Subject: Info-Mac Digest V18 #120 MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: multipart/mixed; boundary="Info-Mac-Digest" --Info-Mac-Digest Info-Mac Digest Fri, 21 Sep 01 Volume 18 : Issue 120 Today's Topics: [*] 11th September Interarchy interface submitted [*] Cookie 1.1 [*] EnglishLeagueManager110 [*] Find Document 2.7 [*] HTML-Optimizer 5.5.1 [*] Jon's Commands 2.1.2 [*] URL Manager Pro 2.8b1J - Japanese Version [*] Web Confidential 2.2.2 [A] New G4 - CD Burning [A] Pop-up menu in Finder [A]: Flaky iBook Ethernet Port [A]: Pop-up menu in Finder [Q] Audio recording from DV stream Any cure for badly-dated installers? ethernet prob New memory delay Pop-up menu in Finder Pop-up menu in Finder Pop-up menu in Finder Wallstreet PRAM Battery The Info-Mac Network is a volunteer organization that publishes the Info-Mac Digest and operates the Info-Mac Archive, a large network of FTP sites containing gigabytes of freely distributable Macintosh software. Working with the Info-Mac Digest: * To submit articles to the digest, email . * To subscribe, send email to with the words subscribe info-mac in the message. * To unsubscribe, send email to with the words unsubscribe info-mac in the message. * To change your address, unsubscribe from the old address, then subscribe from the new address. * Please send administrative queries to . Downloading and Submitting Files from the Info-Mac Archive: * A full list of Info-Mac mirror sites is available at: * Search the archive via the MIT HyperArchive at: . * To submit files for the archive, email the binhexed file with a description to . Submissions must be made by the author or with permission of the author. It may take up to a week to process; check mirror sites for the status of new uploads. * To submit files larger than 2 MB, email a description to and then use an FTP client to upload the binhexed file to info-mac.org, using the userid "macgifts" and the password "macgifts". Or, click . Info-Mac volunteers include Adam C. Engst, Demitri Muna, Hugh Lewis, Tom Coradeschi, Shawn Bunn, Christopher Li, Patrik Montgomery, Ed Chambers, and Chris Pepper. America Online donated the main Info-Mac machine . ---------------------------------------------------------------------- --Info-Mac-Digest Content-Type: multipart/digest; boundary="----------------------------" Content-Disposition: attachment; filename="Info-Mac Digest V18 #120" ------------------------------ Date: 21 Sep 2001 From: Francesco Ventimiglia To: Subject: [*] 11th September Interarchy interface submitted How to install this interface * Launch Interarchy (version 3.8 or higher) * Select "Preferences Folder" from the "Settings" menu * Drag the file "11th September" into the "Home Items" folder * Switch back to Interarchy * Select "11th September" from the "Home" menu items and use it * If you wanna make "11th September" the default interface return to Finder and place its alias from the "Home Items" folder to the "Startup Items" folder removing any other item inside. Then restart Interarchy. GOD HELP US! Franco Ventimiglia Contact Info: Please send comments to: francoventimiglia@iol.it 11th September Interarchy Interface ¨2001 by Franco Ventimiglia ¨2001 by Apple Computer [Archived as /info-mac/gui/11th-september-interarchy-interface.hqx; 342 K] ------------------------------ Date: 20 Sep 2001 From: John Rethorst To: Subject: [*] Cookie 1.1 Quote/phrase/tip generator. Unlike others, its library is plain text, so you can add or edit anything. Supports an unlimited number of quotes. Comes with large library of classic quotations. Lets you choose between random or sequential choices (useful for training). Displays a large variety of great icons with the quotes, and user-chosen text for the OK button. Source code is commented. New in version 1.1: more options, faster, over twice as many icons, docs cover editing of icons. Unsolicited comments from users include: "A real nice little program . . . could be used very nicely as a Tips and Tricks display for large workgroups . . . Thanks very much . . . Popular Download [Download.com] . . . a fun program". Free. Should replace data/cookie.hqx now on Info-Mac. John Rethorst [Archived as /info-mac/data/cookie-11.hqx; 224 K] ------------------------------ Date: 20 Sep 2001 From: TigaByte Software To: Subject: [*] EnglishLeagueManager110 English League Managerv1.10 is a shareware soccer management game. Version 1.10 has major improvements including more competitive leagues. ELM allows you to manage a team within the English league. The ultimate aim is to win the Premier Championship and both the FA and League Cups within the same season. FEATURES * Manage a team from one of the 4 main English Divisions using