home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Path: senator-bedfellow.mit.edu!bloom-beacon.mit.edu!pad-thai.aktis.com!pad-thai.aktis.com!not-for-mail
- From: eharold@sunspot.noao.edu (Elliotte Rusty Harold)
- 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)
- Supersedes: <macintosh/general-faq_745041620@GZA.COM>
- Followup-To: comp.sys.mac.misc
- Date: 25 Aug 1993 00:00:39 -0400
- Organization: Department of Mathematics, NJIT
- Lines: 1279
- Sender: faqserv@GZA.COM
- Approved: news-answers-request@MIT.edu
- Expires: 22 Sep 1993 04:00:11 GMT
- Message-ID: <macintosh/general-faq_746251211@GZA.COM>
- Reply-To: eharold@sunspot.noao.edu (Elliotte Harold)
- NNTP-Posting-Host: pad-thai.aktis.com
- 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, general, introduction
- X-Last-Updated: 1993/08/23
- Xref: senator-bedfellow.mit.edu comp.sys.mac.apps:42637 comp.sys.mac.misc:50733 comp.sys.mac.system:36069 comp.sys.mac.wanted:27045 comp.sys.mac.hardware:64712 comp.answers:1736 news.answers:11768
-
-
- Archive-name: macintosh/general-faq
- Version: 2.1.8
- Last-modified: August 22, 1993
-
- Copyright 1993, Elliotte Harold
-
-
- Changes:
-
- 0.0: The table of contents has been revised to reflect new questions.
-
- 2.3: Where can I find application X?
-
- I've expanded this question to include payware.
-
- 2.4: Added this question, "Where can I find an application to do X?
-
- 4.7: Disk Utilities
-
- Disk First Aid and HD SC Setup have
- been upgraded to version 7.2. Everyone should replace the
- old DFA and HD SC Setup on the Disk Tools disk with the
- new versions.
-
-
- comp.sys.mac.faq
- Part 1: An Introduction to the Macintosh Newsgroups
-
-
- 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. Someone just asked why the System was taking up sixteen
- megabytes on their IIcx. Shouldn't I display my knowledge
- to the world by posting the seventeenth response to
- their question?
- 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 as well
- as the simple/free solution you already include?
- 3. Would you please include my software in your FAQ?
- 4. Why don't you post the FAQ more often?
- 5. Where can I repost the FAQ?
- 6. Can I republish your FAQ?
- 7. Can you help me with this problem I'm having with my Mac?
- 8. Will you send me the FAQ?
- 9. Why don't you format the FAQ in setext? Word? Digest? etc.?
-
- Other FAQ lists currently available:
-
- B. 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 can I convert a Windows font to a Mac font and vice versa?
- A TrueType font to a PostScript font?
- 2. Which font will be used on my screen and printer when I have
- different types 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
-
-
- C. 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. How do I edit a PostScript file?
- 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 prevent users from changing the contents of a folder?
- 2. How can I password protect my Mac?
- V. Sound
- 1. How can I read 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?
-
- D. 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
- II. Microsoft Word
- 1. Character based styles
- 2. Cross-references
- 3. Word to TeX and back
- 4. How do 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?
-
-
- This work is Copyright 1993 by Elliotte M. Harold. Permission
- is hereby granted to distribute this unmodified document provided
- that no fee in excess of normal on-line charges is required for
- such distribution. Portions of this document may be extracted and
- quoted free of charge and without necessity of citation in normal
- on-line communication provided only that said quotes are not
- represented as the correspondent's original work. Permission for
- quotation of this document in printed material and edited on-line
- 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).
-
- 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
- erh0362@tesla.njit.edu.
-
- 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.
-
- 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 is posted every two weeks in
- comp.sys.mac.misc. Tables of contents for those two pieces are
- included above. Please familiarize yourself with all three
- sections of this document before posting.
-
- All pieces are available for anonymous ftp from
- rtfm.mit.edu [18.70.0.224] in the directory
- pub/usenet/news.answers/macintosh. Except for this introductory
- FAQ which appears in multiple newsgroups and is stored as
- general-faq.Z, the name of each file has the format of the last
- part of the group name followed by "-faq.Z", e.g the FAQ for
- comp.sys.mac.system is stored as system-faq.Z and the FAQ for
- comp.sys.mac.misc is stored as misc-faq.Z. RTFM stores files as
- compressed (.Z) BINARY files. If you leave off the .Z at the end
- of the file name when "getting" the file, rtfm will automatically
- decompress the file before sending it to you. 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? WHERE CAN I GET IT? (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 and comp.sys.mac.misc. FAQ
- lists for comp.sys.mac.wanted, comp.sys.mac.apps and
- comp.sys.mac.hardware are in development. When ready each part
- will be available in its respective newsgroup. All pieces are
- available via anonymous ftp from rtfm.mit.edu in the
- pub/usenet/news.answers/macintosh directory. Except for this
- document itself which is named general-faq.Z the pieces are named
- as per the last part of the newsgroup they cover followed by
- "-faq", e.g. system-faq.Z, misc-faq.Z. The .Z means the file is
- stored compressed so you'll need to ftp it in binary mode and use
- either MacCompress, StuffIt Deluxe, or the UNIX uncompress command
- to decompress it. However if you leave off the ".Z" extension when
- you "get" the file, rtfm will automatically decompress the file
- before sending it to you.
-
- 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.
-
-
- 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 newsgroup
- comp.sys.mac.misc and comp.sys.mac.system. Four other files
- are worthy of particular note: Daryl Spitzer maintains a
- FAQ list covering Macintosh programming for the newsgroup
- comp.sys.mac.programmer. It's posted to that group weekly and
- available for anonymous ftp from ftp.cs.uoregon [128.223.8.8]
- in /pub/mac. Eric Rosen maintains a frequently asked questions
- list for comp.sys.mac.comm available in that newsgroup and from
- sumex-aim.stanford.edu in info-mac/report. 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. It's available in comp.fonts
- or by ftp from ibis.cs.umass.edu [128.119.40.118] in
- /pub/norm/comp.fonts/FAQ*. 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 and news.answers. It's
- available for anonymous ftp at jagubox.gsfc.nasa.gov.
