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- 9-Mar-88 06:53:39-PST,33694;000000000000
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- Date: Wed, 9 Mar 88 08:57 EDT
- From: Jeffrey Shulman <SHULMAN@sdr.slb.com>
- Subject: Delphi Mac Digest V4 #5
- To: delphi-mac@RELAY.CS.NET, PIERCE%HDS@sdr.slb.com
- X-VMS-To: in%"delphi-mac@relay.cs.net",in%"PIERCE%HDS@SDR.SLB.COM"
-
- Date: Wed 9 Mar 88 08:57:44-GMT
- From: Jeff Shulman <SHULMAN@SDR>
- Subject: Delphi Mac Digest V4 #5
- To: Delphi-List: ;
- Message-ID: <573901065.0.SHULMAN@SDR>
- Mail-System-Version: <VAX-MM(218)+TOPSLIB(129)@SDR>
-
- Delphi Mac Digest Wednesday, March 9, 1988 Volume 4 : Issue 5
-
- Today's Topics:
- My poor Lisa's Internal Hard Disk
- RE: re: Alphabetizing Icons?
- comeserve 1.0 problems (2 messages)
- re: power supply repairs
- SLIMs and SmartCards
- re: Using C in Pascal
- SCSI HELP (2 messages)
- SCSI AGAIN
- HyperCard 1.1
- gama resource ?
- re: MultiFinder Info Again
- re: WriteNow format needed
- re: WriteNow vs. Easy Access on the Mac
- RE: Usenet Mac Digest V4 #29
- BMUG CD-ROM Library
- Re: Maybe I'm dumb but... [DrawPicture]
- Re: Device driver status call with csCod
- Re: AUX SCSI driver question
- RE: ListMgr Scrollbar Anomalies
- RE: Full screen access
- RE: Chaining Disk Drives
- hardrives/reliability (3 messages)
- mac speaker output (3 messages)
- 35mm slide of MacII screen (3 messages)
- re: Request for wargamers
- Hard disks disappearing (2 messages)
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- From: MACLAIRD
- Subject: My poor Lisa's Internal Hard Disk
- Date: 21-FEB 17:43 Hardware & Peripherals
-
- Just a word of caution to all you Lisaphiles --
-
- I recently installed the double-sided floppy drive in my Lisa 2/10,
- which I still use with pleasure: what it does it does well enough for
- me. The disk drive is longer than the Sony drive it replaces, with the
- result that a fan sitting under the Widget and Sony drives on the
- Macintosh XL cannot be used.
-
- The DS drive works all right, although it will not format disks in the
- Lisa Pascal Workshop, and presumably the Lisa Office System. Formatting
- a disk which is already formatted can take a while, but not long enough
- to make me hack into the driver. The HFS hack recalls "Hard Disk 20" on
- my Mac 512K.
-
- However, my internal hard disk, so reliable before, has failed twice
- since I removed the fan. The first time I re-initialized the drive
- several times until it seemed to be working okay. The second time the
- drive ready light was out, and I suspected a controller failure. I
- unplugged the hard drive.
-
- I then discovered that the INIT file would not work from floppy at boot.
- I can post the fix if anyone wants, but I wanted to warn Macintosh XL
- owners.
-
- It could be that Sun stands to profit from selling their 20-megabyte
- drive. Me, I will put the drive into my Lisa 2/5, which has no internal
- hard disk.
-
- Laird
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: DSACHS
- Subject: RE: re: Alphabetizing Icons? (Re: Msg 25359)
- Date: 21-FEB 20:04 Network Digests
-
- I prefer the following sequence, which is less accident prone.
- 1) Move folder to desktop
- 2) Open folder
- 3) Select view by name
- (I actually prefer view by kind or color)
- 4) Resize folder to about 1 icon less than "normal"
- 5) Select all (Command -A)
- 6) Drag Icons into (same) Folder
- 7) Select View by Icon
- 8) Resize as needed
- 9) Close Folder
- 10) Move Folder back to its position
-
- This way an accidental click is less trouble. The resizing of the Folder
- is needed because of eccenmtricities in the Finder.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: CHUQ
- Subject: comeserve 1.0 problems
- Date: 22-FEB 01:30 Business Mac
-
- Folks on the CO tonight knew I was coming and going rather suddenly.
