   Bill Basham's DOS 3.3 replacement is MUCH superior 
 | 
						||
to ProDOS for 5.25-only systems.  It's just as fast as ProDOS, makes fewer 
 | 
						||
demands on system resources, and is easier to use.  But it's only good for 
 | 
						||
DOS 3.3 disks, which limits its utility these days.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     4) ShrinkIt 3.4   Where would we be today without Andy Nicholas?  
 | 
						||
This is the program I always use to show PC-snobs what a lowly 13-year-old 
 | 
						||
Apple II is STILL capable of.  (If only all of our programs were this 
 | 
						||
good!)
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     5) Copy II+ 8.4   Not the best disk utility that was ever on the 
 | 
						||
market, but it's the one that I use the most often.  I think it's the 
 | 
						||
easiest to use, and it gives me some features I need that I don't see 
 | 
						||
anywhere else.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
GEnieLamp>   Do you have any anecdotes you can share with us about your
 | 
						||
"""""""""    first experiences with the Apple II?
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
Tom>   Gosh, I don't know.  I was totally consumed by programming and
 | 
						||
"""    gaming.  My job had me working out of my home on an "on call" basis, 
 | 
						||
and I had a lot of free time.  I'll bet I spent upwards of 70-80 hours per 
 | 
						||
week programming and playing games in 1980-81.  No social life at all.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     Back then a low-end printer cost about $800, and I didn't get a 
 | 
						||
printer or an assembler until '81 or '82, and so I used to spend absolutely 
 | 
						||
absurd amounts of time working with pen and paper and typing things in by 
 | 
						||
hand.  This is a very time-consuming way to write and debug machine-code 
 | 
						||
programs!  Fortunately, I had the foresight to get that Disk II at the 
 | 
						||
beginning.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     I had an inventory of about 400 small parts that I carried for my 
 | 
						||
job, and it was a tedious task to reconcile it four times a year.  So I 
 | 
						||
built a speech synthesizer and wrote a program that read my inventory to me 
 | 
						||
while I checked my stuff.  It was a wonderfully productive program and 
 | 
						||
quite successful.  Of course, I spent much more time constantly making it 
 | 
						||
"better" than I ever saved by merely using it.  It was great fun!
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     The early days were great.  I wrote several small articles that I 
 | 
						||
sold to the many Apple II magazines of the day.  Anybody could do it back 
 | 
						||
then, when they published entire articles about how to save a single byte 
 | 
						||
in a routine.  Ah, the days of 16K computers!
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     I was late to come to ProDOS, still using my II+ and DOS 3.3 up until 
 | 
						||
1989.  ProDOS just didn't have anything to offer to me that I thought I 
 | 
						||
needed, and cost more resources than DOS 3.3 did.  (There are still legions 
 | 
						||
of such Apple II users out in the World; you'd be amazed.)  It took coming 
 | 
						||
online to GEnie to expand my needs beyond what I could do with the ol' II+.  
 | 
						||
These days I use a souped-up IIe, a stock GS, a 486, and the II+, pretty 
 | 
						||
much in that order.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
GEnieLamp>   Tell us a little bit about yourself.
 | 
						||
"""""""""
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
Tom>   I was born and grew up in northwest Missouri, near Kansas City.
 | 
						||
"""    Since I was 8 years old, all I ever wanted to do was design rocket 
 | 
						||
hardware, and the year I graduated from high school was the year they 
 | 
						||
pulled the plug on Apollo.  I drifted for two years in college and then 
 | 
						||
joined the Air Force in search of an interesting career.  I learned to 
 | 
						||
repair computers in the Air Force, and got my AA Electronics degree.  The 
 | 
						||
Air Force stint included two years in Japan, where I would have gladly 
 | 
						||
lived the rest of my life, if they would have let me stay there.  I wound 
 | 
						||
up in North Carolina, which is a pretty nice place, so I can't complain.  I 
 | 
						||
live in a small rural housing development a few miles out from a 
 | 
						||
medium-sized city, and really like the peace and quiet.  I listen to a lot 
 | 
						||
of music of the hard-rock variety, and watch far too much TV.  I'm 43 years 
 | 
						||
old.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
GEnieLamp>  What do you consider your proudest accomplishment?
