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1995-05-11
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*** Tessler's Nifty Tools (tm) ***
"Tessler's Nifty Tools" is a collection of over 35 ultra low cost
DOS and Windows (Win95, Win 3.1, and NT) programs for both the
casual and power user who desires to increase his/her PC
productivity and enjoyment. Many of the unique programs are so
incredibly useful that you'll never understand how you lived
without them.
Many programs have been reviewed in InfoWorld, PC Computing,
COMPUTE, Windows Sources, and PC Techniques magazines.
Each program is available separately ($19, $29, or $39), as a
complete collection, or TNT may be purchased in "mini" packages
-each of which addresses the needs of a specific type of user. Each
"mini" package offers significant savings over purchasing each
program separately. The complete collection offers even more
savings.
Any one "mini" package: $69
Any two "mini" packages: $119
All three "mini" packages
(the complete collection): $159
Add an additional $5 for shipping. Outside of the U.S., add $10 for
shipping. (California residents must include state taxes.)
Each program has on-line documentation. "Mini" package and complete
collection purchases include a printed manual. TNT is distributed
only on 3.5" HD disks.
U.S. checks, money orders, Visa, MasterCard, and purchase orders
(NET 30) are accepted. Returned checks will be charged a $15
processing fee. Corporate and institutional site licenses are
available at substantial discounts.
Technical support is provided through CompuServe, U.S. Mail, and
return telephone calls.
Designed and developed by:
Gary S. Tessler, P.E.
Copyright (c) 1986-1995 by GST at TNT
All Rights Reserved.
Tessler's Nifty Tools (TNT)
430 Canyon Woods Place Suite A
San Ramon, Ca. 94583
CompuServe: 71044,542
Internet: 71044.542@compuserve.com
*** THE EXPERTS ARE RAVING ABOUT TNT... ***
Tessler's Nifty Tools is the utility package that's different from
all the rest. Instead of supplying yet another version of the same
familiar programs, TNT gives you unique utilities that let you
maintain, fine-tune, and control your system in ways you can't do
with anything else. If you want to control your serial port's UART,
or modify Windows INI files through a batch file, edit a Windows
group file, or check on various Netware operations, TNT is the one
package you need. This is one of the most useful and original sets
of utilities on the market."
-Edward Mendelson Contributing Editor
PC Magazine
"Change your .INI settings before Windows starts: ...Combining this
shutdown program (WrapUp) with two other TNT utilities (CfgCntrl
and Grp2Ini) can give you even greater control over your Windows
configuration. Gary Tessler ...has cracked the .GRP code and made
it accessible to ordinary mortals. He has invented a Group-to-Ini
(Grp2Ini) utility, which converts .GRP files into text files,
like .INI files. A separate utility converts them back. This is not
an easy feat, because the .GRP format contains binary data, which
is poorly documented at best."
-Infoworld 1/16/95
"TNT's new edition of some much needed tools provides a powerful
way to maintain alternate Windows configurations... I especially
like DIR2BAT, which writes batch files to carry out commands on any
file specification..."
-Brian Livingston Infoworld 8/30/93 and 4/11/94
"Now, run any command right before Windows exits -An enterprising
developer creates WrapUp for us readers..."
-Infoworld 1/9/95
"If you need to configure Windows on the fly, I think you'll find
that these programs give you a degree of control that has
previously been very difficult to achieve."
-PC Computing 11/94
"Vdel - the command that Microsoft forgot."
-PC Computing "DOS Application of the Month" 3/94
*** "MINI" PACKAGE DESCRIPTIONS ***
Power User, Multiple Configuration & Control Pkg.
Cfgcntrl* -Intelligent text file controller for Windows INI,
LanManager, Autoexec and Config.sys files.
Grp2ini* -Convert a Windows GRP (group) formatted file into a text
file for editing.
Ifonscrn* -Check if specific characters appear on your screen and
act on them by stuffing keystrokes into your application.
Ifwait -Beep or buzz your PC's speaker or any LPT port device.
