Subject: Info-Mac Digest V18 #128 MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: multipart/mixed; boundary="Info-Mac-Digest" --Info-Mac-Digest Info-Mac Digest Thu, 11 Oct 01 Volume 18 : Issue 128 Today's Topics: [*] DupFinder 1.0.2J - Japanese Version [*] FloatingNotes 1.0.2J - Japanese Version [*] Massinova.menu 1.0.1 [*] RPN Calculator 1.43 68K [*] RPN Calculator 1.43 Carbon [*] RPN Calculator 1.43 PPC [*] SnipIt for Macintosh [*] TidBITS#600/08-Oct-01 [*] Traffic 1.0.1 [*] Web Confidential 3.0b9J - Japanese Version [*] YP Circuits CC 2.0 (french version of YP DC Circuits) [*] YP DC Circuits 2.0 (simulation of an electric circuit) [A] MAC partition on a NT PC???? [A]: Second Hard Drive in G3 [Q] audio transfer [Q] initializing new drive All-in-one device Buying a G4 from Japan Custom made restore disk? G3 to G4 How to check ethernet port looking for missing Mac people MAC partition on a NT PC???? MAC partition on a NT PC???? MAC partition on a NT PC???? 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 #128" ------------------------------ Date: 6 Oct 2001 From: ChrisLi@Bridge1.com To: Subject: [*] DupFinder 1.0.2J - Japanese Version This is the Japanese version of the DupFinder package. DupFinder can quickly and easily remove duplicate files from your hard disk by replacing the duplicates with an alias of a "master" file. Eliminates disk clutter as well as saving disk space. New in DupFinder 1.2: *Expert mode for manually entering creator and/or file type. Can now search all applications or all text files without limiting to a specific creator type. DupFinder requires OS X, or OS 8 or 9 and CarbonLib. CarbonLib is free and can be obtained from your "Software Update" control panel. [Archived as /info-mac/disk/dupfinder-12-jp.hqx; 535 K] ------------------------------ Date: 6 Oct 2001 From: ChrisLi@Bridge1.com To: Subject: [*] FloatingNotes 1.0.2J - Japanese Version This is the Japanese version of the FloatingNotes package. What's the point of having notes if they're buried by other application windows and you can't see them? Sure, Stickies is free, but FloatingNotes "floats" on top of all other application windows so you can always see them. FloatingNotes uses no system extension, and best of all, FloatingNotes is a Carbon application so it works under OS X as well! FloatingNotes automatically saves all open notes when you quit. To delete a note, simply close the window. FloatingNotes requires OS X, or OS 8 or 9 and CarbonLib 1.3 or later. CarbonLib is free and can be obtained from your "Software Update" control panel. [Archived as /info-mac/app/floating-notes-102-jp.hqx; 267 K] ------------------------------ Date: 8 Oct 2001 From: ChrisLi@Bridge1.com To: Subject: [*] Massinova.menu 1.0.1 The Massinova Project Broadcasting trance and electronica music to the world 24 hours a day, 7 days a week with live requests, a vast community network of listeners and an unrivaled web site. The project started with the desire to push the envelope of music interactivity by providing an automated request system. A custom broadcast engine was developed to interface directly with an SQL backend allowing unsurpassed web interactivity. The result, as you can see, is very cool. The Menu Extra The Massinova Menu Extra is an extension of The Massinova Project allowing listeners running Mac OS X to interface directly with the broadcast database. It sits in the Mac OS X Menu Bar providing useful information such as the current song playing and recently requested songs. Additionally, it allows a listener to place requests for songs in the request list, and directly connect to the broadcast. Languages: English, French, Spanish, German, Italian, Danish, Norwegian, Finnish, Brazilian-Portuguese, Japanese, Korean, Simplified Chinese, Traditional Chinese Requirements: Mac OS X 10.1 A broadband connection to the Internet (DSL, Cable, T1+) Version 1.0.1 *Fixed a common Menu Extra server crash that happened if you unload the extra at certain key moments during an update. *Removed an accidental double download when selecting "Refresh Menu". *Better identifies any of your requests or changes in your favorites when using only the website. *Cleaned