 | 
						||
"""""""""
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
Tom>   I never really thought about it before.  Probably my proudest
 | 
						||
"""    accomplishment is the fact that my father is proud of how I turned 
 | 
						||
out and what I have become.  That means a lot to me.  It rather dazzles me 
 | 
						||
that my wife thinks I'm good enough for her, because she is quite an 
 | 
						||
exceptional woman, very wise and smart.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     Computer-wise, I take great pride in the esteem that my own Eamon 
 | 
						||
adventures are given by many Eamon gamers.  The best Eamon authors are 
 | 
						||
darned good, and it's a real honor to be included in that select group by 
 | 
						||
people whose opinions I value.  There's an awful lot that goes into a top 
 | 
						||
Eamon adventure that no one but another Eamon author would ever notice. 
 | 
						||
Like many things, when it's done right, the user doesn't even know it's 
 | 
						||
there.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     Online, I'm darned proud of the job the library staff does in A2.  
 | 
						||
A2's library was a real mess at one time, and Dean put together a great 
 | 
						||
crew that cleaned it all up.  We put a lot of work into keeping things that 
 | 
						||
way that the users never see.  Tony does a great job and it's a real 
 | 
						||
pleasure to work with him.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
GEnieLamp>   Who do you look up to as your mentors?
 | 
						||
"""""""""
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
Tom>   I really never thought of it before.  My dad, of course.  He taught
 | 
						||
""""   me to be honest and do the best work I know how; I always have, and 
 | 
						||
it's stood me well over the years.  I took much inspiration in my youth 
 | 
						||
from the honorable heroes in Robert Heinlein's teenager stories.  I learned 
 | 
						||
a lot about how to live an honorable life from many people I knew when I 
 | 
						||
was younger.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     I guess I'm old enough now that I don't look to anyone for 
 | 
						||
inspiration or direction.  Possibly this is a consequence of becoming the 
 | 
						||
defacto head of my extended family, as my parents get old.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     I don't really have any aspirations to become a better programmer 
 | 
						||
than I am now, so I don't look to anyone in that regard.  Don't 
 | 
						||
misunderstand me, I have no doubt that my programming ability could use a 
 | 
						||
lot of help, but I have to be inspired by a project to get motivated, and 
 | 
						||
nothing new looms on the horizon.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
GEnieLamp>   What sorts of things do you like to do for fun 
 | 
						||
"""""""""    (i.e. non-computer hobbies)?
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
Tom>   Heh.  I do spend too much time playing with computers.  I am a 
 | 
						||
"""    member of the local astronomy club and own a small astronomical 
 | 
						||
reflecting telescope that I'd like to use more than I do.  I have a 
 | 
						||
motorcycle and a '61 Austin-Healy Sprite sports car that I haven't even 
 | 
						||
driven in a couple of years, but I keep telling myself that someday I will 
 | 
						||
get tired of the computer....
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     My main hobby these days is High Power Rocketry.  HPR is the adult 
 | 
						||
version of the little Estes rockets that many of us flew as kids, but uses 
 | 
						||
much larger airframes and motors that are only available to certified adult 
 | 
						||
fliers.  The old saying, "the only difference between men and boys is the 
 | 
						||
price of their toys" very much applies to rocketry, I'm afraid.  My 
 | 
						||
crowning achievement in HPR to date is a 1/12th-scale V-2 that was very 
 | 
						||
well received at last year's National meet in Kansas.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
GEnieLamp>   Tell us a bit about your family.
