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Compusa Restocking Fee

Compusa Restocking Fee

General Reference · 1994 · TXT
Filenamecompusa-restocking-fee.txt
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Year1994
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Contents
Date: Mon, 23 May 1994 07:21:06 PDT
From: Bruce_Rubin.Wbst845@xerox.com
Subject: [!]CompUSA 10% restocking return policy for Apple products found on

Hi,

The evening of May 22nd, while beta testing (i.e. playing) Apple's eWorld, I
drilled down through Computer Center:News & Industry Information:MacWEEK
Online:MacWEEK Round Table:Tips to Mac the Knife and found a "conversation"
regarding how CompUSA has a 10% restocking policy for Apple products! I posted
this note on a Rochester, NY FC BBS (Mac's Last Stand 716-247-9056) and the one
reply todate (last note of this message) makes it seem that this new policy
might be more Apple's than CompUSA's fault. I haven't heard of this new policy
of Apple's affecting other stores. While it is not uncommon for manufacturers
to get very very tough on their suppliers, this is the first time that I have
heard of a sales outlet getting beat up!

Bruce

===========

Subj:  COMP USA's new Apple policy           94-05-11 21:31:58 PDT
From:  NormR

If you aren't aware, COMP USA as of 5/1/94 instituted a new policy against only
APPLE equipment, They now charge a 10% restocking fee if you return any Apple
product within 30 days. I for one, will not buy another item from them with
that type of discriminatory policy and will write about it in my newsletter
telling everyone else not to shop there either.

Subj:  CompUSA big mistake                   94-05-12 20:41:29 PDT
From:  Todd 4ta

I always dreaded shopping at CompUSA, especially when having to deal with a
return ('talk to him, go over there, sign this, wait here, ...'). This new
restocking fee policy is the final mistake they will make for me. I just bought
a PowerPC Upgrade Card before May 1, and I might just return it for the heck of
it! There are so many other options in most cases, but Apple seems to like
CompUSA and gives them preferential product stocking treatment. I have met only
one person at CompUSA that knew anything about Macs (@ San Bruno, CA).


Subj:  BOYCOTT COMP USA                      94-05-12 20:45:05 PDT
From:  NormR

Lets get the message out to everyone, even user groups,

BOYCOTT COMP USA


Subj:  CompUSA. . .                          94-05-13 16:23:06 PDT
From:  IDIVISEeW

I don't think a boycott is necessary. The level of service, technical knowledge
and product stocking will eventually lead to their adjusting or getting
smaller.

As I live in the vacinity of a CompUSA, I often visit the store(always against
my better judgement, but with a hope the trip will provide what I need). I
cannot find the items (hardware or software) more then 75% of the time. When I
do, the price(s) are nowhere to be found. The salespeople are usually too busy
giving the wrong information to 'windoze' people to be of any help. I've had to
demonstrate how to reboot their PowerBooks, etc. while they fumbled around. . .

In the many trips I've made, I've actually purchased only one thing. . . a CPU
vertical stand. Both my company and I have decided not spend anymore time and
money there. We've found a better resource (although it is twenty miles away)
and shall do business elsewhere.

Thanks for the soapbox. . .

Subj:  COMP USA return policy                94-05-14 23:17:53 PDT
From:  DanJF

It's readily apparent that COMP USA's return policy is most likely formulated
by upper management who have little if  any  experiance as frontline employees.
If they were "in the trenches" so to speak, they would cringe at the average
customers negative response to this return policy.  But then, how often does
upper management listen to frontline employees, let alone empower them to make
decisions pertaining to strategy????  Its also sad to witness Apple letting
Comp UsA get away with this, now does that say something about Apples'
notorious haughty attitude or what??

Dan,
 Customer Service Consultant


Subj:  COMP USA--Customer Service??????      94-05-14 23:33:01 PDT
From:  DanJF

It's interesting to see that other Mac shoppers have experianced similar
situations in the larger, supposedly "sophisticated" supper stores.  Last June
when I was hunting for the best price and availability of my Mac Powerbook 160,
the assistant manager of the Redmond Wa store insisted he would call me (after
I had to suggest it to him!)first thing the next day  after checking with the
Southcenter store for availability.    Knowing  the chances  of the assist
manager calling were as dependable as software being released on time,  I
called Ballard Computer and found the Powerbook with the desired configuration,
and cheaper to boot!!

To confirm my suspisions, he did not call me the next day or ever.  I bought
the Powerbook at Ballard Computer.

 These larger stores will soon discover that Price, Inventory levels,  and
Technology can always be matched and become comodities.  When they do, the only
competitive Advantage left is Customer Service.  For that, I think the mail
order catologs warehouses are superior for tech support, delivery, and
professionalism not to mention super selection.  Keep it up COMP USA.

Dan


Subj:  CompUSA horror stories                94-05-15 10:52:37 PDT
From:  JBKline

The only time to buy a computer at CompUSA is when they sell returned products
on their "Manager's Special" table at a good price.  Over the past few months,
family and friends have gotten some good deals.  I wonder if that will change
with the new restocking fee.

Most of the sales people dont't know too much, but there are a few fustrated
one who must deal with a stupid and indifferent management.

One week ago, my brother and I went in a few minutes before closing to check
the "return" pile in the corner of the store.  The items were not yet priced.
The assistant manager refused to give us a price on anything and told us the
merchandise was not for sale.  Later, someone told us the items were going to
be auctioned off at 11:00 the next day (Saturday).  We returned the next day to
find that the manager wasn't in and no one had heard of the auction, except
another customer who was told it was at 10:00 and had been waiting an hour.  At
12:30, the assistant manger told us all to come back for an auction at 2:30.
The auction started at 3:00.  They started the bidding at 10% below dealer cost
so there were no "great" deals.

The best thing about the CompUSA Woodland Hills store is that it is close by...

Subj:  Pricing in NYC for MACs               94-05-18 06:43:46 PDT
From:  LAMBDA RPh

I recently poked my head into the new CompUSA store in Manhattan (on posh 5th
Ave no less). They did not have much in the way of MAC equipment on display.
All the MAC hardware and software was located on one side of the store. The
selection was a tad frugal. Their prices are not that competitive (at least in
NYC) for the MAC hardware. There were only 2-3 salespeople to help about 20
customers in the area. While it was nice to see how the store was set up, I was
not amused by the paltry amount of MAC stuff. I'd rather go to J&R Computer
World. They have a better selection of MAC software and hardware, and at good
prices too. The staff is knowledgeable, but you need to ask people who used to
work in Mac Emporium before they merged. The people who used to work at this
store are the most knowledgeable about MAC equipment.

So, for the money, I'd go to J&R any day (at least in Manhattan).

LAMBDA RPh

(From Mac's Last Stand 716-247-9056)

Yes, it's true, I called CompUSA and they confirmed the new policy. Victor, no
last name, said that his manager told him it was in response to a change in
Apples treatment of CompUSA and a change in Apples return policy. He(Victor)
thought that because of somthing Apple did or changed, CompUSA must now sell
returned, undamaged/working, Apple products, at reduced price, instead of
getting a full credit from Apple on products that were returned for reasons
other than a bad product,ie.; factory QC failures (unless the packaging has not
been opened).
Home Documents General Reference Mac Medical Modifications
Mac Medical Modifications

Mac Medical Modifications

General Reference · 1995 · TXT
Filenamemac-medical-modifications.txt
Size0.00 MB
Year1995
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Contents
From: MarkMilem@aol.com
Date: Sun, 28 May 1995 09:13:38 -0400
Subject: Mac Medical Modifications, etc. (S) (long)

-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----

I have been remiss about my promise to summarize to the list.

Back on 17 Feb, I said:

>A friend of mine has a relative who suffers from ALS and he is interested in
>any support groups/information that might be available here/on the net.
>
>He is also interested in adapting technology to help when various bodily
>systems start to fail.  Is there any information on use of Macs for
>quadriplegics and the like?

I have chosen some of the replies as representative and edited those for
length.  Any errors should be considered mine.

First about online ALS support groups.  Bob Broedel <bro@huey.met.fsu.edu>
runs a mailing list whose header follows:

>===============================================================
>==                                                           ==
>==        ----------- ALS Interest Group -----------         ==
>==            ALS Digest (#175, 17 February 1995)            ==
>==                                                           ==
>==  ------ Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS)               ==
>==       ------ Motor Neurone Disease (MND)                  ==
>==            ------ Lou Gehrig's disease                    == 
>==                 ------ Charcot's Disease                  ==
>==                                                           ==
>==  This e-mail list has been set up to serve the world-wide == 
>==  ALS community. That is, ALS patients, ALS researchers,   ==
>==  ALS support/discussion groups, ALS clinics, etc. Others  ==
>==  are welcome (and invited) to join. The ALS Digest is     ==
>==  published (approximately) weekly. Currently there are    ==
>==  490+ subscribers.                                        ==
>==                                                           ==
>==  To subscribe, to unsubscribe, to contribute notes,       ==
>==  etc. to ALS Digest, please send  e-mail to:              ==
>==  bro@huey.met.fsu.edu  (Bob Broedel)                      ==
>==  Sorry, but this is *not* a LISTSERV setup.               ==
>==                                                           ==
>==  Bob Broedel; P.O. Box 20049; Tallahassee, FL 32316 USA   ==
>===============================================================

- From Tim Nolan <timnoln@mcmail.cis.mcmaster.ca>:

>There is an organization in Minneapolis called "Closing the Gap". They 
>have more technology resources info than imaginable. They also put out a 
>regular newsletter. Unfortunately I don't have a contact address, but I 
>don know they are in Minneapolis.
>
>Also, a great list group is available through St. John's U. in NY 
>called project EASI. EASI can be contacted at easi@sjuvm.bitnet. The EASI 
>list is full of great information and contacts.

Finally, on the topic of Mac related hardware modifications, the following
from ann gutting (?) <agutting@indiana.edu>  or  <skripka@aol.com>:

>I found some information which may be of help. The Apple ftp site:
>ftp://ftp.apple.com/apple/disability-solutions/
>has several _very_ informative files.
>
>1. The  Q&A from Apple includes product names and contact information.
>
>2.  The FilemakerPro database,  MDR (Macintosh Disabilities Resources), is
>excellent.
>
>To contact them directly:
>
>Apple Computer, Inc.
>    Worldwide Disability Solutions Group
>    One Infinite Loop,  MS 38-DS
>    Cupertino, CA  95014
>
>   (800) 776-2333 - voice
>   (800) 833-6223 - TTY

Thanks to all who responded.  I hope this helps someone else.

- -Mark Milem
markmilem@aol.com
72254.3244@compuserve.com
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Home Documents General Reference Expo Event List 96 01
Expo Event List 96 01

Expo Event List 96 01

General Reference · 1996 · TXT
Filenameexpo-event-list-96-01-03.txt
Size0.01 MB
Year1996
Downloads10
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Contents
From: robert_hess@macweek.com (Robert Hess)
Subject: Macworld Expo Event List 01/03

Jan. 3 edition of my Expo Event List.