up internal communication and notification methods for ease of upgrades and future Massinova products. *Artist info links now correctly handle and encode special characters. [Archived as /info-mac/gst/snd/massinova-menu-101.hqx; 384 K] ------------------------------ Date: 8 Oct 2001 From: Jeff Baker To: Subject: [*] RPN Calculator 1.43 68K RPN Calculator is a mathematically robust RPN implementation for Macintosh in three flavors: 68k, PPC, Carbon. V1.43 is essentially a final quality program and is very reliable. Its features include: 100 element stack 8 memories Full support for complex number math Scalable user interface Statistics Systems of Equations Prime Search Factorization Prime Factorization Fraction Approximation to Decimal Expansions Base Conversion Function Library (user-defined) Constants (user-defined) [Archived as /info-mac/sci/calc/rpn-calculator-143-68k.hqx; 743 K] ------------------------------ Date: 8 Oct 2001 From: Jeff Baker To: Subject: [*] RPN Calculator 1.43 Carbon RPN Calculator is a mathematically robust RPN implementation for Macintosh in three flavors: 68k, PPC, Carbon. V1.43 is essentially a final quality program and is very reliable. Its features include: 100 element stack 8 memories Full support for complex number math Scalable user interface Statistics Systems of Equations Prime Search Factorization Prime Factorization Fraction Approximation to Decimal Expansions Base Conversion Function Library (user-defined) Constants (user-defined) [Archived as /info-mac/sci/calc/rpn-calculator-143-cbn.hqx; 983 K] ------------------------------ Date: 8 Oct 2001 From: Jeff Baker To: Subject: [*] RPN Calculator 1.43 PPC RPN Calculator is a mathematically robust RPN implementation for Macintosh in three flavors: 68k, PPC, Carbon. V1.43 is essentially a final quality program and is very reliable. Its features include: 100 element stack 8 memories Full support for complex number math Scalable user interface Statistics Systems of Equations Prime Search Factorization Prime Factorization Fraction Approximation to Decimal Expansions Base Conversion Function Library (user-defined) Constants (user-defined) [Archived as /info-mac/sci/calc/rpn-calculator-143-ppc.hqx; 862 K] ------------------------------ Date: 7 Oct 2001 From: "SnipIt support" To: Subject: [*] SnipIt for Macintosh SnipIt is a utility to extract songs or clips from a long audio recording (or movie). Its main use is to split long recordings from a vinyl record, tape or FM station into individual song files. It can use any movie or audio file readable by quicktime and exports the output as a movie file (readable by iTunes and many other utilities). Clips are generated by specifying a clip-start and a clip-end time and then saving the movie in between. Shareware $10. Unregistered versions have a "please register" reminder, but are otherwise fully functional. Publisher: Kifa Software (www.diskrecall.com) Home page: http://www.diskrecall.com/snipit e-mail: snipit@diskrecall.com Copyright 2001 Kifa Software [Archived as /info-mac/gst/snd/snipit.hqx; 660 K] ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 8 Oct 2001 21:00:00 -0700 From: TidBITS Editors To: digest@info-mac.org, mac-l@sparky.listmoms.net, Subject: [*] TidBITS#600/08-Oct-01 TidBITS#600/08-Oct-01 Mac OS X 10.1's improvements make a world of difference in usability, and this week we look at a slew of changes that give Mac OS X 10.1 a far more rich and polished feel than previous versions. Also this week, we roll out new Web and mailing list services in honor of our 600th issue. In the news, Microsoft releases a patch for PowerPoint and Excel (both 98 and 2001) to block potentially malicious macros from running without warning. Topics: MailBITS/08-Oct-01 Further Explorations into Mac OS X 10.1 Six Hundred Issues and New TidBITS Services [Archived as /info-mac/per/tb/tidbits-600.etx; 31K] ------------------------------ Date: 10 Oct 2001 From: reddlew To: Subject: [*] Traffic 1.0.1 Traffic 1.0.1 is a great shareware board game. Move cars and trucks around to get the silver car out on the road. Please download, it is very fun, come on! Requires: 68K or PowerPC system 7.5 or later 5MB of Free Ram [Archived as /info-mac/game/brd/traffic-101.hqx; 1668 K] ------------------------------ Date: 6 Oct 2001 From: ChrisLi@Bridge1.com To: Subject: [*] Web Confidential 3.0b9J - Japanese Version This is the Japanese version of the Web Confidential package. This is the preview (beta) version Web Confidential 3.0 package. Web Confidential runs natively on Mac OS X or on Mac OS 9 with CarbonLib 1.1 or better. Web Confidential is an intuitive, easy-to-use program for managing user IDs, passwords, registration numbers, and the like. 