Info-Mac Digest V19 #26

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Info-Mac Digest V19 #26

Post by Info-Mac » March 14th, 2002, 2:30 am

Subject: Info-Mac Digest V19 #26
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--Info-Mac-Digest

Info-Mac Digest Thu, 14 Mar 02 Volume 19 : Issue 26

Today's Topics:

[*] TidBITS#620/11-Mar-02
[*] Acronyms 3.2
[*] Acronyms update 3.1 -> 3.2
[*] All About Dinosaurs
[*] Beat the Dragon 3.0
[*] BTV Pro 4.0
[*] CopyPaste-X 1.2 - Multiple Clipboards for Mac OS X
[*] Extension Overload 5.9.6
[*] Keyboard Maestro 1.0.3J - Japanese Version
[*] Pocket Album v1.1.9
[Q] SMC router/print server and lpr
[Q] Text Editor?
[Q] Which Printer will work for me?
Bomb Cursor during startup, OS 9.2.1
Connecting PLW to OS X
Felt Tip Sound Studio tip: saving "can't save" files
Firmware startup
Info-Mac Digest V19 #22
Info-Mac Digest V19 #23
MicrosoftDialogLib to J. McGibney
mouse clicking

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--Info-Mac-Digest
Content-Type: multipart/digest; boundary="----------------------------"
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------------------------------

Date: Mon, 11 Mar 2002 21:00:00 -0800
From: TidBITS Editors
To: digest@info-mac.org, mac-l@sparky.listmoms.net,
Subject: [*] TidBITS#620/11-Mar-02

TidBITS#620/11-Mar-02

Confused by fonts in Mac OS X? Us too, but thanks to Matt
Neuburg's review of DiamondSoft's Font Reserve 3.0 for Mac OS X,
we now know where to turn to eliminate font duplication and
confusion. Matt Slot of Ambrosia Software then joins us with a
revealing look at how Ambrosia recently dealt with problem of
casual software piracy. Important new releases this week include
Virtual PC 5.0.2, EIMS Server 3.1.1, and Lasso Professional 5.

Topics:
MailBITS/11-Mar-02
Font Reserve Moves to Mac OS X
The Plain Truth about Casual Software Piracy




[Archived as /info-mac/per/tb/tidbits-620.etx; 32K]

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

Date: 12 Mar 2002
From: Angela Brett
To:
Subject: [*] Acronyms 3.2

Main changes in this version (listed in more detail at
http://acronyms.co.nz/changes.html):

* 517 new original acronyms - a total of 5027
* A few bug fixes
* A new background pattern

[words and phrases in capitals are acronyms whose expansions are in the stack]
The purpose of this FREEWARE HYPERCARD STACK is to provide an
introduction to a MIRTHFUL use of ACRONYMS on the INTERNET. Have you
ever wished you had a better alternative to LOL? Or thought "Who
makes up these WITTICISMs?" Well anybody can, you can! Don't say
you're JUST TOO BUSY! and you don't want to READ A MANUAL. You can
create an ACRONYM out of ALMOST ANYTHING! You can make them from any
old CLICHE, use them to tell people to SHUT UP, state that THAT'S NOT
FUNNY, tell a GIRL that she's FEMININE, SMILE a SMUG SMILE or just
find FLAWS in the MEMORY of a UNIVERSITY EINSTEIN.

Take a DIRTY MIND, add a CHUCKLE, stir in a QUIP, and a QUANTITY of
SNORTING, stick on a DISCLAIMER, and that's THE WAY THINGS ARE!

You can politely tell people to PISS OFF, PUT A SOCK IN IT, BE CIVIL
or tell them THAT'S CHILDISH. You can tell people that they're
talking BOLLOCKS! And if you're ON A ROLL, you can create a HUMDINGER
of a reply to someone who won't TRY ONSCREEN HELP.

So who began this BIZARRE ADVENTURE through the ALPHABET? A CRAZED
KIWI and an ABNORMAL IRISH man with a DIRTY MIND, who found
themselves making up LAUGHTER ACRONYMS during their EPISTLES to the
ANTIPODES - a sequence of combinations started when TONY MCCOY
O'GRADY (MAXIOGEE) sent ANGELA BRETT AN EMAIL about his SLEUTHing in
some of her SHAREWARE. They decided not to continue DOING NOTHING
about their HILARIOUS ACRONYM stash, so they compiled them into this
STACK, and in the process created a SUPERHERO called MACGIRL, her
SIDEKICK KEYBOARD, and many DASTARDly VILLAINs.

