Aucbvax.1764 fa.apollo utzoo!duke!decvax!ucbvax!Chapman.ES@PARC-MAXC Mon Jun 15 23:29:05 1981 Re: Definitions Will By now you have undoubtedly read the several messages about what Mesa is. So I am going to address your other questions. As to the inavailablity of Mesa on Star. I do not work on Star myself, but I do work on another product, the 5700 copier/printer, which uses Mesa to control its operations. My understanding of the Star is that it IS primarily only a word processor, although an extremely powerful one, at least partly because of the capability of allowing the user to design graphics as well as text. (It also will allow electronic mail, but this need not be much more than writing a memo and sending it out, still conceptually within the province of a word processor.) It is not intended that the user or any OEMs be able to change the way the station operates, therefore, there is no need to allow Mesa to be directly accessable by either. To you people who see the potential fun of being able to get your hands on such a nice graphics screen and love the idea of being able to hack this system, too bad. That's not what Xerox is selling. They really are aiming at The Office of the Future, where executives may take a more active part in preparing memos, reports, etc., because it has been made much easier through the facilities of products like the Star. They are NOT interested in giving clever hackers a new toy to play with. And, yes, Xerox probably will try to control any customization requested by users, but will probably try to keep customization to a minimum. The system really does try to be quite general, and suggestions for customization will probably, if considered generally useful enough, be incorporated into the product wholesale, that is, all costumers will get the improvement/new feature with some subsequent release of software. An "icon" is a small picture (generally ~1" square) which looks approximately like the name of the icon displayed on it, i.e. a Memo icon looks like a sheet of paper with a preset heading on it; it looks like a memo. An icon is selected and expanded so that you then have a blank form on your screen already to be filled out and become a memo, which can then be distributed. The purpose of icons is to serve as a visual menu. You can see what facilities are available to you (i.e. file server, printer, memo, report, graph, etc.) and select those that you need for the particular task at hand, either singly or in groups, and deselect them when you don't need them anymore. It allows you several different windows into a variety of services, but they don't all have to be "full-size" all the time. Hope this information is useful. Cheryl ----------------------------------------------------------------- gopher://quux.org/ conversion by John Goerzen of http://communication.ucsd.edu/A-News/ This Usenet Oldnews Archive article may be copied and distributed freely, provided: 1. There is no money collected for the text(s) of the articles. 2. The following notice remains appended to each copy: The Usenet Oldnews Archive: Compilation Copyright (C) 1981, 1996 Bruce Jones, Henry Spencer, David Wiseman.