1/08/96	9:00 AM	5:00 PM	Mactivity/Web	http://www.mactivity.com/conferences/m_web/m_web.html
1/08/96	5:00 PM	9:00 PM	Mactivity WebOut Vendor Fair	see http://www.mactivity.com, 800-798-2928, info@mactivity.com
1/09/96	7:30 AM	9:30 AM	Symantec User Group Breakfast	ANA Hotel
1/09/96	8:00 AM	9:30 AM	Power Computing PowerCurve Rollout	ANA Hotel, 50 3rd. St, 2nd floor, University Room, across the street from Moscone, 415-974-6400; Invite Only; RSVP lwall@waltsom.uucp.netcom.com or call Erin Curtis or Lynne Wall at 408-496-0900
1/09/96	8:00 AM	9:00 AM	Ion/Interscope/Inscape Primus Tales�	�from the Punchbowl and Residents Bad Day on the Midway Party; Bimbos 365 Club, 1025 Columbus
1/09/96	9:00 AM	5:00 PM	Mactivity/Web	http://www.mactivity.com/conferences/m_web/m_web.html
1/09/96	10:00 AM	6:00 PM	Macworld Expo	
1/09/96	12:00 PM	12:30 PM	Macromedia/ Xres	demo at Marriot, room number TK.Lynne Stadler and Tom Hale.
1/09/96	5:30 PM	8:30 PM	Dantz Party	the Cartoon Art Museum, 814 Mission St., 2nd Floor, across from 5th & Mission Garage;
1/09/96	6:00 PM	7:30 PM	Club Adtype debriefing	sponsored by Adtype Solutions, an Apple reseller in Sydney, Aust.; the 30th Flor Bar, Holiday Inn Union Square, Sutton St.
1/09/96	6:00 PM	8:00 PM	Live Picture Press Conference	...to unveil Live PIcture 2.5.Digital Pond, 4th Street.RSVP to Eileen Ebner @ ebner@mcleanpr.com or 415-513-8800.
1/09/96	6:30 PM	7:30 PM	UGWUMP Live Broadcast	on eWorld (Shortcut: IRC) and IRC channel #UserGroups
1/09/96	6:45 PM	10:00 PM	Claris FM Pro 3.0 Launch	Press & Invite only; @ SF MOMA, 151 3rd St.; RSVP 12/22 @ (408) 987-3888 or sue_hrt@claris.com
1/10/96	7:00 AM	10:00 AM	Adobe User Group Breakfast	ANA Hotel
1/10/96	7:30 AM	9:00 AM	DK Multimedia press breakfast; Ultimate Sex Guide CD	Anne Hooper's Ultimate Sex Guide CD-ROM; cheri grand; dkcherig@aol.com
1/10/96	7:45 AM	10:00 AM	Claris VIP Breakfast	with Claris execs; RSVP Bernie Stark, 408-987-3830; present invite at door
1/10/96	8:00 AM	9:30 AM	Freehand Breakfast	ANA Hotel, 50 3rd St., Metropolitan II room; breakfast @ 8:00m, presentation @ 8:30m; RSVP by 01/08/96 to Jane Chuey, 415-252-2268 or macropr@macromedia.com
1/10/96	8:00 AM	9:45 AM	Mac Home Journal Breakfast	Sheraton Palace, 2 Montgomery
1/10/96	10:00 AM	6:00 PM	Macworld Expo	
1/10/96	1:00 PM	3:00 PM	Apple Tech Vision 1996	Briefing from COMDEX repeated; Room 102 next to Apple Pavilion; Moscone South; RSVP by 12/21/95; (408) 974-8695, fax (408) 974-1929
1/10/96	2:00 PM	3:00 PM	Big Island Intro	communications software rollout; Moscone 113
1/10/96	3:30 PM	4:30 PM	StarNine/Quarterdeck	Moscone Center meeting room 113, South Hall; contact Naomi Pearce @ (510) 528-0824 or naomi@well.com
1/10/96	4:00 PM	5:15 PM	Macworld Expo User Group Extravaganza	Moscone 302; simulated UG meeting
1/10/96	5:00 PM	7:00 PM	Frontier Birds of a Feather	Suite I on 4th Floor of Marriott; 30 NW'd computers; no net hookup
1/10/96	5:30 PM	7:30 PM	Netcom Press Event	NetCruiser launch; Moscone 232; RSVP jill_ryan@mcleanpr.com
1/10/96	6:00 PM	8:00 PM	APS Hospitality Suite	ANA Hotel, Metro I & II, 50 3rd. St.
1/10/96	6:00 PM	9:00 PM	Adobe Illustrator Party	Miss Pearl's Jam House, 601 Eddy; one-way shuttle from Moscone (see invite for details)
1/10/96	6:00 PM	8:30 PM	Mac Home Journal Readers' Choice	Kate O'Brians, 579 Howard
1/10/96	6:00 PM	8:30 PM	APS Party	ANA Hotel, Metropolitan I & II, 50 3rd. St.
1/10/96	6:30 PM	10:00 PM	BMUG meeting @ Nikko Hotel	
1/10/96	6:30 PM	10:30 PM	Bad Mojo Roach Parth	Bimbo's, Columbus @ Chstnut
1/10/96	6:30 PM	9:30 PM	BMUG Meeting	tons of companies show off their stuff
1/10/96	7:30 PM	10:00 PM	Macromedia Party	Paradise Lounge5101 Folsom StreetRSVP to Grace Hom 252-2209 or ghom@macromedia.com
1/10/96	8:00 PM	11:59 PM	Apple/Adobe/DataTranslation Party	Club DV8, 540 Howard
1/10/96	9:00 PM	10:00 PM	ZD-Yahoo Techno Rave	RSVP Leslie Keirns, 415-578-7664 for location
1/11/96	7:30 AM	9:30 AM	WEST Corporate Briefing	Invite only; Pan Pacific Hotel
1/11/96	7:30 AM	9:30 AM	Apple User Group Breakfast	invite only; RSVP req'd; http:://www.ugconnection.org/events/macworld.html
1/11/96	10:00 AM	6:00 PM	Macworld Expo	
1/11/96	6:00 PM	7:00 PM	Netter's Dinner	$16/person; must pre-register beforehand with credit card at http://iw.cts.com/~jonpugh/nettersdinner.html; buffet; meet top escalators @ entrance @ 6p
1/11/96	6:30 PM	8:00 PM	Mac Consultant's Dinner	Bistro M, 55 Fifth St.; meet @ 6:30p, dinner at 7p;  around $55-65/person; come meet tons of Mac consultants; http://www.lookup.com/52515/home.html
1/11/96	6:30 PM	9:30 PM	Friends of BMUG	BlastHaus, 2nd St. near Howard; contact lisa_taplin@bmug.org, 510-337-9427
1/11/96	7:00 PM	8:00 PM	8th Annual Digital Art Be-In	$15 in advance, $20 at the door at Verbum Booth #4474 or Bass Tickets; 415-777-9901, mail@verbum.com
1/11/96	8:00 PM	11:59 PM	Digital Media Party	Exploratorium
1/12/96	10:00 AM	6:00 PM	Macworld Expo	
1/13/96	6:00 PM	10:30 PM	Digital Queers Annual Bash	the coolest party at Expo; $35 in advance, $50 at door; The Forum at the Center for the Arts, Yerba Buena Gardens (across the street from Moscone); entertainment by HBO comediene Suzanna Westenhoefer; sponsored by a zillion companies including Apple, Connectix, etc.; DQWebel@ao.com or info@dq.org or 415-252-6282
Home Documents General Reference Symbol Bold
Symbol Bold

Symbol Bold

General Reference · 1994 · TXT
Filenamesymbol-bold.txt
Size0.00 MB
Year1994
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Contents
From: "Bruce Bromberek" <brombere@a2.chen.umn.edu>
Subject: Bold Symbol - the Method
Date: Wed, 26 Jan 1994 18:31:27 -0600 (CST)

Here is the method I've used, courtesy Roger Marks who posted
Anders Liljegren's original method.  I offer no gaurantee 
other than to say it worked for me.  Proceed at your own risk.


>Date: Tue, 29 Jan 91 15:20:17 MET
>From: Anders Liljegren <andersl@snobben.teknikum.uu.se>
>Subject: Symbol bold

I encountered the problem with printing in Symbol bold a couple of years ago.
For a long time I used a work-arround which consisted of having another copy
of the Symbol screen font called something different, e.g. symbo2, in my
system. When I wanted to print in Symbol bold I used Symbo2 bold instead. 
This meant that the system didn't recognise the screen font Symbo2 as 
corresponding to the Laser font Symbol. It then used the standard way of 
printing fonts not available on the LaserWriter, namely to use the screen font 
instead, just smoothing it a bit. This works quite well, even if you don't get 
the same quality as with laser fonts.

I didn't solve the problem for good until I got hold of a copy of 
"Apple LaserWriter Reference". The solution is described on page 29, 
table 2-1 in this book. It consists of changing 1 (one) bit in the Symbol
screen font with ResEdit or some similar program. I case you don't have the
book, I will here try to describe how to do it.

1) Play it safe, make a copy of the Symbol screen font using the FontMover. 
2) Start ResEdit.
3) Open the file in which you have the Symbol copy, by double-clicking on 
   it's name in ResEdits window.
4) Double-click on "FOND" in the new window.
5) Double-click on "FOND Symbol ID=23" in the new window.
6) Scroll the new window until you come to "Offset to style mapping tables" 
   and write down the hex number in the box. In my copy it's 274.
7) Close the last window you opened.
8) Select the entry mentioned in point 5, if it's not already selected.
9) Select "Open Using Hex Editor" under the "Resource" menu or "Open General"
   under the "File" menu.
10) Scroll down until you reach the address you wrote down earlier. In my case 
    the address to the left should be 270. The first byte (two hex digits) to
    the right is then at address 270, the next byte is at 271, and so forth.
    The interesting byte is at address 275 = 274+1.
11) This byte is 1D in my copy. Change bit number 4 to 0, i.e. change the
    hex number to 0D in my case.
12) Quit ResEdit, saving the changes to the Symbol copy.  
13) Use the FontMover to remove the Symbol font from your system and replace
    it with the modified copy.
14) That's it! You should now get both Symbol bold and Symbol bold italic on 
    the Laser Writer, with full resolution.  

Can someone  at Apple or Adobe tell me why this was not the default from the 
beginning. According to standard for writing formulas, all vectors should be 
in bold or bold italic and often you must use greek letters when you run out 
of latin ones. This has created a lot of trouble for a lot of people.
Home Documents General Reference Better 8Bit Qt Color
Better 8Bit Qt Color

Better 8Bit Qt Color

Filenamebetter-8bit-qt-color.txt
Size0.01 MB
Downloads9
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Contents
From: AvramD@aol.com
Date: Sat, 02 Jul 94 16:22:35 EDT
Subject: copy of better-8bit-qt-color.txt for archives

Here you go Igor... Thanks!
----------------------
If you've seen some really beautiful 16 or 24 bit quicktime moovs on someone
else's expensive Mac, and you've seen really beautiful GIF images on your own
piddling 8 bit Mac (256 colors), and you whish you could get the quality of
the later when viewing the former (and you don't mind run-on sentences), then
you've come to the right posting!

This is a simple trick that anyone can do to improve the color of quicktime
moovs on a mac that can only display 256 simultaneous colors. It doesn't
always work, and sometimes it makes them look much worse. But there are lots
of moovs out there that it does help, and hey - it's free!

Background (experienced graphics people can skip this): 

Color Macs can actually display over 16 million colors. The trouble is that
due to memory limitations, many Macs can only display 256 of these at one
time. The reason that GIFs look so good even if you only have 256 colors is
that they come with a custom color palate. This means that they can contain
any 256 colors from the full palate, not just the standard 256 system colors.
You may notice that when you display a nice GIF, things in the background
like your desktop pattern and some of your icons will have messed up colors.
Lots of really nice pictures only have a few hundred colors in them just by
chance. For example, if you had a picture of a six pack of Coke cans, you
would need many shades of red and grey, but if your background was just
white, you might not need anything else. Thus, it would be possible for the
Coke cans to appear with the same quality in 256 colors as they would in 16
million color mode.

The problem with quicktime:

Lots of quicktime movies don't need more than a few hundred colors to look
perfect. As with GIFs, you ought to be able to get these movies to look
nearly top quality even with only 256 colors, simply by using a custom color
palate. Ideally, if you changed the palate with every frame, you would be
able to get qt moovs to look as good as GIFs. Unfortunately, that's too much
work, and qt would be unusably slow. So, Apple just uses the standard 256
color palate, and picks the best matches it can.

The theory:

If you have a quicktime moov that over the course of its life doesn't use
more than a few hundred colors, you should be able to pick a color palate
that is customized for the colors that the moov as a whole uses. Then the
moov would look much better than it did under the standard 256 system colors.
It would be much closer to it's ideal 24 bit appearance, especially if the
colors the moov uses are very different from the standard palate (which is
usually the case).

The method:

Well, you CAN pick a custom palate to display quicktime moovs! And thanks to
readily available tools, a wonderful operating system, and a system
limitation 8-), it's very easy. Most graphics applications that can display
GIFs (e.g. GifConverter, available at Sumex) will customize the color palate
according to whatever image they are currently displaying. All you need to do
is get a picture that has a color palate that is appropirate for the movie,
display it in the graphics program, then simultaneously play the movie.

But where can you get a picture with a good color palate? Every frame in the
moov you are viewing can be used as such a picture. Most qt moovs are stored
in 24 bit color, regardless of the system that they will be viewed on. When
you copy a frame from the moov to the clipboard (just fast forward to the
frame, go to Edit, and select Copy),  MoviePlayer copies the picture in 24
bit color even if it is displaying it in only 8 bit color. You can then paste
it into a graphics application, and most apps will customize the color palate
on the spot to give you the best 256 colors for displaying that picture.

Ok, the procedure:

(I'll use GifConverter as the example graphics app)
1. Open the moov.
2. Open GifConverter.
3. Find a frame in the moov that is a good sample of what colors the moov
needs.
4. Copy it to the clipboard.
5. In GifConverter, select New from the File menu
6. Paste the frame into the new GifConverter document. (GifConverter will
adjust the color palate).
7. Switch directly to MoviePlayer and watch the moov (don't go through the
finder).
-- The moov will be shown with the current color palate instead of the
standard one.

When you switch directly from the graphics app to MoviePlayer, the system
doesn't reinstall the standard color palate (that's the application's
responsability, and MoviePlayer doesn't bother). If you switch to the finder,
it may try to readjust the palate. Just go back to the graphics app, and then
make the switch directly (e.g. by clicking on the moov window).

The limitations:

Some moovs have drastic scene changes with very different sets of colors. If
this happens, you probably won't be able to get a frame that represents both
equally. The result is that the unrepresented scene will look much worse than
if you just played the moov straight. Other moovs just plain have too many
colors, and will look equally awful.

Side notes:

This only helps with the color related problem of 8 bit quicktime. The other
main issue is speed: The algorithm to display graphics in 16 bit or 24 bit
mode is much simpler because the system doesn't have to decide which color is
closest to the requested color. Theoretically, there should be no change in
speed between the standard palate and a custom palate. In practice, it may be
that the system is optimized for working with the standard palate, or it may
be that it is easier to work with an optimized palate. I couldn't tell either
way.

Have fun, and feel free to send questions or comments!