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. [Archived as /info-mac/comm/inet/web/web-confidential-30b9-jp.hqx; 1323 K] ------------------------------ Date: 8 Oct 2001 From: Yves Pelletier To: Subject: [*] YP Circuits CC 2.0 (french version of YP DC Circuits) YP Circuits CC 2.0 is the french version of YP DC Circuits 2.0. YP DC Circuits 2.0 allows the user to build a virtual electric circuit including batteries, resistors and switches, and measure currents and voltages with an ammeter and a voltmeter. The circuit can be copied, printed or saved on disk. New in this version 2.0: - You can now save each circuit in a document which can be open and edited with YP DC Circuits. - A third circuit model (3 loops, 6 branches) has been added. - The value measured by an ammeter is written in the circuit, beside each ammeter. - The value measured by the voltmeter is written in the circuit, beside the voltmeter. - The polarity of the voltmeter tool is automatically changed when you just created one terminal of the voltmeter, and the other terminal doesn't exist yet. System Requirements: YP DC Circuits runs on any Macintosh computer with MAC OS 7, 8 or 9. It needs about 400 Kb on your hard disk and 1 Mb of RAM. Price: $20 US Keywords: Physics teaching, sciences, electricity, electromagnetism, electric circuit, direct current, battery, resistor, switch, electromotive force, current, voltmeter, ammeter, Ohm's law, Kirchoff's law, series circuit, parallel circuit, simulation, voltage. Author: Yves Pelletier Email: pelletier@kagi.com WWW: http://www.kagi.com/pelletier [Archived as /info-mac/sci/yp-circuits-cc-20.hqx; 270 K] ------------------------------ Date: 8 Oct 2001 From: Yves Pelletier To: Subject: [*] YP DC Circuits 2.0 (simulation of an electric circuit) YP DC Circuits 2.0 allows the user to build a virtual electric circuit including batteries, resistors and switches, and measure currents and voltages with an ammeter and a voltmeter. The circuit can be copied, printed or saved on disk. New in this version 2.0: - You can now save each circuit in a document which can be open and edited with YP DC Circuits. - A third circuit model (3 loops, 6 branches) has been added. - The value measured by an ammeter is written in the circuit, beside each ammeter. - The value measured by the voltmeter is written in the circuit, beside the voltmeter. - The polarity of the voltmeter tool is automatically changed when you just created one terminal of the voltmeter, and the other terminal doesn't exist yet. System Requirements: YP DC Circuits runs on any Macintosh computer with MAC OS 7, 8 or 9. It needs about 400 Kb on your hard disk and 1 Mb of RAM. Price: $20 US Keywords: Physics teaching, sciences, electricity, electromagnetism, electric circuit, direct current, battery, resistor, switch, electromotive force, current, voltmeter, ammeter, Ohm's law, Kirchoff's law, series circuit, parallel circuit, simulation, voltage. Author: Yves Pelletier Email: pelletier@kagi.com WWW: http://www.kagi.com/pelletier [Archived as /info-mac/sci/yp-dc-circuits-20.hqx; 263 K] ------------------------------ Date: Sun, 7 Oct 2001 18:06:34 -0400 From: Ken Laskey To: Henk & Jeannine , digest@info-mac.org Subject: [A] MAC partition on a NT PC???? ++++ previous message ++++++ I need to set-up a MAC partition on a NT machine. This MAC partition will only contain data. The machine does not have to run any MAC OS. It is currently being used as a proxy/mail server. +++++++++++++++ You need to get your administrator to enable Services for Macintosh (SFM). It only works on an NTFS file structure but it allows you to mount the NT partition