Aug 95 Newsbits
Volume Number: 11
Issue Number: 8
Column Tag: Newsbits
By John Kawakami, MacTech Magazine Editorial Assistant
Note: Source code files accompanying article are located on MacTech CD-ROM orsource code disks.
UserLand Frontier is Free!
Most of you should know by now that UserLand Software has made Frontier 4 free. No
retail price. No license fees. Free. It’s all part of Dave Winer’s plan to increase
Frontier usage, especially to automate tasks on the world wide web, and as the
preferred platform for Macintosh scripting.
Most interesting is the improved interface between Netscape and Frontier. Now,
it’s possible for a URL to contain a Frontier script that is executed on the user’s
machine. As if by magic, the webmaster can gain greater control of the Macintosh user
interface, performing tasks which were previously impossible.
Frontier, in current and previous version, has always made it’s rich collection
of verbs available to people using other scripting systems such as AppleScript. So the
many AppleScripters will gain a great deal from Frontier’s new “free” distribution.
Everyone should check out the first URL below; the site is often busy, so you may have
to make several attempts, but it’s worth the effort. Frontier is also described in
TidBITS 279.
http://www.hotwired.com/Staff/userland/aretha/index.html
http://www.hotwired.com/Staff/userland/beingfree_220.html
http://www.hotwired.com/Staff/userland/mylittlesymphony_223.html
http://www.dartmouth.edu/pages/TidBITS/issues/TidBITS-279.html
Welcome, Comp.lang.pascal.mac
The following was recently spotted on the Usenet.
Subj: **** WELCOME TO COMP.LANG.PASCAL.MAC: PLEASE READ ****
Date: Tue, Jun 13, 1995 11:12 AM PST
From: sam@ccnet.com (Scott A. Moore)
************************************************************
======= WELCOME NEW USERS =======
TO COMP.LANG.PASCAL.MAC !
It is my privilege to officially open this group for posting. This
group was created by your votes on June 12, 1995.
PURPOSE
This is the group for discussion on Macintosh Pascals, including
Apple Pascal, THINK Pascal, CodeWarrior Pascal and others. All
aspects of Pascal on the Macintosh are discussed.
SOS Corporation Releases Internet Firewall Freeware
SOS Corporation announces the release of Freestone (TM), a freeware, firewall
construction software suite. The Freestone suite of self-contained programs and
utilities is used to create an application gateway, bastion-host firewall for TCP/IP
networks. It is designed to provide user-level security for LANs connecting to public
networks, such as the Internet. Freestone is an ideal solution for any organization
which has the resources to build and maintain a firewall, with a need for a dedicated
Internet link.
Freestone offers fine-grained control over both ingoing and outgoing network
traffic on a per-user basis. This robust access control is unsurpassed by any
freeware firewall currently available. Freestone provides user access control based
upon source and/or destination address, source and/or destination port, time of day,
day of the week, date of the month, month of the year, and system-defined holidays.
SOS Corporation, which develops and markets several commercial computer
network security products, including the popular Brimstone application gateway
firewall, is making Freestone available via the Internet. To download the package,
users may FTP to one of the following Internet sites:
ftp://ftp.cs.columbia.edu/pub/sos (the preferred site) or
ftp://ftp.soscorp.com/pub/sos
Users may download and install the firewall software free of cost and without
license, provided that they do not repackage, sell, license, or in any way use the suite
for commercial purposes. Building and installing a firewall with Freestone requires a
solid understanding of UNIX and network services, such as DNS, TELNET and FTP. The
suite contains documentation, as well as files with integration advice and pointers to
Internet and public domain resources.
To subscribe to the Freestone mailing list, send e-mail to
freestone@majordomo.soscorp.com, and include the word ‘subscribe’ in the
subject heading.
SOS Corporation: (212) 686-5700, e-mail sales@soscorp.com
http://www.soscorp.com
Free Updates to LS FORTRAN for the PowerMac
Language Systems offers free patches and upgrades to their products on their ftp
server. The latest patch currently available for LS FORTRAN is version 1.1a6. It is
based on LS FORTRAN.PPC version 1.0. The major upgrade v1.1 will be mailed to all
registered 1.0 users.
Electronic updates are now available from the anonymous ftp site, langsys.com,
directory pub/langsys.
