TidBITS#506/15-Nov-99
=====================

  Good intentions make excellent paving stones this week, with
  warnings about a utility that circumvents a crucial bit of Mac OS
  9's error checking and a security hole in Outlook Express 5.0. In
  other email news, Adam announces his new book on Eudora and
  explains how to use Eudora in multiple user setups, and this
  week's poll asks about your favorite Mac email client. Finally,
  Warren Magnus contributes the first part of an overview of USB
  mice.

Topics:
    MailBITS/15-Nov-99
    Quiz Results: PRAM Got Ya Down?
    Eudora 4.2 Book & Multiple Users
    Pointing the Way with USB Mice, Part 1

<http://www.tidbits.com/tb-issues/TidBITS-506.html>
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MailBITS/15-Nov-99
------------------

**Outlook Express 5.0 Open to Security Breach** -- Microsoft has
  issued an alert about a security hole in Outlook Express 5.0 for
  the Macintosh. Essentially, a malicious person could send a
  specially composed MHTML (MIME HTML) message to an Outlook Express
  5.0 user. That message would then automatically download a file to
  the user's default Download folder without the user's knowledge.
  (You set the Download folder in the Internet control panel,
  Internet Config, Internet Explorer, or other Internet Config-savvy
  application.) If that file were a destructive application, and if
  you were to launch it, damage could occur. This situation is
  similar to receiving an application as an email attachment. In
  this case, though, you won't be able to connect a message to that
  file; at some point, you'll just find an unidentified application
  in your Download folder with no indication that it might be
  dangerous. Although Microsoft is working on a fix, the only
  solution at the moment is to open only downloaded files whose
  source you can identify. [ACE]

<http://www.microsoft.com/mac/oe/>


**Avoid AKUA Interactive's Nine 11 Utility!** AKUA Interactive
  Media has released an extension called Nine 11 that prevents Mac
  OS 9 from stopping certain incompatible programs with error number
  119. To quote MWJ publisher and TidBITS contributor Matt
  Deatherage, this is "an indescribably irresponsible idea roughly
  on par with disconnecting the buzzers in your smoke detectors." As
  we explained in "Mac OS 9 Installation & Compatibility" in
  TidBITS-503_, to increase the maximum number of open file forks in
  Mac OS 9, Apple had to change the file control block (FCB) table
  that the Mac OS uses to track open files. Even with all their
  resources, there was no way Apple could maintain compatibility
  with old code that ignored Apple's recommendations and accessed
  the FCBs directly. So Mac OS 9 prevents programs from doing that,
  because code that goes directly to the FCBs would likely crash the
  system or corrupt data on your hard disk. Why is this?
  Applications accessing the FCBs probably want to read data about
  which files are open, but because of the changes in Mac OS 9,
  those applications will read the _wrong_data_. If that application
  then uses that incorrect information as input for other disk-
  related functions, disk corruption is likely. In short, if you see
  this utility online, do not download it and warn anyone using it
  that they do so at significant risk. [ACE]

<http://www.gcsf.com/>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=05624>


**iMac Knockoffs Barred by Injunction** -- Apple has announced
  that Judge Jeremy Fogel of the U.S. Federal Court in San Jose has
  stated his intention to issue a preliminary injunction barring
  Future Power and Daewoo from manufacturing, selling, or
  distributing the E-Power computer, which Apple says copies the
  design of the iMac. Apple has filed similar lawsuits against
  eMachines (in the U.S.) and K. K. Sotec (in Japan) and the Tokyo
  District Court has issued a preliminary injunction barring K. K.
  Sotec from manufacturing or distributing the eOne iMac look-alike.
  Although the Future Power/Daewoo injunction doesn't apply to the
  eMachines case, it's also before Judge Fogel, making another
  injunction likely. Implicit in these initial court victories is
  agreement from the courts that Apple's curvaceous and colorful
  design for the iMac is unique and deserves legal "trade dress"
  protections. (See "A Case for Color" in TidBITS-492_ and "Look
  Different: Excellence in Apple Design" in TidBITS-430_ for more
  about the iMac's design.) [ACE]

<http://www.futurepowerusa.com/products/epower.html>
<http://www.e4me.com/infocentral/product_eone433.html>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=05501>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=04898>