-
-
- 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. Specifically questions about productivity applications
- (software you bought your Macintosh to run, not software you bought
- to make your Macintosh run better) should go to comp.sys.mac.apps
- unless the application is covered in a more specific newsgroup.
- Communications programs, games, HyperCard, compilers and databases
- all have more topical comp.sys.mac.* newsgroups. Post questions
- about non-communications hardware including questions about what
- software is necessary to make particular hardware work to
- comp.sys.mac.hardware. Questions about MacOS system software
- belong in comp.sys.mac.system. Questions about utilities and
- extensions normally belong in comp.sys.mac.misc. Questions about
- A/UX go to comp.unix.aux. Detailed questions about Appletalk
- belong in comp.protocols.appletalk.
-
- Direct questions about HyperCard to comp.sys.mac.hypercard.
- Non-HyperCard programming questions and questions about development
- environments should go to comp.sys.mac.programmer. ResEdit
- questions may be posted either to comp.sys.mac.misc,
- comp.sys.mac.system, or comp.sys.mac.programmer; but generally the
- netters who inhabit the darker recesses of comp.sys.mac.programmer
- are considerably more practiced at the art of resource hacking.
-
- A general exception to the above rules is that any VERY
- technical question about an application that actually begins to
- delve into the how's of a program as well as the what's (Recent
- example: How does WriteNow which is written entirely in assembly
- compare to other word processors written in high level languages?)
- might be better addressed to the programmer newsgroup.
-
- For Sale and Want to Buy posts should go to
- comp.sys.mac.wanted and misc.forsale.computers.mac ONLY. We
- understand that you're desperate to sell your upgraded 128K Mac to
- get the $$ for a PowerBook 180; but trust me, anyone who wants to
- buy it will be reading comp.sys.mac.wanted. Political and
- religious questions (The Mac is better than Windows! Is not! Is
- too! Is not! Is too! Hey! How 'bout the Amiga! What about it? Is
- Not! Is too!) belong in comp.sys.mac.advocacy. Anything not
- specifically mentioned above probably belongs in comp.sys.mac.misc.
-
- Finally don't be so provincial as to consider only the
- comp.sys.mac newsgroups the appropriate forums for your questions.
- Many questions about modems in comp.sys.mac.comm are much more
- thoroughly discussed in comp.dcom.modems. Questions about Mac MIDI
- are often better handled in comp.music even though it's not a
- Macintosh specific newsgroup. Shop around. Usenet's a big place
- and not everything relevant to the Macintosh happens in
- comp.sys.mac.
-
-
- 4. SOMEONE JUST ASKED WHY THE SYSTEM WAS TAKING UP SIXTEEN OF
- THEIR TWENTY MEGABYTES OF RAM. SHOULDN'T I PUT MY BRILLIANCE AND
- WIT ON DISPLAY FOR THE WORLD BY POSTING THE SEVENTEENTH RESPONSE?
-
- No. Frequent answers are just as boring and uninteresting as
- frequent questions. Unless you really have something new to add to
- the traditional answers (such as the recent discovery that fonts in
- System 7.1 could eat memory) private E-mail is a much better medium
- for answering common questions like this one.
-
- You might want to add a mention of this FAQ in your E-mail
- response and a polite suggestion that your correspondent read it
- before posting future questions. I do read all the newsgroups
- covered here and have written a small script in MicroPhone II that
- lets me send PWFAQ's (people with frequently asked questions) the
- section of this document that answers their question with just the
- click of a button so please don't feel obligated to respond to
- someone who cares so little about the answer to their question they
- can't be troubled to read the FAQ list to get it.
-
-
-
- ===
- FTP (2.0)
- ===
-
- WHERE CAN I FTP MAC SOFTWARE? (2.1)
-
- The three major North American Internet archives of shareware,
- freeware, and demo software are sumex-aim.stanford.edu (36.44.0.6),
- mac.archive.umich.edu (141.211.165.41), and wuarchive.wustl.edu
- (128.252.135.4) which mirrors the other two sites and several
- others. Wuarchive often holds on to files after other sites remove
- them for space concerns, and still has files that were deleted from
- the formerly important site, rascal.ics.utexas.edu. Rascal was
- notable for storing its files in MacBinary format rather than the
- less efficient BinHex format common at the other archives. Unless
- otherwise noted shareware and freeware mentioned in this document
- should be available at the above sites.
-
- To keep traffic on the Internet manageable, Scandinavians
- should try connecting to ftp.funet.fi (128.214.6.100), ftp.lth.se
- (130.235.20.3), or sics.se (192.16.123.90) instead. Those in
- the U.K. should look first at src.doc.ic.ac.uk (146.169.2.1).
- Continental Europeans can try nic.switch.ch (130.59.1.40),
- ezinfo.ethz.ch (129.132.2.72), and anl.anl.fr(192.54.179.1).
- Australian users should try to find what they want at archie.au
- (139.130.4.6) which mirrors info-mac and mac.archive. Japanese
- users will find sumex mirrored at ftp.u-tokyo.ac.jp
- (130.69.254.254).
-
- A fourth very important site is ftp.apple.com (130.43.2.3).
- This is Apple's semi-official repository for system software,
- developer tools, source code, technical notes, and other things
- that come more or less straight from Apple's mouth. Some material
- at this site may not be distributed outside the U.S. or by other
- sites that don't have an official license to distribute Apple
- system software. Please read the various README documents
- available at ftp.apple.com for the detailed info if you're
- connecting from outside the U.S. or if you wish to redistribute
- material you find here.