ACRONYMS is also on the WORLD WIDE WEB. Check out
http://acronyms.co.nz to view all the acronyms - including new ones,
download the latest update lists (which let you import new acronyms
into the stack) and new versions of the stack, view the acronymist
HALL OF FAME and honours list, subscribe to THE ACRONYM TIMES and
more. You can also discuss and create acronyms on the FORUMS or FORA
at http://www.co.nz/cgi/forums/start.cgi?id=acronyms

[Archived as /info-mac/game/word/acronyms-32.hqx; 2374 K]

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

Date: 12 Mar 2002
From: Angela Brett
To:
Subject: [*] Acronyms update 3.1 -> 3.2

Update List {6}Lime can be imported into ACRONYMS 1.0 to 3.1 to add
all the acronyms which are in version 3.2 but not in version 3.1. It
does not add any of the new features (see
http://acronyms.co.nz/changes.html) which are in ACRONYMS 3.2, just
the 517 new acronyms.

If you don't have ACRONYMS, you can download the latest version of
ACRONYMS from http://acronyms.co.nz. The latest version (currently
3.2) already contains all the acronyms which are in this update list,
so you won't need to download this as well.

[Archived as /info-mac/game/word/acronyms-update-31-32.hqx; 36 K]

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

Date: 11 Mar 2002
From: joel saleson
To:
Subject: [*] All About Dinosaurs

here's a hypercard stack that teaches dinosaurs to children. freeware. I am
the author.

[Archived as /info-mac/edu/yng/dinosaurs.hqx; 1303 K]

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

Date: 12 Mar 2002
From: Tom Lakovic
To:
Subject: [*] Beat the Dragon 3.0

Now true full screen sizing options with big off-white (easy on the eyes)
beautiful cards, animations, sounds, and arcade-like game-play fun. Beat the
Dragon 3.0 comes alive at last, setting a new design and animation standard
for solitaire games, BTD3 is a must have!

If you don't already know, Beat the Dragon is an original, comical,
addictive and incredibly frusterating solitaire game for your Macintosh.
Beat the Dragon is much more challenging than standard varieties of
patience. Like many solitaire games your aim is to build all 4 foundation
piles, but watch out! There's a dragon with an attitude problem who seems to
have the cards stacked in his favor...your mission: to Beat the Dragon at
his own game (new animated rules in the game show you how it's done).

Hours of fun, hours of frusteration, and hours of laughter...BTD is a must
have for the solitaire expert and those of us who just want one really good
time-waster to play while we wait for long downloads or just to
procrastinate in style!

Be sure to check out our other games and offers at:
http://www.graphicaindustria.com

Beat the Dragon 3.0 fixes many bugs with version 2.5, comes with all new
features, sounds, full screen game-play, animation and design, new laughs,
and a new animated rules demo for beginners but it's the same great game you
love to hate!

Requirements: Any power macintosh with 3MB of free Hard Drive space and
about 4MB of free memory.
Users of Black&White Macintoshes can still download version 1.0 available on
our web site or at most macintosh game archives on the internet.

Beat the Dragon is shareware -- still only $10 to register, and this
entitles you to a personalized copy that gives you extra hints and high
score saving ability. (see 'about' in the game for more information) and
GOOD LUCK (you're going to need it)!

[Archived as /info-mac/game/crd/beat-the-dragon-30.hqx; 2282 K]

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

Date: 13 Mar 2002
From: Ben Bird
To:
Subject: [*] BTV Pro 4.0

BTV Pro
Version 5.4
March 4, 2002

Author: Ben Bird
Email: benbird@kagi.com
Web site: www.bensoftware.com
Online order page: http://order.kagi.com/?UXT

Description

BTV Pro is an application for the Macintosh that allows you to view,
capture and edit video, create stop-motion animations, and also has
advanced capture features such as time lapse and motion detection. It
works with any Macintosh compatible video input source such as video
input cards, TV cards, built-in video, USB, DV, and FireWire video
sources.

