Subject: Info-Mac Digest V17 #113
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--Info-Mac-Digest

Info-Mac Digest             Sun, 23 Jul 00       Volume 17 : Issue 113

Today's Topics:

      (A) .exe files
      (A) Pagination problems in Word 98
      (A) Summary - Keyboard control panel based shortcuts
      .exe files
      .exe files
      2 volume disk and HFS
      [*] MIDI Warehouse v1.0.4
      [*] Scheduler 2.0
      [Q] on the new multiprocessor G4s
      Accessing logic board on the 8100 AV
      Greeting card programs?
      IBM techexplorer Version 3.0 Preview Release 1: Windows 95/98/NT, 
      iMac gutz removal
      iMac gutz removal
      iMac Help
      Info-Mac Digest V17 #112
      Lowering Startup Chime Sound
      Pagination problems in Word 98
      Pagination problems in Word 98

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------------------------------

Date: Fri, 21 Jul 2000 21:39:41 -0500
From: Charles Pearce <pearce@ksu.edu>
To: <digest@info-mac.org>
Subject: (A) .exe files

>Info-Mac Digest             Fri, 21 Jul 00       Volume 17 : Issue 112
>
>Today's Topics:
>
>From: "Chip Sample" <sample@idcomm.com>
>Subject: .exe files
>
>
>Is there a utility that will allow my Mac to execute/view the 
>scads of .exe files I receive from PC users?
>
>Thanks for any info,
>Chip

Yup, It's called Virtual PC and it runs a Windoze emulation--SoftWindows 
is another application. I get those (.exe) files from others, usually 
attached to e-mail. Mostly they're not worth the bother. These file types 
are called "executibles" and are usually applications or installers. Even 
if you could view them, you wouldn't be able to actually "execute" the 
program without Windows. They're completely PC native and there's no real 
Mac correspondence.

------------------------------

Date: Sat, 22 Jul 2000 15:18:25 -0700
From: Barb Lange <blange@sfu.ca>
To: 00bkpickeril@bsuvc.bsu.edu, bpickerill@mac.com
Subject: (A) Pagination problems in Word 98

Brian

Have you checked under "compatability" (under Tools/Preferences)? It is
possible that "Suppress extra line spacing at bottom of page" is turned on
for one computer and not the other.  There are two other suppression that
we keep turned on in the office on all desktop publishing computers, they
are: "Suppress extra line spacing at top of page" and "Suppress Space
Before after a hard page or column break".

>Date: Tue, 18 Jul 2000 11:37:30 -0500
>From: Brian Pickerill <00bkpickeril@bsuvc.bsu.edu>
>To: digest@info-mac.org
>Subject: Pagination problems in Word 98
>
>Hello.  This has been nagging me for a long time.  Oftentimes, I have a
>document that will print very differently depending on which Mac I am using
>to print.  The fonts, document format, print setup, ect... are all the
>same, yet on one machine, it will paginate correctly, and on the other, a
>line or three will spill off onto the next page.
>
>Any insights you have would be appreciated.
>
>Thanks,
>
>--Brian Pickerill, Ball State University, Muncie, IN  <bpickerill@mac.com>

セ萓萓萓萓萓�
  Barb Lange
  CDE / SFU
  (604) 291-4776
セ萓萓萓萓萓�

------------------------------

Date: Fri, 21 Jul 2000 16:02:36 -0500
From: Chaz Larson <chaz@visi.com>
To: "abrody@smart.net" <abrody@smart.net>, digest@info-mac.org
Subject: (A) Summary - Keyboard control panel based shortcuts

At 2:25 PM -0400 7/20/00, abrody@smart.net wrote:
>Dear Digest readers,
>Thank you one and all for your replies.   It appears that only USB
>based Macs (not those with a PCMCIA or PCI added USB card) support
>shortcuts in the Keyboard control panel.

It's actually ROM-in-RAM Macs that get this.

However, St英hane Madrau has created a little utility that enables 
this feature on all Macs.