Ini2grp* -Convert a Grp2ini text file back into a Windows GRP
(group) formatted file.
Power User & Programmer's Pkg.
Capstat -Determine if your printer is being Netware captured.
Chek4dup -Check for duplicate EXE & COM programs.
Chkparm -Determine if pathname is drive, directory, filename; new
or existing; local or Lan reference.
Comspeed -Determine actual modem DTE line speed during a call.
Controlp -Control printer echoing ^P within batch files.
Dir2bat -Perform a series of commands on a series of files.
Dvcpu -Set Desqview's Share-CPU option from the command line.
Dvprompt -Embed a Desqview window's switch number in the DOS
prompt.
Dvrun -Determine if Desqview is running.
Feefifo -Enable and control 16550a UART serial chip's FIFOs.
Growp -Grow and change your DOS prompt each time you shell to
DOS.
Rlist -Display or print a portion of a text file.
Setbeep -Control the duration of your PC's beep sound or silence
your PC.
SuperMon* -Track your Windows, Win95, WFW, & NT User, GDI, RAM, &
Virtual (Swap) resource usage. Only program of kind in
industry. Determine how much memory you should purchase
and much much more...
Vers* -Set DOS' version better than Setver does.
WinRun -Determine if Windows 3.n Enhanced mode is running.
Safer & Easier Computing & Multimedia Pkg.
Chk4root -Check for a root directory reference & protect DELTREE
from deleting every file from your disk!
Copywa -Copy files along with their attribute bit.
Crtdump -Copy your monitor's text screen to a disk file for
editing.
Expndtab -Convert tab characters to spaces with document alignment
preserved.
Parkhead -Park your hard disk(s) before turning off your PC.
Pdel -Permanently delete a file so that it can't be recovered.
Player -Play a wav or voc format sound file.
Prtscrff -Send a formfeed (paper eject) command to your printer
whenever you press the Printscreen key.
Rwdir -Display files that are read/writable (not read-only).
Thot4day -Display a random humorous thought of the day on your
monitor.
Tune4day -Play a different sound file every time you turn on your
PC.
Vdel* -Delete files (including read-only files) with
verification.
WrapUp* -Just as Windows executes your StartUp group's programs,
WrapUp allows Windows to execute any programs in your
"ShutDown" group right before it exits.
Zdir -Determines the size of sub-directories nicer than DIR
does.
Note: * indicates that this program was reviewed by a major
magazine. Ask us for a reprint!
*** COLLECTION SUMMARY ***
CapStat ($19) (CaptureStatus) determines if your local printer is
being Netware captured.
Chek4Dup ($19) (CheckForDuplicates) generates a list of files that
exist in both .EXE and .COM form. This usually occurs
when software is upgraded from a COM format to an EXE
format and the old COM version is accidentally left on
the system when the new EXE program is put onto the
system. DOS will always invoke the COM program before the
EXE program so you should delete the older COM program.
CfgCntrl ($29) (ConfigController) is an intelligent text (ASCII)
file controller. Just what does this mean? Well a bit of
history is required to explain this new type of software
utility... We created ConfigController to solve common
office and home Windows computing problems.
Before ConfigController, the typical office had MS-DOS
laptop PCs running Windows software and LanManager LAN
software that had to have specific LAN device drivers and
video drivers installed and activated when the laptop was
plugged into its desktop docking station with a LAN card
and external video monitor, and a different set of device
drivers installed and activated when the laptop was out
in the field running remote LAN access software with its
internal LCD display which required custom video drivers.
The PC "techies" were managing this mess by keeping two
copies of Window's configuration files -WIN.INI and
SYSTEM.INI files and LanManager PROTOCOL.INI files
present on each PC -one set for the docking station mode
and one set for remote access mode. This didn't work
well, for every time the user added/deleted or moved a
group on his/her desktop, these changes were never saved
to the other set of configuration files. Installing
software that modified these configuration files had to
manually be added to the other set of configuration
files. Maintenance became a total nightmare. Similarly
having two separate LanManager PROTOCOL.INI files was
just as difficult to maintain.