-
-
- CAN I GET SHAREWARE BY E-MAIL? (2.2)
-
- The info-mac archives at sumex-aim are available by E-mail from
- LISTSERV@RICEVM1.bitnet (alternately listserv@ricevm1.rice.edu).
- The listserver responds to the commands $MACARCH HELP, $MACARCH
- INDEX, and $MACARCH GET filename. Mac archive files are available
- from mac@mac.archive.umich.edu. Send it a message containing the
- words "help" and "index" (no quotes) on the first two lines of your
- message for instructions on getting started and a list of the files
- you may request. You can retrieve files from other sites by using
- the server at ftpmail@decwrl.dec.com. For details send it a
- message with just the text "help" (no quotes).
-
-
- WHERE CAN I FIND APPLICATION X? (2.3)
-
- If you can't find shareware you're looking for at one of
- the above sites, try telnetting to your nearest archie server or
- sending it an E-mail message addressed to archie with the subject
- "help." Archie servers are located at archie.rutgers.edu (128.6.18.15,
- America), archie.mcgill.ca (132.206.2.3, the original archie server
- in Canada), archie.au (139.130.4.6, Australia), archie.funet.fi
- (128.214.6.100, Scandinavia), and archie.doc.ic.ac.uk (146.169.3.7,
- the U.K. and the continent). These sites index the tens of
- thousands of files available for anonymous ftp. Login as "archie"
- (no password is needed) and type "prog filename" to find what
- you're looking for or type "help" for more detailed instructions.
- For instance you would type "prog Disinfectant" to search for a
- convenient ftp site for Disinfectant. If the initial search fails
- to turn up the file you want, try variations on and substrings of
- the name. For instance if you didn't find Disinfectant with "prog
- Disinfectant", you might try "prog disi" instead. Substring
- searches often hide the gold in a pile of dross. To avoid many
- erroneous matches add a ".*\.hqx" to the end of the substring,
- e.g. "prog disi.*\.hqx" Most Mac software available on the net
- ends in .hqx but almost no UNIX or PC software does.
-
- Most common payware is stocked by MacWarehouse and featured
- in their catalog which you can get by calling 1-800-622-6222 and
- asking for a copy. Apple brand software not stocked by MacWarehouse
- and not available on ftp.apple.com is often available from APDA,
- the Apple Programmers' and Developers' Association. Call
- (800)282-2732 in the U.S., (800)637-0029 in Canada, (716)871-6555
- elsewhere, for a catalog. Finally most third party programming
- tools with too small a market to be advertised in the MacWarehouse
- catalog is advertised in every issue of MacTech along with
- information on how to order.
-
- Please check the above catalogs and ARCHIE personally BEFORE
- asking the net where you can find a particular piece of software.
- These sources provide answers much more quickly than the net.
-
-
- WHERE CAN I FIND AN APPLICATION TO DO X? (2.4)
-
- Most archives of shareware and freeware have index files
- which contain brief descriptions of the various programs available
- at the site. At anonymous ftp sites these files typically begin
- with 00 and end with either .txt or .abs. Lists that cover the
- entire archive and topical subdirectories are both available.
- For example if you're looking for a program to play MOD files, ftp
- to sumex-aim and look in the directory Sound/util for any files
- beginning with two zeroes. You'll find 00Utility-abstracts.abs.
- Get it and then browse through it at your leisure. Then when you've
- located a likely candidate in the index file you can ftp it and try
- it out.
-
- The best source of information about payware programs is the
- MacWarehouse catalog. You'll occasionally find it on sale at
- newsstands for about two dollars; but if you call MacWarehouse
- at 1-800-622-6222, they'll be happy to send you one for free.
- Unlike many other catalogs almost all common software is
- advertised in the MacWarehouse catalog. A quick browse through
- the appropriate section normally reveals several products that
- fit your needs.
-
-
- CAN SOMEONE MAIL ME APPLICATION X? (2.5)
-
- No. Nor will anyone mail you a part of a file from
- comp.binaries.mac that was corrupt or missed at your site.
- Please refer to the first questions in this section to find
- out about anonymous FTP, archie, and automatic E-mail servers.
-
-
- WHAT IS .BIN? .HQX? .CPT? .ETC? (2.6)
-
- Most files available by FTP are modified twice to allow them to
- more easily pass through foreign computer systems. First they're
- compressed to make them faster to download, and then they're
- translated to either a binhex (.hqx) or MacBinary (.bin) format
- that other computers can digest. (The Macintosh uses a special
- two-fork filing system that chokes most other computers.) BinHex
- files are 7-bit ASCII text files, while MacBinary files are pure
- 8-bit binary data that must always be transferred using a binary
- protocol.
-
- How a file has been translated and compressed for
- transmission is indicated by its suffix. Normally a file will have
- a name something like filename.xxx.yyy. .xxx indicates how it was
- compressed and .yyy indicates how it was translated. To use a file
- you've FTP'd and downloaded to your Mac you'll need to reverse the
- process. Most files you get from the net require a two-step
- decoding process. First change the binhex (.hqx) or MacBinary
- (.bin) file to a double-clickable Macintosh file; then decompress
- it. Which programs decode which file types is covered in the table
- below. Also note that most Macintosh telecommunications programs
- will automatically convert MacBinary files to regular Macintosh
- files as they are downloaded.
