Subject: Info-Mac Digest V17 #78
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--Info-Mac-Digest

Info-Mac Digest             Wed, 10 May 00       Volume 17 : Issue 78

Today's Topics:

      [*] MediaWrapper Light 2.0.9
      [*] Menuette 3.0.1J - Japanese Version
      [*] Obsidian Trial Size 1.0.6
      [*] Window Monkey 1.3J - Japanese Version
      [*] WindowMenu v1.2.1J - Japanese Version
      Appletalk conundrum
      Audio input plug for G4
      Consumer Reports Opinions
      Keyboard Commands
      Locking Finder Window Locations
      Quote of the Day

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Date: 10 May 2000
From: John Clark <12ftguru@mindspring.com>
Subject: [*] MediaWrapper Light 2.0.9


MediaWrapper Light lets you scan a removable disk, and print out the 
contents on a wrapper that you can insert into the disk case. 
Currently MediaWrapper Light supports Zip, Jaz, CD-ROM, EZ Flyer, 
SyJet, SyQuest, MagnetoOptical Disks, and SuperDisk.
The Scan to Clipboard option allows you to scan a disk and then paste 
the file list into your own custom layout. You can create your own 
custom layout in Quark, Microsoft Word, AppleWorks (ClarisWorks) or 
just about any Word Processing/ Page Layout program you like.

2.0.9 fixes 2 bugs. the first would cause MediaWrapper to ask you for 
another disk when scanning (caused by aliases on the volume being 
scanned). The second cause MediaWrapper to crash on certain machines 
when two disks in a row were scanned. Both problems have been fixed. 
Please contact me at: 12ftguru@mindspring.com if any other problems 
appear.

[Archived as /info-mac/disk/media-wrapper-light-209.hqx; 1638 K]

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

Date: 10 May 2000
From: ChrisLi@Bridge1.com
Subject: [*] Menuette 3.0.1J - Japanese Version


This is the Japanese version of the Menuette package.

Menuette 3.0.1 replaces those boring, old-fashioned words in your menu bar 
with fun and colorful animated icons.  That's not all, Menuette also lets 
you choose the font and size of menu text.  It also adds WYSIWYG menu 
fonts!

*The folks at CNET's download.com called Menuette 3 the "ideal utility for
PowerBook users", including it in their picks of the "best software available".

*MacUser Magazine's Software Central awarded Menuette a perfect five-mouse rating
in an online review of Menuette.  

*Menuette is a two-time America Online Macintosh Utilities Forum Shareware Award winner.  

*Apple Wizards gave Menuette 3 a gold medal in a mini-review.

[Archived as /info-mac/gui/menuette-301-jp.hqx; 752 K]

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

Date: 10 May 2000
From: "David C. Oshel" <dcoshel@mac.com>
Subject: [*] Obsidian Trial Size 1.0.6


Obsidian 1.0.6 is military-grade drag 'n drop personal file encryption
WITHOUT PASSWORDS. 

Data protection in the full version is provided by Rijndael, Serpent or
Twofish, and may not be freely distributed because of U.S. export
restrictions.  The full version is $15 shareware payable via Kagi.

Obsidian Trial Size 1.0.6, on the other hand, is an evaluation copy which
has all the features of the full version -- except that it uses a
low-security cipher comparable to PrngXor for demo purposes, and will not
write codebooks larger than 5 Mb.  This demo does not expire, and may be
freely distributed if all files remain intact.

Passwords are dead at last.  And the concept of key escrow is proven moot.

[Archived as /info-mac/disk/obsidian-trial-size-106.hqx; 383 K]

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

Date: 10 May 2000
From: ChrisLi@Bridge1.com
Subject: [*] Window Monkey 1.3J - Japanese Version


This is the Japanese version of the Window Monkey package.

Choose patterned backgrounds for Macintosh Finder windows. You even get a
handy way to navigate through windows and folders, so it's useful, too.
MacAddict magazine rates Window Monkey among the top 20 Mac shareware
programs, CNET calls the software "too cool," and MacWorld magazine chose it
as a Pick of the Week. For Mac OS.

