Subject: Info-Mac Digest V18 #76 MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: multipart/mixed; boundary="Info-Mac-Digest" --Info-Mac-Digest Info-Mac Digest Wed, 16 May 01 Volume 18 : Issue 76 Today's Topics: (A) Found Entourage to Eudora script [*] MaxBulk Mailer v1.7.1 [*] TidBITS#580/14-May-01 How to open the case Opening a Mac Case Times Bold becomes Times Bold Italic? What Host is an OS X Finder Window Showing? 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 #76" ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 15 May 2001 18:07:51 -0400 From: a brody To: digest@info-mac.org Subject: (A) Found Entourage to Eudora script Dear Digest readers, Much to my surprise, I found a script that if put in the Entourage Scripts folder will export Entourage mailboxes to Eudora mailboxes as long as there is more than one message in the mailbox: http://homepage.mac.com/WebObjects/FileSharing.woa/wa/default?user=allenwatson&fpath=Entourage%20Scripts%3AExport%2FImport&templatefn=FileSharing.html It is the Eudora Export E script on the above URL. Thank you to all who replied...and no Eudora only recognizes Outlook mailboxes and not Entourage since Entourage stores all its mailboxes in a single file. Sincerely, abrody@smart.net -- Check my internet portal of over 1000 links verified monthly, over 200 Macintosh, and over 200 Cartography GIS and Mapping links. http://www.index-site.com/ ------------------------------ Date: 15 May 2001 From: "Stanley C. R. Roche Busk" To: Subject: [*] MaxBulk Mailer v1.7.1 ***Permanent X-Mailer SMTP Header to avoid spamming uses.*** MaxBulk Mailer is a full featured mail-merge and bulk mailer for Macintosh able to send mailings to recipients list using a complete customizable tags set. MaxBulk Mailer is fast, fully customizable and very easy to use. It uses mailings as documents with configuration data, mailing text and mailing list built-in. MaxBulk Mailer handles both plain text and HTML documents. Maxbulk is perfect for sending: - Newsletters - Customer mailings ...etc... New in this release ------------------- - New "Paste Special" menu allows user to import address from clipboard Improvements ------------ - Importation with tab, comma, colon and semicolon as delimiters Bug fixes --------- - Several fixes in SMTP error handler. - Find/Find Next commands did not process all columns.. And many more... [Archived as /info-mac/comm/inet/mail/max-bulk-mailer-171.hqx; 1435 K] ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 14 May 2001 21:00:00 -0700 From: TidBITS Editors To: digest@info-mac.org, mac-l@sparky.listmoms.net, Subject: [*] TidBITS#580/14-May-01 TidBITS#580/14-May-01 This week we examine two fixtures in the technology landscape: modems and databases. Kevin Savetz contributes a look at V.92, the next modem standard for those who can't get broadband connections, and Jonathan Rentzsch starts a look at relational databases for Mac OS X by explaining what a relational database actually is. In the news, Apple releases Mac OS X 10.0.3, Casady & Greene discontinues SoundJam, Macromedia ships FreeHand 10, and we note the passing of author Douglas Adams. Topics: MailBITS/14-May-01 TenBITS/14-May-01 V.92 Modems: Will Dial-Up Access Get Faster? Relational Databases and Mac OS X, Part 1 [Archived as /info-mac/per/tb/tidbits-580.etx; 31K] ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 15 May 2001 09:51:15 +0100 From: John Staplehurst To: Subject: How to open the case >I have a Performa 630CD and It is not woking. Even not a noise. I think >I need to replace power supply but I don't know how to open its case. I >don't want to break it. Any help? Opening the case is in order to get at the PSU is not simple. You need to remove the following: * Drive bezel * Drive security bracket * Front panel control * Floppy drive * CD-ROM drive * Hard drive * I/O door * Logic board * Top cover and shield * Shield/wiring harness * Fan/video card bracket which just leaves the PSU (and speaker) attached to the base plate! Most of the individual steps are straightforward, but you must take care when removing the top cover and shield, as the metal shield has the floppy drive cable attached underneath it. Good Luck! ......................................................................... John Staplehurst School of Psychology, University of Exeter, UK J.A.Staplehurst@ex.ac.uk tel: +44 (0) 1392 264624 http://www.macanics.com/ fax: 0870-2841326 ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 15 May 2001 10:59:14 -0400 From: deborah foss To: Subject: Opening a Mac Case > >Hi Folks, > >I have a Performa 630CD and It is not woking. Even not a noise. I think >I need to replace power supply but I don't know how to open its case. I >don't want to break it. Any help? > >Thanks, > >Ayhan > >PS:Could you plase cc to my email address when you are replying to the >list. > -- This link has the service manuals for all the macs http://www.accesscom.com/~gamba/manuals.html ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 16 May 2001 00:04:07 +0200 From: Minus van Baalen To: digest@info-mac.org Subject: Times Bold becomes Times Bold Italic? Dear All, since a few weeks ---I can't recall exactly when the effect appeared--- my G3 PowerBook (running system 8.6) is confused about some fonts. In particular, times bold has become times bold italic... It not only annoying but the freak aspect worries me. I tried many things apart short of doing a fresh reinstall but the problem persists (even with all extensions off). Worse: often when I make a change in the Fonts folder the Finder crashes at the next startup, which suggests to me some deeper problem. Thing is, I understand the principles of bitmap fonts and truetype fonts (at least I think do) but postscript fonts and what ATM does are complete mysteries to me so I have no idea where to look. Is this a mild symptom or is my computer suffering from some serious illness (and should I take emergency procedures immediately)? Does anyone know? Thanks in advance, Minus van Baalen ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 16 May 2001 11:37:31 +1200 From: Nigel Stanger To: , Subject: What Host is an OS X Finder Window Showing? On 15/5/01 2:49 AM, eliot@cs.umass.edu spake thus: > I sometimes compare folders on my home machine to folders on my office > computer and I find it confusing that there is no indication of the "host" > associated with a Finder window. [...] > Does this bother anyone else? > > Are there any solutions to this problem? It's never really bothered me, although that could be because of the way I work. I tend to orient similar windows spatially so that I can tell them apart, e.g., "local" window on the left, "remote" window on the right. (I only just now noticed the Local/Left/L and Remote/Right/R correspondence, which possibly also helps on a subconscious level. Amazing what you discover when you try to explain something to someone else :) This isn't a problem exclusive to Mac OS X either --- you get exactly the same problem under Mac OS 9 and earlier when you connect to an AppleShare server. Mac OS X exacerbates it somewhat with its not-as-good support for spatial orientation of windows, but you can get around that on the fly. The real problem under Mac OS X arises when you use column view, as the windows don't look any different and often look like part of the same file system (which is I think intentional, deriving from the Unix approach). An extreme example of this is what I have at home: I have a directory on my NetBSD box mounted on my Mac OS X box as part of the normal directory structure. About the only indication that the OS provides is that the mount point looks like a server alias, but once you've browsed into it it just looks like part of the local file system. Fortunately I don't have identical directories on both machines like you do so it's not a major problem for me. -- Nigel Stanger, mailto:nstanger@infoscience.otago.ac.nz Dept. of Information Science, http://strange.otago.ac.nz/ University of Otago, Dunedin, NEW ZEALAND. XNS: =Nigel Stanger Beware the lollipop of mediocrity. Lick it once and you suck forever. -------------------------------- --Info-Mac-Digest-- End of Info-Mac Digest ******************************