Main features

- Works with any Macintosh compatible video input source
- View video in a window or full-screen
- Play back movies in a window or full-screen
- Capture video to disk as a standard QuickTime movie using custom
compression settings
- Capture frames of video to disk in many different file formats (PICT,
JPEG, TIFF and more)
- Advanced video capture features
- Powerful time lapse capture feature
- Motion detection capture feature
- Stop motion animation features
- Onion skin feature for helping with stop motion animation
- Frame averaging feature to eliminate noise in still image captures
- DV video input/output and DV device control
- Edit movies using simple copy-and-paste and click-and-drag commands
- Floating Frame Position window that shows time code and frame count
- Export movies with custom compression and frame rate settings, and
filters
- Channel changing on ixTV and TurboTV tuner cards
- AppleScript support
- Folder Viewer feature to view all the image files in a folder
- Includes the macgix LiveCam AppleScript to turn BTV Pro into a Webcam
application

Minimum System requirements

PowerMac with video input hardware running system 8 and QuickTime 3.0
(QuickTime 5 recommended, especially for use with USB video input
sources). QuickTime 5 required for DV device control.
********** ABSTRACT CROPPED **********

[Archived as /info-mac/gst/btv-pro-54.hqx; 1223 K]

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

Date: 11 Mar 2002
From: ChrisLi@Bridge1.com
To:
Subject: [*] CopyPaste-X 1.2 - Multiple Clipboards for Mac OS X

This version of CopyPaste-X is internationalized. It runs native in English, French,
German, and Japanese, with online documentation in each language.

The original built in Macintosh clipboard can only copy one item at a
time. CopyPaste-X is a natural software evolution which augments the original
clipboard with supernormal clipboard abilities.

The 4 main features of CopyPaste-X
1. Clipboard Extender: 10 clipboards, easily accessed via palette, drag & drop,
Dock-menu or keyboard.
2. Clip Sets: Any number of sets of ten clipboards can be created and accessed
easily via the Clip Sets menu at the bottom of the Clipboard Extender
palette.
3. Clipboard Recorder: Remember the last 200 clips copied via the standard cmd+C.
4. Clipboard Editor: Edit the clipboard contents. Open and edit any text file. Double
click any clipboard to open the editor.

Each clipboard can be remembered through restarts. CopyPaste-X is the
clipboard the way it should be and is hundreds of times more useful.

CopyPaste also has many other features that help eliminate tedious,
repetitive work and increase your ability to get the job done.

Version 1.2

Bugfixes:
*The Clip-Set menu now shows checkmarks correctly.

Improvements:
*If you change the active Clip Set, CopyPaste stays in the background
and is not switched to the front which would interrupt your workflow.

New features:
*The Clipboard Recorder now can hold up to 200 clips adjustable in the
preferences (default 20 clips)
*The maximum amount of memory the Clipboard Recorder can use is
ajustable in the preferences (default 20 Mb)
*You can import and export Clip Sets in the same format CopyPaste
Classic uses for import and export, so you can exchange Clip Sets with
Classic users.

[Archived as /info-mac/gui/copy-paste-x-12.hqx; 1741 K]

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

Date: 13 Mar 2002
From: Teng Chou Ming
To:
Subject: [*] Extension Overload 5.9.6

Announcing the release of Extension Overload v5.9.6

Extension Overload is an extensions, control panels, control strip
modules and contextual menus management application. It offers detail
information of 5696 extensions and control panels, control strip
modules and contextual menu items in your system. It also lets you
activate and deactivate them, so that you can always easily tailor
your system to your current requirements. In addition, Extension
Overload includes a useful collection of helpful information and
tidbits.

5.9.6 released March 11, 2002
* Now with definitions of 5696 extensions, control panels, CSM and
CMM, up from 5583 previously.
* Added an 'Updates' button. When clicked, this button will launch
the web browser with the URL where you can find the update.
* More URLs and emails have been updated.

You can download the latest version from any info Mac site or
http://www.ExtensionOverload.com

System Requirements.
Min. System..: 8 on up through Mac OS 9.2.2
Min. Hardware: Mac with 601 or newer processor
Shareware....: $29
Author.......: Teng Chou Ming & Peter Hardman
Email address: eo@kagi.com
Home Page....: http://www.ExtensionOverload.com

[Archived as /info-mac/cfg/extension-overload-596.hqx; 1544 K]

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

Date: 13 Mar 2002
From: ChrisLi@Bridge1.com
To:
Subject: [*] Keyboard Maestro 1.0.3J - Japanese Version


This is the Japanese version of the Keyboard Maestro package.