over 90 screens. * Play three types of game - Standard, Manager's, and Custom. * Over 4000 players in 124 clubs: - up to 25 players in squad & up to 25 in reserves. * Player roles - goalkeeper, defender, midfielder, forward. * Players have 17 attributes:. * Moving match play allowing substitutes,injuries, corners,free kicks, red cards. * Match animation is 2D but hidden simulation uses 3D space for ball. * The ability to change formation and general tactics during a match. * Training ground for practicing corner and free kick tactics. * Tactical screens for planning defensive and offensive formations. * Player ageing and retirements - skill varies with age. * Financial control of the club including loans, sponsorships and match advertising. * Buy and sell players on the transfer market, and browse any club. * Player contracts and renegotiations. * Ground development for increasing crowd capacity. * On screen help system. * Editor for creating custom scenarios with registered version. REQUIREMENTS * 68030 or later, 68040 recommended, an FPU is NOT required. * 3.7MB free RAM - on older Macs with 8 bit colour. * 5.0MB free RAM - on newer Macs with 16 bit colour. * 640x480 at 256 colour screen * OS7.1 or above - (OSX - I simply don't know) DISTRIBUTION This English League Manager demo may be freely included on CDROMs. CONTACT Malcolm:- mrj.mcquoid@kagi.com http://www.kagi.com/mrj.mcquoid/default.html TigaByte Software, 28th August 2001. [Archived as /info-mac/game/english-league-manager-110.hqx; 1291 K] ------------------------------ Date: 20 Sep 2001 From: John Rethorst To: Subject: [*] Find Document 2.7 AppleScript scripting addition to find files, folders or applications on designated disks. Ten times faster than similar osaxen. Author JF Pautex permits free distribution; $5 shareware. Should replace osa/find-document-22.hqx on Info-Mac. [Archived as /info-mac/dev/osa/find-document-27.hqx; 32 K] ------------------------------ Date: 20 Sep 2001 From: Ton Brand To: Subject: [*] HTML-Optimizer 5.5.1 HTML-Optimizer 5.5.1 What it is: Utility to check and optimize your web pages to make them load faster. Author: Ton Brand Company: Ton's Software License: Shareware US$10 Computer: PowerPC, iMac or iBook Mac OS: 7.5.3 or later Abstract: HTML-Optimizer is the ideal tool for managing your web site. It checks your web pages for broken links and dangling tags and optimizes both text and graphic files. The program offers 5 functions plus a number of useful options that make working with HTML-Optimizer very easy. Especially the new 'duplimize' feature comes in handy for uploading an optimized web folder. The program has a built-in Manual and Balloon Help is supported too. The five basic functions of HTML-Optimizer are: 1. Optimizing HTML code by removing unnecessary characters and tags, which results in faster loading of your pages in your client's browser. Client-side and server-side JavaScript can be optimized too. Graphic file resources, which are of no use on the web, are removed, saving 10 to 80 % of space. 2. Checking the so called tagged pairs, i.e. the tags that always have to appear together with their end tags. Further, IMG tags are checked for Width, Height and Alt attributes. Missing attributes are added with values which are automatically detected. 3. Checking the validity of the internal hyperlinks, 8 levels deep. 4. Marking dangling tags and missing attributes to find and fix them quickly. 5. Converting special characters to the &....; notation. Version 5.5 removes more redundant editor tags and has a 25 files per folder limit if unregistered. Version 5.5.1 corrects a version number error when registered. [Archived as /info-mac/text/html/html-optimizer-551.hqx; 1245 K] ------------------------------ Date: 20 Sep 2001 From: John Rethorst To: Subject: [*] Jon's Commands 2.1.2 A free set of AppleScript scripting additions (osaxen) that, in the words of author Jon Pugh, "will improve your life if you use AppleScript". For sure. Author permits free distribution; further info available at his web page, http://www.seanet.com/~jonpugh/. Should replace /osa/jons-commands-21.hqx. [Archived as /info-mac/dev/osa/jons-commands-212.hqx; 177 K] ------------------------------ Date: 20 Sep 2001 From: ChrisLi@Bridge1.com To: Subject: [*] URL Manager Pro 2.8b1J - Japanese Version This is the Japanese version of the URL Manager Pro package. "In the shareware arena, my pick is URL Manager" - Adam C. Engst "You have got me addicted" - Henry Norr, San Francisco Chronicle "A must have for serious Web users" - Tucows rating: 5 out of 5 "It's a polished, professional-standard application packed with useful features, neat shortcuts and quality design. Brilliant." - MacFormat