<http://www.madrau.com/html/others.html>

chazl

-- 
Come on over to our valley, where boys run free!  Run through the lush green
meadows in your shorts!  Brother John will be your guide in a summer of
indescribable earthly delight!                   - The Suburbs, Music For Boys
Chaz Larson     -    chaz at spamcop dot net    -    http://www.visi.com/~chaz

------------------------------

Date: Fri, 21 Jul 2000 15:55:48 -0500
From: Chaz Larson <chaz@visi.com>
To: "Chip Sample" <sample@idcomm.com>, digest@info-mac.org
Subject: .exe files

At 7:21 AM -0600 7/19/00, Chip Sample wrote:
>Is there a utility that will allow my Mac to execute/view the
>scads of .exe files I receive from PC users?

Sure.

Virtual PC:  <http://www.connectix.com/products/vpc3.html>
SoftWindows: <http://www.fwb.com/emu/SW_RealPC.html>
RealPC:      <http://www.fwb.com/emu/SW_RealPC.html>
Blue Label:  <http://www.lismoresoft.com/>

chazl

-- 
Come on over to our valley, where boys run free!  Run through the lush green
meadows in your shorts!  Brother John will be your guide in a summer of
indescribable earthly delight!                   - The Suburbs, Music For Boys
Chaz Larson     -    chaz at spamcop dot net    -    http://www.visi.com/~chaz

------------------------------

Date: Fri, 21 Jul 2000 14:12:03 -0400
From: Tom Coradeschi <tcora@skylands.ibmwr.org>
To: "Chip Sample" <sample@idcomm.com>
Subject: .exe files

Chip Sample wrote:
>Is there a utility that will allow my Mac to execute/view the
>scads of .exe files I receive from PC users?

Virtual PC would be my recommendation. 
<http://www.connectix.com/products/vpc3.html>.

                  tom coradeschi <+> tcora@skylands.ibmwr.org
          Skylands (NJ) BMW Riders <+> <http://skylands.ibmwr.org/>

------------------------------

Date: Fri, 21 Jul 2000 15:50:03 -0500
From: Chaz Larson <chaz@visi.com>
To: Ezra Nathan <ezra@watchit.demon.co.uk>,
Subject: 2 volume disk and HFS

At 9:49 PM +0100 7/13/00, Ezra Nathan wrote:
>What I want is both to be HFS+. Is there a way of doing that without
>initializing both volumes of the HD? I can back-up the contents of
>the HFS standard volume easily enough, but not that of the HFS+
>volume.

Back up the contents of the HFS Standard volume.  Use the Finder's 
"Erase Disk" command to format it as "Mac OS Extended".  Restore its 
contents.  You're done.

chazl

-- 
Come on over to our valley, where boys run free!  Run through the lush green
meadows in your shorts!  Brother John will be your guide in a summer of
indescribable earthly delight!                   - The Suburbs, Music For Boys
Chaz Larson     -    chaz at spamcop dot net    -    http://www.visi.com/~chaz

------------------------------

Date: 22 Jul 2000
From: Takashi Suzuki <setsu@tcp-ip.or.jp>
To: 
Subject: [*] MIDI Warehouse v1.0.4


MIDI Warehouse is an application for the Macintosh which allows you to
play & manage standard MIDI files.
Player window holds one standard MIDI file, and displays it's current tempo,
System Exclusive status, Control Change status and Voice Name, Panpot, Pitch
Bend, Level for each MIDI channel.
Playlist window can have up to 2,147,483,647 MIDI files to be played back
sequentially, or random order.
Database window can have up to 2,147,483,647 MIDI files with sort & find
capability.

What's changed :
 - Some label pop-up menu items could not be chosen -> fixed.
 - Japanese labels did not drawn correct -> fixed.
 - Sometimes characeres inside Database Window shown badly -> fixed.