 | 
						||
"""""""""
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
Tom>   I'm married to a wonderful woman named Tina; we just got married
 | 
						||
"""    last August and I am the luckiest guy on earth.  We have no 
 | 
						||
children, but we do share the house with ten cats, two of which were 
 | 
						||
actually intentionally acquired.  The rest just sort of showed up and moved 
 | 
						||
in, as we seem to live in a popular pet dumping ground area.  Actually, ten 
 | 
						||
cats aren't as bad as you might think, once you get used to the idea that 
 | 
						||
you can't have anything nice in the house.  I imagine that it's much like 
 | 
						||
having small children, in terms of dirt and destructiveness.  Though I 
 | 
						||
doubt that children shed so much in the spring.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
GEnieLamp>   Are computers a part of your daytime job?  Please tell us a 
 | 
						||
"""""""""    little about what you do between 9 and 5.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
Tom>   I have worked for the past 15 years servicing CAT scanners, a job
 | 
						||
"""    that once required considerable technical ability above all else but 
 | 
						||
now requires a great deal of customer-handling skill as the technology has 
 | 
						||
matured.  I work for a national independent service provider and work on a 
 | 
						||
variety of types and brands of scanners.  As you might expect, CAT scanner 
 | 
						||
repair isn't a huge field, and though I work for the largest independent 
 | 
						||
outfit in the business, my immediate supervisor lives in Atlanta, and his 
 | 
						||
supervisor is in California.  I work out of a bedroom office in my house, 
 | 
						||
as do most people in my line.  This means that I have a lot of free time in 
 | 
						||
which I sit around waiting for a customer to call in a problem.  This fact 
 | 
						||
of my life had a lot of bearing in my taking up Eamon as a hobby, as it is 
 | 
						||
something I can do and enjoy, yet quit on an instant's notice without 
 | 
						||
needing to clean up when I get called to work.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
GEnieLamp>   What new services do you think GEnie should provide its 
 | 
						||
"""""""""    subscribers?
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
Tom>   I'd like to see better Internet coverage and more competitive rates
 | 
						||
"""    for high speed and daytime use.  And of course we need more and 
 | 
						||
faster high-speed nodes!  It would be great if GEnie could get involved 
 | 
						||
with some of the magazines and such that presently restrict themselves to 
 | 
						||
CIS or AOL.  I sincerely hope that they never rework their software to 
 | 
						||
require a proprietary front end.  I'd like to see a really easy way to do 
 | 
						||
email across the services.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
GEnieLamp>   Where do you see the future of telecommunications moving in
 | 
						||
"""""""""    the next five to ten years?
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
Tom>   Well, we'll be seeing 9600 quickly become the default "slow" speed,
 | 
						||
"""    especially as the commercial online services continue to try to 
 | 
						||
outdo each other.  I see just about everyone who moves about in their job 
 | 
						||
telecommunicating many times on a daily basis.  Cell phone modem and fax 
 | 
						||
links will become very commonplace for business travellers.  More and more 
 | 
						||
correspondence will travel direct through the wire rather then via the mail 
 | 
						||
or Fed Ex.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     I don't share the general enthusiasm for the Internet as the upcoming 
 | 
						||
"Information Highway"; I just don't think that it has the underlying 
 | 
						||
infrastructure to handle the need.  This probably means that the Federal 
 | 
						||
government will get involved in the "highway" construction, which will 
 | 
						||
result in poor performance, massive bureaucratic overhead, and endless 
 | 
						||
Federal meddling in our lives and business.  I think we'll wind up with a 
 | 
						||
Federal system that is about as intrusive and friendly as the IRS. 
 | 
						||
(Cheerful guy, ain't I?)  If we don't want this, then it is up to all of us 
 | 
						||
to keep up with what Congress and the Clinton Administration is up to and 
 | 
						||
LET THEM KNOW when we disagree.  Our telecommunications rights are NOT 
 | 
						||
defined in the Constitution, and it's up to each of us to make sure that 
 | 
						||
the Feds don't ruin everything.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
GEnieLamp>   What one piece of advice would you pass along to a new
 | 
						||
"""""""""    Apple II telecommunications enthusiast?