Window Monkey adds background pictures or textures to any window in the
Finder -- it's like "Desktop Patterns" or "Desktop Pictures", but for folder
window backgrounds instead of the desktop.

You can color-code your windows to see at a glance what they contain, or use
wild patterns just for fun. Give your folder of "work stuff" a background
that looks like a legal pad, or choose a background of hearts for that ZIP
disk full of love letters.

This program also helps you better manage your windows in every application
(not just the Finder): You can use the handy Window Monkey menu to quickly
go to any window in any application, even if it's buried beneath many other
windows. Window Monkey also remembers recently used folders and lets you
instantly jump to any open or recently used folder from an Open or Save
dialog box.

Many background patterns are included, and you can add as many as you wish by
simply pasting or dragging your own pictures into the control panel.

Window Monkey is compatible with System 7 and Mac OS 8 and later (including
9.X).

[Archived as /info-mac/cfg/window-monkey-13-jp.hqx; 688 K]

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

Date: 10 May 2000
From: ChrisLi@Bridge1.com
Subject: [*] WindowMenu v1.2.1J - Japanese Version


This is the Japanese version of the WindowMenu package.

    WindowMenu is a utility that exists to let you do one thing: jump
directly to a specific window in an application. Although I have a big
monitor, I often find myself going through all kinds of contortions to
get to a window I know is open but that is buried under a hundred
others. Applications with "Windows" menus help things somewhat, but
you still have to make the trip to the menu bar.

    WindowMenu will pop up a menu of all open windows in the current
application and let you select one directly when you click anywhere
while holding down control keys that you choose. It also lets you
define a hotkey to cycle forward and backwards through all open
windows. I use it every day and I think if you give it a try, you may
too.

[Archived as /info-mac/gui/window-menu-121-jp.hqx; 233 K]

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

Date: Tue, 9 May 2000 14:04:15 -0700
From: Lisa Bjarke <lisa.bjarke@dfrc.nasa.gov>
Subject: Appletalk conundrum

In Info-Mac Digest V17 #76, abrody@smart.net wrote:

>But nowhere can I find the Appletalk control panel in my custom 
>installer of MacOS 9 that is part of the MacOS 9 CD. I don't want to 
>reinstall the whole OS just to get Appletalk back.

I don't have OS 9, but perhaps TomeViewer might help. It is available 
from the MacFixit Library 
<http://www.macfixit.com/library/tul/TomeViewer.sit.hqx> and has the 
following description:

TomeViewer lets you view and extract individual files contained 
within the compressed tome files that accompany most Apple's 
Installers. This can be useful for files that may otherwise be 
inaccessible from a normal Easy or Custom Install on a particular Mac 
model. This is a pre-release unsupported utility from Apple.

You should be able to use TomeViewer to extract the files you need.

Hope this helps,

Lisa

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

Date: Wed, 10 May 2000 07:58:10 -0400
From: Saint John <StJ@mac.com>
Subject: Audio input plug for G4

At 20:32 -0400 5/9/00, The Info-Mac Network wrote:
>Date: Tue, 9 May 2000 15:02:40 +0100
>From: "Charles Arthur, The Independent" <carthur@independent.co.uk>
>Subject: Audio input plug for G4
>
>On Mon, 8 May 2000 16:54:09 +0200, "Michael S. Silverstein"
><michaels@techunix.technion.ac.il> wrote:
>
>>I would like to hook up my stereo system to my G4 400 MHz.
>>The trouble is, there is only the microphone input and I cannot find
>>an adaptor with the extra-long plug that is used by Apple.
>
>The microphone input is all you get. Are you sure it's an extra-long plug?
>I think you'll find it's the same as the plug that fits into headphones.

   Unless something has changed on the G4, the Macintosh microphone input
jack requires a special long plug, specifically to defeat standard
(nonpowered) microphones.

>>Where do they sell these adaptors?
>
>I don't think they need to.