Features :
 - Fat Binary.
 - QuickTime support.
 - Macintosh Drag and Drop support.
 - GM, GS, XG format compatible.
 - 32part Standard MIDI File playback support.
 - Navigation Services support. (PowerPC only)

This application requires :
 - Macintosh with 68020 or higher / PowerPC
 - System7.6.1 + QuickTime 3.0 + Appearance Manager or later
 - OMS (Open Music System) -- If you use external MIDI tone generator
 - MIDI tone generator or QuickTime Musical Instruments

-- T.Suzuki

[Archived as /info-mac/gst/midi/midi-warehouse-104.hqx; 438 K]

------------------------------

Date: 22 Jul 2000
From: Joao Varela <jvarela@clix.pt>
To: 
Subject: [*] Scheduler 2.0


Scheduler 2.0 is an utility that can schedule alerts to remind you of
important tasks.  Just by clicking on a couple of buttons you can schedule
to call Mom every Friday or every first Monday of the month.  Scheduler can
also launch applications at a given time and date, managing in a simple,
intuitive way a set of applications you want to start your day with.  For
instance, during the week you want to start by reading your mail, but in the
weekend you want to start with your game.  Scheduler 2.0 is Freeware.

[Archived as /info-mac/app/time/scheduler-20.hqx; 407 K]

------------------------------

Date: Fri, 21 Jul 2000 12:44:25 -0700
From: Wagner Truppel <wtruppel@uci.edu>
To: digest@info-mac.org
Subject: [Q] on the new multiprocessor G4s

Hi folks,

since all of the software I currently use on a daily basis was not 
written to take advantage of multiprocessor configurations, a 
situation I don't expect to change in the near future, I'm wondering 
how much faster the new dual-processor G4s really are compared to 
single-processor configurations of comparable speed. Can anyone 
comment on this?

Also, are MacOS 9 and the upcoming MacOS X fully native and 
multiprocessor-ready? If so, then a dual-processor system might still 
be much faster, even with software that's not multiprocessor ready.

One last question: what are the major differences between the G3 and 
G4 chips? I'm considering getting either a PowerBook G3 500 or a 
dual-processor desktop G4 500 (or, if the multiprocessor 
configuration ends up not being much of an advantage for me, a 
single-processor desktop G4 500).

Thank you for your assistance.
Wagner Truppel
wtruppel@uci.edu

------------------------------

Date: Fri, 21 Jul 2000 16:14:32 -0500
From: Chaz Larson <chaz@visi.com>
To: "Oleh S. Ilnytzkyj" <oleh.ilnytzkyj@ualberta.ca>, digest@info-mac.org
Subject: Accessing logic board on the 8100 AV

At 8:41 PM -0600 7/16/00, Oleh S. Ilnytzkyj wrote:
>Hi everyone,
>
>Can one find instructions on the Web about gaining
>access to the Power Macintosh 8100/80 logic board?
>I'd like to add RAM but the board doesn't exactly flip
>open by itself.

One source might be to look for G3 upgrade installation instructions, 
since I believe installing one of those invloves removing the 
motherboard.

Here's a quick outline from memory, which may be enough to get you going.

Unscrew four thumbscrews from the back.
Slide the case cover back and lift it off.
Remove all Nubus cards.
Disconnect all the cables at the top edge of the motherboard.
Remove the single screw in the middle of the motherboard.
Remove the programmer's switch assembly.
Now slide the motherboard forward a little bit to disengage it and tilt it out.
Reassembly is the reverse of disassembly. ;)

chazl

-- 
Come on over to our valley, where boys run free!  Run through the lush green
meadows in your shorts!  Brother John will be your guide in a summer of
indescribable earthly delight!                   - The Suburbs, Music For Boys
Chaz Larson     -    chaz at spamcop dot net    -    http://www.visi.com/~chaz

------------------------------

Date: Fri, 21 Jul 2000 16:50:40 -0400
From: Patty and Art Werschulz <agw@home.com>
To: digest@info-mac.org
Subject: Greeting card programs?

Hi.

Does anybody know of any programs for making greeting cards, such as
birthday cards and the like?

Thanks.
-- 
  Patty and Art Werschulz http://members.home.net/agw/
  207 Stoughton Avenue Cranford NJ 07016 (908) 272-1146

------------------------------

Date: Sat, 22 Jul 2000 14:21:09 -0400
From: Angel Luis Diaz <aldiaz@us.ibm.com>
To: comp-sys-mac-digest@moderators.isc.org
Subject: IBM techexplorer Version 3.0 Preview Release 1: Windows 95/98/NT, 

IBM techexplorer is a plug-in for Navigator and Internet
Explorer as well as an ActiveX control for applications
like Microsoft PowerPoint and Word. techexplorer enables
the display of TeX, LaTeX and MathML documents and the
publishing of interactive scientific material on the Web.