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
Tom>   Gosh.  ONE piece?  Spend the bucks and buy a decent telecom program.
 | 
						||
"""    If you're using some old piece of telecom trash, you'll find that 
 | 
						||
this is the single best investment you can make.  If you already have one, 
 | 
						||
then find and learn the tools and methods that you need to interact with 
 | 
						||
the PC and Mac worlds, and accept the fact that they will seldom meet you 
 | 
						||
halfway.  Enjoy the fact that you can actually get to know the movers and 
 | 
						||
shakers in our cozy Apple II world and that they may actually get to know 
 | 
						||
you.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
GEnieLamp>   Tom, this has been an enjoyable interview.  Thank you for
 | 
						||
"""""""""    sharing with us.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
Tom>   It's been my pleasure.  I hope that your readers will check out some 
 | 
						||
"""    of the Eamon Adventures featured in the Treasure Hunt column.  They 
 | 
						||
really are my favorites.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
                                 [*][*][*]
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     A note to our readers:  If you want to know more about a particular 
 | 
						||
person and want him/her to be interviewed for the GEnieLamp A2 profile 
 | 
						||
column, send E-mail to A2.CHARLIE or EDITOR.A2 and we'll see what we can 
 | 
						||
do.  In your E-mail message, tell why you think this person is a good 
 | 
						||
candidate for the profile.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
[EOA]
 | 
						||
[HUN]//////////////////////////////
 | 
						||
               THE TREASURE HUNT /
 | 
						||
/////////////////////////////////
 | 
						||
Yours For the Downloading
 | 
						||
"""""""""""""""""""""""""
 | 
						||
by Charlie Hartley
 | 
						||
      [A2.CHARLIE]
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     Welcome back to the Treasure Hunt!  This month we will take a look at 
 | 
						||
the best 20 Eamon adventures available in the Apple II library on GEnie.  
 | 
						||
As explained in this month's Profile column, Eamon adventures are 
 | 
						||
text-based games of exploration and combat that allow you to type simple 
 | 
						||
commands such as GET RING and DRINK POTION and see how the game responds.  
 | 
						||
There are hundreds of Eamon games.  Each module is loosely referred to as a 
 | 
						||
"dungeon", despite the fact that it might take place entirely in the 
 | 
						||
outdoors, or in outer space... or even in a dungeon!
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     This month I have asked Tom Zuchowski, our resident Eamon expert, to 
 | 
						||
tell us about these files.  The rest of this column is written by him.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
                   >>> THE BEST 20 EAMON ADVENTURES <<<
 | 
						||
                   """"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     Like anyone else, I am very fond of my own Eamons and can't be 
 | 
						||
objective when deciding where to place them in a list of "Top 20" Eamons.  
 | 
						||
So here is the top 20 as determined by the Eamon Adventurer's Guild's 
 | 
						||
Ratings Poll.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     Sorry for the low number of raters, but for some strange reason many 
 | 
						||
people are very reluctant to rate the Eamons they've played, even when they 
 | 
						||
write to bawl me out because they strongly disagree with a given rating!  
 | 
						||
Go figure.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     Everyone has his own special likes and dislikes when adventuring.  
