SHULMAN@sdr.slb.COM (Jeffrey Shulman) (11/14/87)
Date: Sat 14 Nov 87 09:50:21-GMT From: Jeff Shulman <SHULMAN@SDR> Subject: Delphi Mac Digest V3 #50 To: Delphi-List: ; Message-ID: <563881821.0.SHULMAN@SDR> Mail-System-Version: <VAX-MM(218)+TOPSLIB(129)@SDR> Delphi Mac Digest Saturday, November 14, 1987 Volume 3 : Issue 50 Today's Topics: RE: Novy Accelerator (2 messages) RE: Imagewriter II Re: MacWEEK accuracy? Re: MacWeek accuracy RE: C Compilers Attn: ResCopy users New Word 3.0x book (2 messages) RE: Usenet Mac Digest V3 #89 Excel/MultiFinder problems (5 messages) Mac II Color Startup (2 messages) Radius Accelerator Slowdowns Suggestion for HyperCard (2 messages) Weird HyperCard problems (2 messages) Smalltalk-80 and Mac II (2 messages) re: Re: Shareware (was Red Ryder) (2 messages) Sesame C compiler (2 messages) Help with Spooler PC Magazine Feature MOOSE Multifinder re: Mac SE Internal Hard Disks re: Color QuickDraw? MiniFinder? Word Companion (the Book) Ready, Set, Go! 4.0 -- a first look (4 messages) PowerStation 1.1 patches Finder 6.0 bug Falcon DvorMac. A program Shell: FaceIt Mac serial drivers (2 messages) ---------------------------------------------------------------------- From: ASMCOR Subject: RE: Novy Accelerator (Re: Msg 23284) Date: 6-NOV-21:34: Hardware & Peripherals Thanks for the info. I've decided to get the 16mhz version. It's the best bet with my current budget, I think. I have a Mac II that I use at the office, and the Mac+ at home just seems too darn slow now. I'll post my experiences with the board here. Jan ------------------------------ From: DWOOD Subject: RE: Novy Accelerator (Re: Msg 23332) Date: 7-NOV-01:11: Hardware & Peripherals The same guy who recently sent back his clip-version Novy board just got the solder on version today (took only a few days to get the replacement). He tells me that the unexplained bombs seem to have stopped. We have concluded that the clip was the problem. -Doug ------------------------------ From: MACWEEKBOS Subject: RE: Imagewriter II (Re: Msg 23304) Date: 6-NOV-20:17: Hardware & Peripherals I've been very disappointed in the ImageWriter II, finding the quality not much better and the noise not much better and the mechanicals much trickier than the ImageWriter I. It does seem faster and it supports the AppleTalk card for the extra money, but I wish Apple still supported the ImageWriter I fully, with software at least. Ric ------------------------------ From: MACWEEKBOS Subject: Re: MacWEEK accuracy? (Re: Msg 23276) Date: 6-NOV-19:57: Network Digests To: mss+@andrew.cmu.edu (Mark Steven Sherman) Subject: MacWeek accuracy? There are a number of reasons why technical inaccuracies creep into articles in MacWEEK and other magazines. The biggest reason is that the text usually gets edited by copy editors (or other editors) after a technical editor reads it - if a technical editor does read that particular article at all. However, MacWEEK has just hired Jon Swartz, a veteran networking writer, and I think you'll see more news and more accuracy in the area of networking topics from now on. I'll pass on your comments to add to the argument for more beef in the copy editing department. Ric Ford MacWEEK Boston office ("Opinions expressed here are my own, not MacWEEK's.") ------------------------------ From: MACWEEKBOS Subject: Re: MacWeek accuracy (Re: Msg 23302) Date: 6-NOV-20:15: Network Digests To: Barry Margolin <barmar@Think.COM> Subject: Re: MacWeek accuracy Barmar, you couldn't be further from the truth. "MacWEEK" is published by Patch Communications, a direct competitor of CW Communications, and "MacWEEK" is a trademark of Patch Communications. Patch is not affiliated in any way with Apple Computer, Inc. CW Communications is the publisher of "Macintosh Today" (a trademark of Apple Computer, Inc.) and is also the publisher of both "InfoWorld" and "MacWorld." Ric Ford MacWEEK Boston ("Opinions expressed here are my own and not those of MacWEEK, Inc.") ------------------------------ From: DWB Subject: RE: C Compilers (Re: Msg 23252) Date: 7-NOV-01:43: Programming I seem to remember seeing somewhere that Borland was going to release Turbo C for the Macintosh but don't quote me on it. What you can quote me on