-Avram

Disclaimers:
1) Yes, I know that GIF's aren't the only images that take advantage of
custom palates
2) I omitted all discussion of dithering for the sake of simplification
3) I can't imagine any way that anyone could cause any harm by doing this,
but if you come up with one, it's not my fault.
Home Documents General Reference Csm General Faq
Csm General Faq

Csm General Faq

General Reference · 1994 · TXT
Filenamecsm-general-faq-225.txt
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Year1994
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Contents
Date: Mon, 21 Mar 94 08:34:11 EST
From: elharo@shock.njit.edu (Elliotte Rusty Harold)
Subject: faq submission

Newsgroups: comp.sys.mac.apps,comp.sys.mac.misc,comp.sys.mac.system,comp.sys.mac.wanted,comp.sys.mac.hardware,comp.answers,news.answers
Subject: Introductory Macintosh frequently asked questions (FAQ)
From: elharo@shock.njit.edu  (Elliotte Rusty Harold)
Reply-To: elharo@shock.njit.edu
Followup-To: comp.sys.mac.misc
Organization: Dept. of Mathematics, NJIT
Keywords: FAQ, Macintosh, Mac, macintosh, mac, general, introduction
Summary: This document answers a number of the most frequently asked
 questions on Usenet about Macintosh computers.  To avoid wasting 
 bandwidth and as a matter of politeness please familiarize yourself 
 with this document BEFORE posting.
Approved: news-answers-request@MIT.edu

Archive-name: macintosh/general-faq


MACINTOSH FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS
====================================


comp.sys.mac.faq, part 1:
Introduction to the Macintosh Newsgroups
Copyright 1994 by Elliotte Harold
Version: 2.2.5
Last-modified: March 12, 1994


What's new in version 2.2.5:
----------------------------

    2.1: Where can I FTP Macintosh software?

         In general everyone should try to connect to a mirror site 
         rather than directly to sumex or mac.archive.
    
    3.6: Isolate the problem
    
          I've added two new steps, remove all external SCSI devices,
          and unplug all cables.  


TABLES OF CONTENTS
==================

General FAQ
-----------
I.   I have a question...
      1. How do I use this document?
      2. What other information is available?
      3. Which newsgroup should I post to?
      4. How should I answer frequently asked questions?
II.  FTP
      1. Where can I FTP Macintosh software?
      2. Can I get shareware by E-mail?
      3. Where can I find application X?
      4. Where can I find an application to do X?
      5. Can someone mail me application X?
      6. What is .bin?  .hqx?  .cpt?  .image? .etc.?
      7. How can I get BinHex?  StuffIt?  etc.?
      8. How can I get BinHex, StuffIt, etc. from a PC?
III.  Troubleshooting.  What to do when things go wrong
      1. Identify the problem.
      2. Read the READ ME file.
      3. Check for viruses.
      4. Reinstall the application and all its support files.
      5. Reinstall the system software.
      6. Isolate the problem.
      7. Contact technical support.
IV.  Preventive Maintenance
      1. Trash Unneeded Files
      2. Reevaluate Your Extensions
      3. Rebuild the desktop.
      4. Zap the PRAM and Reset the Clock
      5. Resize the system heap.  (System 6 only)
      6. Reinstall the system software.
      7. Disk Utilities
      8. Backing Up
      9. Disk Defragmentation
     10. Reformatting and partitioning your hard disk
V.   Meta-FAQs (Frequently Asked Questions about the FAQ)
      1. There's a mistake in your FAQ.
      2. Why don't you include this complicated/payware solution?
      3. Would you please include my software in your FAQ?
      4. Why don't you post the FAQ more often?
      5. Can you help me with this problem I'm having with my Mac?
      6. Will you send me the FAQ?
      7. Why don't you format the FAQ in Word?  Digest?  etc.?


comp.sys.mac.system
-------------------

I.   Memory
      1. Why is my system using so much memory?
      2. What is Mode 32?  the 32-bit enabler?  Do I need them?
      3. Cache and Carry (How much memory should I allot to my cache?)
II.  System Software
      1. Why does Apple charge for System 7.1?
      2. What does System 7.1 give me for my $35 that System 7.0 doesn't?
      3. Where can I get System 7.1?
      4. How can I use System 6 on a System 7 only Mac?
      5. Non-US scripts and systems
      6. What is System 7 Tuneup?  Do I need it?
      7. Why do my DA's disappear when I turn on MultiFinder?
      8. Do I need System 7.0.1?
      9. How can I get System 7.0.1 on 800K disks?
III. Hard Disks, Filesharing, and the File System
      1. Help! My folder disappeared!
      2. Why can't I throw this folder away?
      3. Why can't I share my removable drive?
      4. Why can't I eject this SyQuest cartridge?  CD-ROM?  etc.?
      5. Why can't I rename my hard disk?
      6. How do I change my hard disk icon?
IV.  Fonts
      1. How do I convert between Windows fonts and Mac fonts?
         TrueType and PostScript?
      2. What font will my screen/printer use when different types 
         are installed?
      3. Where should I put my fonts?
V.   Miscellaneous:
      1. What does System Error XXX mean?
      2. What is a Type Y error?
      3. What is A/ROSE?
      4. Easy Access or One Answer, Many Questions
      5. How can I keep multiple system folders on one hard disk?
      6. How do I access the programmer's key?


comp.sys.mac.misc
-----------------

I.   Viruses
      1. Help!  I have a virus!
      2. Reporting new viruses
II.  Printing and PostScript
      1. How do I make a PostScript file?
      2. How do I print a PostScript file?
      3. Why won't my PostScript file print on my mainframe's printer?
      4. Why are my PostScript files so big?
      5. How can I print PostScript on a non-PostScript printer?
      6. How do I make my ImageWriter II print in color?
      7. Why doesn't PrintMonitor work with the ImageWriter?
      8. Why did my document change when I printed it?
      9. How can I preview a PostScript file?
     10. Can I use a LaserJet or other PC printer with my Mac?
     11. How can I print grey scales on my StyleWriter I?
III. DOS and the Mac
      1. How can I move files between a Mac and a PC?
      2. How can I translate files to a DOS format?
      3. Should I buy SoftPC or a real PC?
IV.  Security
     1.  How can I password protect a Mac?
     2.  How can I password protect a file?
     3.  How can I password protect a folder?
     4.  How can I prevent software piracy?
     5.  How can I keep a hard drive in a fixed configuration?
V.   Sound
      1. How can I copy a track from an audio CD onto my Mac?
      2. How can I extract a sound from a QuickTime movie?
      3. How can I convert/play a mod/wav/etc. file?
VI.  No particular place to go  (Miscellaneous Miscellanea)
      1. Are there any good books about the Mac?
      2. How do I take a picture of the screen?
      3. How do I use a picture for my desktop?
      4. Can I Replace the "Welcome to Macintosh" box with a picture?
      5. What is AutoDoubler? SpaceSaver? More Disk Space? Are they safe?
      6. How do they compare to TimesTwo, Stacker and eDisk?
      7. Where did my icons go?
      8. Where can I find a user group?
      9. Where can Ifind the 1984 Quicktime movie?
     10. Do RAM Doubler and Optimem work?
     11. I'm greedy.  Can I triple my RAM?
     12. How do I run software that needs an FPU on a Mac that doesn't 
         have one?


comp.sys.mac.apps
-----------------

I.   What's the Best...
      1. Text editor
      2. Word processor
      3. Genealogy software
      4. TeX/LaTeX
      5. Integrated application
      6. Spreadsheet
      7. JPEG Viewer
      8. Electronic publishing software
      9. Drawing application
      10. Typing tutor?
      11. OCR software?
II.  Microsoft Word
      1. How can I assign styles to characters?
      2. How can I automatically generate cross-references?
      3. How can I change a Word document to TeX?  and vice-versa?
      4. How can I depersonalize Word?
      5. Where can I get more information?
III. TeachText
      1. How can I change the font in TeachText?
      2. How do I place a picture in a TeachText file?
      3. How do I make a TeachText document read-only?


comp.sys.mac.wanted
-------------------

I.   Buying and Selling Used Equipment
     1. Should I buy/sell on Usenet?
     2. Where should I buy/sell used equipment?
     3. I've decided to completely ignore your excellent advice and
        post my ad anyway.  What should I do?
     4. I've decided to completely ignore your excellent advice and
        buy something offered for sale on the net anyway.  How can 
        I avoid being ripped off?
II.  Fair Market Value
     1. How much is my computer worth?
     2. What is used software worth?
     3. Going prices?
III. Where Should I Buy a New Mac?
     1. Authorized Dealers
     2. VAR's
     3. Superstores
     4. Performas
     5. Educational Dealers
     6. Direct From Apple
     7. Auctions
     8. Does anyone know a dealer in New York City?
     9. New Equipment Prices
IV.  When Should I buy a New Mac?
     1. Macrotime
     2. Microtime
     3. When will I get my Mac?
V.   How Should I Buy a New Mac?
     1. Know what you want
     2. The dealer needs to sell you a mac more than you need to buy one
     3. Have a competitor's ad handy
     4. Cash on delivery
     5. The sales tax game
     6. Leasing
     7. Be nice to the salesperson.
VI.  The Gray Market and Mail Order
     1. What is the gray market?
     2. Are gray market Macs covered by Apple warranties?
     3. Does anyone know a good mail-order company?


ADMINISTRIVIA
=============

Copyright
---------

       This work is Copyright 1994 by Elliotte M. Harold.  Permission
  is hereby granted to transmit and store this document as part of an
  unedited collection of any newsgroup to which it is posted by myself.
  I also grant permission to distribute unmodified copies of this
  document online via bulletin boards, online services, and other
  providers of electronic communications provided that no fees in
  excess of normal online charges are required for such distribution;
  i.e. if the FAQ is available on a system, it must be available at
  the minimum charge for accessing the system.  For instance you may
  post it to most BBS's that charge either a flat monthly fee or a
  per hour rate.  However if there is an extra charge for downloading
  files over what is charged per normal access, either per hour, per
  kilobyte, or per month, then the FAQ may not be posted to that
  system without my explicit, prior permission.  Portions of this
  document may be extracted and quoted free of charge and without
  necessity of citation in normal online communication provided
  only that said quotes are not represented as the correspondent's
  original work.  Permission for quotation of this document in
  edited, online communication (such as the Info-Mac Digest and
  TidBITS) is given subject to normal citation procedures (i.e. you
  have to say where you got it).  If you wish to republish this FAQ
  in a modified form or in a non-electronic medium, please contact
  me with specific details.  I'm normally receptive to non-profits
  that wish to redistribute it at no charge, and to anyone who
  is willing to make reasonable remunerative arrangements for
  non-exclusive republication rights.


Disclaimer
----------

       I do my best to ensure that information contained
  in this document is current and accurate, but I can accept no
  responsibility for actions resulting from information contained
  herein.  This document is provided as is and with no warranty of
  any kind.  Corrections and suggestions should be addressed to
  elharo@shock.njit.edu.


Trademarks
----------

       Apple, Macintosh, LaserWriter, ImageWriter, Finder, HyperCard
  and MultiFinder are registered trademarks and PowerBook is a
  trademark of Apple Computer, Inc.  Linotronic is a registered
  trademark of Linotype-Hell AG, Inc.  PostScript is a registered
  trademark and Illustrator and Photoshop are trademarks of Adobe
  Systems, Inc.  Microsoft is a registered trademark of Microsoft
  Corporation.  PageMaker is a registered trademark of Aldus Corp. 
  AutoDoubler and DiskDoubler are trademarks of Fifth Generation
  Systems, Inc. StuffIt and StuffIt Deluxe are trademarks of Raymond
  Lau and Aladdin Systems, Inc.  StuffIt SpaceSaver is a trademark
  of Aladdin Systems, Inc.  More Disk Space is a trademark of Alysis
  Software Corporation.  TimesTwo is a trademark of Golden Triangle
  Computers, Inc.  UNIX is a registered trademark of AT&T.  All other
  tradenames are trademarks of their respective manufacturers.


How to Get the Entire FAQ
-------------------------

       This is the FIRST part of the this FAQ.  The second part is
  posted to comp.sys.mac.system and features many questions about
  system software.  The third part answers miscellaneous questions
  about Macs and is posted every two weeks in comp.sys.mac.misc.  
  The fourth part covers frequently asked questions about Macintosh
  application software and appears in comp.sys.mac.apps.  The fifth
  part covers buying and selling Macintosh computers, software and
  peripherals and is posted in comp.sys.mac.wanted.  Tables of
  contents for those three pieces are included above.  Please
  familiarize yourself with all five sections of this document
  before posting.
 
       All pieces are available for anonymous ftp from rtfm.mit.edu
  [18.70.0.209] in the directory pub/usenet/news.answers/macintosh.
  Except for this introductory FAQ which appears in multiple
  newsgroups and is stored as general-faq, the name of each 
  file has the format of the last part of the group name followed 
  by "-faq", e.g the FAQ for comp.sys.mac.system is stored as
  system-faq.  You can also have these files mailed to you
  by sending an E-mail message to mail-server@rtfm.mit.edu with the
  line:  send pub/usenet/news.answers/macintosh/"name"  in the body
  text where "name" is the name of the file you want as  specified
  above (e.g. general-faq).  You can also send this server a message
  with the subject "help" for more detailed instructions.
   

===========================
I HAVE A QUESTION...  (1.0)
===========================
 
       Congratulations!  You've come to the right place.  Usenet is
  a wonderful resource for information ranging from basic questions
  (How do I lock a floppy disk?) to queries that would make Steve
  Jobs himself run screaming from the room in terror.  (I used
  ResEdit to remove resources Init #11, WDEF 34, and nVIR 17 from my
  system file and used the Hex Editor to add code string #A67B45 as a
  patch to the SFGetFile routine so the Standard File Dialog Box
  would be a nice shade of mauve.  Everything worked fine until I
  installed SuperCDevBlaster, and now when I use the Aldus driver to
  print from PageMaker 5.0d4 to a Linotronic 6000 my system hangs.
  P.S. I'm running System 6.0.2 on a PowerBook 170.)
 
