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HyperBook | 1994-03-26 | 215.6 KB | 874 lines |
- kIXdK
- gfgfff
- gfgfff
- Picture1
- STUFF:temp/Hyper_Demo/pics
- Hyper.backdrop
- Note1
- Welcome to
- HyperBook !
- Group1
- Picture1
- STUFF:temp
- Bladzid
- Note1
- Click on hand to continue
- . . .
- Button1
- "Welcome to HyperBook"
- Picture1
- STUFF:temp/Hyper_Demo/pics
- Hyper.backdrop
- Note1
- What is
- HyperBook ?
- Picture2
- STUFF:temp
- Bladzid
- Note2
- Mmm . . . A good question . . .
- Button1
- "What is Hyperbook"
- Note1
- HyperBook is a multimedia tool that lets you organize and display
- information in any format you wish.
- You c
- an combine pictures and drawings
- with text and speech
-
-
- and many other types of information
- to create splashy, interactive
- displays and presentations that are easy to make and fun to use!
- Note2
- score
- seven
- years
- ago...
- Picture1
- STUFF:temp
- sample.pics
- Drawing1
- Picture2
- STUFF:temp
- Bladzid
- Note3
- Neat ! Tell me more . . .
- Note4
- HyperBook is a multimedia tool that lets you organize and display
- information in any format you wish.
- You c
- an combine pictures and drawings
- with text and speech
-
-
- and many other types of information
- to create splashy, interactive
- displays and presentations that are easy to make and fun to use!
- Note5
- 2Say -f Rowmeo. Rowmeo. wherefour art thou Rowmeo !
- click here
- Button1
- "HyperBook description"
- Picture1
- STUFF:temp
- Bladzid
- Note2
- Go Ahead...click on everything!
- Button1
- Note4
- HyperBook presentations, or "HyperBooks" are created by placing "objects"
- on the screen. There are five types of objects in HyperBook:
- Every type of object can have a specific action associated with it, like
- displaying a graphic or popping up some text. Actions are triggered by
- clicking on the object with the left mouse button.
- Note5
- HyperBook presentations, or "HyperBooks" are created by placing "objects"
- on the screen. There are five types of objects in HyperBook:
- Every type of object can have a specific action associated with it, like
- displaying a graphic or popping up some text. Actions are triggered by
- clicking on the object with the left mouse button.
- Note6
- BUTTONS
- Note7
- NOTES
- Note8
- DRAWINGS
- Note9
- PICTURES
- WINGS
- Note10
- LISTS
- Note11
- wp:Documents/story.txt
- Upon a
- Button2
- <HYPERBOOK_DEMO:C/Sound HYPERBOOK_DEMO:SOUNDS/orchestra.sound
- Drawing2
- List1
- Psay -r The Ay team is not on television anymore. I never really liked it anyway.
- A-Team
- )say Arsenio hall is on every nite at ten.
- Arsenio Hall
- Hsay Barney Miller has not been on television for years now. get with it.
- Barney Miller
- /say the world of disney is on sundays at eight.
- Disney
- 4say doctor who is on sunday morning at nine o clock.
- Doctor Who
- Qsay Donahue is on weekdays at ten thirty in the morning and two in the afternoon.
- Donahue
- <say the flintstones are on saterday morning at seven thirty.
- Flintstones
- )say Jeperdy is on weekdays at six thirty.
- Jeopardy
- Ksay Late nite with dayvid letterman is on every nite at one in the morning.
- Letterman
- say mash is on weekdays at seven
- *say mistery is on fry days at ten thirty.
- Mystery
- +say I don't remember when nightline is on.
- Nightline
- 4say -r -p65 -s100 Nova is on wensdays at ate thirty.
- Xsay The smurfs are on saterday morning at ten. They may be cute, but I can't stand them!
- Smurfs
- 2Say -r Star Trek is on saturdays at seven ohclock.
- Star Trek
- ,say the simpsins are on thurs days at eight.
- The Simpsons
- Osay -f -p65 twy lyt zone is on every nite at two in the morning. Oh, excuse me.
- Twilight Zone
- %say twin peaks is on saturday at ten.
- Twin Peaks
- Picture2
- HYPERBOOK_DEMO:pics/Phone.pic
- STUFF:temp
- sample.pics
- "lists text"
- Lists
- A list is a special object that may
- consist of any number of single line
- items. Lists make any type of database
- application such as an adress book or a
- recipe box easy to create. Unlike other
- objects, lists can have separate actions
- and colors for each item in the list.