Version 3.0 PR 1 includes full support for MathML 1.01,
augmented display of LaTeX, and new ways to enliven
techexplorer documents via C++, Java, JavaScript, the
DOM, and a web-based equation editor.

The Introductory Edition of IBM's techexplorer Hypermedia
Browser Version 3.0 Preview Release 1 is now available for
Windows 95/98/NT, Macintosh, Linux on Intel, AIX, Solaris
and SGI! New to version 3.0 PR 1 is a Macintosh version
and a 10-day trial download of the Professional Edition.

For more details and the no-charge downloads, see
http://www.ibm.com/software/techexplorer.

Please send all questions to techexpl@us.ibm.com.

Best regards,

Angel

--------------------------------------------------------------
Angel Luis Diaz, Ph.D
IBM T. J. Watson Research Center
Manager, Advanced Internet Publishing

IBM techexplorer       http://www.ibm.com/software/techexplorer
W3C Math WG [co-chair] http://www.w3.org/Math
W3C CSS  WG            http://www.w3.org/Style/CSS
W3C XSL  WG            http://www.w3.org/Style/XSL/
---------------------------------------------------------------

------------------------------

Date: Fri, 21 Jul 2000 15:47:45 -0500
From: Chaz Larson <chaz@visi.com>
To: Chazzz <macman@kyol.net>, <digest@info-mac.org>
Subject: iMac gutz removal

At 12:16 PM -0400 7/17/00, Chazzz wrote:
>I've looked at the back/removed the plastic housing and the two upper anchor
>screws but the gutz won't come out. Is there more to do or do I just have to
>be more aggressive and yank the sucker?

A google search on "imac memory upgrade instructions" turned this up, 
which looks quite complete:

<http://www.gla.ac.uk/~gwm1h/iMac/>

chazl

-- 
Come on over to our valley, where boys run free!  Run through the lush green
meadows in your shorts!  Brother John will be your guide in a summer of
indescribable earthly delight!                   - The Suburbs, Music For Boys
Chaz Larson     -    chaz at spamcop dot net    -    http://www.visi.com/~chaz

------------------------------

Date: Fri, 21 Jul 2000 14:09:30 -0400
From: Tom Coradeschi <tcora@skylands.ibmwr.org>
To: Chazzz <macman@kyol.net>
Subject: iMac gutz removal

Chazzz wrote:
>I'm helping out a friend whose iMac went south (software). I'm
>reinitializing etc.
>While I'm at it, she's asked me to do a memory upgrade.
>I've looked at the back/removed the plastic housing and the two upper anchor
>screws but the gutz won't come out. Is there more to do or do I just have to
>be more aggressive and yank the sucker?

There should be directions which came with the computer, and describe 
just what you need to do to get at the RAM slots. If you can't find 
them, visit <http://til.info.apple.com/techinfo.nsf/artnum/n43012>, 
print out those pages and have at it!

                  tom coradeschi <+> tcora@skylands.ibmwr.org
          Skylands (NJ) BMW Riders <+> <http://skylands.ibmwr.org/>

------------------------------

Date: Fri, 21 Jul 2000 22:09:02 -0400
From: Chazzz <macman@kyol.net>
To: <digest@info-mac.org>
Subject: iMac Help

Thanks for all the list help.
It went smooth as silk and she's now the proud owner of MORE RAM!
-- 
Charles Cusumano

------------------------------

Date: Fri, 21 Jul 2000 21:19:54 -0400
From: Jeffrey Frankel <jfrankel@gwi.net>
To: <digest@info-mac.org>
Subject: Info-Mac Digest V17 #112

On July 18 Brian Pickerill wrote:

> Hello.  This has been nagging me for a long time.  Oftentimes, I have a
> document that will print very differently depending on which Mac I am using
> to print.  The fonts, document format, print setup, ect... are all the
> same, yet on one machine, it will paginate correctly, and on the other, a
> line or three will spill off onto the next page.