**Dartmouth TidBITS Mirror Gone** -- Those of you who have been
  reading TidBITS for years may remember that issues of TidBITS were
  originally made available on the Web at Dartmouth College's site,
  back in 1994. William Murphy converted the issues from setext to
  HTML, and Andy Williams kindly made the space available on the
  Dartmouth Web server. In subsequent years, of course, we focused
  on our own Web server, but Randy Spydell helped us maintain a
  mirror of TidBITS issues at the Dartmouth site. Dartmouth has
  decided to remove the mirror (which is no longer as necessary as
  it was initially), but they've left redirects in place from the
  main TidBITS page there. Nonetheless, if you're still using the
  Dartmouth pages, now's the time to switch over to our main site.
  Thanks to William, Andy, and Randy for all their help over the
  years! [ACE]

<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=03956>


**Poll Preview: Your Preferred Mac Email Client** -- Here's a poll
  in which I encourage everyone to vote. We at TidBITS are big fans
  of Qualcomm's powerful Eudora, and Apple bundles the free
  Microsoft Outlook Express with every Mac and copy of the Mac OS,
  but there are numerous other programs people use to read email,
  each with its own unique advantages and disadvantages. Which one
  do you prefer? Make sure to register your vote so we can get a
  sense of what you're all using! [ACE]

<http://www.tidbits.com/>


Quiz Results: PRAM Got Ya Down?
-------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>

  Our goal with last week's quiz was mostly educational, since we
  expected that most people would know the answer. We weren't
  disappointed, with 93 percent of the more than 1,700 people taking
  the quiz choosing the correct answer of Command-Option-P-R to zap
  the PRAM. The fact that such an easy quiz garnered that much
  attention would seem to indicate that people like quizzes to have
  an educational bent rather than just testing knowledge of
  Macintosh trivia, so we'll try to follow that path with future
  quizzes.

  Zapping the PRAM is a relatively obscure trick that many Macintosh
  users don't know, but it works on every Macintosh and can be
  useful for solving strange problems ranging from an inability to
  start up at all to the Mac displaying the wrong font in places
  like the Get Info windows. To zap the PRAM, make sure Caps Lock is
  turned off, then restart the Mac and hold down Command-Option-P-R
  at startup, making sure to hold the keys down until your Mac
  restarts itself twice. Be aware that zapping the PRAM on the
  PowerBook 190, 1400, 2400, 3400, 5300, and original G3 also resets
  the Power Manager. On PCI Power Macs, hold down Command-Option-P-R
  as soon as you press the Power key to turn on the Mac to clear the
  Non-volatile RAM (NVRAM) that stores display information on those
  Macs. Finally, if you were wondering, the keystroke for zapping
  the PRAM remains the same on the iMac and other new Macs that use
  USB keyboards.

  A number of people in TidBITS Talk recommended MicroMat's free
  TechTool or commercial TechTool Pro as an alternative method of
  resetting the PRAM. These programs offer three advantages over the
  standard method. First, they clear all the information from PRAM,
  more than the standard method does. Second, they enable you to
  save the contents of PRAM and, if the PRAM doesn't turn out to be
  the problem, restore it rather than reset all your settings. Third
  and finally, they can automatically save and restore your Mac's
  manufacture date and hours of use, both of which are stored in the
  PRAM and are lost with the standard method.

<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tlkthrd=846>
<http://www.micromat.com/>

  Keep in mind that zapping the PRAM does reset some settings,
  including those below, so you will need to use various control
  panels to turn on AppleTalk, change your mouse speed, reset your
  beep sound, and more.

* AppleTalk status
* Serial port configuration and port definition
* Alarm clock setting
* Application font
* Serial printer location
* Key repeat rate
* Key repeat delay
* Speaker volume
* Alert sound
* Double-click time
* Insertion point blink rate
* Mouse speed
* Startup disk
* Menu blink count
* Monitor depth
* 32-bit addressing
* Virtual memory
* RAM Disk
* Disk cache

  You might find these articles from Apple's Tech Info Library of
  interest - for more information, search the Tech Info Library on
  "PRAM."

<http://til.info.apple.com/>
<http://til.info.apple.com/techinfo.nsf/artnum/n2238>
<http://til.info.apple.com/techinfo.nsf/artnum/n16473>
<http://til.info.apple.com/techinfo.nsf/artnum/n14449>


Eudora 4.2 Book & Multiple Users
--------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>

  My latest book, "Eudora 4.2 for Windows & Macintosh: Visual
  QuickStart Guide," (Peachpit Press, ISBN 020135389X) should now be
  widely available. The book is essentially the second edition of my
  earlier Eudora Visual QuickStart Guide (discussed in "Eudora Tips
  & Tricks" in TidBITS-405_), offering concise, step-by-step
  instructions for performing almost any task in Eudora. Each task
  takes no more than a single page and is accompanied by screenshots
  that parallel the step-by-step instructions. I also include
  numerous little known tips and strategies for using Eudora's more
  powerful features like filters, personalities, saved searches,
  stationery, and the toolbar.

