[comp.sys.mac.digest] INFO-MAC Digest V6 #67

Moderators.Jon.Pugh;Dwayne.Virnau;Lance.Nakata@SUMEX-AIM.STANFORD.EDU (08/02/88)

INFO-MAC Digest          Tuesday, 2 Aug 1988       Volume 6 : Issue 67

Today's Topics:
                             Netter's Dinner
         MacWorld (early August) leads to Macnificent rumors :-)
                        Usenet Mac Digest V4 #87
                             MultiLaunch 1.1
                             Clipboard XCMDs
                 PSHelp DA 1.1 -- Online Postscript Help
                   "VT100 Maculator" Terminal Emulator
                  here comes PopIt-1.72.sit.hqx (again)
                           VirusDetective 1.2
                            TimeKeeper 1.0a1
                  here comes StuffIt_1.40B.install.hqx
                               Rear_Window


----------------------------------------------------------------------

Date: 	  Sat, 30 Jul 88 09:55:17 PDT
From: PUGH@NMFECC.ARPA
Subject: Netter's Dinner

Well, with the onslaught of additional information, it looks like the Netter's
dinner will be on Friday, the 12th of August at 6:00 so as to be agreeable
with the largest number of people and conflict with less stuff.

A very nice man by the name of Robert Hammen has volunteered to organize the
dinner with an assist from some others in the Boston area (Ric and Peter, I
believe).  Robert started thinking about this long before I did, so he gets
credit for advance planning also.  Robert's addresses on the various nets are:

Usenet: uwvax!uwmcsd1!uwmcsd4!hammen    ARPAnet: hammen@csd4.milw.wisc.edu
Delphi: HAMMEN          GEnie: R.Hammen         CI$: 70701,2104

You can send messages to either he or I to RSVP your place.  Please be sure
to tell one of us if you are coming as we need an accurate head count for the
restaurant which has yet to be determined.

Stay tuned for more news as it develops.

Jon
pugh@nmfecc.arpa

------------------------------

Date: Wed, 27 Jul 88 20:51:27 EST
From: Murph Sewall <SEWALL%UCONNVM.BITNET@Forsythe.Stanford.EDU>
Subject: MacWorld (early August) leads to Macnificent rumors :-)

                         VAPORWARE
                       Murphy Sewall
               From the August 1988 APPLE PULP
        H.U.G.E. Apple Club (E. Hartford) News Letter
                          $15/year
                       P.O. Box 18027
                  East Hartford, CT 06118
     Permission granted to copy with the above citation
            Call the "Bit Bucket" (203) 569-8739

Mac Double II.
Golden Triangle has announced the Firepower processing board
for the Mac II which will be capable of running Apple's
forthcoming (in beta test at the moment) Macintosh real-time
distributed operating system (called MR-DOS) independently
of the host Mac II (which means it will not be necessary to
dedicate a Mac II solely to file serving on an AppleTalk
network).  The Firepower board is available with a 16, 20,
or 25 MHz 68020, 2 Appletalk ports, up to 4 Mbytes of RAM
and 1 Mbyte of ROM.  Manufacturer's prices for the Firepower
board start at $2,500 in volume.  - InfoWorld 11 July

Clone a Mac II at Home.
Second Wave, makers of a 4-slot expansion chassis for the
Mac-SE (last October), has begun shipping a similar chassis
for the Mac Plus and will introduce a 6-slot Nubus unit at
MacWorld that can be used to expand the number of slots in a
Mac II.  If it's outfitted with the Firepower board, a hard
disk, and a keyboard, the Second Wave product can become a
basic Unix workstation, or the combination could act as a
network file server without any Mac II at all.  If some
enterprising firm (Phoenix Technologies? AST?) should decide
to write Macintosh compatible ROM chips, the Second Wave
expansion chassis plus the Firepower board could be turned
into a Mac II clone.  The price of the expansion unit which
is scheduled for shipping this fall has not been announced.
- InfoWorld 11 July and a phone call from 2nd Wave 2 July

Color SE.
Perhaps next January's MacWorld will see the introduction of
the new, three expansion slot, color Macintosh SE (see last
October's column), as there are no indication that it will
be unveiled at the Boston show in August.
- InfoWorld 20 June