An essential utility for anybody who works on their Mac, Keyboard Maestro
perform many different tasks simply by pressing a few keys. Keyboard
Maestro allows you to spend more time working and less time mousing and
clicking and typing to get the work done. Keyboard Maestro has built into it
three core features to make working on the Mac much simpler: Hot Keys,
Program Switcher, and Clipboard Switcher.

The Hot Key feature enables you to define any number of user configurable
actions simply by pressing a keystroke. Hot Key actions include quitting,
hiding, or activating applications, inserting text, executing an Apple or UNIX
Script, opening files or folders, and so much more. All hot keys can
optionally be targeted to specific applications, allowing the hot key to be
active only when you find it most useful.

Keyboard Maestro incorporates the wildly popular Classic MacOS application
switching utility, Program Switcher. In fact, Keyboard Maestro was written
by the author of Program Switcher. With the Program Switcher feature, you
are able to launch, switch, hide, and quit applications with a simple
keystroke. Keyboard Maestro brings to MacOS X what Classic Mac users have
been enjoying since 1994 - the most refined application switching utility
there is!

Keyboard Maestro also has the extremely useful clipboard utility Clipboard
Switcher built in. Clipboard Switcher allows you to define any number of
clipboards which you can use to copy to and paste from simply by pressing a
keystroke. Clipboards are automatically saved through system restarts and
user logouts, and always available when you need them.

Changes in version 1.0.3:

*The Execute UNIX Script hot key results can now be selected and copied
or dragged from the pop-up results window
*Improved user interface
*Hot keys that are targeted to different applications can now have the
same keystroke
*Fixed problem when the Keyboard Maestro periodically ignored the quit
command or crashed when quitting
*Improved the internal storage of file references
*The Program Switcher window no longer crashes if through some strange
twist of fate there are no applications available to be displayed
(over-aggressive use of the "excluded applications list"?)
*Increased the number of hot keys available to the free Lite version

[Archived as /info-mac/gui/keyboard-maestro-103-jp.hqx; 1001 K]

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

Date: 11 Mar 2002
From: Takashi Suzuki
To:
Subject: [*] Pocket Album v1.1.9


Pocket Album is an application for the Macintosh which allows you to
view picture files. Not just only browsing the files, this application
works as librarian and format converter. One window, i.e. one file, can
hold 24 picture files and some comments for them.

http://www.tcp-ip.or.jp/~setsu/pocket.html

Pocket Alubum accepts these picture format with QuickTime 4.0:
BMP, FlashPix, JPEG, GIF, Macromedia Flash, MacPaint, PICT, PhotoShop,
PNG,
SGI Image, QuickTIme Image, TIFF, TARGA

Can convert to these picture format with QuickTime 4.0:
BMP, JPEG, MacPaint, PhotoShop, PICT, PNG, QuickTime Image, TGA, SGI
Image, TIFF

What's changed in v1.1.9:
- Opens new window when single picture file is dropped into
right-bottom
cell on 6th page. -> fixed.
- File size is not shown with some version of QuickTime. -> fixed.

Features:
Fat Binary.
Drag & Drop support.
Navigation Services aware. (PowerPC only)
Mac OS 8.5 Windows Manager aware. (PowerPC only)

This application requires:
Macintosh with 68020 or higher / PowerPC
System7 + QuickTime 2.5 or later (Exclude Mac OS X)

[Archived as /info-mac/gst/grf/pocket-album-119.hqx; 270 K]

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

Date: Wed, 13 Mar 2002 18:52:16 -0500
From: "Michael G. Schabert"
To: Rob McCleave , digest@info-mac.org
Subject: [Q] SMC router/print server and lpr

At 3:04 PM -0500 3/9/02, Rob McCleave wrote:
>I have an Apple Laserwriter Select 360 connected to a SMC7004ABR
>(wired, not wireless) router/print server. The SMC has been updated
>to v1.4.1.
>
>The LW360 is a Postscript printer, so with the SMC printer server,
>which handles lpr, it should be able to work with a Mac lpr client.
>
>I can't get my PB400 (Pismo), running OS9.2.2, to print to the
>printer using the lpr print option. Using the Desktop Printer Utility
>I can set up the lpr client, and the printer can be verified at the
>IP address of the router.
>
>I get an error -8746 or something from the Finder when I try to print.
>
>When I check the status of the SMC router, it says the printer is
>ready, and the activity log shows a print job has been received.
>
>I thought this would be a cheap way to keep using the LW360 with the
>new generation Macs. It is a pretty rugged printer, but has only
>parallel and Appletalk ports, no USB or Ethernet.