- Click on this box to make it go away....
- "Pictures Text"
- PICTURES
- A picture is a piece of a bitmap graphic
- that you "grab" from any IFF picture.
- Like other objects, it can be scaled to
- whatever size you wish. A typical action
- for a picture might be to display the
- entire full-screen version of the
- picture it represents, but of course, it
- can have any action.
- Click on this box to make it go away....
- Note14
- HYPERBOOK_DEMO:text/story.txt
- "Notes Text"
- NOTES
- A Note is a rectangular box with text in
- it. The text can appear in any font,
- style, or color, and the box itself can
- be any color and have an outline and a
- drop shadow. When you change the size of
- a note, the note's text automatically
- reflows into the new region.
- Click on this box to make it go away....
- "Drawings Text"
- DRAWINGS
- A drawing is a graphic that you create
- yourself with HyperBook's "Drawing
- Editor". Numerous drawing tools are
- available, and HyperBook drawings are
- structured graphics
- , meaning that they
- can be scaled to any size and still
- appear crisp and clear.
- Click on this box to make it go away....
- Button3
- Button4
- Note18
- CLICK ON ME!
- Note19
- CLICK ON ME!
- Button5
- "Mouse Pointer text"
- CLICKING ON AN OBJECT
- When the pointer passes over any object
- that has an action associated with it,
- the pointer itself changes to an inward
- pointing arrow. This lets you know right
- away if you are supposed to click on a
- specific object, and also allows you to
- spot "invisible" objects.
- This page is full of HyperBook objects
- with various actions associated with
- them.
- Click on this box to make it go away....
- "Actions text"
- ACTIONS
- What sort of actions can an object
- initiate ?
- * Displaying a full screen picture
- * Displaying a text file
- * Hiding or revealing other objects
- * Turning to other pages
- * Running external programs
- * Running Arexx commands or macros
- Click on this box to make it go away....
- "Buttons text"
- BUTTONS
- A button is a rectangular box. It can
- appear in any color (even transparent)
- and can have an outline and a drop
- shadow. Invisible buttons can be used to
- make anything on a page perform an
- action (like playing a moaning sound
- when the word "taxes" is clicked on).
- Click on this box to make it go away....
- "My house drawing"
- "HyperBook Objects"
- "World Map"
- world.pic
- "Africa"
- Africa
- "North America"
- North America
- "Australia"
- Australia
- "South America"
- South America
- "Asia"
- "Europe"
- Europe
- Note1
- Click on a Continent:
- Note2
- Atlas of the World
- Drawing1
- Group1
- Button1
- Drawing1
- Note3
- Note: This is a demo only. Not
- all options are functional.
- "Atlas Demo Continents"
- Note1
- North America
- Button1
- Canada
- Button2
- U.S.A
- Button3
- Mexico
- Note2
- North America is a nice place.
- Contrary to popular belief, it
- actually consists of
- three
- countries:
- Canada
- , the
- United States of America
- Mexico
- . Canada is similar to the
- United States (U.S.A), which you have
- probably heard of, but Mexico is
- quite different.
- Click on the "Canada" button at the
- right to learn
- even more
- about one of
- these countries.
- Group1
- Button1
- Drawing1
- "Atlas demo north america"
- "Note about Canada"
- Canada is a democracy under the British Parliamentary system. It
- is an independent country, but has close ties with Britain.
- Canadians enjoy their "smokes" (cigarettes), wearing "toques" (a
- kind of warm hat), and saying "eh" a lot (as in "nice day, eh?").
- With very few exceptions, winters are very cold in Canada.
- Group1
- Note1
- Canada
- Drawing1
- Group2
- Button1
- Drawing1
- Picture1
- canada.br
- "Manitoba"
- Manitoba
- "Quebec"
- Quebec
- "Saskatchewan"
- Saskatchewan
- "Alberta"
- Alberta
- "Ontario"
- Ontario
- "Nova Scotia"
- Nova Scotia
- "Newfoundland"
- Newfoundland
- "New Brunswick"
- New Brunswick
- Drawing1
- "Quebec"
- Northwest
- Territories
- "British Columbia"
- British
- Columbia
- "Quebec"
- Yukon
- "P.E.I."
- P.E.I.