is that LightSpeed C is a much better environment on the Macintosh than is Turbo C on the PC. David ------------------------------ From: STEVEMALLER Subject: Attn: ResCopy users Date: 7-NOV-12:17: Creative Pursuits The stack that contains my ResCopy XCMD has one minor problem - the "Help" button has not icon. Actually, it just got lost in the shuffle. To fix this most annoying problem, do this: 1) Open the message box 2) Type: set icon of card button "Help with ResCopy" to 2 3) Press [RETURN] That's it... Sorry! Steve Maller Apple Computer ------------------------------ From: CHUQ Subject: New Word 3.0x book Date: 7-NOV-23:25: SIG Business Just a quick note to Word users. There is a new book out, called "The word companion: the definitive guide to microsoft word 3 for the Mac". It's $19.95, about 700 pages, and from the Cobb Group (ISBN 0-93667-05-7). I"m just starting to plow through it now, but it looks to be much better than "microsoft word 3.0 made easy" the other Word book I've found. I'll do a full writeup after I've finished it, but anything we can find to replace Microsoft's manuals has to be of interest.... chuq ------------------------------ From: NWOLF Subject: RE: New Word 3.0x book (Re: Msg 23363) Date: 8-NOV-01:04: SIG Business ..anything we can get to replace Microsoft's manuals has to be _worthwhile_! ------------------------------ From: MACWEEKBOS Subject: RE: Usenet Mac Digest V3 #89 (Re: Msg 23348) Date: 8-NOV-11:06: Network Digests To: tom@jiff.berkeley.edu Subject: Looking for high performace disks and controller cards for Mac II You might want to look at the Hammer drives from FWB Software in Berkeley. They are very fast, come in capacities of 80, 150 and 300 MB, and have hard (and soft) partitioning capabilities. I don't know of any vendor who has announced a hard disk with a DMA controller for the Mac II. Ric Ford ------------------------------ From: MACWEEKBOS Subject: Excel/MultiFinder problems Date: 8-NOV-13:05: Bugs & Features I'm having big problems trying to get Excel 1.04 to run under MultiFinder. It's got a 5MB Mac II to use and it tells me there's not enough "application memory" to run or print. Gimme a break! Anybody know how to get it to work? Ric (who can't *wait* for Modern Jazz) ------------------------------ From: JEFFS Subject: RE: Excel/MultiFinder problems (Re: Msg 23396) Date: 8-NOV-13:44: Bugs & Features *ALL* MicroSoft products, due to their M-Code (or is it P-Code?) intermediate language, will ONLY address 1MB (and the LOWER 1MB at that.) I heard Apple had to specifically modify MultiFinder so that MicroSoft programs are loaded into the first 1MB of memory. Jeff ------------------------------ From: MACWEEKBOS Subject: RE: Excel/MultiFinder problems (Re: Msg 23401) Date: 8-NOV-14:15: Bugs & Features I've heard that 1.04 now addresses more memory. Anyway, how do I get around it. I even tried shutting off the cache and everything else because I knew about what you mentioned... Ric ------------------------------ From: JIMH Subject: RE: Excel/MultiFinder problems (Re: Msg 23396) Date: 8-NOV-14:16: Bugs & Features Ric, i heard microsoft did some stupid things in memory management and so yhou need to make sure that excel is the first app. loaded under multidinder. best jim ------------------------------ From: MACWEEKBOS Subject: RE: Excel/MultiFinder problems (Re: Msg 23404) Date: 8-NOV-14:38: Bugs & Features I been trying that, but so far no luck. Maybe tomorrow it'll work. Ric ------------------------------ From: DIVERDAN Subject: Mac II Color Startup Date: 8-NOV-17:28: Macintosh II I need some help!!! I followed the directions of the column in Nov MacUser to make a color StartupScreen and had a big bomb. Any amplification? ------------------------------ From: DSACHS Subject: RE: Mac II Color Startup (Re: Msg 23418) Date: 8-NOV-18:04: Macintosh II What was the origional source of your startup screen? How much memory do you have. I have a couple of startup screens that will not display on my ( presently 1 MB) Mac II, but will on another one with 2 MB. I also created a startup screen that bombed by using Grayview with a perfectly good b & w MacDraw PICT format file. I suspect that there are severe restrictions as to what codes