- Well, After five hours, I tracked down the problem.
-
- I'm running Comserve 1.0 to get to the modem on my other Mac. Well, the
- comserve client got upgraded today, and it's now running under
- Muiltifinder. Surpised, Surprise, Comserve isn't multifinder compatible.
-
- Needless, I"m wonderfully non-thrilled. I've spent all evening ripping
- apart the software and hardware, only to find this.
-
- Anyway, for folks who've considered Comserve, here's teh problems I've
- run into.
-
- o You can run Comserve's server under Multifinder, as long as you don't
- print in the background (this is what tripped me up. The server
- basically works fine under multifinder, and you can use the local modem
- under multifinder.)
-
- o To use comserve to talk to a modem, you have to reboot into
- singlefinder. Otherwise, you'll get random hangs that require rebooting
- both the server and the client (ooph!)
-
- o Don't expect to use the modem port on the local machine while comserve
- is active. Despite what the comserve people told me at macExpo, comserve
- wires itself into this and virtually detaches the hardware, replacing it
- with the comserve port. This is fine unless you're doing something with
- the port at the time, like, say, Data Acquisistion, or, like me, running
- an od, but reliable seial hard disk (my Paradise 10 is still alive and
- well, and MUCH more compatible with Multifinder than the brand new
- Comserve program. Ain't progress wonderful?)
-
- I'm going to be, um, talking with comserve in the morning. I'll let you
- know anything I find out about compatibility.
-
- chuq
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: CHUQ
- Subject: RE: comeserve 1.0 problems (Re: Msg 25459)
- Date: 22-FEB 21:42 Business Mac
-
-
- I talked to InfoSpehre today. there's a maintenance release (comserve
- 1.1) due out in about 30 days. It clears up a lot of the bugs and
- compatibility issues they've found. As far as we can tell, the problems
- I saw are being addressed. What I was told was that it would go out to
- all registered users.
-
- So it looks like their working on it. I'll let folks know when I hear
- more.
-
- chuq
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: MACWEEKBOS
- Subject: re: power supply repairs (Re: Msg 25475)
- Date: 24-FEB 08:15 Network Digests
-
- Re: Power Supply repairs
-
- A cost-effective alternative to dealer repairs of Mac Plus power
- supplies is ComputerQuick, La Mirada CA 213-941-7951. They have been
- active in MacTutor magazine and it seems like a good company. They will
- send you the parts for module replacement, and you ship back the old
- ones. Loy Spurlock is the contact.
-
- Last time I checked, they didn't handle SE power supplies, which was a
- disappointment when a friend's SE died.
-
- Ric Ford
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: MACWEEKBOS
- Subject: SLIMs and SmartCards
- Date: 24-FEB 08:27 Hardware & Peripherals
-
- I'm looking for information about SLIMs (Slim Line IC Modules,
- supposedly), SmartCards and similar technology. Rumor has it that
- Apple's using some of this stuff in the laptop, but they're talking
- about 2MB, credit card sized RAM modules. Sounds weird to me. Anyone
- know much about these things for speculating on how Apple might use 'em?
- I'm especially interested in companies that manufacture them.
-
- Ric
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: DDUNHAM
- Subject: re: Using C in Pascal (Re: Msg 25477)
- Date: 24-FEB 23:31 Network Digests
-
- > From: Major John Buono
- > Subject: Using C in Pascal
-
- The article Jim Hopper and I wrote for the January MacTutor (it's on
- writing Acta format drivers; Acta's in C, Jim's format driver in Pascal)
- explains one solution to the multiple-language problem: code resources.