-
- ***************************************************************************
- Suffix: .sit .cpt .hqx .bin .pit .Z .image .dd .zip .uu .tar
- Extractors
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------
- StuffIt 3.0| X X X X X
- Compact Pro| X X
- Packit | X
- UUTool | X
- MacCompress| X
- SunTar | X X X X
- BinHex 5.0 | X X
- BinHex 4.0 | X
- DiskDoubler| X X
- ZipIt | X
- DiskCopy | X
- macutil | X X X X
- ***************************************************************************
-
- A few notes on the decompressors:
-
- StuffIt is a family of products that use several different
- compression schemes. The freeware StuffIt Expander will unstuff
- all of them. Versions of StuffIt earlier than 3.0 (StuffIt 1.5.1,
- StuffIt Classic, UnStuffIt, and StuffIt Deluxe 2.0 and 1.0) will
- not unstuff the increasing number of files stuffed by StuffIt 3.0.
- You need to get a more recent version of StuffIt or StuffIt
- Expander.
-
- StuffIt 3.0.6 (Lite and Deluxe) consistently makes smaller
- archives than any other Macintosh compression utility. To allow
- maximum space for files on the various ftp sites and to keep
- net-bandwidth down, please compress all files you send to
- anonymous ftp sites with StuffIt 3.0.6.
-
- UUTool, MacCompress, and SunTar handle the popular UNIX
- formats of uuencode (.uu), compress (.Z), and tar (.tar)
- respectively. The UNIX versions are often more robust than the Mac
- products, so use them instead when that's an option. Translators
- that allow StuffIt Lite to expand uuencoded and tar files are also
- available by anonymous ftp.
-
- Macutil is dik winter's package of UNIX utilities to
- decompress and debinhex files on a workstation before downloading
- them to a Mac. Since UNIX stores files differently than does the
- Mac, macutil creates MacBinary (.bin) files which should be
- automatically converted on download. It can't decompress
- everything. In particular it can't decompress the new StuffIt 3.0
- archives. :-( However, if you need only one or two files out of an
- archive--for instance if you want to read the README to find out if
- a program does what you need it to do before you download all of
- it--macutil is indispensable. It can be found at sumex-aim in the
- info-mac/unix directory.
-
- A few notes on the compression formats:
-
- .bin: These are MacBinary files. Always use a binary file
- transfer protocol when transferring them, never ASCII or text.
- Most files on the net are stored as .hqx instead. Only rascal
- stores most of its files in .bin format. Most communications
- programs such as ZTerm and MacKermit are capable of translating
- MacBinary files on the fly as they download if they know in
- advance they'll be downloading MacBinary files.
-
- .image: This format is normally used only for system software,
- so that on-line users can download files that can easily be
- converted into exact copies of the installer floppies. Instead of
- using DiskCopy to restore the images to floppies, you can use Steve
- Christensen's freeware utility MountImage to treat the images on
- your hard disk as actual floppies inserted in a floppy drive.
- MountImage has a reputation for being buggy, so you should have
- some blank floppies and a copy of DiskCopy handy just in case.
-
- .sea (.x, .X): .sea files don't merit a position in the above
- table because they're self-extracting. They may have been created
- with Compact Pro, StuffIt, or even DiskDoubler; but all should be
- capable of decompressing themselves when double-clicked. For some
- unknown reason Alysis has chosen not to use this industry standard
- designation for self-extracting archives created with their
- payware products SuperDisk! and More Disk Space. Instead they
- append either .x or .X to self-extracting archives.
-
-
- HOW CAN I GET BINHEX? STUFFIT? ETC.? (2.7)
-
- By far the easiest way to get these programs is to ask a human
- being to copy them onto a floppy for you. If you're at a
- university there's absolutely no excuse for not finding someone to
- give you a copy; and if you're anywhere less remote than McMurdo
- Sound, chances are very good that someone at a computer center,
- dealership, or user group can provide you with a copy of StuffIt.
- Once you have StuffIt (any version) you don't need BinHex.
-
- If you're such a computer geek that the thought of actually
- asking a living, breathing human being instead of a computer
- terminal for something turns you into a quivering mass of
- protoplasmic jelly, you can probably download a working copy
- of StuffIt from a local bulletin board system.
-
- If you have religious objections to software gotten by any
- means other than anonymous ftp, then I suppose I'll mention that
- you can in fact ftp a working copy of StuffIt though this is by
- far the hardest way to get it. Ftp to wuarchive.wustl.edu
- and login. Type the word "binary." Hit return. Type "cd
- mirrors/rascal.ics.utexas.edu/compression" and hit return. Then
- "get StuffIt_Expander_1.0.1_SEA_bin" and hit return. Of course
- it's always possible that by the time you read this StuffIt
- Expander will have been updated and the name changed so if this
- fails look for something similar. If you've ftp'd straight onto
- your Mac you should now have a self-extracting archive which will
- produce a working copy of StuffIt Expander when double-clicked. If
- you've ftp'd to your mainframe or UNIX account first, you still
- need to use a modem program to download it to your Mac. Just make
- sure that the Mac is receiving in MacBinary mode and the mainframe
- is sending in binary mode. If you need more details on the last
- step, consult the FAQ list for comp.sys.mac.comm and the manuals
- for both your mainframe and Macintosh telecommunications software.
-
-
- HOW CAN I GET BINHEX, STUFFIT, ETC. FROM A PC? (2.8)
-
- You can't. There is absolutely NO way to get an executable
- Macintosh file from an ftp site onto a PC and then onto your Mac
- without some software obtained by means other than anonymous ftp.
- You MUST beg, borrow, or steal the necessary software such as
- Binhex or StuffIt Lite from another person. I realize this may
- terrify those among you who haven't left your parents' basement
- since you got an Apple II+ in 1980, but eventually you're going
- to need to link up with some human being other than your mother.
- (though I suppose if you're this much of a nerd you could send
- your mother out to get it for you.) While you're gathering
- your nerves for a venture into the strange and terrifying world
- of daylight, please don't bother the net by asking this question
- again. There simply is no way to move executable Macintosh
- programs from a PC or other non-Macintosh computer onto a
- Mac without software that is not bundled with most Macs.