are allowed in a startup screen PICT resource. In particular the display of text may be totally verbotten. I have broached this subject before with (so far) no real answer. ------------------------------ From: MACWEEKBOS Subject: Radius Accelerator Slowdowns Date: 8-NOV-17:46: Bugs & Features Don Byrd found a problem with the Radius Accelerator for the SE. It's subtle and weird, but I reproduced it on my own Accelerator. We're using ROM version 1.8. What happens is that some software triggers a slowdown in the Accelerator. You don't easily notice it, but measured performance tests show that it's running at 1/2 speed. (We used PackIt as a test, among others). The only program we've found that definitely triggers the slow mode is HFS Backup v. 2. Other programs do also trigger it, and it may have something to do with the Lightspeed C compiler. We're going to call Radius on Monday. Ric Ford ------------------------------ From: MACWEEKBOS Subject: Suggestion for HyperCard Date: 8-NOV-17:48: Business Mac We've been thinking a lot about using HyperCard as a prototyping system, and it occurred to me that it might be very useful to have some way of making HyperCard respond to buttons in dialogs created in ResEdit. Is anyone working on this? Could it be done in XCMDs? Ric ------------------------------ From: PEABO Subject: RE: Suggestion for HyperCard (Re: Msg 23420) Date: 8-NOV-19:53: Business Mac Sounds like a good idea. The biggest bugaboo is retaining context from one invocation of your XFCN to another. You would want this if you implemnted a modeless dialog for instance. I'd suggest also the idea of prototyping the dialog in HyperCard and having some program that converts the card layout into a DITL/DLOG combination. It's *much* easier than prototyping in ResEdit. If you just want a modal dialog that returns a result to HC, it probably isn't too hard (because you won't be returning to HC after pressing a button and then want to reinvoke the dialog after doing something). peter ------------------------------ From: MACWEEKBOS Subject: Weird HyperCard problems Date: 8-NOV-19:50: Bugs & Features OK, HyperHackers, what the heck is this problem: I try to open a stack (password protected) on a Mac II (5MB) and get an error "Old file format." I can't open it. I haven't touched the stack for weeks, and left it working just fine. I copy the file to a floppy and run it off an SE/Radius Accelerator. No problems, it opens right up! I don't get it. Ric ------------------------------ From: MACWEEKBOS Subject: RE: Weird HyperCard problems (Re: Msg 23433) Date: 8-NOV-20:22: Bugs & Features I pulled back a copy from DiskFit and it seems to be OK. Maybe this was all the result of a crash in MultiFinder. :-( ------------------------------ From: RAMARREN Subject: Smalltalk-80 and Mac II Date: 8-NOV-21:27: Programming after getting my copy of Smalltalk-80 from APDA i went to install it on the Mac II that i use at work. this is v0.4, Mac II compatible. The environment is 5 Meg RAM, CMS 80MByte internal drive, SuperMac video card and SuperMac 19" (Ikegawa) color monitor. problem 1: DivJoin reports that the "target drive has insufficient space to join the selected file". There is 40Meg free on the drive, the Smalltalk.sources file is 1.4 Meg in size. No other program has ever come up with a lack of disk space. Huh? - i copied the two halves of the .sources file onto the drive and used MPW's Catenate tool to render a joined file; no problems. problem 2: after installing all the rest of the items, I double click on the .image file to start up as usual. Loading commences, the balloon picture traversed the screen, the gray System background and standard window wake up... but only half the screen is in use. the lower half of the screen is Still white, with a piece of the startup balloon still on board. Windows, either collapsed or open, which extend beyond the screen upper half are either not reachable or otherwise damaged. everything works normally otherwise, on the upper half of the screen, assuming I don't accidentally run the mouse beyond that point. - i thought: "oh, left it in 16 bit mode" and tried resetting the monitors Control Panel item, but it trashed the System file entirely. Had to