home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- In article <4dpgp8$eju@sol.wf.net>, cbell@sol.wf.net (Chuck Bell)
- declares...
- >
- >I begin work on Monday with an organization that has only Macintosh
- >computers. If I type a plain ASCII file in DOS, can I easily open it
- >on a Macintosh, or do I need some sort of emulator program to save it
- >in a format particular to Mac? I'll be doing all of my writing on my
- >IBM Thinkpad, and want to be prepared.
-
- Okay, there are two issues: file format, and media format. Most PC word
- processors can save in a file that a decent Mac word processor could
- open--MacWord 5.1 or RTF or MacWrite. You should be able to open one of
- these formats from the Mac's file/open box. The problem is getting your PC
- files onto a medium the Mac can read. There are three or so options:
-
- 1) Macintosh's rudimentary file-transfer program. Can't even remember the
- name. Comes with all pre-System 7.5 Macs. You run the program, then put a
- PC-formatted HD floppy in the Mac's drive and copy the files. If you do
- anything other than ASCII text, you'll need to make sure it's using binary.
- This is, in my opinion, the worst option.
-
- 2) The PC Exchange control panel on the mac, or some other control panel
- providing similar functionality. If this is installed, you just put the PC
- disk in the drive and the Mac acts like it's a Mac-format disk. You can map
- DOS extensions (.doc, .exe, etc) to Macintosh file type/creator information
- to make your DOS documents double-clickable. I suppose this is the easiest
- option, especially since this control panel is a part of System 7.5.
-
- 3) Using executor or some other program to put the files on a Mac disk in
- the PC. This is perhaps the most fun (I really like Executor), and easier
- than (1), but less convenient that (3) because you have to launch an extra
- application. Oh, wait, I guess there's a (4):
-
- 4) Get Executor and register it. If your company site-licenses its
- software, you should be able to put it on your "Mac" legally. Word 5.1
- generally runs, though it crashes once in a while, and Executor doesn't
- support TrueType fonts, so far as I can tell, but this may be a solution for
- you. If so, it would minimize file-conversion problems.
-
- And I might as well mention (5):
-
- 5) You could see about getting a hookup for your Thinkpad to the office LAN,
- if they have one. If they're only using AppleTalk, this could be annoying,
- since you'll need to buy a third-party product which allows PCs to speak
- AppleTalk (Farallon makes one, as does one other company which I can't
- recall). If they run AppleTalk over LocalTalk, you'll need some sort of
- LocalTalk box for the PC, which may or may not be pricey; if it's EtherTalk,
- you can I think use any PCMCIA ethernet card.
-
- Good luck.
-
- Scott Shuchart
- shuchart@fas.harvard.edu
-
-
-