 | 
						||
Everyone's tastes may not specifically agree with this list, but it is 
 | 
						||
probably a fair guideline for a few adventures that most will enjoy.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     The scale is 1-10 with 10 the best, and no Adventure has been rated 
 | 
						||
by its author:
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 GEnie                                 Average   # of
 | 
						||
 file#  Adventure                      rating   raters
 | 
						||
 -----  ----------------------------   -------  ------
 | 
						||
 15698  124 Assault on Dolni Keep        9.2       6
 | 
						||
 15697  114 Thror's Ring                 9.0       6
 | 
						||
 15747   78 The Prince's Tavern          9.0       3
 | 
						||
 16034  194 Attack of the Kretons        9.0       2
 | 
						||
 15872  120 Orb of My Life               9.0       1
 | 
						||
 18011  204 Sanctuary                    9.0       1
 | 
						||
 15948  161 Operation Endgame            8.9       5
 | 
						||
 17522  150 Walled City of Darkness      8.8       2
 | 
						||
 15748  147 The Dark Brotherhood         8.7       3
 | 
						||
 17162  129 Return to Moria              8.6       4
 | 
						||
 20058  166 Storm Breaker                8.5       2
 | 
						||
 18039  148 Journey to Jotunheim         8.4       5
 | 
						||
 19648  145 Buccaneer!                   8.3       3
 | 
						||
 16798  108 The Mines of Moria           8.2       4
 | 
						||
 19683  121 Wrenhold's Secret Vigil      8.2       2
 | 
						||
 17043  169 The Black Phoenix            8.1       5
 | 
						||
 16248   91 FutureQuest II               8.0       5
 | 
						||
 14384  117 Dungeon of Doom              8.0       3
 | 
						||
 16503  118 Pittfall                     8.0       1
 | 
						||
 24516  225 Adventure in Interzone       8.0       1
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
124 Assault on Dolni Keep   Set in J.R.R. Tolkein's Middle Earth, you and 
 | 
						||
'''''''''''''''''''''''''   two hardy companions are tasked to rescue a 
 | 
						||
wise High-Elf from an Orc stronghold.  This Eamon is nearly unique in that 
 | 
						||
each of your two companions has knowledge and skills that you yourself 
 | 
						||
lack.  They are capable of some independent action, will offer advice, and 
 | 
						||
won't hesitate to argue with you if they think you are making an unwise 
 | 
						||
choice.  It's a smallish dungeon, because all the special programming for 
 | 
						||
the companions used up a LOT of memory.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     [Note:  Tom is too modest to tell you that he is the author of this 
 | 
						||
top-rated Eamon Adventure.--CH]
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
114 Thror's Ring   Also set in Middle Earth, this time you and your two 
 | 
						||
''''''''''''''''   companions are tasked to recover the last Dwarven Ring 
 | 
						||
of Power from the depths of Moria.  I did a fair amount of research on the 
 | 
						||
setting and style, and lots of people have told me that they enjoyed the 
 | 
						||
richness of the descriptions.  This Eamon broke some new ground 
 | 
						||
program-wise and was an early forerunner of what eventually became the 
 | 
						||
Eamon 7.0 MAIN.PROGRAM.  Still, it was my first Eamon, and there's a lot I 
 | 
						||
would do different now that would have made it even better.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 78 The Prince's Tavern   Here, in this adventure by Bob Davis, you are 
 | 
						||
'''''''''''''''''''''''   tasked to recover a 600-year-old bottle of scotch 
 | 
						||
from the depths of a rather silly tavern.  Lots of laughs; just when you 
 | 
						||
think it finally turned serious, something silly happens.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
194 Attack of the Kretons   This is absolutely the funniest Eamon ever 
 | 
						||
'''''''''''''''''''''''''   written, as well as being one of the 
 | 
						||
finest-crafted titles in the list.  I REALLY enjoyed it.  Basically, your 
 | 
						||
quest is to rescue a besieged city from the Kreton horde and the god of 
 | 
						||
cheese dip.  If I had to pick just one Eamon to show people, this one might 
 | 
						||
well be it.  It was written by Nathan Segerlind.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
120 Orb of My Life   John Nelson had a real gift for using the basic Eamon 
 | 
						||
''''''''''''''''''   programming tools to turn out really decent Eamons in 
 | 
						||
just a day or two; I could never figure out how he did it.  This is his 
 | 
						||
best.  This Eamon is one of a gaggle of Eamons that were entered in a 
 | 
						||
long-forgotten Eamon club contest involving a quest for the recovery of a 
 | 
						||
wizard's Life Orb.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
204 Sanctuary   Sam Ruby is absolutely the finest Eamon author who ever 
 | 
						||
'''''''''''''   lived.  This Eamon broke new ground with an all-new combat 
 | 
						||
system that takes distance into account.  But this is not one for 
 | 
						||
"hack'n'slash" fans! Everything you do requires careful reading and 
 | 
						||
forethought, with dozens and dozens of obstructions and difficulties to 
 | 
						||
solve.  Even the combat requires a careful selection of the best weapon for 
 | 
						||
the job.  I highly recommend this one!