- Drawing2
- "Atlas demo canada"
- Note1
- Ontario, Canada
- Group1
- Picture1
- canada.br
- Drawing1
- Note2
- Ontario is the largest and wealthiest province,
- which is why Canadians in the other provinces
- dislike it so much. Canada's capital city,
- Toronto (population 2.5 million), is located in
- Ontario.
- Popular activities in Ontario are skiing,
- boating and making money.
- Group2
- Button1
- Drawing1
- "Atalas demo Ontario"
- Note1
- Quebec is unique among Canada's ten
- provinces in that its population
- predominantly French-speaking. While the
- rest
- of Canada was originally settled by the English,
- French settlers formed Quebec, and the language
- has prevailed. Quebec forms almost a third of
- Canada's population of 25 million, and has a
- large influence on the nation's culture.
- Note2
- Quebec, Canada
- Picture1
- canada.br
- Drawing1
- Group1
- Button1
- Drawing1
- "Atlas demo Quebec"
- "Europe Map"
- Europe.pic
- "Europe Heading"
- Europe
- "United Kingdom"
- United Kingdom
- Group1
- Button1
- Drawing1
- "Atlas demo Europe"
- "U.K. Map"
- UK.pic
- "U.K. Heading"
- The United Kingdom
- Group1
- Button1
- Drawing1
- "Atlas Demo UK"
- Note1
- HYPERBOOK APPLICATIONS
- Picture1
- STUFF:temp
- pic.temp
- Note2
- Famous
- Quotations
- Picture2
- temp:pics
- pic.temp
- Picture3
- temp:pics
- pic.temp
- Group1
- Picture1
- STUFF:temp
- Bladzid
- Group1
- Note1
- Click on hand to continue
- . . .
- Button1
- "HyperBook Applications"
- Picture1
- RAM DISK:
- Landscape1
- Note1
- Jabberwocky
- Note2
- Quit Storybook
- Note3
- Next Page
- "Jabberwocky 1"
- Drawing1
- Picture1
- RAM DISK:
- Landscape1
- Note1
- Twas brillig, and the slithy toves
- Did gyre and gimble in the wabe;
- All mimsy were the borogoves,
- And the mome raths outgrabe.
- Note2
- Previous Page
- Note3
- Next Page
- "Jabberwocky 2"
- Picture1
- RAM DISK:
- Landscape1
- Note1
- "Beware the Jabberwock, my son,
- The jaws that bite, the claws that catch!
- Beware the jub-jub bird, and shun
- The frumious Bandersnatch!"
- Drawing1
- Group1
- Drawing1
- Picture1
- p:aai/castlepics
- Codger
- Note2
- Previous Page
- Note3
- Next Page
- "Jabberwocky 3"
- Picture1
- RAM DISK:
- Landscape1
- Drawing1
- Picture2
- p:aai/castlepics
- sword
- Drawing2
- Note1
- He took his vorpal sword in hand,
- Longtime the manxome foe he sought;
- So rested he by the tum-tum tree
- And stood a while in thought.
- Drawing3
- Note2
- Previous Page
- Note3
- Next Page
- "Jabberwocky 4"
- Drawing1
- Picture1
- DF0:Aliens
- Vaxor-close
- Picture2
- RAM DISK:
- Landscape1
- Note1
- And as in uffish thought he stood,
- The Jabberwock, with eyes of flame,
- Came whiffling through the tulgey wood
- And burbled as it came!
- Note2
- Previous Page
- Note3
- Next Page
- "Jabberwocky 5"
- Picture1
- RAM DISK:
- Landscape1
- Note1
- One two, one two, and through and through,
- That vorpal blade went snicker-snack!
- He left it dead, and with its head
- He went galumphing back.
- Drawing1
- Picture2
- Vaxor
- Note2
- Previous Page
- Note3
- Next Page
- "Jabberwocky 6"
- Picture1
- RAM DISK:
- Landscape1
- Group1
- Drawing1
- Picture1
- p:aai/castlepics
- Codger
- Note1
- "And hast thou slain the Jabberwock?
- Come to my arms, my beamish boy!
- O frabjous day! Calloo! Callay!''
- He chortled in his joy.
- Drawing1
- Note2
- Previous Page
- Note3
- Next Page
- "Jabberwocky 7"
- Drawing1
- Note1
- Twas brillig, and the slithy toves
- Did gyre and gimble in the wabe;
- All mimsy were the borogoves,
- And the mome raths outgrabe.