       Since the Macintosh newsgroups are medium to high volume, we
  ask that you first peruse this FAQ list including at least the
  table of contents for the other pieces of it, check any other
  relevant on-line resources listed below in question 1.2, especially
  the FAQ lists for the other Macintosh newsgroups, and RTFM (Read
  the Friendly Manual) before posting your question.  We realize that
  you are personally incensed that the System is taking up fourteen
  of your newly-installed twenty megs of RAM, but this question has
  already made its way around the world three hundred times before,
  and it's developing tired feet.  Finally, before posting to any
  newsgroup (Macintosh or otherwise), please familiarize yourself
  with the basic etiquette of Usenet as described in the newsgroup
  news.announce.newusers.


HOW DO I USE THIS DOCUMENT?  (1.1)
----------------------------------

       comp.sys.mac.faq is currently divided into multiple pieces, a
  general introduction which you're reading now, and specific lists
  for the newsgroups comp.sys.mac.system, comp.sys.mac.misc and
  comp.sys.mac.apps.  This introductory document is posted to all 
  of the concerned newsgroups.  The tables of contents for each of 
  the specific FAQ lists are at the beginning of this file so you 
  should be able to get at least some idea whether your question is
  answered anywhere else in the FAQ even if you don't have the other
  parts at hand. It's not always obvious, especially to newcomers,
  where a particular question or comment should be posted.  Please
  familiarize yourself with the FAQ lists in all the major Macintosh
  newsgroups before posting in any of them.  Which questions
  appear in which FAQs can serve as a basic guide to what posts
  belong where.

       To jump to a particular question search for
  section-number.question-number enclosed in parentheses.  For
  example to find "Where can I FTP Macintosh software?" search 
  for the string  "(2.1)".  To jump to a section instead of a 
  question use a zero for the question number.
 
       This document is in "setext" format.  Akif Eyler's freeware
  application EasyView can parse this document into a hierarchical
  outline view that makes for easier browsing. 


WHAT OTHER INFORMATION IS AVAILABLE?  (1.2)
-------------------------------------------

       comp.sys.mac.faq provides short answers to a number of 
  frequently asked questions appropriate for the Usenet newsgroups
  comp.sys.mac.misc and comp.sys.mac.system.  Five other FAQ lists are
  worthy of particular note.   All are available for anonymous ftp from
  rtfm.mit.edu [18.70.0.209] in the directory pub/usenet/group-name
  (where "group-name" is the name of the group in which they're posted)
  as well as in their respective newsgroups.  Jon W{tte maintains 
  a public domain FAQ list for comp.sys.mac.programmer which is 
  posted about every three weeks.  The original FAQ list for
  comp.sys.mac.programmer is no longer being posted or updated but 
  is still useful and available via anonymous ftp to rtfm.mit.edu.  
  Eric Rosen maintains a frequently asked questions list for
  comp.sys.mac.comm.  This list answers many frequently asked 
  questions about networking, UNIX and the Mac, telecommunications, 
  and foreign file formats.  Norm Walsh has compiled an excellent FAQ 
  for comp.fonts that answers a lot of questions about the various 
  kinds of fonts and cross-platform conversion and printing.  Finally 
  Jim Jagielski maintains a FAQ for comp.unix.aux covering Apple's UNIX
  environment, A/UX.  It's posted every 2 to 3 weeks in comp.unix.aux.


WHICH NEWSGROUP SHOULD I POST TO?  (1.3)
----------------------------------------

       There are no stupid questions, but there are misplaced ones.
  You wouldn't ask your English teacher how to do the definite
  integral of ln x between zero and one, would you?  So don't ask
  the programmer newsgroup why your system is so slow when Microsoft
  Word is in the background.  Ignorance of basic netiquette is not an
  excuse.  If you want people to help you, you need to learn their
  ways of communicating.

       Posting questions to the proper newsgroup will fill your
  mailbox with pearls of wisdom (and maybe a few rotten oysters too
  :-) ).  Posting to the wrong newsgroup often engenders a thundering
  silence.  For instance the most common and glaring mispost, one
  that seems as incongruous to dwellers in the Macintosh regions of
  Usenet as would a purple elephant to Aleuts in the Arctic, asking 
  a question about networking anywhere except comp.sys.mac.comm,
  normally produces no useful responses.  Posting the same question
  to comp.sys.mac.comm ensures that your post is read and considered
  by dozens of experienced network administrators and not a few
  network software designers.
 
       Please post to exactly ONE newsgroup.  Do not cross-post.
  If a question isn't important enough for you to take the extra
  minute to figure out where it properly belongs, it's not important
  enough for several thousand people to spend their time reading.
  For the same reason comp.sys.mac.misc should not be used as a
  catch-all newsgroup.
 
       The breakdown of questions between different newsgroups in 
  this document can also serve as a reasonable guide to what belongs
  where.  Questions about productivity applications (software you
  bought your Macintosh to run, not software you bought to make your
  Macintosh run better) should go…

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Home Documents General Reference Mac Newton Easter Egg List
Mac Newton Easter Egg List

Mac Newton Easter Egg List

General Reference · 1994 · TXT
Filenamemac-newton-easter-egg-list-94.txt
Size0.04 MB
Year1994
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Contents
From: bskendig@netcom.com (Brian Kendig)
Date: Wed, 13 Apr 1994 09:41:38 PDT
Subject: The Macintosh/Newton Easter Egg List


                                                          .__________.
  .__________________________________________________.    | Contents |
  |                                                  |    |================|
  |  The Macintosh/Newton Easter Egg List            | .  | Hardware       |
  |  compiled by Brian Kendig (bskendig@netcom.com)  | .  | System         |
  |                                          ____    | .  | Other software |
  |  Easter 1994 edition.                   | OK |   | .  | Useful tips .  |
  |                                         `----'   | .  `-------------|\-'
  `--------------------------------------------------' .                |_\
      .................................................    (c)1994 bsk    \


Welcome to the Macintosh/Newton Easter Egg List!  An "easter egg"
(sometimes known as a "cookie") is something amusing or otherwise
nonproductive (like a picture, a song, or the developers' names) hidden
in your computer.  It won't appear unless you do some action you
wouldn't normally do, so you can't find it unless you're lucky or you
know what you're looking for.

Some really clever About boxes are mentioned in this list too, and I've
also included a few interesting, useful, and little-known tips further
down that are really handy to know.  The list is getting so long, though,
that I've been weeding out some of the trivial or very esoteric tricks.
Too many applications will bring up "secret" things if you hold down the
right keys and click in the right places, so I'm only keeping the more
interesting easter eggs around.

Please report any corrections to me!  And if you find a really good
easter egg, then please tell me about it and I'll put your name in here.

You may (of course!) distribute information about these tricks freely,
but please note the copyright on this collection -- I really don't like
when people try to pass it off as their own work.  If you'd like to use
this material in a book or newsletter or distribute it commercially on
electronic media like disks or CD-ROMs, please contact me first for
permission, and you'll get it.  :-)  It would also be nice to let me know
if you're including this list in a users' group collection.  So far,
this list has been printed in the WAMUG (Australia) and BMUG
newsletters, translated into Japanese and printed in the Japanese users'
group "MuON" newsletter, used in the books "Maximizing your Mac" and
"Voodoo Mac", and distributed on Nautilus and Pacific Hitech CD-ROMs.

Thanks to the people who have written similar lists, from which I've
gotten plenty of ideas: J. D. Sterling Babcock and Mike Kimura, among
others.  For additional help, I thank Paul Franklin and Seth Pettie.
Rene Ros has contributed so much that he deserves special mention, too!

The list has grown to such a size that I can't personally verify every
trick here, so if you just can't get something to work, please tell me!

If you want to skip forward to the "Useful Tips" section, have your
software search for three asterisks ('***') now.


 -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-

				Hardware

Macintosh Plus

>From MacsBug or the interrupt debugger, enter "G 40E118" (that's a zero,
not an oh).  (To get into the interrupt debugger, press the button on
the left side of your machine closer to the back.  If you're running
System 7, just Shut Down your machine, then while the "you may turn off
your Macintosh safely" dialog is displayed, press the button.)  This
gives you a tiny "Stolen from Apple Computer" message in the upper
left-hand corner of your screen.

----------------
Macintosh SE

>From MacsBug or the interrupt debugger, enter "G 41D89A".  (See the
trick above for info on how to get into the debugger.)  This brings up a
slideshow displaying four bitmap pictures of the Macintosh development
team.  Reboot (hit the button on the left side of the machine closer to
the front, with the triangle on it) to get out of the endless cycle.

Also, entering "G 4188A4" into the debugger gives you a tiny "Stolen
from Apple Computer" message in the upper left-hand corner of your
screen.  [Contributed by J. D. Sterling Babcock.]

----------------
Macintosh Classic

Hold down Command-Option-x-o right after you turn on or reboot the machine.

This starts up the Classic from a minimal ROM-disk which contains System
6.0.3, Finder 6.1x, and AppleShare.  (This version of the System is not
recommended for use with the Classic, so you probably shouldn't boot off
it to do any important work.)  If you look at the ROM-disk with a
program able to see invisible files (like ResEdit or MacTools), you'll
find a folder named "Brought to you by" hidden there, containing more
hidden folders bearing the names of the Classic designers.  (The keys
`X' and `O' were chosen because the development name of the Classic was
the "Mac XO", or was it OX?)  Also, there's an invisible application in
the System Folder named "Launch" and set as the startup application;
anybody know what it does?  [Thanks to Charles Gousha for the details.]

----------------
Macintosh SE/30

This trick requires that you have MacsBug installed.  Press the
interrupt switch to dump yourself into the system debugger, then use the
command "dm 4082E853 20" to display a few bytes of memory from location
4082E853 onwards.  The bytes there spell out, in ascii, "WHAT ARE YOU
STARING AT?"  [Contributed by Esa Ristila.]

Also, type "g eb1000" into MacsBug or the interrupt debugger.  This
displays the "Macintosh SE/30 Engineering Hall of Fame".  Entering
"pc=e11000;g" works too.  [Contributed by Aapo Puskala and Mark
Gadzikowski.]

----------------
Macintosh IIci

Set the system date to 9/20/89 (the release date of the IIci), and set
your monitor to 8-bit color.  Restart while holding Command-Option-c-i.
You'll see a color picture of the IIci design team.  Click the mouse to
continue.  (Other color settings might also work...)

----------------
Macintosh IIfx

Set the system date to 3/19/90 (the release date of the IIfx), and
restart while holding down Command-Option-f-x.  You'll see a color
picture of the IIfx design team.  Click the mouse to continue.
(Interestingly enough, this is the same picture used in the IIci.)
[Thanks to Jeff Home for details.]

----------------
Macintosh IIsi

Enter the debugger and type "dm 4086F088 20".  The bytes there spell out
"SO...WHAT ARE YOU STARING AT?  "  [Contributed by Jeff Home.]

----------------
Any Macintosh computer

Every Mac will play interesting noises if it fails its internal RAM
check.  You can harmlessly force it to fail its check by pressing the
Interrupt button on your system immediately after it starts booting up.
Mac II systems play interesting chimes, Quadra AV's play drum solos,
LC's play a flute, and the Power Macintoshes play a sound of a car wreck
with glass breaking.  [Contributed by Rick Warfield.]

----------------
Macintosh ROMs (any of them)

With a debugger, look at the last few locations on the ROM of your
machine.  Developers put their initials there, as well as the date that
the ROM was linked.  For example, the 128k ROM (Mac Plus) contains, at
$41FFC0-$41FFFF:

    ALR ELR BA BMB EHB JTC SC DLD PWD KWK LAK SEL BWed, Nov 6, 1985

which are the initials of Erich Ringewald, Bill Atkinson, Bill Bruffey,
Ernie Beernik (sp?), Jerome Coonan, Steve Capps, Donn Denmann, Pat
Dirks, Larry Kenyon, and three other unknown developers.  [Contributed
by Scott Lindhurst and Ed Tecot.]

----------------
Apple Fax Modem

While holding down the button on the front panel, turn on the modem.
The modem will beep three times.  After the three beeps, press the
button again three times, timed exactly in "rhythm" with the beeps.  If
your timing is correct, the modem will speak the digitally-recorded
voices of the three developers saying their names ("Peter, Alan, Neal").
[Contributed by Neal Johnson and Alex Rosenberg.]

----------------
StyleWriter

When you turn on your printer, hold down the RESET and FORM FEED keys to
print a diagnostic test page, which lets you exercise the print head and
see if any of the pins are damaged.  [Contributed by Tommy Aenst.]

----------------
Newton Messagepad

Write "About Newton" on your Messagepad, hilite it (hold the pen down
until a large dot appears at its tip then draw a line across the words
with it), then tap Assist.  The names of all the Newton developers will
appear.

On the original Messagepad (now called the Messagepad 100), tap the
clock in the lower left-hand corner of the display, and hold down on it.
The display will show you the current temperature!  (This is because the
battery level indicator works by sensing temperature.)

Go to the Map, tap "Find", then write "Elvis".  It will briefly say "The
King was sighted in" and choose a city name at random before it catches
itself and says "not found".  [All three of these were contributed by
Scott Ryder.]

 -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-

				 System

	   ("7.0" means 7.0.0 or 7.0.1 and probably 7.1 also)

Multifinder 1.0 (distributed with System Software prior to 6.0)

Hold down Command and Option while selecting "About Multifinder" from
the bottom of the Apple menu.  A scrolling list of credits appears.
[Contributed by Seth Theriault.]