replace ALL the system files, including Finder, before things worked. i tested the software out by running to a Mac II with 2Meg RAM and a 40Meg Apple drive and B&W monitor and it runs great... why not on the SuperMac screen, which would be ideal? And why the divJoin problem? Anyone with any hints, I'd appreciate knowing. Thanks, godfrey digiorgi ------------------------------ From: JEDIVASOVIC Subject: RE: Smalltalk-80 and Mac II (Re: Msg 23439) Date: 9-NOV-04:41: Programming I had thme problem with my 5 meg Mac II with the 19 '' supermac color monitor. The problem is that Samlltalk regonizes only the upper third of the screen. I guess it has something to do with bitmaps saving(?) I did not have the divjoin problem, however, but I have a 40 meg Hyperdrive FX hard disk. -> Jean-Denis <- ------------------------------ From: DDUNHAM Subject: re: Re: Shareware (was Red Ryder) (Re: Msg 23348) Date: 8-NOV-22:08: Network Digests > From: gardner@prls.UUCP (Robert Gardner) > Subject: Re: Shareware (was Red Ryder) I think all my shareware is polished (Dir-Acta-ry, which is free, is also polished and usable, but incomplete), tho I agree there is the temptation to make use of the quasi-interactive distribution system to get feedback. And I agree, I want to pay shareware fees for what I have in hand, not what's promised. People who pay for shareware have some strange ideas, too. I get an awful lot of payments from people who want to know if they have the latest version -- and don't tell me which version they have. Are you saying I should charge more than $10 for DiskInfo, just because $10 is too small for you to send? You can always send more :-) I've tried to price my software reasonably -- as little as possible, while still providing us with some money. There are a lot of useful programs that do less or are less sophisticated than miniWRITER or DiskInfo, so I think they should cost less (and I paid the $2 for one of Lofty Becker's programs). Why don't you treat software cheaper than $10 as a bargain? And why should "doing something else with" be a concern of the payer? As you seemed to state, you want to pay for what you've got, not for future considerations. Free updates are something I intend to provide for my software, but many companies don't. Aside to paid users: to get the latest version of Maitreya Design shareware, send an initialized disk and self-addressed, stamped envelope. David Dunham "Whenever you see a sign 'No Exit,' it means Maitreya Design there is an exit." ------------------------------ From: DDUNHAM Subject: re: Re: Shareware (was Red Ryder) (Re: Msg 23350) Date: 8-NOV-22:09: Network Digests > From: rmh@apple.UUCP (Rick Holzgrafe) > Subject: Re: Shareware (was Red Ryder) I don't have any comparative experience, but I think games can't be successful as shareware because people don't use them enough. People have told me that they've used my stuff for over a year before getting around to paying for it, and most games don't have that kind of replay value. BTW, I encourage you (and other Apple employees) to check your AppleLink a bit more often. David Dunham "The more laws there are, the more people are Maitreya Design inclined to break them" ------------------------------ From: TOMCATR Subject: Sesame C compiler Date: 9-NOV-00:56: Tools for Developers I'm having some trouble with applications created with the Sesame C compiler. The sample program made it through compilation and linking, however when I try to run the application from the Desktop, I get a system error.(-26 "Couldn't find driver in resource file") I've tried several programs but I still get the same error. Any help would be greatly appreciated. By the way I am using a 512k with the old ROM's if that makes any difference. Thanks. P.S.