-
- David Dunham "The more laws there are, the more people are
- Maitreya Design inclined to break them"
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: PSTAR
- Subject: SCSI HELP
- Date: 24-FEB 23:46 Hardware & Peripherals
-
- I have a 512KE upgraded with a MacMemory RAM upgrade to 2 megs. When I
- got the memory upgrade, I figured that eventually I'd add a SCSI port
- and a hard disk. Today I called my dealer and asked about th e MacMemory
- SCSI port, which is the only one compatible with my MacMemory RAM
- upgrade. He told me that they weren'trecommending the SCSI port add-on
- because their customers who had gotten them pretty much indicated that
- they didn't wor k (!!!). So now -- any suggestions as to what I can do?
- I'd hate to have to ditch my RAM upgrade and start all over again with
- my trusty 512KE -- but I don't want to depend upon an undependable SCSI
- port. SUGGESTIONS MUCH APPRECIATED.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: MACWEEKBOS
- Subject: RE: SCSI HELP (Re: Msg 25512)
- Date: 25-FEB 14:56 Hardware & Peripherals
-
- The Dove SCSI port seems to be most popular, though it's not compatible
- with all hard disks. (It is reportedly incompatible with Micah drives.).
- I'd be surprised if you couldn't use it with the MacMemory upgrade - I
- think it's worth investigating.
-
- Ric Ford
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: PSTAR
- Subject: SCSI AGAIN
- Date: 27-FEB 18:25 Hardware & Peripherals
-
- I've asked a couple of questions here about the MacMemory SCSI ports.
- Is there anyone out there who uses one? Are they any good? Is the
- combo of the MacMem ory RAM upgrade and the SCSI port really no good?
- Thanks for your help.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: DDUNHAM
- Subject: HyperCard 1.1
- Date: 25-FEB 23:30 HyperCard
-
- For those of you who use a default font other than Geneva, but like
- icons to be labelled in Geneva-9, the following patch makes HyperCard
- use Geneva-9 (rather than the default font in 9-point size) as the
- default font for buttons with icons and Show Name.
-
- Change: 6724 3F2D F318
- to: 3F3C 0003 (the 0003 is for Geneva)
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: ROWLAND
- Subject: gama resource ?
- Date: 24-FEB 20:54 Inside Mac
-
- I'm looking for information on the gamma correction resource "gama" -
- specifically what is its form and how is it used ? Inside Mac V says
- that a -1 entry (in the scrn device resource structure) gives the
- default correction which is for an Apple 13 inch color monitor (and that
- it may be different for other monitors). The device/card manual info for
- the Apple video card doesn't even mention it; however it does say that
- the DACs are 11 bit but that only 16.8 million colors are allowed (8
- bits per gun) - so I presume the extra 3 bits allow for gamma correction
- in addition, but exactly how ? It is important for some visual
- psychophysical experiments that I understand what's going on. Does
- anyone know, or have any suggestions on where to go to find out ?
-
- -Thanks
-
- Mike Burns
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: DDUNHAM
- Subject: re: MultiFinder Info Again (Re: Msg 25549)
- Date: 29-FEB 04:57 Network Digests
-
- >From: raylau@dasys1.UUCP (Raymond Lau)
- >Subject: MultiFinder Info Again
- The story I heard was that Apple purposely did not release internal
- docs for MultiFinder 1.0 because they intended to change them for the
- next release (maybe they'll have a way to get rid of layers!).
-
- David Dunham "Efficiency is intelligent laziness."
- Maitreya Design
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: DDUNHAM
- Subject: re: WriteNow format needed (Re: Msg 25550)
- Date: 29-FEB 04:58 Network Digests
-
- > From: dorner@uxc.cso.uiuc.edu
- > Subject: WriteNow format needed
-
- Yes, I have the format. I think I uploaded it to DELPHI, and you can
- also get it from T|Maker.
-
- David Dunham "If voting could change the system, it would be
- illegal. If
- Maitreya Design not voting could change the system, it would be be
- illegal."
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: DDUNHAM
- Subject: re: WriteNow vs. Easy Access on the Mac (Re: Msg 25550)
- Date: 29-FEB 04:59 Network Digests
-
- > From: dplatt@coherent.com (Dave Platt)
- > Subject: WriteNow vs. Easy Access on the Mac II
- I don't use Easy Access, but I can attest that WriteNow has some bug on
- the Mac II. I don't know what bug that is, but it's obvious when things
- garbage up, and I'm willing to put up with it until there's a better
- word processor available (which may even be the next version of
- WriteNow).