on your Mac desktop and read/write to it as any partition. There is also a software package from Thursby called DAVE, but I haven't used it. -- Ken Laskey kenneth.j.laskey@saic.com ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 06 Oct 2001 12:01:22 -0400 From: Scott Horton To: Info Mac Digest Subject: [A]: Second Hard Drive in G3 My experience with an early version of the B&W G3, IDE drive (Maxtor) and a second IDE drive follows: The tip off of to which revision B&W motherboard you have comes when you open the case and look at the IDE ribbon cable. If there is NO connector for a second drive, then purchasing a dual cable and installing it onto the IDE plug on the mother board alone will NOT work. Sure, you may see the drive but this is a funky and limited IDE bus that ONLY supports one device properly and INDEED you may wind up with data corruption or at least a lot or lockups or crashes when the data on the bus collides with itself, etc. If, however, your machine comes with a cable that has 2 connectors (one will not be used) then you PROBABLY (I have no personal experience but it makes sense) can add a second slave configured IDE hard disk to this bus. I purchased and installed a Tempo Ultra-66 PCI IDE card because my B&W has the earlier version motherboard and it works just fine! Be aware that there is no point in formatting or putting data on your new disk drive until AFTER the installation of the card as you must initialize the drive AFTER installing it on the new IDE bus to use it. I installed an IBM 75 GB drive and it has been fine. BTW, the tempo card comes with 2 IDE buses supporting a total of 4 devices, a master and a slave on each bus in addition to the IDE bus on the motherboard itself. I believe that someone is now making an Ultra-100 card. My IBM drive is ultra-100 but these drives automatically work with Ultra-66 bus specifications if an Ultra-66 vs. Ultra-100 bus is found. I had NO problems with this. Lastly, a question. Does anyone know if the Tempo Ultra-66 PCI IDE card is supported under Mac OS 10? (10.1?) Good luck, SH > From: Don Chesnut and Cathy Jo Cassidy > Date: Tue, 2 Oct 2001 10:09:39 -0700 > To: digest@info-mac.org > Subject: hard drive in G3 > > Can a second IDE hard drive be added to a B&W G3? > > What I found out is that is that you can add a second and third IDE > drive to the G3 with one important caveat...if you have a Rev 1 G3 > there is a possibility of data corruption; this according to Apple. > The one reply with the Rev 1 had used a Maxtor drive and had no > problems; he seemed to think the brand of the drive was important. > Several replies pointed me to the xlr8your mac website, specifically > http://www.xlr8yourmac.com/systems.html#g3macs > which detailed how to identify Rev 1 and 2 G3s. > > Another reply -- >> 2 articles: >> http://www.xlr8yourmac.com/G3-ZONE/yosemite/IDE/ (if you have a rev 1) >> http://www.xlr8yourmac.com/IDE/add_2nd_drive/index.html (rev 2) > >> There is also a drive compatibility database which you can search to check >> whether the drive you pick will be compatible: >> http://forums.xlr8yourmac.com/drivedb/search.drivedb.lasso > > Turns out the xlr8yourmac site is very helpful, as is the Infomac community. > > Don ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 8 Oct 2001 21:43:50 -0500 From: solitude@flash.net To: digest@info-mac.org Subject: [Q] audio transfer I have audio tapes that I want to digitize. How can I do this? I used 1/8 inch plugs from the small tape recorder to the Powerbook G3 but this did not work. The programs I tried using were SoundJam, the free program included with Toast (CD Spin Doctor), and SoundEdit. SoundEdit seemed to have recorded but it was useless as the sound was too low. ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 8 Oct 2001 21:45:30 -0500 From: solitude@flash.net To: digest@info-mac.org Subject: [Q] initializing new drive Just bought an 80 gig firewire external drive. CharisMac is touting their Anubis Utility as the best initializer. Any opinions or experiences to share? Why should I not just use Apple's Drive Setup? Actually, I tried Drive Setup and it did not recognize the drive although it was on the desktop.TIA Mink ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 9 Oct 2001 15:07:08 +0200 From: "Norbert M. Doerner" To: digest@info-mac.org, rg.van.tiel@hccnet.nl, neil@designumbrella.com Subject: All-in-one device At 14:30 Uhr -0400 04.10.2001, The Info-Mac Network wrote: >In response to: >________________________________ >Date: Thu, 27 Sep 2001 13:30:29 +0200 >From: Robert van Tiel >To: >Subject: Printer > >Hello, >i am looking for a all-in-one printer for my iMac with USB-port. >I am looking for a all-in-one printer, scanner, fax and copier. >Which one is the best for me?? > >With kinds regards, > >Robert van Tiel >______________________ > >I can't speak highly enough about the Hewlett Packard Officejet G85. >We've had it for a month and we're still amazed by the quality of the >photocopying, even on normal. It's quiet, fast, well designed, has a >flatbed scanner, a colour fax and clear, well laid-out controls. It >can work as a stand-alone or controlled from your computer. It's a >superb piece of kit. > >Neil Jones Well, I cannot agree with this. I had bought a LaserJet 3200M, because I wanted a fax and a laser printer in one device. The hardware is really superb, it works like a charm. But the software is a plain disaster, a total mess. - The installer did delete some of my fonts and replaced them with different ones of the same name. This very effectively destroyed a lot of layouts in my database, as the new fonts had differences in size. According to German law, the deletion of use files is criminal! - The Fax driver, which is the very same of as used by the Officejet G85 was not working at all at the beginning. After some serious hacking with a debugger, I found that this extension REQUIRES ColorSync. Without it, is refuses to work, and it will of course NOT give you an appropriate error message. That would have been far to easy. - The "HP-All-In-One Communication" extension is the most buggy piece of software I have ever seen. Often it claims that the door of my printer would be open, but of course it isn't. Often it will just lock up my computer, effectively destroying my recent work. Also, sometimes it will just not print at all, but just generating a strange error message in the printer, and again locking my Mac. - The CDROM does not contain a manual, only a huge amount of cluttered HTML files, that don't contain anything useful, and that is not even useable with Internet Exploder. There is a PDF file, but I had to download it from the web site. HP support for this beast is not existing, several requests have never been answered, and the folks at the telephone hotline are surprised that this machine even works with a Mac. What a waste of money. I never buy another HP product. I mean, there are always problems, but completely ignoring them does not help. Sigh. Yours, -- Norbert M. Doerner (Doerner@kagi.com) Please donate money for the New York Firefighters 9-11 Disaster Relief Fund ----------------------------------------------------- **CDFinder** The file is out there! Check out the CDFinder-Homepage at: Now available: CDWinder for Windows: ! Our lives begin to end the day we become silent about things that matter. -- Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. ----------------------------------------------------- ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 06 Oct 2001 10:59:39 From: "tony stanton" To: vin@episolve.com Subject: Buying a G4 from Japan Thanks for your reply. I bought a new 733 in the end. never did find out what GIGE-JPN meant though. From: Vincent Cayenne To: "Tony Stanton" , Subject: Re: Buying a G4 from Japan Date: Thu, 6 Sep 2001 06:53:41 -0400 MIME-Version: 1.0 Received: from [64.32.225.132] by hotmail.com (3.2) with ESMTP id MHotMailBD60A06F001E4004318C4020E184D5BB0; Thu, 06 Sep 2001 03:52:31 -0700 Received: from wtca92.wtca.org (66-65-90-9.nyc.rr.com [66.65.90.9])(authenticated)by eligon.episolve.com (8.11.0/8.11.0) with ESMTP id f86AsiG12252;Thu, 6 Sep 2001 06:54:45 -0400 >From vin@episolve.com Thu, 06 Sep 2001 03:52:31 -0700 Message-Id: At 4:50 PM +0800 2001/09/04, Tony Stanton wrote: >I can figure out all of it apart from the GIGE-JPN part. Can