----------------
Multifinder 6.0

Select "About Multifinder" and leave the dialog up for about an hour or
more.  (Yes, this means you can't use your machine meanwhile.)  A
message will appear:

  "I want my"
  "I want my"
  "I want my l--k and f--l"

You can also see this message if you snoop around in the 'STR#'
resources of Multifinder for a while with ResEdit.  [Contributed by Tony
Cooper and James Boswell.]

----------------
System 6.0.7, 6.0.8, or 7.0

Take a look through the data fork of the System File (with MacSnoop or
MacTools, or open it with MS Word).  (It's short.)  The string "Help!
Help! We're being held prisoner in a system software factory!" is in the
data fork, with a list of the names of the Blue Meanies (the System 7
developers).  In System 7.1, the string is slightly different.  "We're
still being held prisoner..."  [Contributed by Kevin Bolduan, Seth
Theriault, and Tim Hammett.]

----------------
System 6.0.7J (Kanjitalk)

Set the clock to January 1, 1992 (or any year?), and restart.  The
startup screen says "Happy new year" in Japanese.  [Contributed by Junio
Hamano.]

----------------
System 7.0

With ResEdit, take a look at STR# resource -16415 in the System file.
The first string in the resource reads "May you code in interesting
times."  [Posted to Usenet by Nigel Stanger.]

Also, while running System 7, try renaming a disk to "Like Wow Man. HFS
For 7.0!" (where the space after 'Man.' is actually an option-space;
you'll have to type this somewhere else like the Notepad then cut/paste
it into the disk name).  Then eject the disk with Command-E, and double-
click on the greyed-out disk icon.  The Mac will ask you to please
re-insert "HFS for 7.0 by dns and ksct".  (The intials are of David
N. Feldman and Kenny S. C. Tung, who wrote the HFS extensions for System
7.)  Other disk names work, due to the way the name is checked; try
"KMEG JJ KS" or "Hello world JS N A DTP".  [Found by Francois Grieu and
mentioned in TidBITS #143.]

----------------
Finder 7.0

Hold down Option while choosing "About This Macintosh".  (The menu
option changes to "About the Finder", and if balloon help is turned on,
the balloon for it reads "Displays a dialog with the original Finder
picture.")  This brings up the original picture of the mountains from
"About the Finder" in System 1.0.  If the creation date of the invisible
"Desktop Folder" is May 13, 1991 (System 7's release date) or later, the
names of all the Finder developers through Mac and Lisa history also
scroll by.  Hold down Command-Option while choosing "About" to get a
goofy-face cursor.

Also, "Get Info" on an alias, turn on Balloon Help, and point to the
icon's italicized name.  Then point to a place right below the very
beginning of the name; you'll have to hunt for the exact spot.  The
Balloon help on the italicized name reads "The underline indicates
that..."  And the Balloon Help on the little invisible point right below
the beginning of the name reads "This is the system software version..."
but there's nothing there.  Oops.  [Contributed by David Richardson and
John Feinberg.]

----------------
System 7 Tune-Up 1.1.1

The owner resource of this third-Tune-Up release contains the question
everybody asked when it was released: "Again?"  [Contributed by Rene Ros.]

----------------
Caches 7.0.1 (on a Quadra)

Turn on balloon help and point to the version number; the balloon reads
"Wink, wink."  Option-clicking the version number makes the "040" icon
whoosh to the side, revealing the name of the programmer who wrote it.
[Contribued by Kemi Jona.]

----------------
Caps Lock 7.0.1 (on a PowerBook 100, 140, 145, or 170)

Turn on balloon help and point to the Caps Lock file icon.  The balloon
help reads: "This file allows your Macintosh TIM or Derringer to display
an icon..."  (These were the working names of the first PowerBooks;
Apple forgot to change the extension before System 7.0.1 was released!
Whoops.)  [Contributed by Seth Theriault and Fabian Hahn.]

----------------
Color Control Panel 7.0

Click on the Sample Text a few times.  The strings "by Dean Yu" "&
Vincent Lo" alternate.  Also, if you're running version 7.1 of the
control panel, "& Don Louv" sneaks in there every sixteenth click.
[Contributed by Don Louv.]

----------------
Labels Control Panel 7.0

Delete all the label names in the Labels control panel, and reboot.  The
labels are now "None," "a", "l", "a", "n", "j", "e", "f".  (Who are Alan
and Jef?  Beats me...)

----------------
Map Control Panel

Type MID as the city name, and click Find.  The stored point MID is
actually "Middle of Nowhere", an insignificant location in the middle of
the South Atlantic.  (This one was added in version 7.0.)

Clicking on the "7.0" puts "v7.0, by Mark Davis" into the city name
field until you release the mouse button.

Option-clicking on Find repeatedly will take you alphabetically to every
city the Map knows.

Opening the control panel while you hold down the shift key will display
a magnified map (the resolution is the same, so it's very jagged).
Opening it with option held down magnifies it more, and shift-option
magnifies it even more to the point of being really blocky.

Clicking somewhere in the map and dragging your pointer off the edge of
it will scroll around the world.

You can paste a new picture into the control panel; the Scrapbook that
comes with System 7 includes a particularly good color map.
[Contributed by Takeshi Miyazaki and Doc O'Leary.]

----------------
Memory Control Panel 7.0 (on a machine capable of virtual memory)

Turn on virtual memory and hold down Option while clicking on the pop-up
menu used to choose a hard drive for your swapfile.  This brings up a
hierarchical pop-up menu with the names of the developers; each name
points to a submenu with a few comments about the developer.
[Contributed by Povl Hessellund Pedersen.]

----------------
Monitors Control Panel

Click the version number in the control panel window.  A box will pop up
with the names of the people who wrote Monitors.  While you hold down
the mouse button, tap Option several times; this makes the smiley face
stick out its tongue.  After tapping Option several times, the names
begin to get rearranged and some first and last names get replaced with
"Blue" or "Meanies".  [Thanks to Steve Noskowicz for details.]

----------------
Finder 7.0 and MacsBug

Turn on Balloon Help and point to the MacsBug file.  The balloon reads:
"This file provides programmers with information proving that it really
was a hardware problem..."

----------------
QuickTime

Turn on Balloon Help and point to the QuickTime file.  The balloon
reads: "time n. A nonspatial continuum in which events occur in
apparently irreversible succession from the past to the present to the
future."  [Contributed by Kristopher Nasadowski.]

----------------
Sound Control Panel 8.0.1

Hold down Option and select something from the popup menu.  You get a
weird sound and a credits dialog.  [Contributed by Bronson Trevor and
Noah Salzman.]

On a Quadra AV system, go into the Effects section of the Sound control
panel and click on the wave icon in the lower right-hand corner of the
window.  It draws a line and the words "by Jeff Boone".  [Contributed by
bwooster@aol.com.]


 -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-

			     Other Software

Adobe Illustrator 5.0

Hold down Option while selecting the Tool Description box (in the lower
left portion of the working window), and instead of the usual four
choices, some new things appear: the number of shopping days until
Christmas, the programmer's home phone number, a pair of eyes that watch
the cursor, the phase of the moon, the number of mouse clicks since you
opened the document, a random number, and so forth.  [Contributed by
David Darrow and Richard Foley.]

----------------
AppleLink CD

Select "About AppleLinkCD" and hold down the Option key.  The spinning
CD turns into a spinning cat's head.  [Contributed by Brian Golden.]

----------------
BBEdit 2.2

Change your Chooser name (in the System 6 Chooser or the System 7
Sharing Setup control panel) so that it contains "Mike" or "Michael",
then hold down Option while you choose "About BBEdit...".  Everyone in
the About box will be given a first name of Mike, Michael, or something
similar.  [Contributed by Rich Siegel.]

----------------
CompuServe Information Manager 2.0.2

Click on the spinning earth in the About box, and hold the mouse button
down.  The earth spins in the other direction.  Eventually, other windows
will appear, giving credit to the authors.  [Contributed by Rene Ros.]

----------------
Dark Castle

If you play the game on December 25 (or if you set your system's clock
to that date, and play the game), a Christmas tree appears in the foyer.
[Contributed by Philip Craig.]

----------------
Disinfectant

Select "About Disinfectant", and hold a menu down to pause the advancing
virus names while the music plays (to prevent the foot from arriving too
soon and stopping the music).  John Norstad appears in one half of the
dialog, while in the other half an animated sequence of virus names
march out as the Monty Python theme song plays, until they get stomped
by a huge foot.  Holding down a menu pauses the viruses but not the
music, and if you hold the menu down long enough, the entire theme song
(John Philip Sousa's "Liberty Bell March") will play!  (You may have to
release the mouse button every now and then if the music does stop.)
[Contributed by Dave Claytor and Mitchell Marmel.]

----------------
Finale 2.x

Select "About Finale" and wait for a few seconds.  The conductor walks
away.  [Contributed by Arthur Rishi.]

----------------
Fractal Forest (an After Dark 'Art of Darkness' module)

Run this sometime around Christmas, and all the trees sprout Christmas
ornaments.  [Contributed by Phil Barrett.]

----------------
FrameMaker

Put the word "Interleaf" into a document, and spell-check it.
FrameMaker will substitute "FrameMaker" wherever it finds "Interleaf".
(Interleaf is FrameMaker's competition.)  [Contributed by Erik Ableson.]

----------------
HyperCard 2.x

Hold down Option as you select "About Hypercard...".  In 2.1, you get a
dialog describing your system setup.  In either 2.0 or 2.1, the chooser
name, if you've entered one, appears in the "HyperCard by" title.  (That
is, if you entered "Joe Cool" as your name in the Chooser (6.0) or
Sharing Setup (7.0), the top of the window will read "HyperCard by Joe
Cool".  If you have no Chooser name, one of the names of…

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Csm Wanted Faq

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Contents
Date: Sun, 17 Jul 1994 07:37:18 +0700
From: eharold@sunspot.noao.edu (Elliotte Harold)
Subject: New version of the wanted faq

From: elharo@shock.njit.edu (Elliotte Rusty Harold)
Newsgroups: comp.sys.mac.wanted,misc.forsale.computers.mac,comp.answers,misc.answers,news.answers
Subject: Macintosh for sale frequently asked questions (FAQ)
Followup-To: comp.sys.mac.wanted
Organization: Department of Mathematics, NJIT
Approved: news-answers-request@mit.edu
Reply-To: elharo@shock.njit.edu (Elliotte Harold)
Summary: This document answers a number of the most frequently asked 
 questions about Macintoshes on Usenet.  To avoid wasting bandwidth
 and as a matter of politeness please familiarize yourself with this 
 document BEFORE posting.
Keywords: FAQ, sale, for sale, Macintosh, Mac, macintosh, mac


Archive-name: macintosh/wanted-faq
Version: 2.3.0
Last-modified: July 14, 1994
Maintainer: elharo@shock.njit.edu

Buying and Selling Macintosh Computers, Software and Peripherals
================================================================


          comp.sys.mac.faq, part 5:
          comp.sys.mac.wanted & misc.forsale.computers.mac 

          Copyright 1993,1994 by Elliotte Harold
          Please see section 5.8 of the general FAQ if you wish  
          to redistribute or revise this document in any way.

          Archive-name: macintosh/wanted-faq
          Version: 2.3.0
          Last-modified: July 14, 1994
          Address comments to elharo@shock.njit.edu


What's new in version 2.3.0:
----------------------------

     This FAQ list now features URL's for a many resources.  See
     the general FAQ list for details.


3.6:  Direct from Apple

     Apple has discontinued catalog sales.


3.9:  New Equipment Prices

     Many models have been discontinued and moved to the used equipment
     section.  Most Quadras and PowerMacs have seen prices fall moderately
     between twenty and two hundred dollars.  I've added some pricing 
     on the new Powerbooks and Duo's as well as including the Apple 
     Workgroup Server's for the first time.

4.1: Macrotime:

     PowerPC 603 machines have been pushed back to spring 1994 at the
     earliest, primarily because of problems with the 68040 emulator.

6.3:  Does anyone know a good mail-order company?

     J&R Computer World (1-800-221-8180) is now an Apple authorized 
     mail-order dealer.
  

                         Table of Contents                         
-------------------------------------------------------------------

I.   Buying and Selling Used Equipment
     1. Should I buy/sell on Usenet?
     2. Where should I buy/sell used equipment?
     3. I've decided to completely ignore your excellent advice and
        post my ad anyway.  What should I do?
     4. I've decided to completely ignore your excellent advice and
        buy something offered for sale on the net anyway.  How can 
        I avoid being ripped off?
II.  Fair Market Value
     1. How much is my computer worth?
     2. What is used software worth?
     3. Going prices?
III. Where Should I Buy a New Mac?
     1. Authorized Dealers
     2. VAR's
     3. Superstores
     4. Performas
     5. Educational Dealers
     6. Direct From Apple
     7. Auctions
     8. Does anyone know a dealer in New York City?
     9. New Equipment Prices
IV.  When Should I buy a new Mac?
     1. Macrotime
     2. Microtime
     3. When will I get my Mac?
V.   How Should I Buy a New Mac?
     1. Know what you want
     2. The dealer needs to sell you a mac more than you need to buy one
     3. Have a competitor's ad handy
     4. Cash on delivery
     5. The sales tax game
     6. Leasing
     7. Be nice to the salesperson.
VI.  The Gray Market and Mail Order
     1. What is the gray market?
     2. Are gray market Macs covered by Apple warranties?
     3. Does anyone know a good mail-order company?