Language Systems: (703) 478-0181, email LANGSYS@aol.com
ftp://langsys.com/pub/langsys
Allegiant Offers Internet XCMD,
Also Free Multimedia Tools With SuperCard
Allegiant Technologies, Inc. previewed their new Internet connectivity program,
code-named BlackHole, during WWDC. BlackHole allows the rapid creation of
completely customized interfaces that automate and simplify Internet tasks. The
product is expected to ship in the Third Quarter, 1995 at a price of $249.
BlackHole gives the Internet a scriptable interface, allowing people familiar with
scripting languages on the Macintosh to build custom TCP/IP client and server
applications. They will be able to create these applications in any authoring
environment that supports both inter-application communication and the standard
external command (XCMD) interface, most notably Allegiant SuperCard 2.0 and
Apple’s HyperCard.
BlackHole provides a familiar high-level interface to the standard Internet
protocols that include standard e-mail (SMTP/POP3), file transfer (FTP),
newsgroup (NNTP), HTTP/CGI and Gopher. The program ships as a system extension
that utilizes Apples Thread Manager for smooth background operations. An external
code module, optimized for standalone performance and delivery within
SuperCard-based applications, will also be included in the package. BlackHoles Task
Manager manages the completion of lengthy operations either while the user works or
deferred until a pre-designated time.
BlackHole will allow corporate MIS directors, researchers, educators, Internet
service providers and net-surfers to create a wide variety of specialized applications.
Examples of these custom applications include simplified, automated Web page creation
and maintenance; utilities for corporate in-house or field personnel; workgroup
E-mail distribution; off-line newsgroup reading; easy mailing list management;
automatic web link verification utilities; collaborative tools, and much more.
BlackHole is expected to ship early in the Third Quarter, 1995 at a price of
$249. A demo version of the system extension will be available from Allegiants home
page when the product ships. Exact pricing for commercial licenses to distribute the
extension or the code module will be made available at a later date.
Allegiant also announced a new retail bundle, the Multimedia Graphics Production
bundle. Until August 31, 1995, SuperCard 2.0 will include the latest versions of
award-winning Ray Dream Designer, Kai’s Power Tools SE from HSC Software, and
Micro Frontier’s Color It! Designer is a 3D modelling and rendering program, Kai’s
Power Tools SE is a 15 filter version of KPT’s popular image processing filters, and
Color It! is a image processing program. The suggested retail pricing of SuperCard 2.0
is $695, with typical street pricing of $399. Upgrades for current users is $149.
Allegiant: (619) 587-0500, email allegiant@aol.com
http://www.allegiant.com/~supercrd/
Apple Developer University Offers QD3D Course
Apple Developer University is offering a 3-day course in using Apple’s exciting new
QuickDraw 3D graphics library. This course teaches you the basics of creating,
manipulating and rendering three-dimensional objects in your applications. You will
also learn about the new 3D human interface guidelines and Apple’s new metafile
format for reading and writing 3D objects. The course consists of a series of hands-on
labs (using C), as well as lectures.
Developer University offers training and educational material covering
Macintosh and MacOS programming.
Developer University: (408) 974-4897,
email devuniv@applelink.apple.com
http://www.info.apple.com/dev/du.html
Also, QD3D additions to the Toolbox Assistant are available from:
http://www.info.apple.com/dev/MPTA.html
Zinc Software has released version 4.1 of Zinc Application Framework, its
award-winning C++ class library and visual development tool. Version 4.0 gained
critical acclaim, receiving two key industry awards: The “Analyst’s Choice” Award
from PCWeek LABS (January 30th, 1995), and InfoWorld’s “Best Portability”
rating (February 6, 1995).
Zinc 4.1 allows software developers to create globally-enabled, object-oriented,
cross-platform applications with one set of source code. The numerous additions and
enhancements in version 4.1 include:
• a new IMAGE object, allowing the display of large bitmaps from native file
formats.
• a new FILE object, allowing Zinc applications to read and write portable binary
files on any operating system.
• new CTL3D support for Windows, improving the look of Windows applications.
• an improved Help display, with ease-of-use enhancements and a facelift.
• support for dot-matrix printers in MS-DOS applications.
• easier function names, designed to reduce developer learning curves.
Version 4.1 also introduces Zinc’s new Customer Assurance Plan (CAP), an
annually-renewable membership plan combining Zinc’s excellent technical support
and product maintenance programs.
Zinc, North America: (801) 785-8900, email info@zinc.com
CompuServe: GO ZINC
Zinc, Europe (UK): +44 (0)181-855-9918, email europe@zinc.com
Zinc, Asia (Japan): +81 (052) 733-4301, email asia@zinc.com