(How might I get in touch with the authors of the compiler?) ------------------------------ From: STEVEMALLER Subject: RE: Sesame C compiler (Re: Msg 2168) Date: 10-NOV 01:29 Tools for Developers I thought an ID=26 error is "Can't load CODE resource #1". Did you get a BOMB with #26 in the box? That is 26, NOT -26. If in fact it was 26, then the linker is kerflooey. Sounds like maybe you should ante up for a real compiler. No offense, but "you get what you pay for." Lightspeed C is reasonably-priced and works like a champ on all Macs. Aztec is also quite good if you want more of a UNIX (ugh)-like interface. As far as Sesame C goes, check the documentation for an address and get in touch with the author. The author may very well have given up given his competition... Steve Maller Apple Computer (disclaimer: The above opinions are mine, and have nothing to do with my employer or my girlfriend...) ------------------------------ From: VASMUG Subject: Help with Spooler Date: 10-NOV 05:45 Business Mac GREETINGS, HELP!!!! - Does anyone have first hand info about a spooler that works. How about one that works with PageMaker 2.0. Is anyone using a hardware spooler? What the world needs is a good hardware or software spooler that works with PageMaker 2.0 and the LaserWriter!!! Please reply. thanks, Fred (VASmug) ------------------------------ From: NETMAN Subject: PC Magazine Feature Date: 10-NOV 09:08 Macintosh II I don't know how many regualr readers of PC Magazine there are in this SIG but there is a legnth comparison of the Mac II vs. the PS/2 Model 80 in the 11/24 issue of PC Magazine. It's written by Jim Seymour and John Dvorak (both Mac and PC users). The bottom line is that they like the Mac more than the Model 80 for a wide range of applications. One area where they say the Mac falls short is business graphics. Are there any Macintosh business graphics programs that really offer a full range of options, like 3-D charts, and can accept data from a variety of applications? (Excel, (Jazz??), 1-2-3, ASCII, SYLK, DIF....) If there are programs that can offer more than Cricket Graph (which is what I've been using) please let me know as I cannot find any reference to them in most trade rags. Jonathan ------------------------------ From: DSACHS Subject: MOOSE Date: 10-NOV 21:10 Creative Pursuits The talking moose does not work properly on the Macintosh II. When the mac II is not in 2 color mode, it displays garbage on the screen. ------------------------------ From: DSACHS Subject: Multifinder Date: 10-NOV 21:14 Programming I have just obtained a set of 5.0 disks, dated Oct 12 and have noted the following quirks. 1) Despite the propaganda to the contrary, funny ICONs still work. 2) LAYOUT will not work when run under multifinder, but if you run it under finder, the changes still hold when running under multifinder. 3) FEED ME crashes everything when run uner multifinder. 4) MACHUH causes garbage to display after running under multifinder. ------------------------------ From: MACWEEKBOS Subject: re: Mac SE Internal Hard Disks (Re: Msg 23493) Date: 10-NOV 22:24 Network Digests To: tom coradeschi <tcora@ARDEC.ARPA> Subject: Mac SE Internal Hard Disks The July 20 issue of MacWEEK has my review of 5 internal hard drives for the Mac SE, including benchmarks. (MacWEEK is at 415-882-7370). I concluded that Apple's internal 20 disk is competitive in speed and utility software, but priced exorbitantly on a cost/MB basis. Rodime, GCC and Peripheral Land drives were all faster than Apple's with double the capacity for about the same money. The CMS drive was a little slower, but a good value. The Warp 9 and Mirror drives were bargains, but somewhat slower (the difference may not be perceptible in everyday use). The Warp 9 and Mirror had huge 47MB capacities. Ric Ford MacWEEK Boston ------------------------------ From: DDUNHAM Subject: re: Color QuickDraw? (Re: Msg 23493) Date: 11-NOV 06:04 Network Digests > Subject: Color QuickDraw? > From: sbm@purdue.edu (Steve Munson) You're not really using Color QuickDraw, since you're not drawing in a color grafport (NewCWindow(), 0xAA45) or using RGBForeColor(). You need Inside Mac vol. 5. David Dunham "The more laws there are, the more people are Maitreya Design inclined to break them" ------------------------------ From: DSACHS Subject: MiniFinder? Date: 11-NOV 19:59 Bugs & Features The new (6.0) Finder is lacking the cammand to make or modify the Minifinder, but the INIT to support MiniFinder is still present in the System 4.2 file. Why???? ------------------------------ From: CHUQ Subject: Word Companion (the Book) Date: 11-NOV 23:05 Business Mac I mentioned this in passing, and I thought I'd post a