In the home, our users wanted a way to configure Windows
in a 'minimal' mode so that their kids would not have
access to certain programs on their PC, and then have
their 'normal' mode with full program/group access for
themselves.
Out of these needs was born ConfigController...
ConfigController does away with multiple configuration
file sets. You only have your single set of standard
Window's configuration files and LanManager files to deal
with. ConfigController and DOS' batch file capabilities
allow you to control all aspects of your configuration
files including adding or deleting complete groups of
programs to or from your desktop.
ChkParm ($19) (CheckParameters) analyzes the file specification
and returns via DOS' ERRORLEVEL whether the specification
is a drive letter, file or sub-directory, whether it
exists or not, and if it is a local reference or a
network (remote) reference. Great for use in batch files.
ComSpeed ($19) (Com Port Speed) determines the actual baud rate
that a COM (serial) port is set to. With today's high
speed modems that can adjust their phone line and data
rate (speed) automatically, it is often very difficult to
determine if your line is operating at the proper rate.
Use COMSPEED to check your COM port's data rate after
establishing a data connection.
ControlP ($19) allows you to turn on screen to printer echoing as
if you had pressed Ctrl-P or Ctrl-PrtScr. Read your DOS
manual for more information on printer echoing.
CopyWA ($19) (Copy with Attributes) will copy files with the
source file's attribute copied into the destination file
too. Great for preserving your read-only file's
attribute when copying them.
CrtDump ($19) copies the contents of a text mode video screen to
a disk file. Great for preserving screen messages for
later review or printing.
DelTree-Chk4Root ($19) uses CHK4ROOT to determine if a file
specification refers to the root directory. DOS'
DELTREE.EXE can easily delete every file on your hard
disk. Now use CHK4ROOT to protect yourself...
Dir2Bat ($19) (Directory to Batch File) performs a series of
commands on a series of files: Will write a listing of
files that match your file specification to the file
DIR2.BAT. Each file found may be prefixed and suffixed
by user provided strings. This batch file will then be
able to perform actions to the files. For example, if
your C:\ disk contains the following files:
list.doc printer.doc readme.doc
then the command:
DIR2BAT c:\*.doc "attrib -r ! /s" "del !" /f
will create a DIR2.BAT file with the following contents:
attrib -r c:\list.doc /s
del c:\list.doc
attrib -r c:\readme.doc /s
del c:\readme.doc
attrib -r c:\printer.doc /s
del c:\printer.doc
DvCPU ($19) is a DesqView utility program that is meant to be
run right before running a program that requires full
usage of the CPU's computing power. It pops up the
DesqView window and sets 'Share CPU when in Foreground'
to Yes or No depending on the parameter entered. Useful
for programs that insist on running in a non-multitasking
environment such as voice sampling and digitization
programs.
DvPrompt ($19) is a DesqView utility program that facilitates easy
recalling of your current DOS window's switch number by
retrieving and embedding its switch number in its DOS
prompt. For example, upon opening and using several DOS
windows with command line programs, the user often finds
it difficult to remember which window he/she was doing
what task in. Since each window has the same DOS prompt,
DOS gives him/her no visual clue to the identification of
the current window. Will change each DOS window's DOS
prompt into the typical form of:
1 C:\> for DesqView switch window #1
2 C:\> for DesqView switch window #2
3 C:\> for DesqView switch window #3
DvRun ($19) is a DesqView utility program that determines if
DesqView is running. Useful within batch files.
ExpndTab ($19) (Expand Tabs) copies a source file to a destination
file with any embedded tabs converted into spaces in the
destination file. Document tab alignment is preserved.
Great for printers that don't expand tabs correctly or
word processors that don't expand tabs into the proper
number of on-screen spaces.
FeeFifo ($19) enables the FIFO of a 16550A high speed UART chip
at the serial COM port specified by you. This allows
many non-FIFO aware programs to use and benefit from FIFO
serial ports.