Not Much to Read (Only).
Apple evangelist Martha Steffen estimated that only about
half a dozen different disks were available for the new Mac
CD ROM by the end of June - a dozen if demo programs are
counted.  Most of those disks contain clip art or similar
applications.  A few more disks will be introduced at
MacWorld in Boston this month, but the first real flurry of
CD's for the Mac aren't expected until January's MacWorld.
However, if High Sierra access software is delivered this
month as expected, disks currently used by the IBM PC could
become available as developers write Mac interfaces for
them.  - InfoWorld 20 June

Apple Connectivity to IBM
David Nagy, Apple's marketing manager for IBM communications
products, has confirmed that a combined Token Ring adapter
(see last month's column) and 3270/5250 terminal emulation
board will be introduced in November for delivery next
March.  In addition, Apple plans to announce wide-scale
support for IBM's Systems Network Architecture (SNA)
communications protocols.
- PC Week 21 June and InfoWorld 27 June

Modern Jazz Blown Away.
Lotus has announced that Modern Jazz (last month and last
May's columns) is one piece of vaporware that will never
materialize.  Apparently recently appointed Lotus vice
president Frank King didn't believe that Modern Jazz would
effectively compete with Microsoft's Works and so decided to
concentrate on 1-2-3 Mac which is expected next year.  Lotus
plans to offer registered users of Jazz 1A upgrades to 1-2-3
Mac, but further details are not yet available.
- InfoWorld 20 June

MacWare That May Yet Exist.
Software Publishing Corporation has signed a joint agreement
with D Graphics, Inc. to create a Macintosh version of the
popular Harvard Graphics program.  The, as yet unnamed,
application will compete with Cricket Presents and Microsoft
Powerpoint.  Delivery won't be until next year.  Another Mac
graphics product scheduled for August publication is Photon
Paint for the Mac II.  This color application is capable of
wrapping designs around 3-D objects and can add luminance to
objects so that they appear to be lighted from a point
source.  Photon Paint's announced price is $299.95.
Electronic Arts expects to release its $495 Studio 8 color
paint program for the Mac II in September.  The program is
designed for graphics professionals and plans to compete
directly with Supermac's Pixel Paint.  Also, Acius is
working on documentation for a prototype database named
Skeleton that will make it simple for anyone to customize
and have a full-featured Mac database application.
- InfoWorld 27 June and 4 July

Rewritable Optical Disc.
Advanced Graphics Applications joined the rewritable disc
race (see June's column) by showing a "plug and play" 650
Mbyte drive at PC Expo in June.  The Discus Rewritable uses
3M's optical media, plugs into an AT bus, and is scheduled
to ship in November.  The transfer rate at the demonstration
was 5.5 Megabits per second with an average access time of
80 milliseconds.  The announced price is $4,995.
- InfoWorld 27 June

Taking a Different Bus.
PC clone manufacturers led by AST Research president Safi
Qureshey are attempting to agree on an alternative to IBM's
Micro Channel Architecture (MCA).  The alternate bus could
be the Nubus standard used in the Macintosh II or an
adaptation of the VME (IBM mainframe Virtual Memory
Extension) electrical specifications.  The move away from
the IBM "standard" is based on dissatisfaction with MCA
performance as well as the cost and difficulty of licensing
from "Big Blue." - InfoWorld 27 June

Twice As Fast.
Nexgen Microsystems is ready to ship a five chip processor
that is Intel 80386 and 80387 compatible, but approximately
six times faster than the Intel originals.  Olivetti is
likely to be the first to offer a workstation built around
the Nexgen processor set early next year.  - PC Week 11 July

More Than Fifty Times Faster.
By October, Semiconductor maker, Wietek, plans to begin
shipping their Abacus math coprocessor for Intel 80386
computers.  The Abacus will come in 20 and 25 MHz versions
and can be used as a stand alone math coprocessor in
conjunction with Intel's 80387 math coprocessor.  In a test
on a 20 MHz Compaq 386 with both 80387 and Abacus
coprocessors, only 9 seconds were needed to recalculate a
program that took a PC-XT with an 8087 chip 470 seconds to
accomplish.  - PC Week 21 June