<http://www.peachpit.com/books/catalog/K5846.html>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=04270>

  For those familiar with the previous edition of the book (which is
  still available for people using Eudora Light and Eudora Pro 3.1),
  there are numerous changes. I removed all discussion of Eudora
  Light because nothing has changed with that program since the
  previous edition of the book and so much has changed with Eudora
  Pro that covering both programs simultaneously was no longer
  feasible. I also added new chapters on personalities, window
  management, and IMAP (Interactive Message Access Protocol, an
  alternate method of retrieving Internet email), and completely
  rewrote the Finding and Searching chapter to cover Eudora's new
  search feature. For more details on the book's contents, news and
  tips about Eudora, and links to important Eudora-related
  resources, visit the Web site I maintain for the book.

<http://www.tidbits.com/eudora/>

  The book retails for $17, though you can get it for less than $14
  through Amazon using the link below, and I suspect that many
  physical bookstores also carry it at a discounted price. Academic
  institutions interested in ordering quantities of the books for
  classes qualify for a steeper discount direct from Peachpit; email
  <academic@peachpit.com> for details. Special discounts are also
  available for non-academic quantity orders such as for businesses
  that have site licenses of Eudora; contact
  <corpsales@prenhall.com> for details.

<http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ISBN=020135389X/tidbitselectro00A/>

  With one notable exception - Multiple User support in Mac OS 9 -
  the book is completely up to date in covering the latest versions
  of Eudora Pro 4.2. People using Mac OS 9's Multiple Users feature
  can now take advantage of a change in the just-released Eudora Pro
  4.2.2 to simplify setting up Eudora for multiple people using the
  same Mac. Essentially, Eudora now stores its Eudora Folder in the
  Documents folder by default, rather than the System Folder. If you
  have Multiple Users turned on, Eudora Pro 4.2.2 automatically uses
  each person's Documents folder for that person's Eudora Folder.
  Here then are instructions for how you would do this in earlier
  versions of the Mac (which work for all versions of Eudora) and
  under Mac OS 9 (which requires Eudora Pro 4.2.2).

<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=05643>


**Separate Mail Folders Prior to Mac OS 9** -- In the past,
  launching Eudora by double-clicking the application's icon would
  load your settings, filters, nicknames, and stored mail from the
  Eudora Folder in the System Folder. However, you can also launch
  Eudora by double-clicking a Eudora Settings file, which is the key
  to setting up Eudora for different people sharing the same Mac.
  Let's assume you're planning on sharing your Mac with a friend,
  and you want to set up Eudora so you can both receive mail
  separately. Follow these steps.

  1. Quit Eudora if it's running. In the Finder, open the System
  Folder and select the Eudora Folder.

  2. From the File menu, choose Duplicate. The Finder makes a
  duplicate of the Eudora Folder, called Eudora Folder copy.

  3. Rename the copy to start with your first name, as in "Adam's
  Eudora Folder".

  4. Open the original Eudora Folder. Inside it is a file called
  Eudora Settings. Select that file, and from the File menu, choose
  Make Alias to make an alias called Eudora Settings alias.

  5. Rename the alias with your friend's name, as in "Tonya's
  Email", and move it to the desktop.

  6. Repeat steps 4 and 5 with the second Eudora Folder. Rename the
  second Eudora Settings alias with your name, as in "Adam's Email".

  7. Double-click the first alias you create to launch Eudora.

  8. Configure Eudora with your friend's email account and settings
  as you would normally.

  9. Double-click the second alias you created to switch to those
  settings (there's no need to quit Eudora), and repeat step 8 with
  your email account and settings.

  10. You may wish to leave the two aliases on the desktop or copy
  them to the Apple Menu Items folder. Whenever either of you want
  to check mail, launch Eudora by opening the appropriate alias
  file.

  You can rename the original Eudora Folder if you like, and you can
  move both customized Eudora Folders out of the System Folder and
  put them anywhere you like, since you're accessing them through
  the aliases now. However, if you do that, I'd recommend creating
  an empty text file called "Eudora Folder" and placing it loose in
  the System Folder in place of the original Eudora Folder. That
  way, if you launch Eudora by double-clicking the application icon
  accidentally, Eudora prompts you to open a Eudora Settings file
  (pick one of your aliases) instead of creating a new, empty Eudora
  Folder in the System Folder.


**Mac OS 9 New Multiple User Setup** -- Let's assume now that
  you've just installed Mac OS 9 at home and want to install Eudora
  Pro 4.2.2 for the first time. Follow these steps.