Growp ($19) (Grow Prompt) grows your DOS prompt each time you
shell to DOS. It adds a user specified growth character
to the environment's 'PROMPT' string each time another
copy of COMMAND.COM is invoked, and removes the growth
character when the copy of COMMAND.COM is terminated.
Each growth character represents a suspended program in
RAM and gives you a visual warning that you should not
turn-off your PC before returning to the suspended
program and gracefully exiting it. This program is meant
to be useful in situations where you invoke COMMAND.COM
from within Windows, DesqView, a word-processor or from
within a spreadsheet. In this typical scenario, GROWP
gives you a visual reminder that you have suspended -not
terminated a critical program. This program will also
help avoid SMARTDRV write-ahead cache data losses.
Grp2Ini-Ini2Grp ($29) (Group file to INI file converter and back)
converts encoded (non-text/non-ASCII) Windows 3.0 and 3.1
GRP (group) files into a plain text (ASCII) INI format
file for your review and editing. It is considered a pre-
processor to the ConfigController program. After Grp2Ini
creates the textual INI formatted output file, you can
edit it with your word processor or use ConfigController
to act on it. Then the companion post-processor Ini2Grp
(INI file to group file converter) must be used to
reconvert the INI file back into the encoded GRP file
format that Windows requires. Grp2Ini-Ini2Grp puts a
powerful dimension of Windows configuration control into
your hands with or without the use of ConfigController.
A 'group' in Windows is a collection of icons (programs).
Example Windows groups are: Main, Accessories, Games, and
Startup. Example items in a typical 'Main' group are:
File-Manager, Control-Panel, Clipboard, and PaintBrush.
Grp2Ini reads the encoded GRP file and constructs an INI
formatted text file that has a section of information
associated with each item in the group. Each section's
entries are explained in plain English. You can control
every aspect of the complete group's window including its
size, location, and name. You can control every aspect of
your group's items including each item's name, program
name, program location, working directory, short-cut-key,
run-minimized state, icon picture (bitmap), icon size,
icon colors, and location of the item's icon within the
group's window, etc..
Tired of waiting for Windows to start up? Grp2Ini can
help. As you add and delete more and more items from a
Windows group, your GRP files grows in size. Windows does
a poor job of recovering wasted space in your group's GRP
file. In fact, Windows does no wasted space recovery.
Grp2Ini will automatically remove all wasted space in
your GRP files. Just run your GRP file through Grp2Ini-
Ini2Grp and notice the file size and speed improvements.
This wasted space recovery is similar to disk
defragmentation processes.
Have you ever wanted to force Windows to load certain
programs in your Startup group in a certain order? Before
Grp2Ini-Ini2Grp you couldn't. Now you can! Windows loads
items in the order that they appear in the GRP file.
However, when adding a new item into your group, Windows
simply finds puts the item into the first hole it finds.
Simply generate the INI output file and move the sections
around to suit your needs...
If you've ever wanted to 'move' an application from a
disk drive to another disk drive (perhaps because your
hard disk was filling up and you wanted to rearrange your
data), or even to another sub-directory, you were forced
to uninstall the application (losing all of your
application's settings) and reinstall it in the proper
new location all because of Windows' encoded GRP
formatted files. With Grp2Ini and Ini2Grp, you simply
generate and edit the text INI file replacing the
application's paths, locations, and working directories
with whatever you want.
IfOnScrn ($29) (If On Screen) will examine the video screen for
the appearance of up to three case sensitive trigger
(search) character strings. Once found, a message box
may pop up, and/or user keystrokes may be stuffed into
the keyboard buffer including rebooting the PC. IFONSCRN
may be run as a TSR (RAM-resident) or as a non-TSR
program. Great for detecting how a program terminated if
it does not set DOS' ERRORLEVEL. Great for detecting
modem, gateway, mail router, and print server failures
and then automatically reboot them.
