Subject: Info-Mac Digest V17 #155
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--Info-Mac-Digest

Info-Mac Digest             Tue, 03 Oct 00       Volume 17 : Issue 155

Today's Topics:

      (C) Norton and 8.1 +
      [*] MacTFTP Client 1.0 [PPC]
      [*] Slide Puzzle Maker 1.5
      [*] SweetMail 1.95f5
      [*] SwitchRes 2.4.2J - Japanese Version
      [*] WebSiteManager 1.0
      [Q] cheap USB FM Radio for Mac?
      Identifying ColorSync Profiles
      Using SCSI Zip disk with G4

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Date: Fri, 29 Sep 2000 20:08:36 -0400
From: "abrody@smart.net" <abrody@smart.net>
To: digest@info-mac.org
Subject: (C) Norton and 8.1 +

Dear Digest readers,
This message bears repeating.   I keep on hearing how people are 
running Norton Utilities on MacOS 8.1 or higher and keep on telling 
the digest and other Mac periodicals how their hard drive has 
corrupted.   First off, don't trust Norton if it tells you your hard 
drive is corrupted.   Don't attempt to repair it using Norton. 
Norton takes one look at the support for HFS+ in the System file, and 
often times thinks it means there are bad btrees.    If it attempts 
to repair those btrees, you can kiss your hard drive goodbye.   I had 
to reformat my hard drive after such a problem, and lose all my files 
from the reformat.   Luckily I had a backup.   If you are upgrading 
to MacOS 8.1, or buy a machine with MacOS 8.1 or higher DO NOT use 
Norton utilities.   Norton Anti-Virus is OK, but Disk Doctor is Disk 
Doctor Kevorkian.   Lots of other people have had to reformat their 
hard drive after Norton improperly tried to fix bad btrees on MacOS 
8.1 or higher.   Use Techtools 2.5.4 or higher, or Disk Warrior, but 
avoid Norton Disk Doctor if you have MacOS 8.1 or higher.   In fact 
if you read the MacOS 8.1 readme files there is a statement regarding 
potential hard drive problems with some early versions of Norton. 
Turns out from many people I know these problems have not yet been 
addressed in all issues.    Some people may run Norton without a 
glitch, but lots have had problems with MacOS 8.1 or higher.
Your milage may vary.   Backup frequently, so you don't find yourself 
in a rut because of Norton or any Disk corruption.

Sincerely,
abrody@smart.net
-- 

Come visit my mini Yahoo at:
http://www.index-site.com/
All links verified monthly. 

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

Date: 29 Sep 2000
From: Kem Tekinay <ktekinay@mactechnologies.com>
To: 
Subject: [*] MacTFTP Client 1.0 [PPC]


MacTFTP Client is the first full-featured TFTP client for the Macintosh. It
enables send and receive, provides for multiple, simultaneous transfers, and
more. It also provides an optional password field required by some devices.

[Archived as /info-mac/comm/inet/mac-tftp-client-10.hqx; 694 K]

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

Date: 29 Sep 2000
From: Joe Hammons <hammo@softcom.net>
To: 
Subject: [*] Slide Puzzle Maker 1.5


    Slide Puzzle Maker contains three games which will improve your
visual memory skills and exercise both sides of your brain by making and
solving slide puzzles.  You may also import your own pictures to use
when making a slide puzzle.  Play Slide Search and practice reading 700
high frequency words.  Until this version is registered, this program
will return to the opening screen after 10 minutes.
    Thanks,
    Joe Hammons

[Archived as /info-mac/game/slide-puzzle-maker-15.hqx; 1570 K]

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

Date: 29 Sep 2000
From: sweet@kagi.com (S.Ichise)
To: 
Subject: [*] SweetMail 1.95f5


SweetMail is an internet e-mail client for Macintosh that provides
most powerful features with sweet interface. SweetMail has
multiple POP3 accounts, very high-speed searching, thread-view,
filtering, templates, auto-wrap and many useful functions.

System Requirements:
* 68K or PPC.
* System 7.5 or later.
* 4MB of Memory.
* OpenTransport, Thread-Mgr and Appearance-Mgr.

[Archived as /info-mac/comm/inet/mail/sweet-mail-195f5.hqx; 1018 K]

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

Date: 29 Sep 2000
From: ChrisLi@Bridge1.com
To: 
Subject: [*] SwitchRes 2.4.2J - Japanese Version


This is the Japanese version of the SwitchRes package.

SwitchRes is a little utility that will allow you to switch the
resolution of all your monitors. You can access to all the resolutions
of all your displays in a simple, customizable menu. SwitchRes
incorporates features from the Monitor Resolution, Monitor BitDepth, and
Video Mirroring Control Strip Modules bundled with your system. You can
use its menu in the Menu Bar, use its provided Control Strip Module, or
click on the Finder Desktop with its Contextual Menu Plugin.
SwitchRes has an extensive list of features: 