VAX-on-the-Desk.
DEC is busy developing a desktop VAX workstation to compete
with Sun, Apollo, and other marketers of high end work
stations.  The VAX-top will retail for around $15,000 and
link to DECnet.  - PC Week 21 June

Who's Doing a Job(s) on Who?
One rumor has it that NeXt is negotiating a licensing
arrangement granting IBM the rights to all, or portions of,
the Palo Alto startup's Unix interface.  However, a rival
rumor monger claims that the whole story originated at Apple
in Cupertino.  - PC Week 21 June and InfoWorld 27 June

More "Unobtainables?"
Shipment schedules for the announced 25 MHz Intel 80386
computers from IBM, Sun, Compaq, and others my slip due to
limited availability of microprocessors from Intel.  Smaller
PC producers are having difficulty getting even
preproduction samples of the 25 MHz chips.
- PC Week 21 June

Blue Chips.
IBM has a license from Intel to manufacturer it's own 80386
chips.  There is a rumor that Big Blue has an in-house
version running at 60 MHz!  Not surprisingly, IBM's
engineers have received an internal memo directing them not
to design any more 80286 systems.  IBM appears well on the
way toward solving their DRAM shortage as well with the
discovery that they can produce 16 Mbit chips as easily as
4 Mbit chips and actually get a higher manufacturing yield
as well.  Those 16 Mbit chips (2 Mbytes) could make OS/2
Extended Edition (now said to require more than 3 Mbytes of
RAM) practical after all.  - PC Week 11 July

Very Fast Laptops.
Harris Corporation announced plans to begin shipping a 20
MHz 80C286 in September.  The Harris chip is the fastest
'286 microprocessor yet announced.  For 16-bit operations it
actually offers faster software performance than the 20 MHz
80386.  Because the CMOS technology of the 80C286 uses only
one-third the power of 80386 and standard 80286 processors,
the new chip is ideally suited for use in battery powered
laptops.  - PC Week 28 June

Speaking of Laptops.
The LapMac rumors have been around so long they're becoming
boring, but it might just show up in Boston at MacWorld, or
next January's MacWorld...  Meanwhile, Big Blue is rumored
to be planning a public announcement of a battery powered,
very compact, 80386 laptop in September.
- InfoWorld 11 July

Not Enough Advantage.
Ashton-Tate is completely rewriting Multimate Advantage for
OS/2 but doesn't expect to be finished until late 1989.  In
the meantime, owners of the present product may be tempted
by new versions of competing word processors.  So, current
Advantage users will be offered an "interim functionality
improvement" (when is a new version not a new version?)
before snow next reaches the Great Plains.  Meanwhile, some
of Ashton Tate's best programmers are said to be accepting
jobs at Claris (to work on what?).
- InfoWorld 27 June and 11 July

IIgs-e?  New IIgs ROM.
Now that wags are saying, in print, that "gs" stands for
"goes slow," rumors are abroad that Apple is planning on
putting Western Design's 65832 in the next IIgs.  If true,
it would mean that the IIgs+ chatter (see April's and June's
columns) is wrong because production quantities of the 65832
aren't planned until 1990 (see last month's column).  Could
someone be planting the "a faster IIgs is coming" rumors to
keep "the rest of us" from buying Amigas?  Maybe the new
IIgs ROMs in September will quicken the pace of the hardware
a bit.  - InCider August

GS Works by Another Name.
A faster IIgs may be needed to make effective use of
AppleWorks GS which was renamed from GS Works after Apple
spinoff Claris acquired Styleware in June.  Sources close to
Claris say that a Macintosh version of the program, which
would compete with Microsoft Works, can be expected in about
18 months.  - InfoWorld 4 July

If These Guys Get Together It Could be Awesome.
Researchers at Sandia National Labs have a 1,024 parallel
processor machine that runs 1,000 times faster than the
single processor machine (Nearly perfect efficiency).
Processing that quickly could require a memory based on a
transistor made of superconducting materials which AT&T Bell
Labs has developed that is current-sensitive to only one
electron.  The machine could produce so much output that
"Digital Paper", a polyester-based substrate coated with
infared-sensitive dye polymer developed by ICI Electronics
might be needed.  The "tape" is able to accept data at 10
Mbits/sec - a 2,400 ft. reel (.5 in wide) can hold 600
Gigabytes.
- Popular Science reader John W. Taylor (SUNY Buffalo)
  6 July

