Moderators.Jon.Pugh;Dwayne.Virnau;Lance.Nakata@SUMEX-AIM.STANFORD.EDU (07/17/88)
INFO-MAC Digest Sunday, 17 Jul 1988 Volume 6 : Issue 65 Today's Topics: Mac Postscript generation Mouse cleaners July Vaporware -- send rumors; see your name in print! ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Date: Thu, 14 Jul 88 10:20:43 EDT From: tom coradeschi <tcora@ARDEC.ARPA> Subject: Mac Postscript generation I've been noting the discussions regarding the creation of postscript files on the mac recently, and feel that a number of items need to be outlined, so misunderstandings are kept to a minimum. It is quite easy to create postscript files from ANY application on your macintosh. After creating the document, and formatting it in the style you wish to have it printed in, choose print from the file menu, just as you normally would. Immediately after clicking in the OK box, hold down either the f or k keys. You will create a PostScript file on the disk the application is on, called "Postscript0". Your next file will be "Postscript1", then "Postscript2", etc, etc. It is not necessary to hold down the command-option, or command, or option keys along with f or k after clicking on OK in the print dialog. Just hold down the single letter key. Any other key is unnecessary. While you can hold down either of two keys, f or k, there is a difference between the files created. When you use k, your postscript file will be prepended with the laser prep file for your machine. If there is some question as to whether or not your mac has the same laser prep version as that used to initialize the laserwriter, then use this option to create the first postscript file you will print(ie Postscript0), and hold down the f key for all files following that one. The difference between using f & k, in terms of disk space consumed is as follows. This letter was composed using Microsoft Word 3.01, and the Postscript files described were created from within Word. File size 3k PostScript0 (using k) 33k Postscript1 (using f) 5k You can see that the laser prep file will increase the size of your postscript file by about 27k. Then printing a large number of small files will mean that using the k option burns up more disk space for laser prep code than for the files themselves. Moral: Use k for your first file, and f thereafter. The above is correct as I know it. If anyone notes any discrepancies, please email to me, and I will post a correction. tom c ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 14 Jul 88 15:41:44 -0400 (EDT) From: Laura Ann Lemay <ll12+@andrew.cmu.edu> Subject: Mouse cleaners I need a good heavy-duty machine that will clean the muck off the little rollers inside an ADB or ordinary mouse. Alcolhol and diligence will not do it, we're talking massive amounts of dirt and sticky things here. Picking it off works, but the problem is I'm asking this on behalf of Carnegie Mellon Academic Computing which owns upwards of 90 SEs and plusses, none of whose mice have ever been cleaned (sigh). We figure a machine that can do it will be well worth the investment. I've heard of kensingtons mouse cleaner, and one called somthing 360, but I need feedback! Do they work? -Laura Lemay CMU Academic Computing Mac Person ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 14 Jul 88 15:20:18 CDT From: Christopher Corke <CC06067@UAFSYSB> I am having a problem with our Apple Laser printer which is connected to an SE. When using Pagemaker, MicroSoft Word, and others, the underscore on Bolded text does not go to the end of the text. Everything appears to be correct on the screen, but when it is printed it is wrong. An Example of what I might see is Mainframe Software ---------------- Any ideas ???? ----------------------------------------------- __ / ) / / /_ __ o _ (__/ / /_/ (_(_/_)_ Smail: University of Arkansas Christopher C. Corke 220 A.D.S.B. System Programmer I 155 Razorback Road University of Arkansas (Postmaster & Info-Rep) Fayetteville, AR. 72701 Department of Computing Services (501) 575-2905 BIT : <CC06067@UAFSYSB.Bitnet> Acknowledge-To: <CC06067@UAFSYSB> ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 29 Jun 88 01:15:31 EST From: Murph Sewall <SEWALL%UCONNVM.BITNET@Forsythe.Stanford.EDU> Subject: July Vaporware -- send rumors; see your name in print! VAPORWARE Murphy Sewall From the July 1988 APPLE PULP H.U.G.E. Apple Club (E. Hartford) News Letter $15/year P.O. Box 18027 East Hartford, CT 06118 Call the "Bit Bucket" (203) 569-8739 Permission granted to copy with the above citation A 32-bit 20 MHz Apple II. Bill Mensch at Western Design Center in Mesa, Arizona where the 65C02 and 65C816 microprocessors