*You can show and use all available resolutions of your video card, not
just those limited by your monitor. For example, 20 video modes are
available on my PowerMac 7300 internal video board. Enjoy your Apple 15"
monitor in 1024 x 768, or 640 x 480 in 120Hz !
*SwitchRes is totally configurable. You can define which resolutions are
really accessible, and which will require a confirmation.
� 
*You can also create display sets which will allow you to change the
resolution and the depth of all your monitors with just one mouse click,
or just one key. With this new version, you can add scripts to display
sets. That gives SwitchRes the ability to launch a script with just one
key, or when an application is launched...
*You can assign a specific set to an application, so that every time you
use this application, your Mac will automatically switch to your
predefined resolutions. You will find this extremely useful for most
games.
� 
*You can save the position of the icons and the windows on your desktop,
independently from one resolution to the other, unlike the Finder. The
configuration is restored at startup.
*You can script SwitchRes for resolutions and color depth changes.
SwitchRes is even recordable: When SwitchRes is running, every
resolution change is automatically recorded in the script editor

New in version 2.4.2 

* Corrects a bug on new G4s with Gigabit Ethernet.
This bugs appears on Multiprocessor G4s on MacOS 9.0.4, and all G4s
under MacOS 9.1 
* Application monitoring is now using another method
when a new app is brought to front and the attached display set should
be applied. This method consumes less CPU time

[Archived as /info-mac/gui/switch-res-242-jp.hqx; 630 K]

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

Date: 30 Sep 2000
From: Ton Brand <Ton_Brand@spidernet.nl>
To: 
Subject: [*] WebSiteManager 1.0


WebSiteManager

What it is: Tool to check and optimize up to 16 web sites, with upload
capabilities.
Author: Ton Brand
Company: Ton's Software
License: shareware US$ 20.00
Computer: PowerPC or iMac
Mac OS: 7.5 or later
Abstract:
WebSiteManager is a versatile tool for webmasters who manage up to 16 web
sites and want all their web pages optimized, without broken hyperlinks or
dangling tags. The program offers 5 functions as known from its predecessor
HTML OptimizerPro and supports drag & drop also. Further it offers various
upload and download capabilities plus other useful options that make working
with WebSiteManager very easy.
WebSiteManager can remove resources from graphic files. The program offers a
large choice of options, including the 'alias mirror' for a good visual check
of an optimized file.
Every web folder gets its own optimized duplicate, with the same directory
structure as the original. When you upload, the URL of the host is
automatically adapted to the directory of the file or folder being uploaded.

[Archived as /info-mac/text/html/web-site-manager-10.hqx; 1329 K]

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

Date: Sat, 30 Sep 2000 14:44:18 -0700
From: "Kee Nethery, Kagi CEO" <kee@kagi.com>
To: digest@info-mac.org
Subject: [Q] cheap USB FM Radio for Mac?

Does anyone know of a USB (or Firewire but I imagine that is pricy) 
FM Radio for the Macintosh that is below $50?

Kee Nethery
kee@kagi.com

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

Date: Sat, 30 Sep 2000 23:05:15 +0200
From: "V.Dooijes" <masters@xs4all.nl>
To: digest@info-mac.org, "Dr. James K. Butler" <jbutler3@san.rr.com>
Subject: Identifying ColorSync Profiles


"Dr. James K. Butler" <jbutler3@san.rr.com> wrote:

> Through installation of all the major
> graphic design applications and various hardware, I have over 500
> ColorSync profiles installed.
>
> <cut>
>
> I would appreciate ANY LEAD that can help me learn the identities of all
> (or some) of my profiles.
>
>

The data fork of ColorSync profiles starts (with an offset of 4 bytes)
with the tags for the suppliercode and the device type, and the color
model used (e.g. ....APPL....mntr...RGB Lab)

inside the data fork of colorsync profiles, look for the "desc"
(description) tags. The desc tags show up in a colorsync profile
selector list panel when it is called from within an application. when
the desc tag is followed by "...," the filename is used as a
description. Other  byte patterns after the desc tag indicate different
aspects of the profile, but always in some form of human language (...)
The curv section describes the transfer curves. The text tag  holds
copyright information, also useful for finding out who named colorsync
profile "ckdslb3486"...

You could perhaps set up a scriptable editor to copy the tags into the
info-window of each profile: when you set the finder to display the info
in list view you will see the descriptions.

hope this helps,

kind regards,
Wouter Meulensteen

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

Date: Mon, 02 Oct 2000 01:01:37 -0400
From: Lilajane Frascarelli <frascl@rpi.edu>
To: comp-sys-mac-digest@moderators.isc.org
Subject: Using SCSI Zip disk with G4

When I got my new G4 (450 MHz with dual processors, OS 9.04) last week I
was able to connect my old Zip 100 MB (SCSI) drive to it, because I had 
a SCSI card installed in the G4.  I used the Zip disk to transfer things
from my old IIsi to the new G4.  Then I reformatted the G4 in order to
create three partitions so that I could eventually run two different
systems (getting ready for the trauma of change to OS X before I have
even learned OS 9.04).  I used the CDs which came with the G4 to replace
the material that had disappeared in the partitioning process. After the
partitioning the Zip drive no longer shows up on the desk top of the G4
and is non-existent, as far as the G4 is concerned.  The Iomega driver
is still where it belongs in the System  folder, but the computer
doesn't seem to be able to make contact with the drive.   The drive
still works fine when attached to the IIsi, so it is still in good
working order.

Can someone please tell me how to get the Zip drive to work again (when
attached to the G4) so that I can finish transferring all my records to
the new computer?

Thank you.

Lilajane Frascarelli
frascl@rpi.edu

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