-
- David Dunham "The more laws there are, the more people are
- Maitreya Design inclined to break them"
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: MACWEEKBOS
- Subject: RE: Usenet Mac Digest V4 #29 (Re: Msg 25549)
- Date: 29-FEB 15:08 Network Digests
-
- Re: ~Summer Workshops/Programs for High School
-
- The Boston Computer Society can direct you to the Summer Computer
- Institute, which features many courses on Macintosh and other computers.
- The B.C.S. is at 617-367-8080.
-
- Ric ford
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: PEABO
- Subject: BMUG CD-ROM Library
- Date: 1-MAR-02:14: Mousing Around
-
- March 1, 1988
-
- For Immediate Release
-
- Contact: Stephen Howard (415) 549-BMUG
-
- BMUG to Produce PD ROM(tm)
-
- Seattle, WA - BMUG, Inc. announced today that it will publish a special
- anthology of its shareware library on CD ROM. This product, called the
- BMUG PD ROM(tm), will include public domain (PD) software and shareware
- as well as digests of public messages from selected electronic services.
- The PD ROM will give an individual easy access to the several hundred
- megabytes of software and information which would previously have been
- difficult and expensive to store and maintain.
-
- Through an agreement with Discovery Systems, a publisher of compact disc
- products based in Dublin, Ohio, the anthology should be available for
- under $100 retail. "We were fortunate to team up with a publisher who
- shares our goal of delivering this material to the users as
- inexpensively as possible, like we do with our floppy-disk-based library
- of over 150 disks available at $3 each. BMUG is not looking at this
- project as a money-maker for the group; we're producing the PD ROM as a
- public service to the community. The disc ties in nicely with BMUG's
- Registration Assistance Program ('the BMUG RAP', where we pay the
- postage and help deliver Shareware registration checks), to help both
- shareware users and authors."
-
- "This is really great. You would have to have been crazy to collect all
- this stuff before. Now, with the PD ROM, you would be dumb not to,"
- said Stephen Howard of BMUG. "Everyone should pick one up when they buy
- a CD ROM drive," he added.
-
- The PD ROM will be designed for use with Apple's today-announced CD SC
- compact disk drive and HyperCard system software. The contents of the
- disc have been drawn from a wealth of available material and will be
- tested and screened prior to publication. "I think it's great, too,"
- said Marsh Williams of Discovery Systems, "the price and utility of this
- product make it a terrific value for every Mac CD ROM user."
-
- BMUG, the world's largest independent non-profit Macintosh users group,
- is well known for its excellent member services and publications. The
- semi-annual BMUG Newsletter contains over 300 pages of candid,
- informative articles and is widely read by novice users and industry
- leaders alike. Discovery Systems is a full- service publisher and
- manufacturer of compact disc products for professional audio and
- computer use.
-
- For more information:
-
- The BMUG PD-ROM(tm) Project:
- BMUG, Inc.
- 1442A Walnut #62
- Berkeley, CA 94709
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: BRECHER
- Subject: Re: Maybe I'm dumb but... [DrawPicture]
- Date: 5-MAR-18:51: Network Digests
-
- To: omh@nancy (Owen M. Hartnett) Subject: Re: Maybe I'm dumb but...
- [DrawPicture]
-
- > Draw a Picture in MacPaint, save to Scrapbook, copy it out of Scrapbook
- > with ResEdit and paste into my application [and then in ResEdit offset
- > the picFrame so its top,left is 0,0].
- >
- > Now, from my application, Get the picture, and call
- > DrawPicture(myPic,myPic^^.picFrame);
- >
- > Now, wouldn't you expect the picture to get drawn in the upper left
- > corner of your window? Nah... It's somewhere in your window.