  1. In the Multiple Users control panel, turn on Multiple User
  Accounts and create a new user for your friend. The Finder creates
  a Users folder on the startup disk, placing in it a folder named
  for your friend. In that folder is a Documents folder.

  2. Install and configure Eudora Pro 4.2.2 normally for yourself as
  the owner of the Mac. (If the Eudora Pro 4.2.2. application is
  already installed, launch it by double-clicking the application
  icon.) Eudora creates a Eudora Folder in the Documents folder at
  the main level of your hard disk; if that folder doesn't exist
  initially, Eudora creates it as well.

  3. From the Special menu in the Finder, choose Logout, then login
  again as your friend.

  4. Launch Eudora Pro 4.2.2 by double-clicking its application
  icon. Eudora creates a new Eudora Folder in your friend's
  Documents folder.

  5. Configure Eudora for your friend.

  As long as you leave these two Eudora Folders in their default
  locations and don't rename them, you can continue to launch Eudora
  by double-clicking its application icon. Eudora automatically
  loads the appropriate settings and stored mail for each of you,
  depending on who is logged into the Mac at that point.


**Converting Multiple Mail Folders to Mac OS 9** -- It's more
  likely that when you install Mac OS 9 you already have an existing
  setup with multiple mail folders, created using the traditional
  method discussed above. If that's the case, you have two choices.
  First, you can continue to launch Eudora from your individual
  settings file aliases, as you've been doing. Second, you can
  convert your existing installation to work with Mac OS 9's
  Multiple Users feature. The decision probably hinges on whether
  you plan to use the Mac OS 9 Multiple Users feature in general -
  if you do, conversion is probably worthwhile, whereas if you have
  no other use for Multiple Users, it makes sense to stick with your
  existing Eudora setup. If you decide to make the leap to the Mac
  OS 9 Multiple Users approach, though, here's what to do. As
  always, make sure you have a current backup first.

  1. In the Multiple Users control panel, turn on Multiple User
  Accounts and create a new user for your friend. The Finder creates
  a Users folder on the startup disk, placing it in a folder named
  for your friend. In that folder is a Documents folder.

  2. Move your Eudora Folder (which may be called something like
  "Adam's Eudora Folder") to the Documents folder in the main window
  of your hard disk. If no Documents folder exists, create one
  first. Make sure your Eudora Folder is named "Eudora Folder".

  3. Move your friend's Eudora Folder to the Documents folder nested
  within his or her individual folder in the Users folder. Make sure
  it too is called "Eudora Folder".

  That's all that should be necessary, and from now on, you can just
  launch Eudora by double-clicking its application icon rather than
  using specific settings file aliases. Just make sure to logout and
  login appropriate to access your different email accounts.

  Finally, here's a tip that will make it possible for your friend
  to check mail quickly without going through the sometimes lengthy
  logout and login process, make an alias of the Eudora Settings
  file in your friend's Eudora Folder and double-click it to switch
  settings. The reverse is not true - users cannot access anything
  in the owner's Documents folder.


Pointing the Way with USB Mice, Part 1
--------------------------------------
  by Warren Magnus <wmagnus@samespace.com>

  The iMac introduced Universal Serial Bus (USB) technology to the
  Macintosh line - along with a puck-like USB mouse that's become a
  frequent target of criticism. The iMac also marked the
  disappearance of the trusty Apple Desktop Bus (ADB), so third-
  party mice and input devices wouldn't work with an iMac without
  add-on converters. Apple's push toward USB ubiquity - combined
  with the iMac's considerable popularity - has caused pointing
  device manufacturers to release a flood of USB pointing devices
  for the Macintosh, all designed to stand in for Apple's default
  USB rodent.

  I've had the good fortune to be privy to the development phases of
  several USB mice and to witness the maneuvering of driver
  development. Sorting through the sizable collection of pointing
  devices here in my office and making a few acquisitions yields a
  cross-section of all of the major offerings.


**Catching Mice of All Sizes** -- With mice, size and shape
  matter. The mouse, in many ways, personalizes the user's computing
  experience. Given the number of hours that professionals spend at
  their computers, the mouse must be conducive to good work habits
  and promote healthy wrist positions. There is likely a user for
  every mouse shape and size, and only you can decide which mouse
  shape and size are best for you, based on your individual anatomy
  and work habits. Fortunately, CompUSA, BestBuy, and similar venues
  have updated their sales displays to include demo mice that users
  can try for size and feel. Still, I've bought and put in my closet
  more mice than I care to count.

  Currently, most high-end USB mice have similar feature sets.
  Multiple-button devices reign. Scroll wheels have mushroomed in
  popularity. Ultimately, though, the mouse driver is what provides
  the fluidity of workflow and user interface that make up the user
  experience. These drivers, where the real magic occurs, can be
  evaluated with some degree of objectivity.