IfWait ($19) will beep the screen or the IFBUZZ device either
once or will wait until you press any key. It can run in
a WAIT mode where the device beeps cyclically until a key
is pressed, or in a BEEP mode where it beeps the device
once and terminates without a key needing to be pressed.
ParkHead ($19) parks an IBM PC 286, 386, 486, Pentium and most
compatible PC's hard disks.
PDel ($19) permanently deletes a file so that it can't ever be
recovered.
Player ($19) plays a wave or voc formatted sound file on a Sound
Blaster or compatible audio. card.
PrtScrFF ($19) (Print Screen with Form Feed) automatically appends
a form-feed (paper eject) command to your printer
whenever you press the PrintScreen key. Very useful to
keep your printer always at its top-of-form position.
For laser printers, this saves you from taking the
printer off-line, and pressing the PageEject button.
RList ($19) (Range List) prints a range of lines from a text
(ASCII) file to the screen or printer.
RwDir ($19) (Read/Writable Directory Listing) generates a list
of non read-only files. Useful to see which files would
be deleted when issuing a DEL *.* command. It is
recommended to make most of your application programs
(programs ending with com, exe, and bat) read-only to
minimize the risk of accidental erasure. RWDIR will help
you identify the files that might need to be made read-
only.
SetBeep ($19) is a memory resident program that will set the beep
character's (ASCII decimal 7 or control-G) duration to a
user specified value or disable it leaving you with a
silent PC. The PC's default beep tone duration is 1
second which is too long and annoying for many people.
SuperMonitor
($39) Some day, real soon, something terrible is going to
happen... Many of your Windows 3.1, WFW, and yes -even
your new Windows-95 programs are all going to stop
running! Your multiple Windows programs are rapidly
eating away at your precious Windows resources -your
User, GDI, RAM and Virtual (Swap) resources to be
precise...
You know this, yet there's nothing you can do! You drop
your head and feel a tear trickle down your cheek.
Suddenly you hear a roar from above! Look! Up in the sky!
Its a bird! No, its a plane! No, its SuperMon-itor to
your aid. You're saved!
SuperMonitor accurately tracks the following Windows
resources:
User resource
GDI resource
Memory (RAM + virtual memory that SysMeter reports)
resource
RAM (physical memory) resource
Virtual Memory resource
SuperMonitor is the only program in the industry to tell
you what amounts of RAM (physical memory) are being
utilized by Windows in general or by a specific program,
and what amounts of Virtual memory (swap file) are being
utilized!
But you say that you already use the Microsoft SDK
provided SysMeter program with great success? Well you'll
be amazed to hear what's "wrong" with SysMeter...
SysMeter has a few fatal flaws that make it a useless
program:
1. SysMeter only reports instantaneous snapshots of
your systems resource utilizations. Since programs
often "grab" many resources for very short moments
in time, Windows must be able to provide resources
for these peak periods. If it can't do so, your
program (or even all of Windows), crashes! If this
resource "spike" is very quick (as most are), you
may not even be able to notice it flash on
SysMeter's screen before it is replaced with the
next instantaneous "normal" resource snapshot. Or if
you're like us, you've turned your head away to
record the past snapshot on a piece of paper while
this "spike" snapshot appeared and then disappeared
-without you noticing it...
2. SysMeter only reports instantaneous snapshots of
your systems resource utilizations during "idle"
periods of your system. Think about the implication
of this statement! When Windows isn't idle - its
busy running your programs which means your precious
resources are being allocated and deallocated. This
is exactly when you'd want a resource monitor to be
tracking your system so that you could catch those
potentially fatal or "near death" allocation spikes.
During this busy time, SysMeter isn't monitoring
your resources. Only during infrequent idle periods
(when virtually no resource spikes occur), can
SysMeter do its thing... Very scary! Now that you
know about the limitations of SysMeter, will you
ever use it again?
We specifically designed SuperMonitor to catch these
resource "spikes". You control SuperMonitor's
"sampling" rate. You can dictate that SuperMonitor
watch your system as fast as every one millisecond (
1/1000 of a second) to catch even the shortest lived
resource spike!