-
- A picture contains drawing commands. These commands contain embedded
- coordinates; merely altering the frame does not alter the embedded
- drawing coordinates. The drawing coordinates are in the same coordinate
- system as the frame; they are not *relative* to the frame. For your
- purpose, the easiest solution is to move the picture to the extreme
- upper left corner of the MacPaint page before cutting it.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: BRECHER
- Subject: Re: Device driver status call with csCod
- Date: 5-MAR-18:52: Network Digests
-
- >To: woody@tybalt.caltech.edu (William Edward Woody)
- >Subject: Re: Device driver status call with csCode == 1
-
- Yes, _Status with csCode=1 returns the DCE handle in the csParam field
- on all ROMs to date. I do not recall seeing this documented.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: BRECHER
- Subject: Re: AUX SCSI driver question
- Date: 5-MAR-18:52: Network Digests
-
- >Re: howarth@mandrill (David J. Howarth)
- >Subject: Re: AUX SCSI driver question
-
- > How does the SCSI driver handle seeking under AUX. Does the driver issue
- > a seek, put itself to sleep, and let AUX do some more processing until
- > an interrupt arrives...
-
- I don't know anything about A/UX, but the SCSI hardware cannot interrupt
- the CPU -- the NCR 5380 chip's interrupt line is not connected.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: TONYN
- Subject: RE: ListMgr Scrollbar Anomalies (Re: Msg 2319)
- Date: 6-MAR-12:57: Programming Techniques
-
- I don't know for sure why the scroll bar doesn't draw, but when I cause
- such behavior in my own code, it is usually because I set my clip region
- wrong. If you feel up to it, you might trace through the List Mgr code
- with this in mind. Perhaps it would help to specifically invalidate the
- scroll bar rect?
-
- Tony N.:'
- '
-
- FORUM>
- ------------------------------
-
- From: TONYN
- Subject: RE: Full screen access (Re: Msg 2339)
- Date: 6-MAR-13:09: Programming Techniques
-
- The "right" way to do full screen access is with a window. The problem
- is to get control of the menu bar. What I believe has worked for others
- in the past is to alter the WMgrPort clipRgn, change the window size,
- and restore the clipRgn. Remember, this change is likely to be
- ephemeral, as anything that makes the window mgr recalculate visRgns
- will undo your work. You could leave the clipRgn as you want it -- as
- long as your application is in front, so be careful when you are
- switched out.
-
- Tony N.:'
- '
- ------------------------------
-
- From: MACENGLISH
- Subject: RE: Chaining Disk Drives (Re: Msg 25650)
- Date: 7-MAR-21:37: Hardware & Peripherals
-
- Well, there is a place at the back of the 800K that allows you to hook
- another one to it. I know because I did it. What happens though is the
- Mac simply doesn't recognize the second external disk drive. So I
- figured if I did something, I could get it to work. If you guys say no
- way, I believe you. :-)
-
- Debbie
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: RAMARREN
- Subject: hardrives/reliability
- Date: 8-MAR-02:27: Hardware & Peripherals
-
-
- I'd be interested in hearing more on reliability problems with drives.
- I frequently have to answer questions on "which one to buy" and lately
- I'm not believeing in my own answers.
-
- I have a DataFrame XP60 on my home machine, bought (!) last August,
- which has NEVER missed a beat, never been formatted since I got it, and
- runs, well, 20 hours in 24 most days. Yet at my office, there have been
- a spate of XP40's and XP60's belly-upped in the past couple of months.
- Another friend buying from a different source lost 2 XP40's. GCC drives
- are just plain junk: I've been through 6 of them (gratis replacements on
- a 1985 HyperDink Machine). Both I and
-
- the official consultant have CMS 80's on our Mac II's and we both
- "nearly" lost the data - I managed to wangle a new replacement just
- before mine froze (happened when the tech came to exchange it) and the
- other guy's managed to UnStick just long enough for him to back it up.
-
- I've seen:
- Jasmine 10 down out of 40
- Rodime 6 down out of 20
- EasyDrive 0 down out of 4
- CMS 60 2 down out of 20
-
- Apple HD20 3 down out of 70
- Apple HD20SC 0 down out of 20
- Apple HD40 internal 0 down out of 4
- Apple HD80 internal 0 down out of 3
-
- X 8 down out of 16, 3 twice
- XP60 2 down out of 4
-
- I'm wondering if the CDC "Wrenn" series drives might be a good bet..