- THE END
- Picture1
- RAM DISK:
- Landscape1
- Note2
- Previous Page
- Note3
- Quit Storybook
- "Jabberwocky end"
- Note1
- A Miscellany of Quotations
- Note2
- List1
- .Because a man dies for it Oscar Wilde
- 4Martyrdom has always been proof Arthur Schnitzler
- .Slaves of the things we like Ernest Benn
- ,Many of us will die of cholera John Rich
- 3Why they invented hell Bertrand Russell
- 4Dead troublemakers Mignon McLaughlin
- .Because everything is different Irene Peter
- 4No one really listens Mignon McLaughlin
- .An artist never really finishes Paul Val
- 6The unreasonable man George Bernard Shaw
- .In times like these Paul Harvey
- /To prove the incredible H.L. Mencken
- 4Marriage is a gamble Laurence J. Peter
- 2Idealism increases John Galsworthy
- /A competent historian Lee Simonson
- 1They first call promising Cyril Connolly
- 4Experience enables you Franklin P. Jones
- 5I drink George Jean Nathan
- .A large deposit in my name Woody Allen
- .Till you can find a rock Wynn Catlin
- 2A neurotic is... Jerome Lawrence
- .The virtue of the vicious Oscar Wilde
- /A gentleman is... H.L. Mencken
- 5We do not know Thomas Alva Edison
- 4Disappointment deferred J. Winston Baldry
- -We have to speak well of the dead John Sloan
- *No man would listen to you Ed Howe
- 1That darn tune pops into my head Anton Bruckner
- +The best government Voltaire
- /Those who write clearly Albert Camus
- 1The law, in its majestic equality Anatole France
- 5One can't judge Wagner's opera Gioacchino Rossini
- Group1
- Button1
- Drawing1
- "Quotations Main page"
- "Because a man dies for it"
- A thing is not necessarily true
- because a man dies for it.
- Oscar Wilde
- !"Martyrdom has always been proof"
- Martyrdom has always
- been a proof of the
- intensity, never of the
- correctness of a belief.
- Arthur Schnitzler
- "Slaves of the things we like"
- Liberty is being free from the
- things we don't like in order to be
- slaves of the things we do like.
- Ernest Benn
- "Many of us will die of cholera"
- If everybody contemplates
- the infinite instead of
- fixing the drains, many of
- us will die of cholera.
- John Rich
- "Why they invented hell"
- The infliction of cruelty with a good
- conscience is a delight to moralists. That
- is why they invented hell.
- Bertrand Russell
- "Dead troublemakers"
- Every society honors its
- live conformists and its
- dead troublemakers.
- Mignon McLaughlin
- Drawing1
- Group1
- Button1
- Drawing1
- "Because a man dies for it"
- !"Because everything is different"
- Just because everything is
- different doesn't mean
- anything has changed.
- Irene Peter
- "No one really listens"
- No one really listens to
- anyone else, and if you try it
- for a while you'll see why.
- Mignon McLaughlin
- !"An artist never really finishes"
- An artist never
- really finishes his
- work; he merely
- abandons it.
- Paul Val
- "The unreasonable man"
- The reasonable man
- adapts himself to the
- world; the unreasonable
- one persists in trying
- to adapt the world to
- himself. Therefore all
- progress depends on the
- unreasonable man.
- George Bernard Shaw
- "In times like these"
- In times like these, it
- helps to recall that
- there have
- always
- been times like these.
- Paul Harvey
- "To prove the incredible"
- Metaphysics is almost always
- an attempt to prove the
- incredible by an appeal to
- the unintelligible.
- H.L. Mencken
- "Marriage is a gamble"
- An optimist is one
- who believes marriage
- is a gamble.
- Laurence J. Peter
- Drawing1
- Drawing2
- Group1
- Button1
- Drawing1
- !"Because everything is different"
- "Idealism increases"
- Idealism increases in
- direct proportion to one's
- distance from the problem.
- John Galsworthy
- "A competent historian"
- Any event, once it has occurred,
- can be made to appear inevitable
- by a competent historian.
- Lee Simonson
- "They first call promising"
- Whom the gods wish
- to destroy they
- first call promising.
- Cyril Connolly
- "Experience enables you"
- Experience enables you
- to recognize a mistake
- when you make it again.
- Franklin P. Jones
- "I drink"
- I drink to make other
- people interesting.
- George Jean Nathan
- "A large deposit in my name"
- If only God would give me
- some clear sign! Like making
- a large deposit in my name
- at a Swiss bank.