Up in Smoke.
Phillip Morris has been test marketing a new cigarette in
Palo Alto, California named Next.  The real difference
between the tobacco product and Steve Job's computer of the
same name is that Phillip Morris has managed to get
something into the box.  - InfoWorld 20 June


Murph Sewall     Sewall@UCONNVM.BITNET
Business School  sewall%uconnvm.bitnet@mitvma.mit.edu          [INTERNET]
U of Connecticut {rutgers psuvax1 ucbvax & in Europe - mcvax}
                 !UCONNVM.BITNET!SEWALL                        [UUCP]

-+- My employer isn't responsible for my mistakes AND vice-versa!
            (subject to change without notice; void where prohibited)

"It might help if we ran the MBA's out of Washington." - Adm Grace Hopper

------------------------------

Date: Tue 12 Jul 88 09:03:24-EDT
From: Jeff Shulman <SHULMAN@SDR.SLB.COM>
Subject: Usenet Mac Digest V4 #87

Usenet Mac Digest     Friday, July 8, 1988           Volume 4 : Issue 87

Today's Topics:
     UUCP/rn for MacOS
     summary of Keyboard information
     Free space for student Ada Mac applications?
     Alternatives to 4D?
     expert systems on PCs
     Re: Free space for student Ada Mac applications?
     Can you link Lightspeed Pascal with Lightspeed C?
     Re: RMaker to MPW Rez conversion
     Screensaver - does one exist?
     Video from an SE?
     Re: Advice re. Terminal Emulator
     MacDraw II Experiences (long)
     Why do Macs have ROMs?
     lisa profile
     Re: Lightspeed C projects
     Re: Bug in System 6.0, or is it ME?
     A/UX availability and dealers
     Re: Map CDev (was CloseView)
     Accessing the user name in the Chooser

[archived as

[SUMEX-AIM.Stanford.EDU]<INFO-MAC>USENETV4-87.ARC

- Lance ]

------------------------------

Date: Tue 31 May 88 13:28:20-EDT
From: Jeff Shulman <SHULMAN@SDR>
Subject: MultiLaunch 1.1

[ Uploaded from Delphi by Jeff Shulman ]

Name: MULTILAUNCH 1.1
Date: 25-MAY-1988 22:10 by ASMCOR

MultiLaunch allows you to use MultiFinder without the Finder, thus saving
you 130K that you can use for other things (like applications!). This is a
new version - it now starts MultiFinder automatically and has a free memory
display.

Shareware by Jan Eugenides.

[archived as

[SUMEX-AIM.Stanford.EDU]<INFO-MAC>MULTILAUNCH-11.HQX

- Lance ]

------------------------------

Date: 	  Sun, 29 May 88 14:07:45 PDT
From: PUGH@NMFECC.ARPA
Subject: Clipboard XCMDs

Here is a new version of my Clipboard XCMDs.  These have no length
limitations, so they can copy any field in its entirety, unlike the
previous versions which mistakenly used a STR255 data type.

These are the commands GetClipboard and PutClipboard in a sample stack.

Jon

         N         L                          pugh@nmfecc.arpa
          M    A    L          National Magnetic Fusion Energy Computer Center
           F    T    N             Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
            E         L                       PO Box 5509 L-561
             C                           Livermore, California 94550
              C                                (415) 423-4239

[archived as

[SUMEX-AIM.Stanford.EDU]<INFO-MAC>HYPERCARD-XCMD-GET-PUT-CLIPBOARD.HQX

- Lance ]

------------------------------

Date: Sat, 28 May 88 20:05:37 AEST
From: munnari!runx.ips.oz.au!johnr@uunet.uu.net (John Rotenstein)
Subject: PSHelp DA 1.1 -- Online Postscript Help

PSHelp DA
========

This desk accessory provides on-line PostScript help.

It requires the "PostScript.Help" file distributed with Cricket Draw
to be placed in the System Folder.