- their 150 /300Meg series has much more impressive ratings for duty
- cycles. We're looking for something to support a big network (many
- LocalTalk/Farallon star clusters and bridges) and need turn it on and
- forget it kind of running.
-
- Anyone with more info on this sort of thing, please let me know
-
- gdg
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: MACWEEKBOS
- Subject: RE: hardrives/reliability (Re: Msg 25726)
- Date: 8-MAR-15:46: Hardware & Peripherals
-
- I'd love to see this thread grow to a useful sample. Here's some quick
- data from my testing:
-
- DataFrame 20's: more than 50% failure over time, 5 samples (some XP's
- some not)
- DataFrame 40's: 1 out of 3 failed. One runs great over a year's time
- DataFrame 60's: Out of 5 or 6 I know of, no failures
- GCC FI40 and FX40, one each: no failures
- HyperDrive 20's: unmitigated disaster, as were all HyperDrive's owned
- by anyone I've ever met or talked to (internals only)
-
- MacBottom 20: one, no problem; good reliability from others I've talked
- with
- Apple Hard Disk 20: bulletproof from people I've talked with
- Apple HD20SC: one sample, no problems (ask Peabo about his, too)
-
- Priam EM100: two, both failed
- CMS internal 150MB Rodime: one failure, one working fine for months
- CMS 40MB internal: no problems
-
- Racet Administrator: 1 power supply failure out of two
-
- I'd love to see a collective database where each entry held:
-
- REPORTER - DATE Placed in use - Date Failed/No failure - failure type
-
- Oops, forgot some others:
-
- Tecmars: 3 out of 3 failures (serial port drive)
- Rodimes: internal 20 and 40 and external 45: no problems
-
- reports from other people have indicated low failure rates on GCC FX
- external drives.
-
- Ric Ford
-
- This sample is too small to draw any good conclusions from, but it may
- be useful when combined with a lot of others...
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: HALL
- Subject: RE: hardrives/reliability (Re: Msg 25726)
- Date: 8-MAR-21:09: Hardware & Peripherals
-
- Well, I've had a CDC Wren III for six months now (it's a NuData), and I
- haven't had any trouble whatsoever with it. This drive gets moved
- around (and banged around) quite a bit. It probably travels at least
- 100 miles a week by car without a carrying case. How's that for
- durability?
-
- Brian
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: CWT
- Subject: mac speaker output
- Date: 8-MAR-10:18: Hardware & Peripherals
-
- will SOMEBODY let me know whether (1) any old speaker can be connected
- to my mac plus audio port or (2) do I have to run the audio through an
- amplifier? If so, how much amplification is too much? Keep up the good
- forum!
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: MACWEEKBOS
- Subject: RE: mac speaker output (Re: Msg 25733)
- Date: 8-MAR-15:48: Hardware & Peripherals
-
- I believe an ordinary 8-ohm speaker will work fine. I hooked up one I
- had from a CB and got more volume and better fidelity than the standard
- one provides. The only thing to watch out for is too inefficient a
- speaker (like a big, acoustic-suspension hi-fi speaker).
-
- Ric
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: RAMARREN
- Subject: re: mac speaker output (re: msg25733)
- Date: 9-MAR-03:32: Creative Pursuits
-
- I use a Radio Shack CB extension speaker, with one of the "Archer
- Private TV Listener" modules hooked in line: you just leave the mac
- volume setting on full this way and have a nice, easy to reach, analog
- volume control for fine tuning the volume... I find (to my surprise)
- that the machine seems to like this better too -- since I set the volume
- on '7' in the control panel, my screen jitters have gone away (yeah, I
- know, I'm lazy about bringing it into the lab and resoldering the analog
- board joints... probably will soon...)