anyone help >me with this? Just a hunch - GIGabit Ethernet? -- 'tis as said. [Reality is defined by being described] _________________________________________________________________ Get your FREE download of MSN Explorer at http://explorer.msn.com/intl.asp ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 08 Oct 2001 18:32:53 +1300 From: "Markus Winter" To: digest@info-mac.org Subject: Custom made restore disk? Hi all, I'm taking care of 23 Macs (mostly Wallstreet Powerbooks, some Bronze Powerbooks, all running Sys 8.6) that we give to our students while they work on their projects. It probably goes without saying that the computers return in different states of "chaos" - games installed, programs deleted, etc - and it's up to me to reformat and install everything. Now I used to make myself a custom disk with all the apps we use and after doing a clean software restore from the MacOS 8.6 system disk install all the programs again - which takes about 2.5 hours per machine ... and is boring as hell. Now I'm thinking there must be a better way ... I tried tinkering with the System restore disk, e.g. create an image of the restore CD, delete the things I don't need, make a new "Macintosh HD" file to restore from, install all the apps onto it, compress it into a DiskCopy image, put it on the copy of the restore CD and burn it onto CD. However when I start the "Apple Software Restore" program I get the message that "The image [Macintosh HD] has a missing or outdated checksum resource". How do I get a restore CD that contains all our apps? Help - the computers have to be restored by next Monday, and I really don't want to set up another 23 machines! Thanks. Markus -- Dr. Markus Winter 1st Floor, Room 15 The Liggins Institute University of Auckland 2-6 Park Avenue Grafton Auckland New Zealand Tel: 0064 (0)9 373 7599 (wait for message then type extension) 3960 Fax: 0064 (0)9 373 7497 mobile: 025 682 0416 ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 09 Oct 2001 14:55:09 -0700 From: Chris McVay/Karen McVay To: Subject: G3 to G4 I have a G3 266 beige desktop with 512mb ram. I need better performance and want to replace the processor with a faster G3 processor or a G4. What price should I expect to pay and which manufacturer offers a good product? Has anyone else done this and what kind of experiences have you had? I also want to upgrade the hard drive and add usb and firewire cards. Any suggestions? Thanks for any help. -- Chris McVay fractured555@earthlink.net ------------------------------ Date: Sun, 7 Oct 2001 21:13:32 -0500 From: Charles Freund To: digest@info-mac.org Subject: How to check ethernet port I have a beige G3/300 desktop with built-in ethernet. I'm getting ready to go to either cable modem or ADSL, and wanted to check out the ethernet port to make sure it was functional before ordering broadband service. I created a 10baseT crossover cable and connected the Mac to my work Windows laptop (with PCMCIA ethernet that is known good). The light on the Windows interface came on, indicating that it saw the connection (also worked when I swapped ends with the cable, to check both paths of the cable). But I was unable to complete a ping from either machine. The laptop was set up with ip of 192.168.30.18, subnet mask of 255.255.255.0. The mac was 192.168.30.17. thanks for any suggestions ------------------------------ Date: Sun, 7 Oct 2001 03:46:24 -0700 From: Denny Davis To: Info-Mac Subject: looking for missing Mac people Several Mac people that I am looking for and since they had something posted of theirs: dumpTRUCK! people. dumpTRUCK! is on the info-mac mirrors, but the web site is not there and the email bounces. email dump1truck@aol.com bounced. site is down Brian Brasher email ikthusian@aol.com bounces site is down anyone know where either of these people are? <<>> Curiosity killed the cat, but satisfaction brought it back. Blessings, Denny ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 8 Oct 2001 07:19:58 -0700 From: "BILLMAN,JEFF (HP-USA,ex1)" To: "'Henk & Jeannine'" , Subject: MAC partition on a NT PC???? There is no free/shareware solution that I know of. If you have NT server or Winders 2000 