Distributed under the Happiware System:

        IF YOU LIKE IT, REMEMBER TO SMILE!

John Rotenstein
PO Box 165,
Double Bay NSW 2028.     Internet: johnr@runx.ips.oz.au
AUSTRALIA.                   UUCP: uunet!runx.ips.oz.au!johnr
=========

[archived as

[SUMEX-AIM.Stanford.EDU]<INFO-MAC>DA-POSTSCRIPT-HELP-11.HQX

- Lance ]

------------------------------

Date: Sun, 29 May 1988 14:56:38 CDT
From: Werner Uhrig <werner@rascal.ics.utexas.edu>
Subject: "VT100 Maculator" Terminal Emulator

"VT100 Maculator" Terminal Emulator - written by Richard K. Lloyd.

There is no documentation with it YET, although the operation is
self-explanatory in the author's opinion. This is probably the
closest to TRUE VT100 emulation anyone will ever get on the Mac.

Interesting features :

* Escape sequences are taken from a PT100 (Plessey VT100), which
  appears to be a superset of a true DEC VT100.

* IntelliMouse feature - Option + mouse click moves the text
  cursor to the mouse position...neatly skipping over tabs
  (unlike all the other emulators).

* Dual speed smooth scrolling in both directions.

* Understands the VT100 time setting escape sequence.

* 25th Status line including 4 LEDs, the time/date and the X,Y
  text cursor position.

* Double width and double height text in ANY combination.

* EXTREMELY FAST E-test and assorted character test.

* Full VT52 support.

* Numeric keypad support - WARNING : Only tested on a Mac Plus
  keyboard...not guaranteed on the Mac SE or II.

* Show control characters option - displays control codes in
  EXACTLY the same way as a VT100.

* VT100 font (remarkably similar to MacKermit's in case you're
  wondering !).

* A double width cursor on double width lines. Cursor can be
  an underline, a block or even invisible !

* Use of DrawString calls instead of multiple DrawChars to speed
  up screen output.

Only features missing are :

* 132 column mode (if someone buys me a big screen, then..).

* Flashing characters (couldn't think of a way of doing this on a
  Mac Plus or SE).

* Printer support (this WILL be coming though !).

* Kermit (may be implemented if I pull my finger out and get down
  to it), XMODEM, YMODEM etc.

* 4010 graphics (I've just started coding this...).

Version 1.31 supplied here will expire at the end of this year.
By then, most of the missing features above should have been
implemented in one way or another (I'm working on the Acorn
Archimedes version at the moment - which is going to be all-
singing and dancing when I eventually finish it) and I will
probably post up a new version.

If there is enough demand, I will cobble together some simple
documentation (though I think it's unnecessary myself - the About
dialog lists the more obscure keys).

Please e-mail me with any (constructive) comments or bug reports.

Richard K. Lloyd,          ***************************************************
Computer Science Dept.,    * JANET : SQRKL@UK.AC.LIV.CSVAX                   *
Liverpool University,      * UUCP  : {backbone}!mcvax!ukc!mupsy!liv-cs!SQRKL *
Merseyside, England,       * ARPA  : SQRKL%csvax.liv.ac.uk@nss.cs.ucl.ac.uk  *
Great (?) Britain.         ***************************************************

"I have VERY strong opinions which are nothing whatsoever to do with the
University of Liverpool, so blame ME if I bitch about useless IBM PC clones,
even more redundant IBM mainframes and the terrible Atari ST..."

[archived as

[SUMEX-AIM.Stanford.EDU]<INFO-MAC>VT100-MACULATOR-131.HQX

- Lance ]

------------------------------

Date: Sun, 29 May 1988 15:33:51 CDT
From: Werner Uhrig <werner@rascal.ics.utexas.edu>
Subject: here comes PopIt-1.72.sit.hqx (again)

[PopIt! 1.72 by Pete Helme]

Place the PopIt! file into your System Folder & reboot your Mac.  When
the Mac is rebooted PopIt! is activated by holding down the shift and
command keys simultaneously.  A popup menu cursor will then appear
letting you know PopIt is active.  Click the mouse and the menu will
appear.  This INIT is Shareware.

PopIt! requires hierarchical menu support, and thus will crash if you
try to use it in a pre-4.1 version of the System.