- Woody Allen
- "Till you can find a rock"
- Diplomacy is the art of
- saying `Nice doggie!' till
- you can find a rock.
- Wynn Catlin
- Drawing1
- Drawing2
- Group1
- Button1
- Drawing1
- "Idealism increases"
- "A neurotic is..."
- A neurotic is a man who builds
- a castle in the air. A psychotic
- is the man who lives in it. A
- psychiatrist is the man who
- collects the rent.
- Jerome Lawrence
- "The virtue of the vicious"
- Patriotism is the virtue of the vicious.
- Oscar Wilde
- "A gentleman is..."
- A gentleman is one who
- never strikes a woman
- without provocation.
- H.L. Mencken
- "We do not know"
- We do not know one millionth of one percent about anything.
- Thomas Alva Edison
- "Disappointment deferred"
- Hope is merely disappointment deferred.
- J. Winston Baldry
- #"We have to speak well of the dead"
- Since we have to
- speak well of
- the dead, let's
- knock them while
- they're alive.
- John Sloan
- "No man would listen to you"
- No man would listen to you
- talk if he didn't know it was
- his turn next.
- Ed Howe
- Drawing1
- Drawing2
- Group1
- Button1
- Drawing1
- "A neurotic is..."
- ""That darn tune pops into my head"
- Someone once asked Anton Bruckner:
- `Master, how, when, did you think
- of the divine motif of your Ninth
- Symphony?' `Well, it was like this',
- Bruckner replied. `I walked up the
- Kahlenberg, and when it got hot
- and I got hungry, I sat down by a
- little brook and unpacked my Swiss
- cheese. And just as I open the
- greasy paper, that darn tune pops
- into my head!'
- Anton Bruckner
- "The best government"
- The best government is a
- benevolent tyranny tempered
- by an occasional assassination.
- Voltaire
- "Those who write clearly"
- Those who write clearly have
- readers; those who write obscurely
- have commentators.
- Albert Camus
- #"The law, in its majestic equality"
- The law, in its
- majestic equality,
- forbids the rich as
- well as the poor,
- to sleep under
- bridges, to beg in
- the streets and to
- steal bread.
- Anatole France
- "One can't judge Wagner's opera"
- One can't judge
- Wagner's opera
- Lohengrin
- after a
- first hearing, and
- I certainly don't
- intend hearing it
- a second time.
- Gioacchino Rossini
- Drawing1
- Group1
- Button1
- Drawing1
- !"The darn tune pops into my head"
- Note1
- This HyperBook demo, and the sample applications it
- contains were as easy to create as they are to use.
- You can be up and running with HyperBook in no time
- at all, and, to get you started, HyperBook comes with
- numerous ready-to-use applications that you can use
- and modify right away. So what are you waiting for ?
- Pick up HyperBook today !
- Note2
- This HyperBook demo, and the sample applications it
- contains were as easy to create as they are to use.
- You can be up and running with HyperBook in no time
- at all, and, to get you started, HyperBook comes with
- numerous ready-to-use applications that you can use
- and modify right away. So what are you waiting for ?
- Pick up HyperBook today !
- Picture1
- STUFF:temp
- Bladzid
- Group1
- Group1
- Note1
- Click on hand to continue
- . . .
- Button1
- Button1
- Button1
- "Final Page"
- Note1
- To Order HyperBook, see your local Amiga dealer,
- or order directly from Gold disk at
-
-
- 1 - 800 - GOLD - DSK
- or
- 1 - 416 - 602 - 4000
- Note2
- To Order HyperBook, see your local Amiga dealer,
- or order directly from Gold disk at
-
-
- 1 - 800 - GOLD - DSK
- or
- 1 - 416 - 602 - 4000
- Note3
- Return to Begining of Demo
- Page28
- :dpaint
- Transcript -k1
- Note1
- To Order HyperBook, see your local Amiga dealer,
- or order directly from Gold disk at
-
-
- 1 - 800 - GOLD - DSK
- or 1 - 416 - 602 - 4000
- Note1
- To Order HyperBook, see your local Amiga dealer,
- or order directly from Gold disk at
-
-
- 1 - 800 - GOLD - DSK
- or
- 1 - 416 - 602 - 4000
- Note18
- CLICK ON ME!
- Euro.font
- diamond.font
- diamond.font
- garnet.font
- ericb2.font
- sapphire.font
- Euro.font
- garnet.font
- ruby.font
- ruby.font
- opal.font
- Euro.font
-