-
- gdg
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: ACOTE
- Subject: 35mm slide of MacII screen
- Date: 8-MAR-21:13: Hardware & Peripherals
-
- Does any one Know of a 35mm Camera device to take pictures of a
- Macintosh II screen. This must be for the Sony 1024 X 768 Super High end
- graphics monitor. It may be possable that most are universal in screen
- resolution (i.e. Mac II, 640x480) If the one that can show me exactly
- what I need, I will send a disk stuffed with PD soft- ware of Mac II
- stuff, including the infamous MacWorld and other Trade journal displays
- of the Floating ball demo on a 800k Sony disk, of course for free (PDS
- is FREE). If you think you may have a lot of Mac II stuff, a spare 800k
- (NEW) sony disk is always needed. This is not just insentive, but time
- is of the essence. Vertical synchronization is obviously a must by this
- device to inhibit gray bar interference. I will reply to those who have
- not pointed me in the right direction for this device (example: a
- Polaroid one step in a dark room.), but I assure you that the one that
- has used, or seen this type of Hi end presentation Slide film tool will
- be given, postage and handling paid, 800k PDS Disk. A description, the
- vendor source, tel number,and if possable, price is required. Thanks for
- your help, --Anthony Cote.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: RAMARREN
- Subject: RE: 35mm slide of MacII screen
- Date: 9-MAR-03:52: Hardware & Peripherals
-
- Anthony, long time ago I did a lot of photography for a buddy with a
- fractal graphics thesis he was doing. I used a Nikon with an 85mm lens,
- stopped down for healthy depth of field, Ektachrome 64 transparency
- film.
-
- We blanked off the precise edges of the CRT with Photo Opaque tape,
- heavily curtained and removed all possible sources of reflection from
- the room, and scrutinized the focussing screen carefully for spurious
- reflections with a 15x magnifying eyepiece. I than ran three test rolls
- (no exposure shorter than 1/8 second) with varying time and development
- to get the gamma and exposure levels just right for each of his 10
- images.
-
- If I remember correctly, the sharpest with some minor loss of dynamic
- range happened with standard development around 2 sec exposures at f/16.
- I exper- imented with a thin clear nylon 'filter' stretched over the
- lens to reduce the contrast with good results. (that may have been
- black).
-
- the CRT was leveled with a standard carpenters' level, the distance from
- ground to center was measured with a yardstick, and a HEAVY duty tripod
- with bubble level was used on the camera end. I used the Nikon screen
- which is a plain fine matte fresnel screen with gridwork reference
- lines. Distance from film plain to screen was ~6 feet, but that will
- depend on the size of your screen ( I can't remember the display
- dimensions).
-
- What does this really say? That without HiRes photo-imageing boxes
- equipped with flat-field CRT and calibration components, you must
- simply do very careful macro-photography, remembering that a CRT screen
- is a 3D surface instead of copy-planar artwork. I guarantee that if you
- do the homework of photography religiously like this, you will get
- acceptable representations on film of the CRT images, but be aware that
- some experimentation with exposure saturation and color combinations is
- usually justified as the dyes in film react differently to the phosphors
- than the appropriation that your eyes make. This sort of amateur setup
- actually can make better transpar- encies than professional equipment
- given poor handling. The only issue is the amount of time it will take
- you to get a 'calibrated' setup, and just how critically sharp the
- output results need to be for your purposes. (a setup like this, by the
- way, is how we have produced many of our animated computer graphics
- sequences, adding in an RS232 trigger to a 16mm movie camera with the
- VAX drawing flip frames for a couple hundred CPU hours here at the Jet
- Propulsion Lab)
-
- Godfrey DiGiorgi digiorgi@jpl-vlsi.arpa DELPHI ::: Ramarren 9 Mar 1988
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: PEABO
- Subject: RE: 35mm slide of MacII screen (Re: Msg 2350)
- Date: 8-MAR-23:05: Macintosh Developers
-
- Try Matrox Systems or Dunn Instruments. I'm sorry I don't have the
- addresses (I
-
- think Matrox is in Ontario, Canada). These two companies have been
- making film recorders for all sorts of graphics processors for years and
- I would be surprised if they didn't have something that could handle a
- Mac II RGB output.