Hi Rob,
The problem is that the printer is not just a PostScript printer. It
is a PostScript printer and also a PCL5 printer. My guess is that the
printer is expecting print jobs in the parallel port to be sent in
the PCL5 language instead of PostScript. The SMC router cannot do
PostScript-to-PCL5 translation, so it cannot act as your print server
for Macs.

I'm positive that it's dual page description language printer, but
I'm just guessing that that is why you're unsuccessful.

Mike
--
Bikers don't *DO* taglines.

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

Date: Mon, 11 Mar 2002 11:14:07 +0000
From: Frazer Wright
To: digest@info-mac.org
Subject: [Q] Text Editor?

On 10/3/02, Li Qian wrote:

> I use a Mac at home, and a PC at work. On the Mac I use extensively
>the BBEdit text
> editor, which, in terms
>of features and reliability, is nothing short of superb. I also need to use
>a text editor on the PC side, but so far I haven't found any Windows text
>editor to even come close to BBEdit, although I've tried a few (e.g.,
>NotePad, UltraEdit, etc.), and PC guys have no clue. So, has anyone come
>across a Windows text editor equivalent to BBEdit?

If you don't need the programming capability of BBEdit, but just want
a text editor for bashing out lots of words, to be processed later in
a pukka wp, try YTSEditor - shareware, via http://www.dcalcoda.com.
It has excellent dictionary and thesaurus functions and seems quick,
neat and unobtrusive.

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

Date: Wed, 13 Mar 2002 21:30:45 -0600
From: Hannes Hofer
To: digest@info-mac.org
Subject: [Q] Which Printer will work for me?

I have a network set up at home with a Power Mac 7200, a 450Mhz iMac
SE, a iBook and an HP Deskjet 870 printer. I am able to print from
all three macs via a ethernet-to-localtalk bridge, but only from OS
9.x and earlier.

Well, the printer is about to die, so I need to buy a new one. The
million dollar question is: Which printer should I buy? Is there any
inkjet printer out there that will work for all three machines? As I
understand it, there are not currently any networkable inkjets that
works with OS X, and even if there is, will a driver be available for
the 7200, which runs OS 7.6?

Does anyone have any good advise? Thanks

Hannes

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

Date: Mon, 11 Mar 2002 17:55:49 -0800
From: "[____d h_____]"
To:
Subject: Bomb Cursor during startup, OS 9.2.1

according to Gib@realpeople.com (Gib Henry, Real People)...

> Does your clock reset whenever you remove power to the machine?

this seems an unlikely culprit given the youth of your model, but have you
considered the battery?

------------------
munsellian@mac.com

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

Date: Wed, 13 Mar 2002 18:51:50 -0500
From: "Michael G. Schabert"
To: Adam Horvath , digest@info-mac.org
Subject: Connecting PLW to OS X

At 12:34 PM -0800 3/7/02, Adam Horvath wrote:
>2 Connect the converter to your printer's serial port and to an
>Ethernet hub (I am assuming that you are using your E-net port on
>your computer for high speed connection, if not, you can connect the
>converter's Ethernet port to your computer dirrectly)

Only if you use a special "crossover" cable.

Mike

--
Bikers don't *DO* taglines.

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

Date: Sun, 10 Mar 2002 11:33:49 -0800
From: Paul Brians
To: digest@info-mac.org
Subject: Felt Tip Sound Studio tip: saving "can't save" files

This tip may save somebody aggravation. When you've been working a
long time with a file in Felt Tip Sound Studio without saving, the
program may run out of memory. The tip-off is that the waveform
suddenly redraws in a sketchy way, quite different from its regular
appearance. If you attempt to save, you'll get an error message.
Occasionally you can do a "save as," but that usually won't work
either.

However, you can almost always select the entire contents of the
file, copy, and paste it into a new file and save that, avoiding the
loss of your edited data. Quit and restart Sound Studio to purge the
memory and continue working.