server you can load Services for Macintosh (SfM) and set up a volume/directory to be accessed by Mac clients and PC clients. You cannot set this up on NT workstation by itself. I am running a network at home with W2K Advanced Server providing file and print services to my Macs and PeeCee's. the only thing to worry about is copying files by a PC from a share set up to work with Macs to one that is not and back again. This sometimes causes the file to get munged but it depends on what the file it. You may look into a product called Dave. I know it will allow a Windows box to be a client of an Appleshare server but I don't know if it will let an NT workstation share files to Mac clients. Regards, Jeff Billman Hewlett-Packard Company North American telecom Team - Atlanta -----Original Message----- From: Henk & Jeannine [mailto:jam_jenny.geo@yahoo.com] Sent: Friday, October 05, 2001 13:48 To: comp-sys-mac-digest@moderators.isc.org Subject: MAC partition on a NT PC???? MAC partition on a NT PC???? Please help. I need to set-up a MAC partition on a NT machine. This MAC partition will only contain data. The machine does not have to run any MAC OS. It is currently being used as a proxy/mail server. The machine specs are: Gigabyte GA-7VXMM motherboard, AMD Duron 800 MHz, 256 Meg Dimm Ram, 20 Gig Hd, Win NT 4 Workstation, SP 5, Realtek chipset 10/100 PCI network card. The machine must still boot NT and run the Proxy, but the MAC partition must be accessible via the network. The proxy is installed on a 4 Gig NTFS partition. The other 16 Gig of the hard drive is not being used. Please help. I know NT fairly well, but I know absolutely NOTHING about MAC. Please help. Thank you. Henk de Swardt South Africa ------------------------------ Date: Sun, 07 Oct 2001 11:02:20 +0100 From: gxm To: Henk & Jeannine , Subject: MAC partition on a NT PC???? > I need to set-up a MAC partition on a NT machine. This MAC partition > will only contain data. The machine does not have to run any MAC OS. It > is currently being used as a proxy/mail server. NTFS the native file system for NT/2000 has native support for Macintosh files, although it will not support file/foldername characters that are fine on a Mac, so stick to letters and numbers, hyphens and underscores. To allow a Mac to see a Windows share requires either NT Server's Services for Macintosh or 3rd party software such as DAVE or PC-MACLAN. Installing and Setting up Windows NT Services for Macintosh should tell you all you need, specifically: for peer-to-peer networking. Dave or MacSOHO from will run on the Mac's to allow them to show up in the Network Neighbourhood on the Win9x/NT/2K boxes, or PC MACLAN from will allow the PC to share using AppleTalk. HTH - gxm ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 06 Oct 2001 11:20:39 -0400 From: "Martin Sieverding" To: digest@info-mac.org Subject: MAC partition on a NT PC???? You can use the File Manager in the Administrative Tools to create a MacVolume. Simple create one in NT then go to the File Manager and make it a mac volume. Be careful to check the permissions on the NT side again after you do this as creating a Macvolume opens it up for all to use. I have done this with every user's folder at the school I work at. Martin Sieverding Tech coordinator Menno High School Menno SD Quoted Message follows: MAC partition on a NT PC???? Please help. I need to set-up a MAC partition on a NT machine. This MAC partition will only contain data. The machine does not have to run any MAC OS. It is currently being used as a proxy/mail server. The machine specs are: Gigabyte GA-7VXMM motherboard, AMD Duron 800 MHz, 256 Meg Dimm Ram, 20 Gig Hd, Win NT 4 Workstation, SP 5, Realtek chipset 10/100 PCI network card. The machine must still boot NT and run the Proxy, but the MAC partition must be accessible via the network. The proxy is installed on a 4 Gig NTFS partition. The other 16 Gig of the hard drive is not being used. Please help. I know NT fairly well, but I know absolutely NOTHING about MAC. Please help. Thank you. Henk de Swardt South Africa -------------------------------- --Info-Mac-Digest-- End of Info-Mac Digest ******************************