-
- peter
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: DDUNHAM
- Subject: re: Request for wargamers (Re: Msg 25711)
- Date: 8-MAR-21:45: Network Digests
-
- > From: <PORTERG%VCUVAX.BITNET@forsythe.stanford.edu>
- > Subject: Request for wargamers
-
- I play wargames -- the multiplayer kind (Civilization, Britannia), the
- kind with hexes, and rolegames (RuneQuest), tho I don't consider RPGs to
- be wargames.
-
- David Dunham "If voting could change the system, it would be
- illegal. If
- Maitreya Design not voting could change the system, it would be be
- illegal."
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: DDUNHAM
- Subject: Hard disks disappearing
- Date: 8-MAR-21:46: Hardware & Peripherals
-
- One of the scariest things that can happen is when your hard disk
- refuses to start your Mac, and won't even show up on the Finder desktop
- when you start from a floppy. Not only that, you can't get to it with
- Apple's Disk First Aid program. Even if you have a current backup, what
- good is it if the Mac can't find the hard disk so you can restore it?
- In technical terms, the Mac can't mount the hard disk. When the Mac
- sees a SCSI device attached, it asks it to provide some software with
- which the Mac can read from it. This is called a driver, and this
- scheme lets new and strange SCSI devices to be introduced, without
- requiring a new release of Macintosh system software. (For example,
- I'll bet the new CD-ROM player accesses information differently from an
- HD20SC.) Perhaps you can spot the potential weakness -- if the driver
- is damaged, the Mac is unable to access any information from the device.
- Luckily, Apple provides a program called Apple HD SC Setup. One of
- its functions is to update the driver on the SCSI device. This lets you
- replace the original driver with a new one (presumably faster or less
- buggy). More importantly, it lets you replace one that has become
- damaged.
- As you've probably guessed, I had to do this recently. My hard disk
- obstinately refused to be recognized by the Mac, so I scrounged up Apple
- HD SC Setup and updated the driver. When I quit, there was the hard
- disk icon!
- I recommend you prepare a special recovery floppy, with all the
- programs you'll need to restore or recover your hard disk if anything
- goes wrong. Apple's Apple HD SC Setup (or an equivalent program from
- your hard disk manufacturer) and Disk First Aid are obvious candidates.
- Paul Mercer's free SCSI Tools control panel extension is another, as
- well as FEdit Plus and a copy of your backup program (I'm currently
- using the brand new Redux from Microseeds).
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: NWOLF
- Subject: RE: Hard disks disappearing (Re: Msg 25753)
- Date: 8-MAR-22:29: Hardware & Peripherals
-
- I had this happen to me recently. Although the problem was apparently
- not with he driver. I didn't undertake all the preliminary steps you
- mention - although I probably should have. Nevertheless, the drive (a
- Jasmine 50 - Quantum) went back and was replaced - apparently the media
- had failed, although I have not gotten back to them for a determination
- of th cause. I had backed up with Fastback - which I detest - because I
- am doing some testing for them. It's diskfit for me all the way now. I
- haven't seen REdux but would like to check it out. Disk fit would have
- solved many of my problems while the drive was being repaired because a)
- it prepares a directory of where all the files are at in the backup
- floppies and b) the files are finder readable. The nightmare I had to
- endure with Fastback will become a subject for a future NL article. For
- the record, the Fastback people have been fairly unresponsive to my
- suggestions, questions, criticisms and input. Too bad. I'd like to like
- the program, but I can'[t. It's flaws are too much - outweighing it's
- benefits by a hefty margin. I.e., what good is a backup set you can't
- read if you don't have enough floppies to translate it into useable
- files - what to speak of time lost doing so, and then having to back up
- the disk later - which, unlike the backup process (I meant restore,
- earlier), takes quite a long time, unless you're doing a miror image
- restore, which probably takes about the same anount of time. If,
- however, you had a rather large backup set - i.e., the number of backup
- disks exceeeded the capacity o the hard drive, I wonder just how good a
- job it would do. Since I had backed up the day the drive died I had no
- such excess. But Fast back, for one, creates duplicate files in an ever-
- increasing backup set that can only be reduced by backing up the drive
- anew. A royla pain to do every few weeks.
-
-
- ------------------------------
-
- End of Delphi Mac Digest
- ************************
- -------
-