UK. URL Manager Pro is a repository for your favorite Internet addresses or URLs (Uniform Resource Locators). URL Manager Pro allows you to organize and collect URLs in a hierarchical structure. Organizing bookmarks between and within folders is easy with Drag & Drop. Drag HyperText links from your Web Browser to the URL Manager Pro window to add a URL to the repository. To go to a URL, Drag & Drop a bookmark to the window of a Web Browser or double click. URL Manager Pro adds tight integration with Navigator, Explorer, iCab, Anarchie, Fetch, NetFinder, Claris Emailer, Outlook Express and Eudora. With URL Manager Pro you can add bookmark menus to the menu bar of these applications. Also, URL Manager Pro adds the URL Manager shared icon menu to the menu bar. With this menu you can create bookmarks for Web Pages from --within-- Navigator, Explorer, iCab, Add Notes, Grab All URLs on a Web Page or in an E-Mail message, and explore the Internet with a predefined set of Search Engines. What's New in 2.8 URL Manager Pro 2.8 is an update of the popular bookmark manager. In particular, the audience of this version is Mac OS 8 users. Mac OS 9 and Mac OS X users are advised to start using URL Manager Pro 3.0, which is a Carbon application. URL Manager Pro 3.0 requires Mac OS 9 and therefore Mac OS 8 users can not use it. URL Manager Pro 2.8 makes sure that Mac OS 8 users still can profit from the improvements made to URL Manager Pro's code as we move along to Mac OS X. URL Manager Pro 2.8 fixes bugs, but also adds new features (see below). URL Manager Pro 2.8 requires Mac OS 8.1 or higher. If you are still running Mac OS 8.0, you should have no problem downloading the Mac OS 8.1 update from Apple. [Archived as /info-mac/comm/inet/web/url-manager-pro-28b1-jp.hqx; 1281 K] ------------------------------ Date: 20 Sep 2001 From: Alco Blom To: Subject: [*] Web Confidential 2.2.2 Web Confidential 2.2.2 for Macintosh - English version Web Confidential is an intuitive, easy-to-use program for managing user IDs, passwords, registration numbers, and the like. Although widely imitated, Web Confidential is still the most powerful password manager on the Mac today and is currently the only password manager which is able to HotSync with a Palm device using a Macintosh Conduit. While Web Confidential is suitable for a wide variety of personal data, from credit card numbers to serial numbers, Alco Blom designed Web Confidential particularly for the World Wide Web in mind. "Increasing numbers of Web sites maintain some form of user registration," points out Blom. "You may not realize it, but in the course of time you may registered at a couple of dozen sites. Do you remember the passwords you entered for all of them?" Web Confidential allows Web surfers to store URLs, user IDs, and passwords in one secure location. Web Confidential can automate the process of logging into a password-secured Web page by automatically passing URL, user ID, and password to your Web browser. For opening pages containing personal account information at commercial sites, Web Confidential allows you to automatically fill in WWW Forms with user ID and password fields. To ensure the personal information stored in Web Confidential remains confidential, the program's password files can be encrypted using state-of-the-art encryption technology. Web Confidential is shareware. Web Confidential is available for Mac, Windows and Palm platforms. The Home Page of Web Confidential is: Contact Alco Blom at: [Archived as /info-mac/comm/inet/web/web-confidential-222.hqx; 822 K] ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 19 Sep 2001 17:03:11 -0700 From: Maurice Mike McNeil To: Stephen Walker , digest@info-mac.org Subject: [A] New G4 - CD Burning At 9:45 AM -0700 9/19/01, Stephen Walker wrote: >Hey this might be a stupid question, but how do you record CDs and DVDs >with the Superdrive on a new G4? I am familiar with Toast from my >previous Mac adventures, but I haven't been able to find a similar >recording software program under MAC OS X? If there is not one for OS X >will Toast under Classic work? OS 9.2 comes with an application called Disk Burner (actually it originally came with 9.1 I believe). It includes an extension Disk Burner Extension and I believe also requires something called proxy.app in the System Folder. It may NOT currently work under OS 10.0.4 and not sure it will run under classic, try it and see. You will know immediately because you get a dialog box as soon as you put a CD in and the CD appears on the desktop. with these installed, it is AUTOMATIC and completely intuitive. Just like putting stuff on a floppy, zip drive etc. with one additional step, when you eject the CD it