more detailed not on it. There is a new book out called "The Word Companion: The definitive guide to microsoft word 3 for the macintosh" by Mynhier Cobb; the Cobb Group, $19.95; ISBN 0-936767-05-7. It's a damn site better than the microsoft documentation, that's for sure. Jsut about everything in the original word documents seems to be in here (with a couple of rather obscure exceptions -- mathematical formulas and postscript being either sketchily covered and missing completely, respectively). As a beginners guide, it's pretty good. Some of the stuff will overwhelm the complete novice, but it's put together in such a way that a person can get what they need easily and go back for more advanced information when they want it. Definitive? no, but close. Postscript is missing, and the math stuff, as I said, is sketchy. I've found a few places where it's a bit naive, but in general, it's a pretty good book. Word users will probably learn to love it. I know it's taken the place of honor on my desk, replacing "microsoft word made easy" and the Microsoft documents. while I still think there's a market for the "hardcore hacker's guide to nifty tricks in word 3, no novices need apply" manual, this does pretty well. chuq ------------------------------ From: CHUQ Subject: Ready, Set, Go! 4.0 -- a first look Date: 11-NOV 23:21 Business Mac I got my RSG4 upgrade yesterday. I've gone through the manuals (yes, two) and spent a couple hours playing with it. This isn't definitive by any means, therefore, but I do have a prototype page for OR #19 laid out in it. In general, I'm impressed. The manuals are a big improvement, since they are real manuals (one is the RSG guide and reference, the other is an introduction to design manual that is VERY well done). The manuals STILL need a lot of work. The index seems to be more or less useless and very poorly done. The reference section explains the various dialog boxes but doesn't show them (as far as I can tell, the boxes wouldn't have fit in the manual layout cleanly, so they left them out -- there is no logical reason for it otherwise). This makes understanding what they're saying about the dialog options interesting -- I recommend having the program around to reference while you're reading it. New features: style sheets, glossaries for boiler plate, a significant rehack of the user interface (much cleaner and easier to use, more intuitive, but not perfect), greatly improved hyphenation, improved spellchecking, must stronger line/paragraph/word spacing and crontrol, the justification looks cleaner, ESPF and TIFF support, word 3.0 support (with a caveat, see below). Also, the fill and pen patterns are significantly improved, throwing out many of the kitschy Apple patters for useful ones, and adding a set of gray screens. It's a MUCH better program than RSG3.0, all around. They fixed scrolling, too (yay!). I was able to put together the page prototype much faster than I could under RSG3, with better control and a cleaner, more professional looking result. I've only found two places where the program falls down a bit. One is the way you execute the style sheets. You can define a special key for a style that you can get to by typing a key sequence and then that key. It works, but it's awkward. Another problem is that style sheets are not global, but specific to a document. You can import them from another document, but again that seems awkward to me. Finally, one really serious glitch (I plan on talking to Letraset about this one in a few days). If you load in a formatted text document, and put a style sheet onto it, the style sheet overrides whatever formatting you have in the text. bye-bye, italic. Hmm. Wait a second, while typing it in, I may have found a way to defeat this. I'll check and update you folks -- but it isn't intuitive or well explained in the manual. Be careful when putting styles on top of heavily formatted text. RSG4 is good. very good, the (possible) style botch notwithstanding. It's definitely oriented towards loonger jobs, while PageMaker is oriented towards shorter ones. From what I've read bout PM, RSG stands a good chance to blow it away completely in the market given a chance. But we still need a really sharp