--
Paul Brians, Department of English
Washington State University
Pullman, WA 99164-5020
brians@wsu.edu
http://www.wsu.edu/~brians

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

Date: Sun, 10 Mar 2002 15:33:34 -0500
From: John McGibney
To: InfoMac posting
Subject: Firmware startup

I got this tip as a reply to the same problem I had with my iMac
Try this next time you start.

HTH
John

in the firmwear prompt try this comand

reset-ALL

type it exactly as shown.

>
> From: "Fred Anderson"
> Date: Tue, 5 Mar 2002 08:45:31 -0500
> To: comp-sys-mac-digest@moderators.isc.org
> Subject: Need help resurrecting powerbook?
>
> On power up, it goes into a dark screen, with "welcome to open firmware,
> type mac-boot to start.....
> I type mac-boot and in returns
> default catch code=300.
> hit the PRAM reset on the back, now it powers up, HD spins up, fan comes on,
> but screen is totally blank.
>
> How to fix?
>
> Powerbook G3, 400 MHZ

_________________________________________________________
Do You Yahoo!?
Get your free @yahoo.com address at http://mail.yahoo.com

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

Date: Wed, 13 Mar 2002 18:52:02 -0500
From: "Michael G. Schabert"
To: Ken Prager , digest@info-mac.org, rpluta@inebraska.com
Subject: Info-Mac Digest V19 #22

At 4:44 AM -0800 3/7/02, Ken Prager wrote:
> > From: Rob Pluta
>> Subject: iMac firmware update - Can't see RAM upgrade
>>
>> Hi,
>>
>> After upgrading the firmware (to 4.1.3) on our iMac 350 MHz
>> (slot-loading) the iMac doesn't see the 128 MB RAM chip which is
>> installed as additional memory. Is this part of the RAM fussiness
>> whereby Apple won't let *inferior* RAM chips run for the newer OS
>> upgrades?
>>
>> Is there a way to downgrade the firmware or do I need to buy a new RAM
>> chip? Am I missing something else?
>>
>> MacOS 9.1
>
>Go to and get DIMM First
>Aid. This will most likely fix the problem.

Actually, it won't fix the problem any more than downgrading the RAM
would...that will just hide the symptom. The problem is that the RAM
does not meet Specs. All RAM from any respectable supplier comes with
a lifetime warrantee. The best solution is to get the RAM exchanged
for a new module.

Mike
--
Bikers don't *DO* taglines.

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

Date: Sun, 10 Mar 2002 19:25:36 -0500
From: "Roger S. Cohen"
To: Info-Mac Network ,
Subject: Info-Mac Digest V19 #23

The Info-Mac Network said on 3/7/02 6:30 AM

>Date: Wed, 27 Feb 2002 23:18:30 +0000
>From: Tom Murphy/Tomßs Ô Murch”
>Subject: Dictionaries
>
>
>Hallo
>Why in preferences is the spelling Tab always faded and dictionaries don't
>seem to load ?
>
>Tom Murphy,
>Ireland

What application? If you're talking about Outlook Express, you need to
have MS Office, with its dictionaries, installed first.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Roger S. Cohen, President, Cohen International
roger@rogercohen.com http://www.rogercohen.com
Voice: +1 (845) 358-8936 Fax: +1 (845) 358-8937

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

Date: Mon, 11 Mar 2002 16:03:05 +0000
From: Jennifer Grimes
To: digest@info-mac.org
Subject: MicrosoftDialogLib to J. McGibney

Dear John:
I am so grateful that you took the time to reply and to send me these 2
files. I have them on my Mac, but don't seem to know what to do next.
I've tried to click on them each to see if they'll install, but am told
that I don't have the application that created the document. I've then
tried to put them in various folders i nExcel or Word, but no luck.
Sorry for being so ignorant on this, but what do I do next?

Best wishes,
Jennifer

--
Grimes & Co.
Jamestown Business Park
Finglas
Dublin 11
Ireland
Tel: +353 1806 8918
Fax: +353 1806 8920
Website: www.GrimesCo.ie

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Date: Sun, 10 Mar 2002 23:55:33 +0000
From: Tom Murphy/Tom=?ISO-8859-1?B?4XMg0yBNdXJjaPo=?=
To: infomac
Subject: mouse clicking

Due to some change in settings my mouse clicks burps and gugles with every
move . What did I do and how to undo it ???
Tomßs Ô Murch”,
37 Aylesbury ,
Bthar Achadh õr.
Cill Chainnigh.
tpom@eircom.net

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