3. SysMeter can't tell you the resource utilization of
a specific Windows program. It only tells you the
state of your overall Windows environment. This is
good information, but not good enough for
SuperMonitor!
SuperMonitor is a MDI (multiple document interface)
program. Each document is a resource sampling
session. By running multiple document sampling
sessions and comparing the session results before
and after running a specific Windows or DOS "box"
program, you can precisely determine the resource
utilizations of that specific program... Cool!
Not only does SuperMonitor track instantaneous resources
usages, but it also automatically records "average" and
"maximum/minimum" (worst-case) usages! You can "log" or
save these snapshots to a disk file and then import them
into your spreadsheet for further analysis or even graph
them. Of course, you control precisely what data to log
to disk and how frequently to save it to disk. You can
even print your screen's data!
SuperMonitor was written for:
The individual Windows user that wants to keep
Windows running smoothly.
The computer programmer that wants to easily
determine the resource requirements of his/her
program under development.
The software development company that produces many
Windows programs and are concerned that they might
produce one more program that when added to the
user's Windows desktop of concurrently executing
programs, will cause a resource to be depleted,
possibly crashing the program or even all of
Windows.
The corporate desktop hardware standardization
engineers that can use SuperMonitor to determine
exactly how much physical memory is required to
execute their programs before the virtual memory
swap file is accessed. This is important for optimal
Windows performance. Then they can purchase exactly
the optimal amount of RAM memory for their PCs.
SuperMonitor is compatible with Windows-95, Windows
3.1 (enhanced mode), Windows-For-WorkGroups, and
Windows NT (WOW compatible).
Thot4Day ($19) (Thought for a Day) is a unique program that will
display varying personalized messages on your PC's
computer screen. You, the user can create a list of
messages (THOTs) to be displayed by the program. Many
Murphy's Law-like thoughts are included.
Tune4Day ($19) (Tune for a Day) plays a different sound file from
a directory of files every time you run the program.
Useful in your AUTOEXEC.BAT file to play a new sound
every time you turn on your PC. Uses PLAYER. May also be
used to run any program with a different filename as its
argument from a directory of files.
Vdel ($19) (Verify DELetion) asks you if you want to delete
file(s) matching your filename. It can delete read-only
files too. For each file that VDEL finds, you can
configure it to or not to ask you if you want to delete
it.
Vers ($19) installs itself as a memory-resident program that
will set the DOS version(s) to user specified value(s).
This is useful when running programs that require a
specific DOS version for no useful reason. (Many DOS
supplemental programs require specific versions for no
legitimate reason). VERS works better than SETVER does.
VERS can set both the TRUE and FAKE (SETVER) versions
that DOS provides to programs.
WinRun ($19) is a DOS utility program that determines if Windows
3.n Enhanced mode is running. Useful within batch files
in a DOS box.
WrapUp ($29) Windows users have long enjoyed the fact that when
you start Windows, you could have Windows automatically
start any programs simply by putting the program's icon
into the 'StartUp' group.
Wouldn't it be great to have a similar 'ShutDown' group
that right before Windows exited, it would run these
'WrapUp' type programs automatically for you? Imagine the
uses for such a program...
You could automatically:
- Backup your PC's hard disk(s).
- Log out of your PC network (LAN).
- Synchronize your laptop PC's hard disk with your
desktop PC's hard disk or visa versa.
- Access your favorite online stock-quote system and
retrieve your latest stock prices.
- Send an email message.
- Run your communications program and have it
autodial your significant other, so you could pick up
the telephone and tell him/her that you're on
your way home.
- Or any DOS program or batch file that can be run
from within Windows.
- Or anything else for that matter...
WrapUp requires Windows 3.0-3.11, Windows-for-Workgroups
3.11, or Win-NT.
ZDir ($19) (Size Directory Listing) determines the size of
sub-directories nicer than DIR does.
<eof>