-
-
-
- =================================================================
- TROUBLESHOOTING: WHAT TO DO (BEFORE POSTING) WHEN THINGS GO WRONG (3.0)
- =================================================================
-
- While the various FAQ lists cover a lot of specific
- problems, there are far more problems that aren't covered here.
- These are a few basic techniques you should follow before asking
- for help. You should probably also perform the ten-step
- preventative maintenance routine described in section four,
- especially rebuilding the desktop (4.3) and resizing the system
- heap (4.5). Following these steps may or may not solve your
- problem, but it will at least make it easier for others to
- recommend solutions to you.
-
- IDENTIFY THE PROBLEM. (3.1)
-
- "Microsoft Word is crashing" doesn't say much. What were you
- doing when it crashed? Can you repeat the actions that lead to the
- crash? The more information you provide about the actions
- preceding the crash the more likely it is someone can help you.
- The more precisely you've identified the problem and the actions
- preceding it (Step 1) the easier it will be to tell if the
- following steps fix the problem. For example, "Sometimes
- QuarkXPress 3.0 crashes with a coprocessor not installed error." is
- not nearly as helpful as "QuarkXPress 3.0 crashes when I link two
- text boxes on a master page when copies of those text boxes already
- contain text." The former will leave you wondering whether the bug
- remains after a given step. The latter lets you go right to the
- problem and see if it's still there or not.
-
-
- READ THE READ ME FILE. (3.2)
-
- Many companies include a list of known incompatibilities and
- bugs in their READ ME files. Often these aren't documented in the
- manual. Read any READ ME files to see if any of the problems sound
- familiar.
-
-
- CHECK FOR VIRUSES. (3.3)
-
- Run Disinfectant or another anti-viral across your disk. Virus
- infections are rarer than most people think, but they do occur and
- they do cause all sorts of weird problems when they do.
-
-
- REINSTALL THE APPLICATION AND ALL ITS SUPPORT FILES. (3.4)
-
- For half a dozen reasons (external magnetic fields,
- improperly written software, the alignment of the planets) a file
- on a disk may not contain the data it's supposed to contain. This
- can cause all types of unexplained, unusual behavior. Restoring
- from original masters will normally fix this.
-
-
- REINSTALL THE SYSTEM SOFTWARE. (3.5)
-
- Bits are even more likely to get twiddled in the system file
- than in the application and the effects can be just as disastrous.
- See question 4.6 for a detailed procedure for performing a clean
- reinstall.
-
- If the problem continues to occur after you've taken these
- steps, chances are you've found either a conflict between your
- application and some other software or a genuine bug in the
- program. So it's time to
-
-
- ISOLATE THE PROBLEM. (3.6)
-
- You need to find the minimal system on which the problem
- will assert itself. Here are the basic steps of isolating the
- cause of a system or application crash:
-
- a. Run only one application at a time. Occasionally applications
- do conflict with each other. If the problem does not manifest
- itself without other applications running simultaneously, you can
- begin launching other applications until you find the one that
- causes the crash.
-
- b. If you're running System 6, turn off MultiFinder. If you're
- running System 7, allot as much memory to the application as you
- can afford. Sometimes programs just need more memory, especially
- when performing complicated operations.
-
- c. If you're running System 7, turn off virtual memory and 32-bit
- addressing. There's still an awful lot of System 7 hostile
- software out there including some from companies that really
- have no excuse. (Can you say Microsoft Word 5.1, boys and girls?
- I knew you could.) Some of this software only expresses its
- incompatibilities when certain uncommon actions are taken.
-
- d. If you have a 68040 Mac, turn the cache off. Many older
- programs don't work well with the built-in cache of the 68040.
-
- e. Boot from a virgin system floppy. If the problem disappears
- you likely have an init conflict. You need to progressively remove
- extensions until the problem vanishes. Use a little common sense
- when choosing the first extensions to remove. If the problem occurs
- when you try to open a file, remove any inits that mess with the
- Standard File Open procedure such as Super Boomerang first. If the
- problem remains after the obvious candidates have been eliminated,
- either remove the remaining extensions one at a time or, if you have
- a lot of them, perform a binary search by removing half of the
- extensions at a time. Once the problem disappears add half of the
- most recently removed set back. Continue until you've narrowed the
- conflict down to one extension. When you think you've found the
- offending init restart with only that init enabled just to make
- sure that it and it alone is indeed causing the problem.
-
-
- CONTACT TECHNICAL SUPPORT. (3.7)
-
- By now you should have a very good idea of when, where, and why
- the conflict occurs. If a tech support number is available for the
- software, call it. If you're lucky the company will have a work
- around or fix available. If not, perhaps they'll at least add the
- bug to their database of problems to be fixed in the next release.
-
-
-
- ======================
- PREVENTIVE MAINTENANCE (4.0)
- ======================
-
- You wouldn't drive your car 100,000 miles without giving it a
- tune-up. A computer is no different. Regular tune-ups avoid a lot
- of problems. Although there are Mac mechanics who'll be happy to
- charge you $75 or more for the equivalent of an oil change, there's
- no reason you can't change it yourself. The following nine-step
- program should be performed about every three months.
-
-
- TRASH UNNEEDED FILES (4.1)
-
- Many of the operations that follow will run faster and more
- smoothly the more free disk space there is to work with so spend a
- little time cleaning up your hard disk. If you're at all like me,
- you'll find several megabytes worth of preferences files for
- applications you no longer have, archives of software you've
- dearchived, shareware you tried out and didn't like, announcements
- for events that have come and gone and many other files you no
- longer need. If you're running System 7 you may also have several
- more megabytes in your trash can alone. Throw them away and empty
- the trash.
-
-
- RETHINK YOUR EXTENSIONS (4.2)
-
- Some Macintoshes attract inits like a new suit attracts rain.