asks if you would like to burn it. Answer YES and a few minutes later you have a CD. If for some reason you don't have disk burner, it is available for download from Apple. I believe you need to be in OS 9.1 or better. Even easier, run Software Update and it should get it for you. It did for my iMac and I don't even have a burner on it. -- ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 20 Sep 2001 17:58:02 -0400 From: Ken Laskey To: digest@info-mac.org Subject: [A] Pop-up menu in Finder >> P.S. - I know about the 1.5 click to get the magnifying glass to >> spring open folders. Unfortunately, this does not give me the >> possibility of going back up the hierarchy once I've scanned the open >> folder and not found what I was looking for. >> -- Hold down the Apple key and click on the folder name. That folder's hierarchy is displayed and you can move back to any node along the way. If you also hold the option key down, it will close the folder that you are leaving. -- Ken Laskey kenneth.j.laskey@saic.com ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 19 Sep 2001 17:05:32 -0700 From: Maurice Mike McNeil To: "Fanning, Alan W. (PS, NE)" , Subject: [A]: Flaky iBook Ethernet Port At 6:43 PM -0700 9/17/01, Fanning, Alan W. (PS, NE) wrote: >We have a 300MHz iBook with an ethernet port that seems to have a bad >connection. If you stick an RJ-45 plug in there and wiggle it, the >connection can be intermittently made. But if you let go, the connection is >lost. Unfortunately it was an Apple refurb with 90 warranty so I'm wondering >if anybody can offer some advice as to what the probem might be and what >we're in for to get it fixed? 1) Recommend you sign up for AppleCare as a starting point, very reasonably priced for 3 years of extended warranty. 2) if you can take the iBook apart, I haven't tried one of those yet, you could see if there are any loose screws, but somehow I suspect this is a long shot. -- ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 19 Sep 2001 17:10:24 -0700 From: Maurice Mike McNeil To: "[???]" , Subject: [A]: Pop-up menu in Finder At 10:10 AM -0700 9/18/01, [???] wrote: > >> P.S. - I know about the 1.5 click to get the magnifying glass to >>> spring open folders. Unfortunately, this does not give me the >>> possibility of going back up the hierarchy once I've scanned the open >>> folder and not found what I was looking for. > >> -- Couple of navigation tips: 1) Hold down Command and click on the folder name in the title bar, you can go up that way through hierarchical folders (OS 9.1+ for sure) 2) User Sherlock 3) Get finderPop from turly@kagi.com GREAT utility, I am missing it in OS X. Gives you all sorts of navigational shortcuts. It's beer ware - Turley works for Apple. -- ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 19 Sep 2001 16:29:54 -0700 From: Chap Godbey To: digest@info-mac.org Subject: [Q] Audio recording from DV stream I bought this neato Sony DVMC-DA2 media converter thingy. Supposedly it sucks up whatever analog input it sees (S-video, video, audio, the cat, whatever) and puts it into nifty digital and vice versa. It works just peachy with iMovie. On the other hand, I bought it partly to be able to take my old 45 records and record them, and the experience of recording blank video and stripping the audio from it is time-intensive and a big disk space hog for all that blank digital video. Sound Manager sort of freaks out whenever it faces digital audio in; I understand it can't function with 44.1kHz input for some reason. So that means ProTools Free and all the other recording programs choke on the converter as well. I'd love a way to record just the audio stream. Any ideas? Chap. ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 21 Sep 2001 00:48:55 -0400 From: Vincent Cayenne To: The Info-Mac Network Subject: Any cure for badly-dated installers? Does no one else use the timestamp of installers to check which is the latest version? And am I the only one who finds that InstallAnywhere (and maybe InstallerVise and others) stamp the date of the wrapper? In effect, this may mean the a brand new application installer has a date some four months old. Not to mention that some unstuff to the same name, regardless of the application contained within the installer. LimeWire springs to mind as an offender in one sense or the other, as do XML Editor (and Opera?). ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 19 Sep 2001 18:00:20 -0400 From: susan mann To: Subject: ethernet prob i have an ibook with os9 i have an ethernet port but when i put a cable in the port and connect it with my cable modem-nothing happens the apple profiler shows no built-in ethernet is it possible that the ibook didn't come with this? ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 19 Sep 2001 17:42:19 -0500 From: Simon Rowland (by way of Hugh Lewis) To: digest@info-mac.org Subject: New memory delay >Date: Tue, 11 Sep 2001 12:48:53 -0400 >From: Ken Laskey >To: , >Subject: [A] New memory delay > > >Any computer does a check of memory on boot. The more memory, the >longer the check takes. The new delay is probably more noticeable if >you had a small amount of memory before the upgrade. To disable this check under pre-MacOSX systems, hold down the command and option keys when opening the Memory control panel. There will be an extra option, to disable startup memory checks, which make your system boot a bit faster. If figure that if your computer's memory has checked out a few times already, you only need to turn the checking back on if your computer is misbehaving or after installing new RAM, then turn it right back off again. -- .--------------------------.---------------------------. | SIMON ROWLAND | http://SimonRowland.com | | simon@SimonRowland.com | 416.920.7394 ICQ5321682 | | Forging Web Businesses | St.George&Bernard,Toronto | |__________________________|___________________________| ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 20 Sep 2001 07:19:36 -0400 From: RobD To: "[???]" , Subject: Pop-up menu in Finder Quoting The Info-Mac Network and possibly previous message on 9/18/01 1:10 PM. > > >>> P.S. - I know about the 1.5 click to get the magnifying glass to >>> spring open folders. Unfortunately, this does not give me the >>> possibility of going back up the hierarchy once I've scanned the open >>> folder and not found what I was looking for. >>> -- > >doesn't that just drive you crazy! you've really got know where you're >going. > >--------------------------- >munsellian@mac.com Command (or Apple Key) Click the Header of the last folder and navigate back to your hearts content! It gives you hierarchy return structure. Also you can use "Open Enclosing Folder" command in the file menu to move up one level only in a Find scenario. >>>-----------Reach me by ICQ# 7162477------------------<<< ~~~ Read my contributions ~~~ ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 20 Sep 2001 10:12:45 +0100 From: m.mitchell@icrf.icnet.uk (Mike Mitchell) To: comp-sys-mac-digest@moderators.isc.org Subject: Pop-up menu in Finder In article ,: > Date: Tue, 18 Sep 2001 10:10:27 -0700 > From: "[???]" > To: > Subject: Pop-up menu in Finder > > > >> P.S. - I know about the 1.5 click to get the magnifying glass to > >> spring open folders. Unfortunately, this does not give me the > >> possibility of going back up the hierarchy once I've scanned the open > >> folder and not found what I was looking for. > >> -- > > doesn't that just drive you crazy! you've really got know where you're > going. If you bottom out somewhere and don't find what you are looking for then just "release" the 1.5 click. That folder is now open, so you can command click on the window title to get the path backup to the hard disk. Select a folder from there and it will open, then you can click and a half your way from there instead. -- Michael Mitchell "Smoke me a kipper, User Support I'll be back for breakfast." Molecular Biology Software Ace Rimmer, Test Pilot +44 (0)171 269 3115 BBC-TV Red Dwarf ENFJ ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 19 Sep 2001 20:45:21 -0400 From: Allan Hunter To: "[???]" , Subject: Pop-up menu in Finder At 10:10 AM -0700 9/18/01, [???] wrote: > >> P.S. - I know about the 1.5 click to get the magnifying glass to >>> spring open folders. Unfortunately, this does not give me the >>> possibility of going back up the hierarchy once I've scanned the open >>> folder and not found what I was looking for. >>> -- > >doesn't that just drive you crazy! you've really got know where you're >going. > >--------------------------- >munsellian@mac.com Yeah, and even with FinderPop, you're stuck with this behavior when you want to drag a file to be copied into a folder deep in some hard drive's hierarchy! Oh, I miss PopupFolder SO SO much!!! ::sniffle:: Sometimes I actually think of going back to System 7 just to be able to use PopupFolder again! -- Allan Hunter ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 21 Sep 2001 12:40:32 +0200 From: Paolo Bartoli To: Info Mac Subject: Wallstreet PRAM Battery my Wallstreet (233) PB's PRAM battery has died. I'd like to replace it, but need to identify: - which battery is - where to buy it (online) - how to replace it thanks a lot! -- Paolo Bartoli ** Arch.Carlo Bartoli / Bartoli Design ** ** archbart@tin.it ** -------------------------------- --Info-Mac-Digest-- End of Info-Mac Digest ******************************