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
161 Operation Endgame   Your special-ops team has been tasked to infiltrate 
 | 
						||
'''''''''''''''''''''   an enemy stronghold and take out their sole 
 | 
						||
nuclear-tipped missile.  Sam Ruby was inspired by the movie "Predator" for 
 | 
						||
this, and your team is very reminiscent of Dutch's.  Sam's specialty is 
 | 
						||
combat, and this one fully incorporates modern weapons and adds many, many 
 | 
						||
realistic touches to the play.  I've played it a half-dozen times, and this 
 | 
						||
one of a very few that gets better with each play.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
150 Walled City of Darkness   My goal here was to design a comparatively 
 | 
						||
'''''''''''''''''''''''''''   difficult, puzzle-oriented Eamon that could 
 | 
						||
not be completed in a single session.  It has several multi-part 
 | 
						||
interlocking puzzles.  My inspiration was Roger Zelazny's "Creatures of 
 | 
						||
Light and Darkness", and the play has a similar style, I think.  You must 
 | 
						||
find means to defeat a number of supernatural foes in your quest to attain 
 | 
						||
godhood, so that you will have sufficient power to defeat a god of great 
 | 
						||
Evil.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
147 The Dark Brotherhood   Pat Hurst did some pretty sophisticated stuff 
 | 
						||
''''''''''''''''''''''''   here.  This Eamon plays on several subtle levels 
 | 
						||
that help determine your eventual success, and is my favorite among his 
 | 
						||
work.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
129 Return to Moria   Sam Ruby went through a period where he was trying to 
 | 
						||
'''''''''''''''''''   turn ALL of the Middle Earth story into Eamon 
 | 
						||
adventures.  This one is his best of the lot, as you quest in the depths of 
 | 
						||
Moria for several things that Minas Tirith must have to survive.  Very 
 | 
						||
well-written.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
166 Storm Breaker   This fantasy pits you against an evil god who has just 
 | 
						||
'''''''''''''''''   awakened from a thousand-year sleep and is feeling his 
 | 
						||
oats, so to speak.  An awesomely good play for puzzle fanciers.  Sam 
 | 
						||
manages to cram an incredible number of locales, creatures, peoples, and 
 | 
						||
events in this Eamon, and does it in a most entertaining and believable 
 | 
						||
style.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
148 Journey to Jotunheim   This Eamon is mostly "true", being based on 
 | 
						||
''''''''''''''''''''''''   several Norse legends.  Here you accompany Thor 
 | 
						||
into a land of Giants on a desperate bid to recover his stolen war-hammer.  
 | 
						||
I did quite a bit of research for this one, but I confess that I got the 
 | 
						||
original idea from "The Last Trump", a great novella by Fletcher Pratt and 
 | 
						||
L. Sprague de Camp.  This Eamon has a unique feature:  it has a very large 
 | 
						||
vocabulary and will respond meaningfully to commands involving pretty much 
 | 
						||
everything you see.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
145 Buccaneer!   By far, the best seagoing Eamon ever written.  A 
 | 
						||
''''''''''''''   two-parter:  in part one you must buy, crew, and provision 
 | 
						||
a ship to put to sea in part two.  Both parts are excellent.  This was also 
 | 
						||
written by Pat Hurst.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
108 The Mines of Moria   This Eamon is very reminiscent of the "Moria" 
 | 
						||
''''''''''''''''''''''   portion of the "Fellowship of the Ring".  Like the 
 | 
						||
book, the passes are blocked and you and your companions must cross Moria 
 | 
						||
to deliver vital information to Gondor.  Good stuff!  Another Sam Ruby 
 | 
						||
classic.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
121 Wrenhold's Secret Vigil   This Bob Davis creation is another of the 
 | 
						||
'''''''''''''''''''''''''''   entries in that old "Life-Orb" contest.  This 
 | 
						||
is a very well-written, serious fantasy Eamon.  It has just about the 
 | 
						||
wickedest maze in the entire series; by the time you realize what you've 
 | 
						||
stumbled into, you're in trouble!