were designed takes "Apple II Forever," seriously. He is working on a chip for a new generation Apple II. The W65C832 features a 32-bit instruction set and an internal math coprocessor. Prototypes of the 65832 in an 8 MHz version should be available by the end of next year with production quantities available in early 1990. Mensch says Western eventually will produce a 20 MHz version that will compare favorably with the Motorola 68020 processor and 68881 math coprocessor in today's Mac II. - Open Apple June Apple II Compatible Super Computer. Another chip under development at Western Design is the W65C265 which squeezes the equivalent of a 65816, math coprocessor, two serial ports, a real-time clock, eight timers, a token-passing local area network link and a high performance interface for parallel processing into a single chip. The 65C265 is designed to be used for parallel processing, and Bill Mensch at Western says he expects initial computers based on the chip to compare favorably with Apollo minicomputers but at a much lower price. Mensch's dream is to apply gallium arsenide technology (Vaporware, May 1985) to produce speeds competitive with today's Cray parallel computers while remaining software compatible with the Apple II (would you like to try "Super Breakout" on that?). - Open Apple June IIgs Clone. Video Technologies which imports the Laser 128 Apple II clone into the U.S. is said to be preparing to market a IIgs clone. Whether it will also be a laptop design is not yet known. Meanwhile, Apple may soon release a "new" //c which actually is only an old //c with a 3.5 inch internal drive and a faster processor. - InCider July NeXt: The Continuing Saga. The introduction date for the new computer from Steve Jobs has slipped so often it's even giving the term "vaporware" a bad name. Perhaps the machine should be christened the Month (as in the "NeXt Month"). The latest delay in the debut of the black magnesium cubic (hmmmm... a "Black Box") computer is said to be caused by a slow screen display, in spite of dedicated video chips. The operating system will be a Unix variant known as "Mach" (will the "speed of sound" be fast enough?). Other technical details and prices (still $4,000 to $9,000) of the 68030 machine were described in last January's column. - Time 20 June Open Look's Look. If the NeXt computer succeeds, expect AT&T to press for the adoption of Display Postscript for Open Look, the common user friendly Unix interface announced by AT&T and Sun and endorsed by Unisys, NCR, Olivetti, and Xerox. - InfoWorld 13 June 17 MIP Workstation in a Mac II. Tektronix recently unveiled the first Motorola 88000-based development card for the Macintosh II. The Tektronix TL88K-P card runs at 20MHz and provides 17 million instruction per second, about 10 times the speed of the 68020, according to the company. The card is intended for developers creating software for the 88000 platform. The Tektronix card features eight Mbytes of memory, three cache memory management units, and diagnostic and control software. The price of a fully configured board is $14,995, though lower priced configurations will also be available. - Boston Computer Currents 3 June (forwarded by Tom Metro) Super Macintosh. Meanwhile Apple is said to be working with the Motorola 88000 chip set too. The company has built prototypes of a "Super Macintosh" intended to be a powerful network server. Apple could bring this machine to market in about a year for between $15,000 and $20,000. - InfoWorld 30 May A 20 MHz 80386 Laptop. U.S. Micro Engineering of Boulder, Colorado is launching a line of laptops that includes a 20 MHz 80386 model that supports up to 300 Mbytes of hard disk. The standard $5,995 version will weigh 15 pounds when equipped with 2 Mbytes of RAM, a 50 Mbyte hard disk, and a 640 by 480 dot backlit supertwist LCD. - InfoWorld 6 June The Macintosh III as a Laptop? Apple's R&D gnomes are reported to have built a 15 pound Macintosh laptop around a Motorola 68030 and a super-quick 20 Mbyte hard drive. The display is an active matrix screen. The company could decide to market the machine as early as next January, perhaps; well, maybe. - PC Week 31 May What Happened to the A/Ux Applications? When Unix for the Macintosh II was released in February, Apple promised easy movement of applications from the standard Mac operating system. However, only Informix which makes the Wingz office automation program reports little difficulty moving their Macintosh application to A/Ux. Microsoft has reported that none of it's applications - Word, Works, Excel - will run under A/Ux without extensive modification. - PC Week 14 June Will