- Seriously consider whether you actually need every extension
- in your collection. If you don't use the functionality of an
- extension at least every fifth time you boot up, you're probably
- better off not storing it in your System Folder where it only takes
- up memory, destabilizes your system, and slows down every startup.
- For instance if you only read PC disks once a month, there's no
- need to keep AccessPC loaded all the time. Cutting back on your
- extension habit can really help avoid crashes.
-
-
- REBUILD THE DESKTOP (4.3)
-
- The Desktop file/database holds all the information necessary
- to associate each file with the application that created it. It
- lets the system know what application should be launched when you
- open a given file and what icons it should display where.
- Depending on its size each application has one or more
- representatives in the desktop file. As applications and files
- move on and off your hard disk, the Desktop file can be become
- bloated and corrupt. Think of it as a Congress for your Mac.
- Every so often it's necessary to throw the bums out and start with
- a clean slate. Fortunately it's easier to rebuild the desktop than
- to defeat an incumbent.
-
- One warning: rebuilding the desktop will erase all comments
- you've stored in the Get Info boxes. Under System 7 Maurice
- Volaski's freeware init CommentKeeper will retain those comments
- across a rebuild. CommentKeeper also works with System 6 but only
- if Apple's Desktop Manager extension is also installed.
-
- To rebuild the desktop restart your Mac and, as your
- extensions finish loading, depress the Command and Option keys.
- You'll be presented with a dialog box asking if you want to rebuild
- the desktop and warning you that "This could take a few minutes."
- Click OK. It will take more than a few minutes. The more files you
- have the longer it will take. If you're running System 6 you may
- want to turn off MultiFinder before trying to rebuild the desktop.
-
- If you're experiencing definite problems and not just doing
- preventive maintenance, you may want to use Fifth Generation's
- freeware init Desktop Reset. Desktop Reset completely deletes the
- Desktop file before rebuilding it, thus eliminating possibly
- corrupt data structures.
-
-
- ZAP THE PRAM AND RESET THE CLOCK (4.4)
-
- All Macs from the original 128K Thin Mac to the Quadra 950
- contain a small amount of battery powered RAM to hold certain
- settings that properly move with the CPU rather than with the disk
- such as which disk to boot from. Unfortunately this "parameter
- RAM" can become corrupted and cause unexplained crashes. To reset
- it under System 7 hold down the Command, Option, P, and R keys
- while restarting your Mac. Under System 6 hold down the Command,
- Option, and Shift keys while selecting the Control Panel from the
- Apple menu. Click Yes when asked if you want to zap the parameter
- RAM. Since you've erased almost all the settings in the General
- Control Panel, you should now reset them to whatever you want.
-
- The one setting that zapping the PRAM does not erase is the
- date and time; but since the internal clock in the Macintosh is
- notoriously inaccurate you'll probably want to take this
- opportunity to reset it anyway.
-
-
- RESIZE THE SYSTEM HEAP (System 6 Only) (4.5)
-
- Even after rethinking their extensions as per step two most
- people still have at least half a row of icons march across the
- bottom of their screen every time they restart. All these
- extensions (and most applications too) need space in a section of
- memory called the System Heap. If the System Heap isn't big enough
- to comfortably accommodate all the programs that want a piece of
- it, they all start playing King of the Mountain on the system heap,
- knocking each other off to get bigger pieces for themselves and
- trying to climb back on after they get knocked off. All this
- fighting amongst the programs severely degrades system performance
- and almost inevitably crashes the Mac.
-
- If you're using System 7, your Macintosh will automatically
- resize the system heap as necessary; but if you're running System 6
- it's important to set your system heap size large enough to manage
- all your extensions and applications. By default this size is set
- to 128K, way too small for most Macs with any extensions at all.
- The system heap size is stored in the normally non-editable boot
- blocks of every system disk. Bill Steinberg's freeware utility
- BootMan not only lets you resize your system heap but even checks
- how much memory your heap is already using so it can tell how much
- needs to be allocated. If you're running System 6, get BootMan,
- use it, and be amazed at how infrequently your Macintosh crashes.
-
-
- REINSTALL THE SYSTEM SOFTWARE (4.6)
-
- System files can become corrupt and fragmented, especially if
- you've stored lots of fonts and desk accessories inside them.
- Merely updating the System software will often not fix system file
- corruption. I recommend doing a clean reinstall. Here's how:
-
- 1. Boot from the Disk Tools floppy of your System disks.
- 2. Copy any non-standard fonts and desk accessories out
- of your System file into a temporary suitcase.
- 3. Trash the System file on your hard disk. Also trash the
- Finder, MultiFinder, DA Handler, and all other standard Apple
- extensions like Control Panel and Chooser. These will all be
- replaced in the new installation. If you're running or
- installing System 7, move everything in the Extensions,
- Control Panels, and Preferences folders into the top level
- of the System Folder.
- 4. Rename the System Folder. Any name other than System Folder
- is fine.
- 5. ShutDown and then boot from the Installer floppy of your
- system disks.
- 6. Double-click the installer script on your System disk. Then
- choose Customize... Select the appropriate software for your
- model Mac and printer. You could do an Easy Install instead,
- but that will only add a lot of extensions and code you don't
- need that waste your memory and disk space.
- 7. Once installation is finished, move everything from the
- temporary folder you created in step 4 into the new System
- folder. If you're asked if you want to replace anything, you
- forgot to take something out in step 3. You'll need to replace
- things individually until you find the duplicate piece.
- 8. Reinstall any fonts or DA's you removed in step 2.
- 9. Reboot. You should now have a clean, defragmented System file
- that takes up less memory and disk space and a much more stable
- system overall.