Are you using the same printer with the different Macs?  Different printers
will print closer to the edges of the paper than others.  If you're using
the LaserWriter 8 printer driver on both machines, make sure that the
settings in the Page Setup dialog box are the same.  Is it possible that US
Letter is selected as the paper size on one and US Letter Small on the
other?  These settings will affect print area.

-- 
Jeff Frankel
Windsor, Maine  USA
"Where the woodpecker pecks
and the porcupine plays"

------------------------------

Date: Sat, 22 Jul 2000 11:59:50 -0500
From: Clinton MacDonald <cbbccm2@ttuhsc.edu>
To: digest@info-mac.org
Subject: Lowering Startup Chime Sound

Chazzzzzz (is that enough Zs? :-) ):

On  Sunday, 09 July, 2000 06:46:08, Chazzz <macman@kyol.net> asked:
>One of my long standing problems is to keep alert sounds loud enough
>while keeping the Startup Chime liveable. If I keep the volume of the
>alert sounds audible enough, the startup Chime blasts the speakers.
>In the Monitor & Sounds CP, I've increased the alert sounds volume to
>the max and have the system sounds about one half volume. Is there
>anyway to lower the chime in ROM and keep the alert sounds reasonably
>loud?

On older PowerBooks (which is all I know, since the most recent I own 
are a PB 145 and a Duo 280c -- both great machines), the startup 
chime is schizophrenic in the following way: the startup chime volume 
lowers as the system sound volume is lowered, until one reaches a 
volume of zero. Then, for some Apple-only-knows reason, the startup 
chime volume is greatest. Therefore, for older PowerBooks, the lowest 
one can set the startup chime is at an overall system sound setting 
of "1." It is still pretty loud at that setting.

I know this makes no sense, but try setting your sound volume to "1" 
using the Control Strip.

Best wishes,
Clint

-- 
    Dr. Clinton C. MacDonald | <mailto:cbbccm2@ttuhsc.edu>
    <http://www.grad.ttuhsc.edu/Grad/macdonald/>

------------------------------

Date: Fri, 21 Jul 2000 15:44:27 -0500
From: Chaz Larson <chaz@visi.com>
To: Brian Pickerill <00bkpickeril@bsuvc.bsu.edu>, digest@info-mac.org
Subject: Pagination problems in Word 98

At 11:37 AM -0500 7/18/00, Brian Pickerill wrote:
>Hello.  This has been nagging me for a long time.  Oftentimes, I have a
>document that will print very differently depending on which Mac I am using
>to print.  The fonts, document format, print setup, ect... are all the
>same, yet on one machine, it will paginate correctly, and on the other, a
>line or three will spill off onto the next page.
>
>Any insights you have would be appreciated.
>

Are the two machines printing to different printers?  Perhaps the 
printable area on one machine's printer [either because it's a 
different printer or because it's using a different PPD file, in the 
case of a LaserWriter-type printer] is ever-so-slightly smaller than 
the printable area on the other, which could cause htat couple-line 
spillover.

Another possibility would be different versions of the fonts on the 
two machines, where one has ever-so-slightly different character 
widths

One machine may be missing a true styled font [like Bold]; the 
faked-up version the OS would generate in that situation is wider 
than the real bold font, and would cause pagination differences.

chazl

-- 
Come on over to our valley, where boys run free!  Run through the lush green
meadows in your shorts!  Brother John will be your guide in a summer of
indescribable earthly delight!                   - The Suburbs, Music For Boys
Chaz Larson     -    chaz at spamcop dot net    -    http://www.visi.com/~chaz

------------------------------

Date: Fri, 21 Jul 2000 23:08:07 -0400
From: "Marlon Deason" <marlond@earthlink.net>
To: digest@info-mac.org
Subject: Pagination problems in Word 98

Bill--

If you are using two different printers, it is probably a difference in the
printable areas. Different types of printers use paper differently. For
example, inkjet printers tug on the leading edge of a sheet paper and so it
can't print there.

Look to see if you have two different printers selected on your two
machines. Many programs use guidelines from the printer driver to determine
the size of a printed page.

-- Marlon
marlond@earthlink.net

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--Info-Mac-Digest--

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******************************