RETRIEVING THE ENTIRE FAQ
=========================

       This is the FIFTH part of this FAQ.  The first part is also 
  posted to this newsgroup under the subject heading  "Introductory 
  Macintosh frequently asked questions (FAQ)" and includes a complete 
  table of contents for the entire document as well as information on
  where to post, ftp, file decompression, trouble-shooting, preventive
  maintenance and conditions for reproduction, posting and use of this
  document outside of Usenet.  The second, third, fourth, and sixth parts
  are posted every two weeks in comp.sys.mac.system, comp.sys.mac.misc,
  comp.sys.mac.apps, and comp.sys.mac.hardware respectively.  Please
  familiarize yourself with all six sections of this document before
  posting.  All pieces are available for anonymous ftp from 

  ftp://rtfm.mit.edu/pub/usenet/news.answers/macintosh/

       Except for the introductory FAQ which appears in multiple
  newsgroups and is stored as general-faq, the name of each 
  file has the format of the last part of the group name followed 
  by "-faq", e.g the FAQ for comp.sys.mac.system is stored as
  system-faq.  You can also have these files mailed to you
  by sending an E-mail message to mail-server@rtfm.mit.edu 
  with the line:  

  send pub/usenet/news.answers/macintosh/name 

  in the body text where "name" is the name of the file you want as 
  specified above (e.g. general-faq).  You can also send this server 
  a message with the subject "help" for more detailed instructions.  
  For access via Mosaic use 

  http://www.cis.ohio-state.edu/hypertext/faq/usenet/macintosh/top.html



========================================
BUYING AND SELLING USED EQUIPMENT  (1.0)
========================================

SHOULD I BUY OR SELL ON USENET?  (1.1)
--------------------------------------

       No, you should not.  Usenet is a medium by which information 
  is broadcast to millions of different people around the world.  
  It's almost certain that noone in Singapore wants to buy a Canadian
  Classic 4/40, even at a really great price.  Import laws, the cost
  of international shipping and a host of other concerns pose too 
  big an obstacle to the sale of small quantities of used equipment. 
  Even within one country geographical distances often pose a severe
  obstacle to the sale of used goods.  There is simply too great 
  a chance of either seller or buyer being ripped off in a
  long-distance transaction via non-payment, non-delivery, 
  or non-usable equipment.


WHERE SHOULD I BUY/SELL USED EQUIPMENT?  (1.2)
----------------------------------------------

       LOCAL bulletin boards, both of the electronic and paper
  varieties, are a far better medium for the sale of used hardware,
  software, and other tangible quantities.  Some Usenet sites and
  local areas have local for sale newsgroups (e.g. nj.forsale
  here in New Jersey) which are more appropriate for classified
  advertising than netwide groups like comp.sys.mac.wanted.  In 
  large cities and college towns you should reach just as many 
  potential buyers by advertising locally as by posting to the net. 
  Advertising locally gives both the seller and the buyer the BIG
  advantage of being able to meet to test the system, verify that
  what is being offered is in fact what is available, and avoiding
  the hassle of shipping.  The chance of being ripped off either
  through non-payment or non-delivery is GREATLY reduced by 
  advertising and selling locally.


I WANT TO POST MY AD ANYWAY.  WHAT SHOULD I DO?  (1.3)
------------------------------------------------------

       First see section 2.0 below to try and decide on a reasonable
  price.  Be prepared for flames if your price is too far out of line
  including follow-up posts warning potential buyers that you are
  trying to rip them off.  You may just want to state "best offer." 
  That way you aren't responsible if someone else misvalues your
  equipment.  If an offer does come in that meets your minimum price,
  you can sell it.  If there are no reasonable offers, you don't have 
  to sell. 
  
       Be sure to include a descriptive subject line in your post.
  For Sale, Macintosh For Sale, and Macintosh Software For Sale are
  all HORRIBLE subject lines.  Better subject lines would be 
  
     SE/30 4/40, $595 or best offer
          or
     Photoshop 2.5, unopened, $250.
     
  Then include a more detailed description in the body of the post.
  Also be sure to state whether or not you'll pay shipping.  (It's 
  much easier to sell an item if you agree to pay shipping.) 
    
       You should post your notice in comp.sys.mac.wanted and
  misc.forsale.computers.mac ONLY.  Posting a for sale ad to
  comp.sys.mac.misc is guaranteed flame-bait, even more so if your
  offer is over-priced.  You should also restrict the distribution of
  your message to as local an area as possible.  Ask your local news
  administrator for help if you don't know how to do this.
  
       Finally if you've sold your item please don't post a message
  saying the item has been sold.  Most of us don't care.  If you are
  getting a lot of offers and want to take the item off the market,
  it's better to cancel the original message.  The bandwidth cost is
  the same, but you'll save a lot of people the trouble of reading 
  two now-pointless messages from you.  Again you may need to ask 
  your local news administrator how to do this.


HOW CAN I AVOID BEING RIPPED OFF WHEN I BUY SOMETHING FROM THE NET?  (1.4)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------

       You can't, which is the single biggest reason I recommend
  against buying and selling on Usenet.  The most effective
  precaution you can take is to insist on check-on-delivery.  That
  way you give the seller nothing until something is delivered, and
  you can stop payment on the check if what is delivered is not what
  was advertised.  This may cost a few dollars more, but the added
  security is more than worth it.  NEVER pay in advance for used
  goods from an unknown shipper.

       You may also want to insist on a work address and phone number
  for the seller.  This is especially effective if the forsale post
  originates from a company account.  The threat of being harassed at
  work is more effective than the threat of legal action against some
  unscrupulous individuals who realize you probably won't sue but may
  complain to their boss.  Even when dealing with completely honest
  individuals it's still much easier to haggle over terms and work
  out shipping arrangements via phone than through protracted 
  E-mail exchanges.



========================
FAIR MARKET VALUE  (2.0)
========================

HOW MUCH IS MY USED HARDWARE WORTH?  (2.1)
------------------------------------------

       Make your lowest estimate of the resale value of your hardware
  taking into account current prices on new hardware of equivalent
  capability.  Then divide that estimate by two.  The price you now
  have is somewhere above the fair market value of your hardware. 
  Almost everyone severely overestimates the value of their
  equipment.  I've seen friendships and business relationships
  destroyed once buyers realized how badly they'd been taken EVEN
  THOUGH THE SELLERS DID NOT INTENTIONALLY MISLEAD THE BUYERS.
 
       Computers are like cars in that they lose 30% of their value 
  as soon as you walk out of the dealer's showroom with one.  They 
  are unlike cars in that they lose more value when new models are
  released irregardless of the condition or age of the previous model. 
  Unlike cars newer models of computer really are better.  High-end
  systems retain their value longer.  My 8/45 SE/30, a high-end system
  when I bought it four years ago, is still barely salable today. 
  Had I purchased a low-end Plus instead it would at most be worth 
  $100 for parts. 



WHAT IS USED SOFTWARE WORTH?  (2.2)
-----------------------------------

       Almost nothing.  It's certainly worth less than the cost of
  distributing a for sale message around the world on Usenet.  If the
  software is the current version AND includes all original master
  disks and manuals AND a notarized letter transferring ownership
  from the original purchaser to the new owner, then it's worth 
  about half of the current mail-order or educational discount price,
  whichever is lower.  Especially note that software left on a hard
  disk when a computer is sold adds NOTHING to the value of the
  system.  The buyer can pirate payware and download shareware 
  just as easily as the seller. 


NO REALLY, HOW MUCH IS MY SYSTEM WORTH?  (2.3)
----------------------------------------------

       I'll give a few numbers I consider current as of mid 1994.
  Unlike the completely ridiculous prices you'll find in the AmCo
  index these values shouldn't leave the buyer feeling ripped off. 
  As a seller you can often get higher prices than these, but as a
  buyer these represent what you should be able to bargain somebody
  down to.  Asking prices and configurations vary WILDLY so haggle 
  and don't be afraid to wait for a better deal if you don't like 
  what someone is offering.

       When trying to determine reasonable prices for discontinued
  equipment I consider several factors.  First I set a floor for a
  given model based on what used equipment dealers like Sun Remarketing
  are willing to pay for inventory and by what repair shops will pay
  for parts.  Then I set a ceiling based on two thirds of typical
  prices for a model at used computer dealers.   Used computer dealers
  can charge more than individuals because they do offer warranties
  that provide some protection against buying a lemon.  Nonetheless the
  Macintosh market moves so fast that dealers of used equipment
  sometimes aren't able to unload inventory before the price of
  equivalent new models drops below what they paid for inventory. The
  existence of many of these dealers is marginal and depends heavily on
  customers who assume that new equipment is more expensive than old
  and that mail order is cheaper than buying from the local dealer,
  neither of which is necessarily true.  Thus I also considered the
  prices of equivalent and better new machines as well.  
  
       The real kicker here is the LC 475 (a.k.a. Quadra 605), a 
  25 MHz 68LC040 (no FPU) with 14" basic color monitor, 4 megs RAM, 
  160 megabyte hard disk, keyboard, several useful applications and  
  a twelve month warranty for about $1250 new.  Very few used Macs 
  currently being offered for sale have as much horsepower as this 
  machine though some may have additional features such as a better 
  monitor or more slots.  However very few people buying used equipment 
  need a better monitor or more than one expansion slot.  Thus as a 
  buyer or a seller ask yourself what a machine is worth compared to 
  an LC 475.  Within this range I try to set the suggested price in 
  the ballpark of the lowest asking price I've seen on Usenet or 
  elsewhere.  Finally I adjust the prices a little between models to 
  make sure that equivalently capable used Macs cost about the same 
  amount.  My ultimate goal is to ensure that a buyer who pays the 
  price listed here does not feel cheated in a transaction, either 
  because they see the Mac they just bought for $1000 advertised for 
  $500 two weeks later or because they realize they could have bought 
  a better Mac new for the same money.  Both of these happen far 
  too frequently.

       These prices are mainly for discontinued models.  For models
  that are still available new, see the list in question 3.8. Figure
  the same system used is worth about 64% of that price plus an 
  extra half percent for every month of warranty coverage left.  For
  compact Macs all prices include a keyboard and mouse.  Take $100
  off the price if there's no keyboard or mouse or both.  Otherwise
  the prices are just for the base CPU with internal hard drive and
  RAM.  Most offers to sell do include a monitor, keyboard and mouse
  and some room for haggling so asking prices will typically be
  somewhat higher.  RAM and hard drive configurations can vary
  greatly.  I've tried to include the high and low ends as well as 
  the configurations you're most likely to run across.  Use your best
  judgment when interpolating and extrapolating to other models.


          Mac 128                  $50
          Mac 512                  $60
          Mac 512ke                $75
          Mac Plus 1/0             $100
          Mac Plus 4/0             $150
          SE 1/0                   $150
          SE 1/20                  $200
          SE 4/0                   $200
          SE 4/40                  $275
          SE/30 1/0                $300
          SE/30 4/40               $500
          SE/30 5/80               $550
          SE/30 8/80               $600
          Classic 4/40             $275
          Classic 4/80             $325
          Classic II 2/40          $495
          Classic II 4/80          $590
          
          LC 4/40                  $300
          LC 4/80                  $350
          LC 10/80                 $450
          LC II 4/40               $400
          LC II 4/80               $450
          LC II 8/80               $500
          LC III 4/80              $595
          LC III 4/160             $650
      
          Mac II 0/0               $300 
          Mac II 0/0/FDHD          $350
          Mac II 8/40              $450
          Mac II 4/105/FDHD        $550
          Mac IIx 0/0              $400
          Mac IIx 8/80             $625
          Mac IIci 0/0             $575
          Mac IIci 8/80            $725
          Mac IIcx 0/0             $350      
          Mac IIsi 2/0             $425
          Mac IIsi 3/40            $520
          Mac IIsi 5/80            $575
          Mac IIsi 5/120/FPU       $600
          Mac IIfx 0/0             $1100
          Mac IIvx 4/80            $650
          Mac IIvx 5/80/CD         $800
          Mac IIvx 4/230           $750
          Mac IIvx 4/230/CD        $950

          Centris 610 4/80         $750
          Centris 610 8/230        $1000
          Centris 610 8/230/CD     $1150
          Centris 650 8/230        $1150
          Centris 650 8/230/CD     $1300 
          
          Mac Portable 1/40        $350
          Mac Portable 4/40        $400
          Mac Portable 4/80/Backlit $450
          
          Quadra 700 4/0           $700
          Quadra 700 4/80          $900
          Quadra 700 8/105         $1100
          Quadra 900 4/0           $1200
          Quadra 900 4/160         $1500

          PowerBook 100 2/20          $500
          PowerBook 100 4/40          $575
          PowerBook 140 2/20          $600
          PowerBook 140 4/40          $675
          PowerBook 140 4/120         $850
          PowerBook 145 4/40          $750
          PowerBook 160 2/20          $800
          PowerBook 160 4/40          $900
          PowerBook 165c 4/80         $1095
          PowerBook 165c 4/120        $1195
          PowerBook 165c 4/120/Modem  $1295
          PowerBook 170 4/40          $1100
          PowerBook 170 4/80          $1175
          PowerBook 170 8/40/modem    $1200
          PowerBook 170 4/120         $1265
          PowerBook 180c 4/80         $1550
          PowerBook 180c 4/160        $1660
          PowerBook 180c 4/160/Modem  $1770

          Duo 210 4/80                $795
          Duo 230 4/80                $895
          Duo 230 4/120               $995
          Duo 230 4/120/Modem         $1095
          Duo 250 4/200               $1650
          Duo 250 12/200/Modem        $1950
          Duo 270c 4/240              $2100
          Duo 270c 12/240/Modem       $2595

          ImageWriter              $50
          ImageWriter II           $75
          ImageWriter LQ           $100
          StyleWriter              $135
          Personal Laserwriter SC  $200
          Personal Laserwriter LS  …

Showing first 20,000 characters of 54,519 total. Open the full document →

Home Documents General Reference Creating An Emergency Disk
Creating An Emergency Disk

Creating An Emergency Disk

Filenamecreating-an-emergency-disk.txt
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Contents
From: williams@world.net (Bill Stanford)
Subject: Drive Setup. But how? (C)

In Info-Mac Digest V13 #140, Al Bloom, replying to Roberto Krause, wrote:

>>How can I boot Drive Setup? My Mac (IDE Hard Disk) says always The HD
>>must not be active. I boot with s disk, click Drive Setup and he says he
>>cant boot Drive Setup from the hard disk. And a 1.44 disk is too little
>>to include Sytem AND Drive Setup. The solution?
>
>Huh? I dunno about the IDE-drive Macs, but the rest of us get Disk Tools
>for that sort of thing. Whatever.
>[snip]
>To rid yourself of the Finder on a boot floppy, first copy Disk Tools
>to a new disk. Drag System out of the System Folder. Delete everything
>else. Then copy your app to the floppy.
>
>You do have to play some games to get by without a Finder. [snip] Click on
>"boot >blocks" and rename Finder and Startup App to the name of whatever
>app you
>have on the disk. There are some goofinesses with naming. You may have to get
>rid of a special symbol in the app's name. It's easy to tell. If the
>floppy won't boot,
>rename the app, and change the "boot blocks" entries to match.