-
-
- DISK UTILITIES (4.7)
-
- Much like system files hard disks have data structures that
- occasionally become corrupted affecting performance and even
- causing data loss. Apple includes Disk First Aid, a simple utility
- for detecting and repairing hard disk problems, with its System
- disks. It's also available for anonymous ftp from ftp.apple.com
- in the directory dts/mac/sys.soft/utils as part of the image file
- software-utility-1-0-image.hqx. If you have an earlier version
- than 7.2 (and almost everyone does) you should get version 7.2
- from ftp.apple.com, make a copy of your Disk Tools disk, and
- replace the old Disk First Aid on the copy with the new version.
- At the same time you should also replace the old version of
- HD SC setup on your Disk Tools disk with the new HD SC Setup 7.2
- from the same image file.
-
- Several companies have released payware disk utilities that
- detect and repair considerably more problems than Disk First Aid
- though, interestingly, none of them detect and repair everything
- that Disk First Aid does. The three most effective for general
- work are Central Point's MacTools Deluxe 2.0, Fifth Generation's
- Public Utilites, and Symantec's Norton Utilities for the Macintosh
- 2.0. A department or work group should have all of these as well
- as Disk First Aid since none of them fix everything the others do.
- For individuals MacTools ($48 street) is about half the price of
- Norton ($94 street) or Public Utilities ($98 street) so, features
- and ease of use being roughly equal, I recommend MacTools.
-
- All of these products occasionally encounter problems they
- can't fix. When that happens it's time to backup (4.8) and
- reformat (4.10).
-
-
- BACKING UP (4.8)
-
- This is one part of preventative maintenance that should be
- done a LOT more often than every three months. The simplest back
- up is to merely copy all the files on your hard disk onto floppies
- or other removable media. If you keep your data files separate
- from your application and support files then it's easy to only back
- up those folders which change frequently. Nonetheless every three
- months you should do a complete backup of your hard disk.
-
- A number of programs are available to make backing up
- easier. Apple included a very basic full backup application with
- System 6. With the Performas Apple ships a new Apple Backup
- utility that can backup the entire disk or just the System folder
- onto floppies. The previously mentioned Norton Utilities for the
- Mac and MacTools Deluxe 2.0 include more powerful floppy backup
- utilities that incorporate compression and incremental backups.
-
- Finally if you're lucky enough to have a Tape Drive, network
- server, or removable media device to use for backups, you should
- check out the more powerful payware utilities Redux ($49 street,
- doesn't support tape drives) and Diskfit Pro ($74 street). There
- are NO freely available backup utilities other than the old HD
- Backup from System 6.
-
-
- DISK DEFRAGMENTATION (4.9)
-
- As disks fill up it gets harder and harder to find enough
- free space in the same place to write large files. Therefore the
- operating system will often split larger files into pieces to be
- stored in different places on your hard disk. As files become more
- and more fragmented performance can degrade. There are several
- ways to defragment a hard disk.
-
- The most tedious but cheapest method is to backup all your
- files, erase the hard disk (and you might as well reformat while
- you're at it. See question 4.10.), and restore all the files.
-
- A number of payware utilities including Norton Utilities for
- the Mac and Mac Tools Deluxe can defragment a disk in place, i.e.
- without erasing it. Although the ads for all these products brag
- about their safety, once you've bought the software and opened the
- shrink-wrap they all warn you to back up your disk before
- defragmenting it in case something does go wrong.
-
- Fast Unfrag is a $10 shareware disk defragmenter by Kas Thomas.
- It appears to do the job it was designed for (defragmenting the files
- on a hard disk) and my brief tests didn't reveal any glaring bugs or
- trash any files. Nonetheless, I'm a bit nervous about this product
- because the programmer and his skill level are unknown to me, and
- writing a disk defragmenter is not something I'd trust to a novice.
- The interface is flaky; the program only works on the disk where the
- application resides (very unusual behavior for a disk defragmenter);
- it's unfriendly to background applications (not so unusual for any disk
- intensive app); and neither documentation, online help, nor an E-mail
- address are provided with the program. Since this is still a relative
- unknown I STRONGLY recommend that you backup your files before using
- it. I'd appreciate hearing any experiences you have with it.
-
- Regardless of which defragmenter you choose please note that
- defragmentation will NOT cure problems with a disk. In fact,
- defragmenting will most likely make existing problems worse.
- If you are having trouble with a hard disk do not use a
- defragmenter on it. Backup, reformat, and restore instead.
-
-
- REFORMAT YOUR HARD DISK (4.10)
-
- Just as a floppy disk needs to be initialized before use, so a
- hard disk must be formatted before it can hold data. You don't
- need to reformat every three months; but when your system is
- crashing no matter what you try, reformatting is the ultimate means
- of wiping the slate clean. Reformatting your hard disk may even
- gain you a few extra megabytes of space. Not all hard disks are
- created equal. Some can hold more data than others. To facilitate
- mass production and advertising without a lot of asterisks (* 81.3
- megabytes is the pre-formatted size. Actual formatted capacity
- may vary.) Apple often formats drives to the lowest common denominator
- of drive capacity. When you reformat there's no reason at all not
- to reclaim whatever unused space Apple's left on your disk.
-
- Unlike floppies hard disks need a special program to
- initialize them. Most hard disks come with formatting software.
- Apple's disks and System software ship with HD SC setup, a minimal
- disk formatter which will format Apple brand hard drives ONLY.
- Version 7.2 of HD SC Setup was recently released as part of the
- Software Update 1.0 disk and should be used in preference to
- earlier versions. The Software Update 1.0 is available on
- ftp.apple.com in the directory /dts/mac/sys.soft/utils. Most
- other manufacturers ship appropriate formatting software with
- their hard drives. Normally this is all you need to reformat
- your hard disk.
