Left Brain
|
Bear with me. I plan to get these links better organized. I'm envisioning
a section of links suitable for morning browsing, such as Version Tracker,
ZDNet's MacWorld online, etc. Places to check for the latest news,
and software. 28 Jan 1999
Mac Shopping
Know your Mac
- MacHome's HotTips
- EveryMac
- MacInstruct
- Bite-sized lessons.
- PowerMac G4
Central
- ...cutting edge ownership.
- MacFixIt and
MacFixIt Forums, for troubleshooting
- InformINIT
- Lets you know what System files you should keep and which ones to toss.
This is a great aid in keeping the MacOS clean.
- Ambrosia Café
- References and summary pages for programmers and end-users.
- Graphics Resources
- MacOSX article
- Stay in the know.
Spiff up your Mac
...with free and fundamental software
(I believe it's good to require people to learn their way around the Apple site
to find stuff there. This increases awareness of Apple's offerings.)
- Mac OS 8.1 or 8.6, or 9.1, or X
- Go to Apple and choose "Software"
from the links accross the top of the page.
- Disk First Aid
- I know, you've used it before and it couldn't fix your problem. Well, that
may not be the case anymore. Version 8.2 works with HFS+ formatted drives, and
isn't picky about working on the startup disk. Don't push this too far though.
If your hard drive is seriously ill, it's still better to start from another
disk (CD, Zip, Syquest, other HD, for instance).
To get it, go to Apple and then on the
black navigation bar choose Support, then on the Products pull-down list
select "MacOS and Applications." There you'll find a side-bar list including
a link to Disk First Aid.
- Quicktime 4.0
- Go to Apple and then to the Products
page where you can find the Quicktime link.
- MRJ 2.1.4 - Mac OS Runtime for Java
- Go to Apple
and select the Products link where you can select MacOS from a Software
pull-down menu which takes you to a page where there's an MRJ link.
MRJ can be used with Microsoft's Internet Explorer 4.0 which, in
my experience, requires less memory than Netscape Communicator 4.04.
Watching and waiting
- Opera web browser
- MacOS version
running,
but needs some polish.
This promises to be a compact alternative to the big browsers.
|
|
|
Right Brain
AppleScripts
As I come up with them, I'll post applescripts here.
OS 9
- Hide MSIE -- intended as an example
of how to hide a specific application. This method could be used in a
launch-and-hide AppleScript.
User Groups
From "Why Mac?" to "Go Mac!"
Send our Windows using friends to my Windows links
Ammunition
Apple history
Stuff for your Mac
My personal favorites for the GUI: background
(from Desktop Textures volume III) ,
sound (appearing soon).
Mac Link Pages
No one can claim to have the best Apple links page, especially me!
Why I like Macs
Here are some of my reasons that I can
put into words. This is not a complete list.
- File associations
- to open a file one can simply double click its icon. Information
is stored with files that includes an identifier of the application that
created it. Extensions in the file name are not necessary for file recognition.
- Application locating
- Using file IDs, the OS keeps track of what applications are on your
computer. So you can rename or move them to different folders
and they can still be found for the purpose of opening a file.
If the database that keeps track of the applications becomes corrupt, it can
be recreated by the system at startup (or after deleting the database).
Try this with the Windows registry.
- Spiffy icons
- It seems like the MacOS was designed from the start with variation in color
capabilities in mind. Files that have icon representations stored in their resource fork have ones for different color depths -- 8 bit, 4 bit, and 1 bit. If
your monitor can show 256 colors or more at the same time, then your icons can
appear with a varied 256-color palette. This makes it possible to have icons
that are thumbnails of picture files.
- SCSI port - standard equipment
- All the Macs I've ever worked with had an SCSI port at the back of the
computer. That means all you need is a cable to attach an SCSI device. This
includes at least external fixed disks, scanners, and Zip drives. You don't
have to open your computer to attach these devices, and for fixed or Zip disks,
there's no software to install to access them. The drivers are on the disks and
are loaded at startup. [Macs since the MacPlus, Jan 1986, have had SCSI ports.]
|
|
|