[archived as

[SUMEX-AIM.Stanford.EDU]<INFO-MAC>INIT-POPIT-172.HQX

- Lance ]

------------------------------

Date: Wed 1 Jun 88 09:35:47-EDT
From: Jeff Shulman <SHULMAN@SDR>
Subject: VirusDetective 1.2

VirusDetective is a DA for tracking down viruses (or any resources) in
files.  You specify the resource type and optionally its size, name, id or
size range.  Once the offending resource is found it can optionally be
removed from the file (use this feature with caution).  The user can update
the search list at any time.  Shareware.  Version 1.2 can now make an
optional log file of files searched and/or matched.

[archived as

[SUMEX-AIM.Stanford.EDU]<INFO-MAC>DA-VIRUS-DETECTIVE-12.HQX

- Lance ]

------------------------------

Date: 1 Jun 88 00:13:08 GMT
From: lsr@Apple.COM (Larry Rosenstein)
Subject: TimeKeeper 1.0a1

Enclosed is an application called TimeKeeper.  It displays a circular,
analog clock on your screen, which updates in the background under
MultiFinder.  (It works under regular Finder, but isn't as interesting.)

The program saves the position of its window, so you can make TimeKeeper
one of your startup applications, and always have a clock available.  In
addition, you can have it beep on the hour.

If the Sound Manager is available, which is true on the Mac II as well as
a Mac Plus or SE running System 6.0, then you will get a menu of all your
beep sounds to play on the hour.  (I have one that sounds like the chime
on a real clock.)

As always, let me know if you have any suggestions.  (Some things that
people have already asked for include: setting the time by dragging the
hands, supporting color, and supporting reminders.)

		 Larry Rosenstein,  Object Specialist
 Apple Computer, Inc.  20525 Mariani Ave, MS 27-AJ  Cupertino, CA 95014
	    AppleLink:Rosenstein1    domain:lsr@Apple.COM
		UUCP:{sun,voder,nsc,decwrl}!apple!lsr

[archived as

[SUMEX-AIM.Stanford.EDU]<INFO-MAC>TIMEKEEPER-10A1.HQX

- Lance ]

------------------------------

Date: Fri, 3 Jun 88 18:01:21 CDT
From: werner@rascal.ics.utexas.edu (Werner Uhrig)
Subject: here comes StuffIt_1.40B.install.hqx

	a bug-fix to Vn 1.40A.  this one is in "Install"-format, which means
	it looks like an application, double-clicking on which causes it
	to "unpack itself"  (similar to the READ-ME self-displaying
	tex-file/applications ...)

[archived as

[SUMEX-AIM.Stanford.EDU]<INFO-MAC>STUFFIT-140B-PART1.HQX
[SUMEX-AIM.Stanford.EDU]<INFO-MAC>STUFFIT-140B-PART2.HQX
[SUMEX-AIM.Stanford.EDU]<INFO-MAC>STUFFIT-140B-PART3.HQX

- Lance ]

------------------------------

Date: Mon, 1 Aug 88 09:27 EDT
From: Jeffrey Shulman <SHULMAN@sdr.slb.com>
Subject: Rear_Window

Date: Mon 1 Aug 88 09:27:20-EDT
From: Jeff Shulman <SHULMAN@SDR.SLB.COM>
Subject: Rear_Window
To: info-mac@sumex-aim.stanford.edu
Message-ID: <586445240.0.SHULMAN@SDR.SLB.COM>
Mail-System-Version: <VAX-MM(218)+TOPSLIB(129)@SDR.SLB.COM>

[ Uploaded from Delphi by Jeff Shulman ]

Name: REAR_WINDOW
Date: 30-JUL-1988 09:08 by NWOLF

Rear_Window is an INIT that allows you to copy files from one window to another which is covered up by the first window (i.e., from a larger window to a smaller one). To activate it, place in system folder, reboot. Hold Command-Tab down and select the files/folders to be transferred/copied. Release the keys and drag the files/folders to their desired destination.  This hack was written by Allen Foster of PMUG and is indispensible!

(This file must be converted with BinHex 4.0)

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End of INFO-MAC Digest
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