-
- A number of general-purpose formatters are also available
- which go beyond the bundled software to include features like
- encryption, password protection, multiple partitioning, faster disk
- access, System 7 compatibility, and even compression. Two of the
- best are the payware Drive7 and Hard Disk Toolkit Personal Edition
- ($49 street for either). While there are one or two freeware
- formatters available, none are likely to be superior to the ones
- bundled with your hard disk.
-
- PowerBook users should be sure to turn off Sleep and
- processor cycling before reformatting their hard drives no matter
- what software they use. Otherwise disk corruption, crashes, and
- data losses are a very good possibility.
-
-
-
- ====================================================
- META-FAQS (FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS ABOUT THE FAQ) (5.0)
- ====================================================
-
- Since posting the first version of my FAQ list a little over
- a year ago I have noticed a precipitous drop in the frequency of
- certain questions. Most noteably: Why is my system using 14 of my
- 20 megs of RAM? Though that still shows up occasionally, it's no
- longer at the twelve times a day level that induced me to start
- writing. I count that as some measure of success. However, I have
- experienced one unexpected phenomena. Certain questions have begun
- appearing frequently in my mailbox so I've composed this little list
- of meta-faqs, i.e. frequently asked questions about the FAQ. Please
- familiarize yourself with this list before mailing me comments
- or questions.
-
-
- THERE'S A MISTAKE IN YOUR FAQ. (5.1)
-
- Thanks for pointing this out. Since I maintain several
- documents of about 200K total size, it would be helpful if
- you would reference the specific document where you found
- my error and the question number.
-
-
- WHY DON'T YOU INCLUDE THIS COMPLICATED/PAYWARE SOLUTION AS WELL
- AS THE SIMPLE/FREE SOLUTION YOU ALREADY INCLUDE? (5.2)
-
- When there are multiple solutions to a common problem, I try
- to pick the one that is achievable with the fewest and cheapest
- tools. Chances are I do know about that undocumented feature
- of WhizzyWriter 1000 that lets you download PostScript files.
- Call me crazy, but I just suspect that most people would prefer
- to download a free utility from ftp.apple.com rather than shell
- out $995 for WhizzyWriter just to solve their PostScript problems.
- Similarly if a problem can be solved with the tools that are
- bundled with every Mac, I'll choose that solution over one that
- requires downloading some shareware. Space in the FAQ is limited
- (mainly by brain-dead news software at some sites that restricts
- files to 64K) and I can't give comprehensive lists when they're
- not needed.
-
-
- WOULD YOU PLEASE INCLUDE MY SOFTWARE IN YOUR FAQ? (5.3)
-
- As explained above space in these documents is limited, and I
- simply can't mention every imaginable software that conceivably
- falls somewhere within the purview of the Macintosh newsgroups.
- If, however, you feel your software answers a frequently asked
- question (e.g. a virtual desktop manager) or it provides a
- solution to a common problem superior to what's already available,
- then I'll be happy to consider it for inclusion in the FAQ. I'm
- also often willing to beta-test software. That is, however, no
- gurantee that the software will be mentioned in the FAQ.
-
-
- WHY DON'T YOU POST THE FAQ MORE OFTEN? (5.4)
-
- The FAQ is posted automatically about every two weeks, give or
- take a day. Normally it doesn't change more frequently than that;
- and I want to avoid wasting bandwidth since the Internet is not,
- contrary to popular belief, free. The FAQ includes an Expires:
- header to insure that one version doesn't disappear from your
- news spool until the next one arrives and a Supersedes: header
- so multiple copies won't waste everyone's disk space. This is
- all accomplished automatically via Jonathan Kamens' faq server.
- If the FAQ is ever not available at your site, then your
- news software is BROKEN and should be fixed. Complain to your
- news administrators about their broken software that ignores
- Expires: headers, not to me.
-
-
- WHERE CAN I REPOST THE FAQ? (5.5)
-
- The FAQ may be archived at any site that does not charge
- extra for downloads, 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.
-
-
- CAN I REPUBLISH YOUR FAQ? (5.6)
-
- For permission to repost the FAQ verbatim in electronic format,
- see above. If you wish to republish it 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.
-
-
- CAN YOU HELP ME WITH THIS PROBLEM I'M HAVING WITH MY MAC? (5.7)
-
- Certainly! I negotiate consulting fees on a case-by-case
- basis, but they tend to average about $60 an hour with a four
- hour minimum. If you're outside the metropolitan New York
- area (roughly Philadelphia to New Haven) the minimum is seven
- hours and you'll also be expected to provide airfare and $100
- a day expenses for meals, hotel, and car rental. Quantity
- discounts and support contracts can be negotiated on a
- case-by-case basis. Oh, you meant free help?. Sorry, that's what
- Usenet is for. Post your question to the appropriate newsgroup,
- and you'll probably get a lot more advice than I could give you.
-
-
- WILL YOU SEND ME THE FAQ? (5.8)
-
- No. I have neither the time nor the inclination to act
- as a mail-server for people who can't be bothered to use the
- mail-server at rtfm.mit.edu as outlined in the introduction.
- I reject all such requests.
-
-
- WHY DON'T YOU FORMAT THE FAQ IN SETEXT? WORD? DIGEST? ETC.? (5.9)
-
- While I get about one request per month to adhere to some
- imagined "standard" format, I have yet to receive two requests
- for the same format. I am considering redoing the FAQ
- in setext format since that is reasonably close to what I already
- use, half-familiar to the Internet-Macintosh community from
- TidBITS, and ASCII readable. I may also release a Microsoft Word
- version when Word 6.0 is released if the promised macro language
- is included and if it proves powerful enough to let me support
- multiple formats from a single source document. I'm also very
- interested in Common Ground, Adobe Acrobat, and MIME-based news.
- However none of these are particularly high on my priority list.
-
-
- --
- Elliotte Rusty Harold National Solar Observatory
- eharold@sunspot.noao.edu Sunspot NM 88349
-