   They do, and "they" in this case is Griffin Technologies
<http://www.griffintechnology.com/>, one of the most trusted names in the
Mac hardware world. Their "NE-mic" product allows you to take a nonpowered
microphone, the kind you'd get on a PC, and hook it up to a Mac. It also
has the long plug that fits into the Mac's microphone port. You can buy a
patch cable that will go from your stereo's headphone jack to a stereo
miniplug, which hooks into the NE-mic.

+- Saint John <StJ@Mac.com> <http://www.dusers.drexel.edu/~stjohn/> -+
|  "If I had no duties, and no reference to futurity, I would spend  |
|   my life in driving briskly in a post-chaise with a pretty        |
+-- woman." (Dr. Samuel Johnson) ------------------------------------+

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

Date: Wed, 10 May 2000 10:01:21 -0600
From: Jerry Spangrude <drblood@path.med.utah.edu>
Subject: Consumer Reports Opinions

Digest Readers,

Can anyone tell me how on earth the people at Consumer Reports, in their latest issue's article on computer monitors, can conclude that the iMac monitor is "OK" but has "less brightness and lower contrast" compared to some of the other monitors they evaluated?

My experience with iMacs and with the new G3 and G4 monitors is that, unlike almost every other Mac monitor I have owned in the past, the brightness and contrast controls need to be decreased to mid-range in order to not burn out my eyes. I think the new monitors are exceptionally clear and bright.

The CR people also point out that the iMac monitor is too small compared to the 17, 19, and 21 inch monitors they evaluated on PeeCee systems. Let's compare apples to lemons, shall we?

Although I value CR for its insightful and helpful reviews of most consumer electronics, appliances, and autos, I find their constant anti-Mac attitude irritating! I have to wonder if the technicians realized that brightness and contrast can be adjusted with those little knobs! Or maybe they simply purchased a faulty iMac. Comments?

Jerry

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

Date: Wed, 10 May 2000 07:57:18 -0400
From: Saint John <StJ@mac.com>
Subject: Keyboard Commands

At 20:32 -0400 5/9/00, The Info-Mac Network wrote:
>Date: Wed, 10 May 2000 06:42:25 +1200
>From: Mike Isle <isle@ihug.co.nz>
>Subject: Keyboard Commands
>
>Does anyone know a programme that will allow me to, easily,  add keyboard
>commands to my Finder and application menus? I know Action Menus does this,
>but it slows my old Mac 68k something awful and I am looking for an
>alternative for this function only. I am running System 7.5.
>Thanks,
>Mike.

   If you don't mind doing a little programming for the ones you use most
often, a macro program will do this for you. You'd write a little program
to intercept the keystroke and "pull down" the appropriate menu. So it
won't automatically work with every menu, but it'll work for the ones you
set up.
   I like OneClick <http://www.westcodesoft.com>, but QuicKeys and
KeyQuencer should also be suitable. You still might get a slowdown with
them, but it may be bearable.

+- Saint John <StJ@Mac.com> <http://www.dusers.drexel.edu/~stjohn/> -+
|  "If I had no duties, and no reference to futurity, I would spend  |
|   my life in driving briskly in a post-chaise with a pretty        |
+-- woman." (Dr. Samuel Johnson) ------------------------------------+

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

Date: Wed, 10 May 2000 15:24:24 -0700
From: Doug Hardie <bc979@lafn.org>
Subject: Locking Finder Window Locations

Is there a way in OS 8.6 to prevent finder's windows from being dragged
around the desktop?  I have a specific arrangement I want to keep but
occasionally my mouse button releases and clicks again while moving it thus
causing a window to get moved.

-- Doug

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

Date: Wed, 10 May 2000 17:59:06 +0000
From: The Norths <ozaffair@zeta.org.au>
Subject: Quote of the Day

Quote of the Day is a simple shareware program that, when placed in your
Startup Items folder inside your System Folder, will greet you each day
with a random quote from a list including humorous, motivational, famous
and business quotes.

The quote list in version 1.0 is contains over 100 quotes, but by
registering you are entitled to free updates that will contain many more
quotes.

Perpetual Notion Software

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