Just to suppliment Al's handy post, here's what usually works with Norton's
Disk Editor.  (Sorry for the bandwidth for those for whom this procedure is
2nd nature...despite having rewritten this myself [on the basis of a
document from Symantec (?)] I have to get this puppy out every blue moon
when I make a new Finderless floppy...and I've never seen it completely
spelt out in a FAQ)

-------------------------
Creating an Emergency Utility Disk for System 7

1       You'll need the following:

***A formatted, High Density (HD) floppy disk.  Name the diskette
something appropriate like "Emergency Disk".

***System 7's "Disk Tools" diskette that came with your Macintosh.
***the top copy of the utility you wish to boot from your emergency disk
(let's say it's Norton Utils or CP Disk Fix�)

***Norton Utilities itself on your hard disk.  If you haven't Norton you'll
need a sector editor of some kind that you're comfortable with� ;-)

2       Copying the System & System Enabler files from Apple Disk Tools
Diskette:

***Insert the "Disk Tools" diskette that came with your System 7 disk set.
***Click open Disk Tools window, click open its System Folder, locate
the files "System", and (if it's Sys 7.1) "System Enabler xxx".
('xxx' is a 3 digit number for the Enabler that varies depending upon
which model Macintosh you have.  If you have an older Mac you won't
have this file.  But if you have an older Mac you don't need to be doing
all this! since your Mac will boot from System 6 emergency floppies.
Sys 7.5 incorporates these things, and is much to be prefered.)

***copy the System and (if necessary) System Enabler xxx file/s on
to a convenient place on your hard disk.

3       Copying the Utility itself:
***Insert the top copy of your utility program and copy that to the
same place on your hard disk.

NB: In the case of Norton Utils it must be the copy on the Norton
Emergency floppy, which hasn't got color resources and hence
is smaller than the verson on your HD.  The name should be
Norton Utils, not Norton Utilities.  In the case of CP Disk Fix�, rename as
Disk Fix, in case you can't remember how the � is typed [opt-r]--for
you will have to type the utility name exactly in just a minute--writing
it out on a piece of paper is a good idea here.

If you're setting up a formatter such as Silverlining 5.6.3 delete the
version number, using just the name.  And also on that piece of paper,
count the number of digets in the name of the utility, including spaces--for
Norton Utils it's 12, for Disk Fix it's 8.  Whatever the utility, the name
when you've finished editing it should be 12 digets or less long!

4      Putting the Utility and System Files on to your Emergency Disk:
***Insert the "Emergency Disk" you made.
***Copy the System file (and if nec. the System Enabler xxx file), and
Norton Utils or Disk Fix from that convenient place on your hard disk
on to the "Emergency Disk".

5       Seting Up the Emergency Disk:
         This is the technical bit: but it's not too bad really:
***On the piece of paper with the name and number of digets in the
name of your utility, convert the number of digets into the hexadecimal
number system as follows (all 0's are zeros):

        1 = 01, 2 = 02, 3 = 03, 4 = 04, 5 = 05, 6 = 06, 7 = 07,
        8 = 08,  9 = 09, 10 = 0A, 11 = 0B, 12 = 0C

Thus Norton Utils with 12 digets would be written 0C, which is twelve in hex.,
(hex has 15 digets, with A through F making up the ones after nine); and
Disk Fix with 8 would be written 08.

***Run your hard disk copy of Norton Utilities...

***When you see the Norton Utilities main dialog, pull down the UTILITIES
menu, and release on Norton Disk Editor.

***At the "Choose a volume to explore" dialog, select your "Emergency
Disk", and click Open.

***When the Directory window opens,  select "Boot Blocks" from the
OBJECTS menu.

***Click on the 5th field, "Finder Name".  The name Finder should
now be selected.

***Hold down COMMAND (the "Apple") key and tap 'J'.  This takes
you to the editing window.  The characters '06' will now be highlighted
within the main body of the window (06 is hexadecimal for the number
of digets in the name Finder!)  In the upper right hand corner of the window,
you'll see the word "Offset" in bold.  It should read 26.

***Now edit that underlined byte: type 0C if it's Norton Utils or 08 if it's
Disk Fix ('0' represents the number zero)--being the number of digets
in the name of your utility in hex; and if you look to the right of the main
window you'll see the underline cursor set under the F of the word Finder.
Hit the TAB key to select the F, then type the exact name of the utility
you've put on the disk, in this case "Norton Utils" or "Disk Fix".  (Don't
type the " here!)  Don't worry if the letters wrap to the next line.

***Type command-J again.   The Finder Name should now read Norton
Utils or Disk Fix.
(If not, type Command-J again, and try again.  Be sure you've hit 0C
or 08 then TAB and are typing into the alpha-numerical column, not
the hexadecimal main area!)

***If the name is correct, quit the Norton Utilities and click Save when asked.

***Write protect your Emergency Disk, and label it appropriately.  Finished!
-------------------------

>There is a hidden lesson here, my children. Just because a program is
>old doesn't mean it won't work in the brave new world of PowerMacs and
>System 7.5.1 (et seq?). CPS's old DiskEdit and FileEdit are two of my
>most-used toys.

Al makes me very nostalgic here, and he's right, DiskEdit is a heck of a little
program, definitely preferable to CPS/Symantec's current things.

Hey, anyone out there still using Fedit Plus (breaks under 7.5, unfortunately).

>It used to be that you could copy an app to a System-only floppy and call
>the app Finder. I haven't had any luck with that dodge for years. No, I
>don't know why. It *should* work. I think. Maybe not. I get confused so
>easily these days.

The good old Mac days, definitely.  Al, you're not confused, it doesn't
even work at 3AM in the quiet of the night...  ;-)  Hence those monster
instructions above (sorry folk!)

--Bill
-------
Home Documents General Reference Info Abstracts
Info Abstracts

Info Abstracts

General Reference · 2005 · TXT
Filename00info-abstracts.txt
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Year2005
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Contents
Abstracts from files in info-mac/info as of Sun 20 Mar 2005


#### BINHEX     800saywhat-301-jp.hqx   ****

From: ChrisLi@bridge1.com
Subject: 800-SAY-WHAT 3.0.1J - Japanese Version


This is the Japanese version of the 800-SAY-WHAT package. 

This version requires Mac OS X 10.1 or higher.

Ever get tired of trying to figure out what numbers to dial when you see
those cute 800 numbers such as 1-800-SOS-APPL?  Now you can easily decode
the numbers with this handy shareware application from Modessit Software.



#### LINK       _Communication     ****

#### LINK       _Development     ****

#### LINK       _Hardware     ****

#### LINK       _Help     ****

#### LINK       _Software     ****

#### BINHEX     alt-cyber-drive.hqx   ****

From: schram@mail.coos.or.us
Subject: alt.CyberDrive


If you don't know what the BMW CyberDrive promotion is, this file will
do you no good and you may skip to the next message.

This is an alternate opening HTML page for the BMW CyberDrive promotion
made primarily for Mac MS Internet Explorer users who are unable to
access the CyberDrive CD-ROM while online.

It contains links to all the viewable QuickTime and QuickTimeVR movies
hidden on the CyberDrive CD-ROM so you can access them at full speed
whether online or offline. It opens the CyberDrive web site in a
separate browser window so that the movies can be "sort of" integrated
into the total presentation. (I left off a few movies that were not
browser viewable, but have included a text listing of the CD's catalog
if you want to try to extract them.)

I slapped this page together without the knowledge or consent of BMW or
anyone else. It's OK with me to include it in the Info-Mac CD, but be
aware that the CyberDrive promotion ends in July 1997. Enjoy.

Chris Schram -- schram@mail.coos.or.us -- http://www.coos.or.us/~schram



#### BINHEX     american-architecture.hqx   ****

From: "Paul Gronemeyer" <pgrone@hotmail.com>
Subject: American Architecture for FilemakerPro

Art & Info / American Architecture

This is a FilemakerPro database about American Architecture.
Starting with the Schindler House from 1922 up to Richard Meiers Getty 
Center
from 1997. Each entry contains a photo of the object, a ground elevation, 
adresse
and information about the architect and the date of completion.

1998-2002 by PGro

#### BINHEX     apple-easter-eggs-14.hqx   ****

From: IXist@aol.com
Subject: Apple Easter Eggs 1.4

What secrets lurk inside the heart of your Mac? Are you too frightened to
look? I didn't think so. 

Grab this self-viewing DocMaker file to discover what those zany Apple
engineers and programmers have hidden inside your Macintosh and Newton. You
may be amazed!

Welcome to the first Easter release of the world's largest collection of
Apple easter eggs.  In fact, there are over 200 of them!  This is a
compilation of secrets stuffed inside of your Macintosh or Newton by Apple
programmers and engineers, which are not accessible without doing something
that you wouldn't normally do.  Easter eggs include random jokes, elaborate
credit screens, or hard-to-find games that are meant to give the creator a
little fame, also adding a personal touch to the best computer on earth.  

For Example: One well known easter egg is if you type "secret about box", in
System 7.5, in Stickies and drag it to the desktop.  You will be able to play
a game, or you can see and move a virtual flag on the new PCI Macs in System
7.5.2 & 7.5.3.  Download this file for more info.

All eggs only apply to Apple Computer made products so any Mac or Newton
owner can try them without having to deal with other software.  This file has
been mentioned in MacWorld Magazine, put on CD's, mentioned in books and
E-Zines, was a most popular download on AOL, and is a top download at many
other software sights.

The upgrade:  Version 1.4 has all of the eggs in previous versions and plenty
more.   I did not have a main focus for this release but there are many
excellent and detailed additions, and even a peek at the first Copland easter
egg.  I also fixed spelling, made many corrections, and added roughly 50 more
eggs to the collection.  Also, with the release of DocMaker 4.6, there is a
much better interface and I cleaned things up a bit.  There are so many
changes I can not list them all.  Download this file, look around, and have
fun!

Made with DocMaker, which means it is stand-alone.  It requires no other
helper applications but a decompressor.  A Newton only list of easter eggs is
also available for all PC owners.


#### TEXT       better-8bit-qt-color.txt   ****

From: AvramD@aol.com
Date: Sat, 02 Jul 94 16:22:35 EDT
Subject: copy of better-8bit-qt-color.txt for archives

Here you go Igor... Thanks!
----------------------
If you've seen some really beautiful 16 or 24 bit quicktime moovs on someone
else's expensive Mac, and you've seen really beautiful GIF images on your own
piddling 8 bit Mac (256 colors), and you whish you could get the quality of
the later when viewing the former (and you don't mind run-on sentences), then
you've come to the right posting!

This is a simple trick that anyone can do to improve the color of quicktime
moovs on a mac that can only display 256 simultaneous colors. It doesn't
always work, and sometimes it makes them look much worse. But there are lots
of moovs out there that it does help, and hey - it's free!

Background (experienced graphics people can skip this): 

Color Macs can actually display over 16 million colors. The trouble is that

#### BINHEX     blue-box-invoices-12.hqx   ****

Bluebox invoices


#### BINHEX     chiron-24.hqx   ****

From: CyberDog91@aol.com
Subject: Chiron v2.4 Release Folder 1

Thanks for checking out Chiron v2.4 for the Macintosh.  A complete online
manual for dealing with your Macs problems.

WHAT'S NEW?

Over 300 additional system error listings have been added.  A chapter
explaining over 20 of the most common system errors is also included at the
request of several users.

WHAT IS CHIRON?

Chiron is a self-running application that contains a wealth of information
helpful to most Macintosh users.  This version of Chiron includes information
on the following subjects:

- System Error Code Listings -  These chapters list and describe the type of
system errors indicated by the I.D. number in System Error dialogs.  Also
includes in depth description of over 20 of the most common errors.

- Virus and Trojan Horse Listing - This chapter lists and explains all
currently known Macintosh virus and trojan horses, plus ways to prevent virus
and trojan horse infections and simple ways to clense your system of those
unwanted viruses.

- Newton Error Codes -  This chapter explains what the various error codes
are for Apple's Personal Digital Assistant (PDA).