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
169 The Black Phoenix   Pure, unabashed space opera.  No doubt strongly 
 | 
						||
'''''''''''''''''''''   inspired by Heinlein's "Starship Troopers", you are 
 | 
						||
a soldier in one of the toughest outfits in the galaxy.  Roger Pender 
 | 
						||
writes great "pulp" science fiction dialogue, not letting facts get too 
 | 
						||
much in the way of a good story.  You have six missions to fulfill, 
 | 
						||
starting with a simple reconnoiter and progressing to a very tough "hold 
 | 
						||
until relieved" firefight.  With LOTS of special features, this one is not 
 | 
						||
to be missed by military SF fans.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 91 FutureQuest II   This a is "classic" 50s-type SF offering.  You must 
 | 
						||
''''''''''''''''''   steal into the Krell Empire, where you must kill the 
 | 
						||
evil scientist Mordor Kang and destroy his doomsday device, the Zontar Ray 
 | 
						||
Machine.  Really keeps you on your toes surviving.  Roger Pender does the 
 | 
						||
best SF in Eamon.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
117 Dungeon of Doom   This was the very first "pure" 80-column Eamon 
 | 
						||
'''''''''''''''''''   adventure, with true 80-column lower-case text and 
 | 
						||
some pretty sophisticated programming.  A very nicely executed Eamon by Dan 
 | 
						||
Knezek.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
118 Pittfall   This is a basic "kill'n'loot" Eamon scenario.  What elevates 
 | 
						||
''''''''''''   it to the Top 20 is clean writing and lots of well-done 
 | 
						||
special stuff.  Even so, it is not particularly difficult and is a good 
 | 
						||
choice for beginners.  A very relaxing play by Scott Starkey.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
225 Adventure in Interzone   This adventure by Frank Kenze is a landmark 
 | 
						||
''''''''''''''''''''''''''   Eamon from the player's point of view, with 
 | 
						||
the cleanest player interface ever done in Eamon.  The actual plot and play 
 | 
						||
is probably more like a "7" rating, but interface is such a pleasure to use 
 | 
						||
that the overall effect is much enhanced.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
                                 [*][*][*]
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     Note:  To play any of the above adventures you will need to download 
 | 
						||
the ProDOS Eamon Master and Main Hall by Don Brown & John Nelson (file 
 | 
						||
#16219).  This Eamon Master contains the Main Hall, where your character 
 | 
						||
buys spells and armaments and where he stays between outings; the 
 | 
						||
Beginner's Cave, a VERY simple adventure for first-timers; an extensive 
 | 
						||
player manual; and various character editing programs.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     I want to thank Tom for sharing his knowledge of Eamon Adventures 
 | 
						||
with us.  I encourage folks to try out some of these adventures.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     That's it for this month.  I hope you have found something here to 
 | 
						||
whet your interest.  Drop me a line and let me know what you think of this 
 | 
						||
column and offer any suggestions you might have about what should be in it.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
     Until next time, happy downloading!
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
                                -- Charlie Hartley
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
           //////////////////////////////////////// GEnie_QWIK_QUOTE ////
 | 
						||
          /  Well, I got my copy Thursday, and, as the ultimate Crash  /
 | 
						||
         /   Test Dummy, we'll soon see!                              /
 | 
						||
        /////////////////////////////////////////////  STAMPS.RT  ////
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
[EOA]
 | 
						||
[LOG]//////////////////////////////
 | 
						||
                         LOG OFF /
 | 
						||
/////////////////////////////////
 | 
						||
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 | 
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 | 
						||
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						||
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						||
                          """""""""""""""""""""""
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						||
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						||
  """""""""
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        """  o Nancy Thomas        [GELAMP.MM]    MultiMedia Editor/Writer
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             o David Leithauser    [D.LEITHASUER] HyperRead Editor
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  """""""""  o Tom Trinko          [T.TRINKO]     Mac Staff Writer
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   """"""""
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[EOF]
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