  My company, samespace, is a consulting firm that specializes in
  marketing and business development. As a result, we use our Macs
  for a variety of common tasks from email and Web browsing to
  graphic design and page layout. This creates a grueling test track
  for input devices that also offers a varied application
  environment in which to test the custom mouse drivers that are
  bundled with today's USB devices.


**UniMouse... Original or Extra Crispy** -- When Contour Designs
  first introduced the UniMouse, they led the market with a three-
  button replacement for the iMac puck. It's a mouse of solid design
  that's a bit beefy, something that many users love. I never could
  use it comfortably, but my wife loves hers, oddly enough, given
  that her hands are significantly smaller than mine.

  However, the driver software that shipped with the original
  UniMouse was awful. It required you to place a custom extension in
  the System Folder, but offered no configuration options. Changing
  button settings required you to replace the Contour extension with
  another pre-programmed one. You set mouse speed via the Mac OS's
  Mouse control panel.

  Since then, the UniMouse has evolved to include UniMouse
  Overdrive, a customized version of Alessandro Levi Montalcini's
  USB Overdrive that gives the user far more control over individual
  key definitions and unifies the mouse speed setting to the same
  control panel. UniMouse Overdrive works well, though its user
  interface is arcane, suffering the same eccentricities of the
  shareware version of USB Overdrive (discussed in part 2 of this
  article). The mouse buttons are now fully customizable. We
  configured our iMac for a click from the left button; the right
  button Control-clicks to bring up contextual menus, and the middle
  button calls up a household favorite application switcher. For
  those who prefer scrolling, UniMouse Overdrive supports an auto-
  scroll function that works in most applications. Additionally,
  UniMouse Overdrive supports application specific sets, enabling
  the user to define mouse functions unique to where they are most
  needed. Overall, UniMouse Overdrive is simple, clean, and
  workable, but mostly a huge improvement over Contour's original
  effort.

<http://www.contourdesign.com/unimouse.htm>


**Kensington MouseWorks... Mostly** -- Kensington Technology Group
  has updated their venerable MouseWorks software to include support
  for USB devices. I've now tested it with both their Orbit
  trackballs and a USB scrolling mouse. Kensington has just released
  a spate of new devices, including two new scrolling mice and a
  multi-button trackball that should perform similarly.

  MouseWorks behaves as expected when configuring the buttons or
  ballistics curves for the pointing device. Ballistic curves change
  the rate at which the mouse responds to movements (for instance,
  the mouse can be set to move further based on faster motions),
  thus providing the finest degree of control offered by any driver
  reviewed.

  For those who need more buttons than their physical device
  provides, MouseWorks supports chording of the mouse buttons,
  enabling the user to define buttons clicked together as though
  they were a single additional mouse button. Also, MouseWorks
  provides a cursor that snaps to the default button of dialog
  boxes, along with several other functions that improve pointing
  precision on large displays or at high cursor speeds.

  MouseWorks offers numerous configuration options, including
  support for both scroll wheels and scrolling with mouse movement.
  Wheel-based scrolling support in MouseWorks 5.3 is vastly superior
  to the previous version of the software. With the previous
  release, some applications didn't scroll at all. The latest
  release fixes this, resulting in consistent scrolling in most
  applications. You can now adjust scrolling speed, but I found that
  even on the fastest setting scrolling continued to feel sluggish.
  This sluggish scrolling combines with Kensington's ample buffer to
  make overscrolling (a condition where the window keeps scrolling
  well after the wheel has stopped) a common occurrence. Also,
  scrolling works exclusively on windows that lie beneath the
  cursor, which can be inconvenient on large displays since it
  forces the user to point at the window they wish to scroll.

  Support for application specific sets is excellent. Kensington has
  developed this functionality through the previous generations of
  MouseWorks. The current iteration allows for fluid application
  changes without unexpected hiccups. Application sets work well
  enough that users can enforce similar interfaces upon disparate
  applications by using the extra mouse buttons as simple macros.

<http://www.kensington.com/products/pro_c1018.html>


**More Mice Everywhere** -- In part two of this article, I'll
  cover the rest of the litter of USB mice and drivers, including
  Logitech's MouseWare, the XLR8 Point-and-Scroll mouse, Microsoft's
  IntelliPoint, and USB's ubermaus driver, USB Overdrive.

  [Warren Magnus is the brains behind samespace, a marketing and
  business development consulting firm. He also serves as
  sponsorship chair and webmaster for the MacHack software
  developers' conference.]

<http://www.samespace.com/>


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