- The Sad Mac -  This chapter is very helpful if you can't get a Mac to start
up.  Often, if there is a problem with the hardware the Macintosh will
display an error code at start-up time (often referred to as a "Sad Mac").
 This describes what the problems these error codes represent on ALL
Macintosh's from the Mac 128k up to the latest models, excluding the
PowerMacs.

- Crash Recovery Strings -  This chapter contains all the information I could
find on using your Macintosh's programmer switch (see user manual for more
info) to successfully recover from a crash with only minimal damage's.

- How to Avoid Another Bomb -  This chapter explains how you can prevent that
dreaded bomb dialog.


IS THIS FREEWARE?

Yep, no charge.  I originally compiled this information for my own personal
reference.  But, at the request of several Mac Users I have posted it online.


----------------
The author can be contacted at:

Chiron v2.4
Rob Cummings
104 Evelina Drive
Marlborough, MA 01752-1088

or

fontesb@meol.mass.edu


#### BINHEX     cmyk-chart-pdf.hqx   ****

From: scott@rabid.com
Subject: cmyk color charts


These CMYK charts can be accessed with Adobe Acrobat Reader 3.0. They
contain eleven pages of complete CMYK color combinations in 10% increments.
This can be useful for achieving predictable color output from your
printer. Enjoy!




#### TEXT       compusa-restocking-fee.txt   ****

Date: Mon, 23 May 1994 07:21:06 PDT
From: Bruce_Rubin.Wbst845@xerox.com
Subject: [!]CompUSA 10% restocking return policy for Apple products found on

Hi,

The evening of May 22nd, while beta testing (i.e. playing) Apple's eWorld, I
drilled down through Computer Center:News & Industry Information:MacWEEK
Online:MacWEEK Round Table:Tips to Mac the Knife and found a "conversation"
regarding how CompUSA has a 10% restocking policy for Apple products! I posted
this note on a Rochester, NY FC BBS (Mac's Last Stand 716-247-9056) and the one
reply todate (last note of this message) makes it seem that this new policy
might be more Apple's than CompUSA's fault. I haven't heard of this new policy
of Apple's affecting other stores. While it is not uncommon for manufacturers
to get very very tough on their suppliers, this is the first time that I have
heard of a sales outlet getting beat up!

Bruce

===========

#### BINHEX     computer-terms-hc.hqx   ****

From: j5rson@prairie.lakes.com (Jeffrey D. Iverson)
Subject: Computer Terms

A glossary of computer terms in a HyperCard stack.

Jeffrey D. Iverson         507.386.6208 weekdays
Iverson Software Co.       507.625.7355 evening/weekend
522 Record St.             j5rson@prairie.lakes.com
Mankato MN  56001-2546     http://prairie.lakes.com/~j5rson/


#### BINHEX     convert-ce-fonts-14.hqx   ****

From: Andreas.Prilop@altavista.net
Subject: Convert Central European TrueType Fonts


This documentation describes in detail how to convert Unicode
TrueType fonts from MS Windows to MacOS Central European.
The Windows fonts are freely available from Microsoft.
Macintosh Central European fonts are compatible with the Czech,
Hungarian, Polish, and Slovak system software.

With the procedure of version 1.3 you might have had conflicts
when using the original font (e.g. Arial) together with the
modified font (e.g. Arial CE). 
Version 1.4 explains how to fix this.
Moreover, QuickDraw GX is no longer required.

This file may be included on the Info-Mac CD-ROM.




#### BINHEX     convert-celtic-fonts-14.hqx   ****

From: Andreas.Prilop@altavista.net
Subject: Convert Celtic (Welsh) TrueType Fonts


This documentation describes in detail how to convert Unicode
TrueType fonts from MS Windows to MacOS Celtic.
The Windows fonts are freely available from Microsoft.
Macintosh Celtic fonts include the letters 'w' and 'y' with
various accents (� ` ^ �) in addition to the regular West European
characters.

With the procedure of version 1.3 you might have had conflicts
when using the original font (e.g. Arial) together with the
modified font (e.g. Arial Celtic). 
Version 1.4 explains how to fix this.
Moreover, QuickDraw GX is no longer required.

This file may be included on the Info-Mac CD-ROM.




#### BINHEX     convert-cyrillic-fonts-14.hqx   ****

From: Andreas.Prilop@altavista.net
Subject: Convert Cyrillic TrueType Fonts


This documentation describes in detail how to convert Unicode
TrueType fonts from MS Windows to MacOS Cyrillic.
The Windows fonts are freely available from Microsoft.
Macintosh Cyrillic fonts are compatible with the Bulgarian,
Russian, and Ukrainian system software.

With the procedure of version 1.3 you might have had conflicts
when using the original font (e.g. Arial) together with the
modified font (e.g. Arial Cyr). 
Version 1.4 explains how to fix this.
Moreover, QuickDraw GX is no longer required.

This file may be included on the Info-Mac CD-ROM.




#### BINHEX     convert-esperanto-fonts-14.hqx   ****

From: Andreas.Prilop@altavista.net
Subject: Convert Latin-3 (Esperanto, Maltese) TrueType Fonts

This documentation describes in detail how to convert Unicode
TrueType fonts from MS Windows to MacOS Esperanto.
The Windows fonts are freely available from Microsoft.
Macintosh Esperanto fonts include special Esperanto, Maltese,
and Turkish letters in addition to the regular West European
characters.

With the procedure of version 1.3 you might have had conflicts
when using the original font (e.g. Arial) together with the
modified font (e.g. Arial EO). 
Version 1.4 explains how to fix this.
Moreover, QuickDraw GX is no longer required.

This file may be included on the Info-Mac CD-ROM.




#### BINHEX     convert-greek-fonts-14.hqx   ****

From: Andreas.Prilop@altavista.net
Subject: Convert Greek TrueType Fonts

This documentation describes in detail how to convert Unicode
TrueType fonts from MS Windows to MacOS Greek.
The Windows fonts are freely available from Microsoft.
Macintosh Greek fonts are compatible with the Greek system
software.

With the procedure of version 1.3 you might have had conflicts
when using the original font (e.g. Arial) together with the
modified font (e.g. Arial Greek). 
Version 1.4 explains how to fix this.
Moreover, QuickDraw GX is no longer required.

This file may be included on the Info-Mac CD-ROM.




#### BINHEX     convert-romanian-fonts-14.hqx   ****

From: Andreas.Prilop@altavista.net
Subject: Convert Romanian TrueType Fonts

This documentation describes in detail how to convert Unicode
TrueType fonts from MS Windows to MacOS Romanian.
The Windows fonts are freely available from Microsoft.
Macintosh Romanian fonts include special Romanian letters
instead of Danish and Norwegian characters and
they are compatible with the Romanian system software.

With the procedure of version 1.3 you might have had conflicts
when using the original font (e.g. Arial) together with the
modified font (e.g. Arial RO). 
Version 1.4 explains how to fix this.
Moreover, QuickDraw GX is no longer required.

This file may be included on the Info-Mac CD-ROM.




#### BINHEX     convert-turkish-fonts-14.hqx   ****

From: Andreas.Prilop@altavista.net
Subject: Convert Turkish TrueType Fonts


This documentation describes in detail how to convert Unicode
TrueType fonts from MS Windows to MacOS Turkish.
The Windows fonts are freely available from Microsoft.
Macintosh Turkish fonts include special Turkish letters
in addition to the regular West European characters and
they are compatible with the Turkish system software.

With the procedure of version 1.3 you might have had conflicts
when using the original font (e.g. Arial) together with the
modified font (e.g. Arial Tur). 
Version 1.4 explains how to fix this.
Moreover, QuickDraw GX is no longer required.

This file may be included on the Info-Mac CD-ROM.




#### TEXT       creating-an-emergency-disk.txt   ****

From: williams@world.net (Bill Stanford)
Subject: Drive Setup. But how? (C)

In Info-Mac Digest V13 #140, Al Bloom, replying to Roberto Krause, wrote:

>>How can I boot Drive Setup? My Mac (IDE Hard Disk) says always The HD
>>must not be active. I boot with s disk, click Drive Setup and he says he
>>cant boot Drive Setup from the hard disk. And a 1.44 disk is too little
>>to include Sytem AND Drive Setup. The solution?
>
>Huh? I dunno about the IDE-drive Macs, but the rest of us get Disk Tools
>for that sort of thing. Whatever.
>[snip]
>To rid yourself of the Finder on a boot floppy, first copy Disk Tools
>to a new disk. Drag System out of the System Folder. Delete everything
>else. Then copy your app to the floppy.
>
>You do have to play some games to get by without a Finder. [snip] Click on
>"boot >blocks" and rename Finder and Startup App to the name of whatever
>app you

#### TEXT       csm-general-faq-225.txt   ****

Date: Mon, 21 Mar 94 08:34:11 EST
From: elharo@shock.njit.edu (Elliotte Rusty Harold)
Subject: faq submission

Newsgroups: comp.sys.mac.apps,comp.sys.mac.misc,comp.sys.mac.system,comp.sys.mac.wanted,comp.sys.mac.hardware,comp.answers,news.answers
Subject: Introductory Macintosh frequently asked questions (FAQ)
From: elharo@shock.njit.edu  (Elliotte Rusty Harold)
Reply-To: elharo@shock.njit.edu
Followup-To: comp.sys.mac.misc
Organization: Dept. of Mathematics, NJIT
Keywords: FAQ, Macintosh, Mac, macintosh, mac, general, introduction
Summary: This document answers a number of the most frequently asked
 questions on Usenet about Macintosh computers.  To avoid wasting 
 bandwidth and as a matter of politeness please familiarize yourself 
 with this document BEFORE posting.
Approved: news-answers-request@MIT.edu

Archive-name: macintosh/general-faq



#### TEXT       csm-miscellaneous-faq-230.txt   ****

Date: Sun, 17 Jul 1994 07:36:52 +0700
From: eharold@sunspot.noao.edu (Elliotte Harold)
Subject: New version of the misc faq

From: elharo@shock.njit.edu (Elliotte Rusty Harold)
Newsgroups: comp.sys.mac.misc,comp.answers,news.answers
Subject: Miscellaneous Macintosh frequently asked questions (FAQ)
Followup-To: comp.sys.mac.misc
Organization: Department of Mathematics, NJIT
Lines: 1202
Approved: news-answers-request@MIT.edu
Reply-To: elharo@shock.njit.edu
Summary: This document answers a number of the most frequently asked 
 questions about Macintoshes on Usenet.  To avoid wasting bandwidth
 and as a matter of politeness please familiarize yourself with this 
 document BEFORE posting.
Keywords: FAQ, Macintosh, Mac, macintosh, mac, misc, miscellaneous

Archive-name: macintosh/misc-faq
Version: 2.3.0

#### TEXT       csm-wanted-faq-230.txt   ****

Date: Sun, 17 Jul 1994 07:37:18 +0700
From: eharold@sunspot.noao.edu (Elliotte Harold)
Subject: New version of the wanted faq

From: elharo@shock.njit.edu (Elliotte Rusty Harold)
Newsgroups: comp.sys.mac.wanted,misc.forsale.computers.mac,comp.answers,misc.answers,news.answers
Subject: Macintosh for sale frequently asked questions (FAQ)
Followup-To: comp.sys.mac.wanted
Organization: Department of Mathematics, NJIT
Approved: news-answers-request@mit.edu
Reply-To: elharo@shock.njit.edu (Elliotte Harold)
Summary: This document answers a number of the most frequently asked 
 questions about Macintoshes on Usenet.  To avoid wasting bandwidth
 and as a matter of politeness please familiarize yourself with this 
 document BEFORE posting.
Keywords: FAQ, sale, for sale, Macintosh, Mac, macintosh, mac


Archive-name: macintosh/wanted-faq
Version: 2.3.0

#### BINHEX     csmpg-faq-96-12-21.hqx   ****

From: garage@wave.net (Ellrott)
Subject: c.s.m.p.games FAQ Draft

This is a copy of the draft for the FAQ for the
comp.sys.mac.programmer.games newsgroup.
It isn't complete yet, so if you have anything you'd like to add, please
send a message to me at garage@wave.net
The homepage for this is <http://www.wave.net/upg/garage/>, but my server
isn't that nice, so I'm still working on getting the updated pages up, as
of now, the pages that are currently up are 2 months old.  But don't worry,
I've worked on them alot, and when there up, they'll look alot better.

Kyle Ellrott


#### BINHEX     dhammapada-13.hqx   ****

From: Brian Kelley <bkelley1@nycap.rr.com>
Subject: Dhammapada 1.3

The Dhammapada is a collection of 423 Buddhist verses, arranged into 26 
chapters by topic.  It is said by many to contain the essence of the 
Buddha's teachings, and is one of  the best-loved works in the Pali Canon.

This application generates a verse of the Dhammapada each time it is 
opened, making it a nice addition to the Startup Items folder.  In 
addition, the entire text of the Dhammapada is available for browsing and 
reading in the conventional, linear way.  Individual verses and chapters 
can be saved as text files and printed from the File menu, and the Edit 
menu allows copying of the text.  If you encounter any unfamiliar terms, 
there is a "Useful Definitions" item under the Apple Menu.

New in Version 1.3
--option to install into Startup Items folder with the click of a button
--new title graphics


#### BINHEX     dividers-rules.hqx   ****

From: nau@bahnhof.se
Subject: Dividers

These files are dividers/rules for people building web-pages.
The read me file contains all the info a person needs to understand
what it is all about.
Thank you.
John Nau
e-mail: n…

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