book/manual for the silly thing. Anyone know a good publisher???? chuq ------------------------------ From: CHUQ Subject: RE: Ready, Set, Go! 4.0 -- a first look (Re: Msg 23526) Date: 12-NOV 00:32 Business Mac To correct myself, the style botch isn't. It's not intuitive, however. When you create a style, the default type-style is plain (as you might expect). If you want the formatted styles to come though, you have to remember to turn off the typestles completely -- they are a set of check boxes. Unfortunately there isn't a 'none' box, none is implied by the lack of any checks, and this isn't clearly explained in the manual (I found it when I went back and looked, but I had to knw what I was looking for). So, a few rough edges, but I haven't found any problems. If you're using shorter documents, you may want to look at PM, but RSG does short stuff quite nicely. If you ever need to do anything longer than about 6 pages, or you are doing lots of text (like a newsletter) or anything with repetitive formatting, I think RSG is the hands down winner. chuq ------------------------------ From: MACWEEKBOS Subject: RE: Ready, Set, Go! 4.0 -- a first look (Re: Msg 23529) Date: 12-NOV 13:14 Business Mac Chuq, Is it reasonable to *write* in RSG, instead of fooling with Word or something else? Does RSG preserve italics and all the other stuff when you import a Word 3 document? Ric ------------------------------ From: CHUQ Subject: RE: Ready, Set, Go! 4.0 -- a first look (Re: Msg 23535) Date: 12-NOV 22:26 Business Mac I don't know if it is reasonable to write in rsg4. It wasn't in rsg3 -- with hyphenation on and with long documents, the delays were intolerable. I haven't tried to do that in rsg4 yet. I'll let you know. Yes, RSG preserves all paragraph and text formatting information (fonts, line spacing, indents, etc.) from Word 3. Unless, of course, you do what I did,m and tell your style sheet to override them. chuq ------------------------------ From: BRECHER Subject: PowerStation 1.1 patches Date: 12-NOV 00:06 Bugs & Features PowerStation 1.1 problems with MultiFinder and patches to fix same. Problem: PowerStation's Finder button can cause a crash. Fixed by patches #1, #2, and #3. Problem: The Restart and Shut Down commands from PowerStation's Special menu return to Finder (if Finder is running) or merely quit and then reopen PowerStation (if Finder is not running). Workaround: quit to Finder (assumes patches #1, #2, and #3 applied) and use Finder's Restart or Shut Down. If Finder is not running, hold Option while clicking the Finder button to get back to Finder, then go back to PowerStation and click the Finder button again ( without Option) to quit PowerStation. Problem: Open an application from PowerStation. After the "interval of idleness" specified in PowerStation's Preferences dialog, return to PowerStation by quitting the application or by switching to PowerStation. PowerStation's boxes/buttons are invisible. Fixed by patches #4 and #5. The "original" and "patch to" values are indented here to indicate their relative positions as they will appear in Fedit's hexadecimal display. patch #1----------------------------------------- Location: file sector 20 (14 hex), offset 26 (01A hex) bytes within sector; 281A hex bytes from start of file. original: 41FA 0046 2078 patch to: 2038 095C 6F0E original: 0A80 303C 010D A047 21F8 0958 033C 2078 patch to: 2040 A01F 2078 0A80 303C 010D A047 21F8 original: 095C A01F 4E75 4EBA FFE6 6704 2EB8 patch to: 0958 033C 4E75 4EBA FFE2 6704 2F38 patch #2----------------------------------------- Location: file sector 30 (1E hex), offset 242 (0F2 hex) bytes within sector; 3CF2 hex bytes from start of file. original: 4EBA EB2A patch to: 4EBA EB26 patch #3----------------------------------------- Location: file sector 31 (1F hex), offset 426 (1AA hex) bytes within sector; 3FAA hex bytes from start of file. original: 4EBA E872 patch to: 4EBA E86E patch #4----------------------------------------- Location: file sector 61 (3D hex), offset 216 (0D8 hex) bytes within sector; 7AD8 hex bytes from start of file. original: 4E56 0000 207C 0000 patch to: 6606 4A2D FCF0 660E original: 016A 202D F7FC D090 206E 0008 2140 FFF8 patch to: 202D F7FC D0B8 016A 2D40 FFF8 