It Be Known as "Gosh?" Apple plans a new operating system for the IIgs called GS OS for release in the Fall. The GS OS environment will permit the IIgs to read text files in both Macintosh and MS-DOS 3.5 inch disk formats. Otherwise GS OS will be ProDOS compatible, but it will permit "naming" devices such as hard drives and RAM disks instead of referring to them by "slot and drive" or "pathname." - InCider June and July MS-DOS 3.3 Clone. Remember Digital Research, marketers of the CP/M and Gem operating systems? DRI recently announced DR-DOS, a single user operating system, which will be fully compatible with MS-DOS 3.3 and adds some extensions such as the ability to assign passwords to files and subdirectories. DRI plans to "aggressively price" DR-DOS to PC-clone manufacturers. DR-DOS will be available on ROM chips which will be especially convenient for diskless LAN workstations and laptop computers. - PC Week 14 June DOS After Dark. Microsoft and IBM are seriously contemplating a PC-DOS version of the Presentation Manager called DOS PM. The product would be essentially Windows code but would look like the Presentation Manager. - InfoWorld 13 June What Happens to AppleTalk? Apple vice president Jean Louis Gassee is quoted as saying that Apple will support the Macintosh running as a client workstation under Microsoft's OS/2 LAN manager for an IBM token ring network. However, Gassee did not elaborate on how or when this would happen, and other Apple officials have no comment on the subject. - InfoWorld 30 May OS/2-386. Market pressure for a 32-bit, 80386 based version of OS/2 is increasing, but Microsoft doesn't expect to release a programmer's tool kit to developers before mid-1989. End user release isn't expected until sometime in 1990. A 32-bit OS/2 will support "virtual machines" allowing several DOS applications to run simultaneously. - PC Week 14 June But Who Gets the "Look and Feel?" Screenplay Systems will soon release to developers "The Macintosh Compatibility Package" (MCP) which will allow software written in C for the Mac to be easily converted to run under MS-DOS with the same look and performance. The compatibility package provides screen handling and other routines that allow the ported code to be run on a PC. Programs written in C for MS-DOS also can be converted to run on a Macintosh with equal ease. - InfoWorld 13 June and PC Week 14 June "Habit" Compatible. Borland International's new $199.95 word processor, Sprint, accepts commands and produces files compatible with other major word processors - Word, Word Star, Word Perfect, and Multimate. Early copies of the program will ship with the "Alternate User Interfaces" (AUI's) that translate the keystrokes of other word processors to Sprint. After a few months, Borland plans to sell AUI's separately for $99. The DOS 3.3 version of Sprint should be released about the time this column appears, an OS/2 version is scheduled for the third quarter, and a Presentation Manager edition is planned for next year. - InfoWorld 6 June and PC Week 14 June The Latest (Perfect) Word. Analysts are surprised that Microsoft doesn't expect to have Word 4.0 available for the Macintosh until October. Although version 4.0 is impressive, users may not want to wait; both Word Perfect and Fullwrite have been gaining share in the Macintosh market. Meanwhile, Word Perfect 5.0 for MS-DOS computers uses a new file structure that is incompatible with Xerox's Ventura and Aldus's Pagemaker. Both Aldus and Xerox have indicated that future versions of their desktop publishing packages will support the new file format, but no release dates have been set. Compaq owners need a ROM upgrade ($60 unless the computer is still under warranty) in order to run the latest Word Perfect. - PC Week 14 June Lateware. Ashton Tate now says that often delayed dBase IV definitely will be out by the end of September (wait and see). In the meantime, a revised version of Framework has been announced for the July 31 date that was to have seen the new dBase. Not to be outdone, shipment dates for Lotus's Agenda and Modern Jazz also are slipping toward Fall. - InfoWorld 30 May --------------------- Disclaimer: --- My employer isn't responsible for my mistakes AND vice-versa! (subject to change without notice; void where prohibited) ARPA: sewall%uconnvm.bitnet@mitvma.mit.edu Murphy A. Sewall BITNET: SEWALL@UCONNVM School of Business Admin. UUCP: {rutgers psuvax1 ucbvax & in Europe - mcvax} Univ. of Connecticut !UCONNVM.BITNET!SEWALL "It might help if we ran the MBA's out of Washington." - Adm Grace Hopper ------------------------------ End of INFO-MAC Digest **********************