4E75 5897 original: 4E5E patch to: 4E75 patch #5----------------------------------------- Location: file sector 61 (3D hex), offset 458 (1CA hex) bytes within sector; 7BCA hex bytes from start of file. original: 4A6D FAC4 670A patch to: 4A47 6710 4A6D original: 2F0E patch to: FAC4 ------------------------------ From: DSACHS Subject: Finder 6.0 bug Date: 12-NOV 20:30 Bugs & Features Finder 6.0 (oct 12 disks) will not allow opening an application with document(s) belonging to another application. (e.g. Word with a MacWrite TEXT document). For some reason this is allowed under multifinder. ------------------------------ From: HALL Subject: Falcon Date: 12-NOV 20:53 Games and Entertainment I received my copy of Falcon today. It looks good, but it requires 1MB of memory. It also doesn't seem to support two players. It isn't copy protected, and runs fine from a hard disk. Brian ------------------------------ From: NATURAL Subject: DvorMac. Date: 13-NOV 12:20 Business Mac I've been thinking recently about changing of to the Dvorak standard on my Macs, which poses a couple of questions... first on the software end, how does one do it? If QuicKeys will change R to P for example, will it change command-R to command-P without having to redifine every function. Secondly, on the hardware side, particularly on the SE/II keyboards, how does a guy like me get those keys rearranged. Thanks. Joshua ------------------------------ From: DWOOD Subject: A program Shell: FaceIt Date: 13-NOV 20:27 Programming Dan Kampmeier of FaceWare has announeced the release of FactIt, a programming shell for the Macintosh. FaceIt is an extention of McFace, the programming shell for the Mac. Dan has completely rewritten McFace in LightSpeed Pascal and has come up with a very clever technique which allows FaceIt to be used from ANY programming language. FaceIt is a set of CODE resources that you pased into your program code with ResEdit. FaceIt provided for many features of a true Macintosh program. It handles up to five text editors, a graphics window (resizeable w/scroll bars) save to MacDraw file format, full support for dialog boxes (including automatic dialog event handling), the list goes on and on. In short, FaceIt gives your Mac Program a full featured Macintosh interface and more. (Oh, if forgot, it supports both ImageWriter and LaserWriter printing, too.) If you desire more information, contact: Dan Kampmeier FaceWare 1310 N. Broadway Urbana, IL 61801 (217) 328-5842 And the best thing about it is the price. FaceIt is only $50 complete. [ I am not affilitated with Dan or FaceWare, I simply am a satisfied customer.] -Doug Wood ------------------------------ From: CCAGOSTA Subject: Mac serial drivers Date: 13-NOV 14:31 Programming Techniques People, This is my first attempt at this form of comunication so any comments are welcome. I have an open question concerning device drivers on the Mac addressed to anyone who might offer assistance. I would like to write a piece of code in Lightspeed C which would allow me to send and receive ascii code through the modem port. A typical application I will use this for is in porting an interactive program to the Mac which runs an HP plotter. I have tried RAMSDOpen, SerReset and FSWrite in various syntax but in each instance I end up with a buserror after the FSWrite routine (on a MacII). I get the feeling I have missed the whole point, so to speak. If anyone has any suggestions, references or examples they would be gre atly appreciated. By the way, I did ask the people at Think about their own routines in "stdio" and they suggested that I steer clear of their attempt to create the interface and use the Mac Toolbox. Thanks for the Help, Chuck Agosta ------------------------------ From: PEABO Subject: RE: Mac serial drivers (Re: Msg 2172) Date: 13-NOV 17:40 Programming Techniques In the call to FSWrite, is the second argument a pointer to a long? If not, check the third argument to see that the buffer you are using is addressible. The Mac II diagnoses bus errors for invalid addresses which on earlier Macs merely cause unexpected results without stopping the program. peter ------------------------------ End of Delphi Mac Digest ************************ -------