💾 Archived View for gemini.spam.works › mirrors › textfiles › magazines › ZNET › 0010.txt captured on 2022-06-12 at 15:28:41.
-=-=-=-=-=-=-
___________________________________ Zmagazine July 11, 1986 Issue #7 Ron Kovacs Publisher/Editor Middlesex, New Jersey ___________________________________ In this issue we have packed ST news and ST Software reviews. In this issue: - XM301 Fix - Touch-Tablet Fix for RAMBRANT - ST Software Reviews - ST vs Amiga - ST Terminal Software Reviews - Zmag Systems - Future issues Before we get into ST news, We will briefly supply our 8 bit readers a few fixes recently found on CIS. Xx XM301 Fix The Following information was taken from Compuserve. NOTE: This fix is NOT an official Atari upgrade. If you attempt this modification, you do so at your own risk! To correct the booting problems experienced with some XM301/1050 configurations will require you to have three 470 ohm resistors, some solder, solder iron, wire cutters, and a phillips screwdriver. 1. Open the XM301 modem and remove the PCB assembly. 2. Locate the area where the cable is attached to the board. The wires will be labeled with numbers. Some modems will have these contacts coated with a sealant. Remove the sealant carefully with your fingers small knife or screwdriver. 3. De-solder the lines labelled 3, 9, & 13 and pull the wires through the board. Remember which wire goes into which hole. Better yet label them with a small piece of tape. 4. Install each of the 470 ohm resistors into each open hole. Push the resistors all the way in leaving them standing upward. 5. Trim the excess wire extending through the bottom of the board and solder the resistor in place. 6. Attach the designated wires close to the tops of the resistors, solder them in place and trim the excess wire off the resistor. 7. Be sure that none of the resistors or wires are touch each other. 8. Put the modem back together. Works fine!! NOTE: If you have no electronic experience DO NOT ATTEMPT THIS FIX. Xx Touch-Tablet Fix This fix was taken from Compuserve Here's a very simple modification to the Atari Touch Tablet which will allow the button on the pencil to work with the popular RAMBRANT from the ANTIC catalog. It will not effect the use of the tablet with any other program. It involves placing a small jumper wire between two pins on one of the plastic connectors inside the unit. 1. Remove the seven screws from the bottom of the tablet. 2. Lift the top of the tablet up and open it like a book from the cable end to the front of the unit. BE VERY CAREFUL NOT TO DAMAGE THE SURFACE OF THE TABLET OR THE RIBBON CABLE THAT CONNECTS TO IT. 3. Fold the tablet surface down and you will see the circuit board inside. On the circuit board, there are two small plastic connectors. One has four wires which go to the buttons, the other connector has seven wires. Its the one with seven wires that we will work with. On my tablet, the colors of the wires are (from left to right) VIOLET, WHITE, GREEN, GREY, BROWN, ORANGE and YELLOW. What we want to do is to place a jumper wire between the BROWN and the ORANGE wire. 4. Cut a small piece of 22 or 24 gauge buss wire about a half an inch long or you can cut a piece of wire from a resistor lead about the same size. 5. Now with the touch tablet facing you, count FROM THE RIGHT to the second and third pins (ORANGE and BROWN) wires. Bend the small piece of wire so that both ends will fit in the top of the connector. Use a pair of needle nose pliers to push down each end of the wire so that it fits snugly (snugly?) in place along side the pins in the connector. Thats all there is to it! What you've just done is place the pencil button in parallel with the left button, so whenever you press the pencil button, its the same as pressing the left button on the tablet. Now carefully close up the tablet. Be extra careful as you try to close the top cover. Don't force it shut. Make sure that the tablet surface is seated properly into the bottom of the tablet. The top should close and mate with the bottom easily. Also make sure that the jumper wire that you installed is not interfering with closing the top. Replace the screws that you removed from the back and you're all done. Remember to use joystick port #2 when using the tablet with RAMBRANT. Any Questions??? - Danny - he IBM PC. In fact, the manual you get only has instructions for booting the IBM version; the 520 ST boot instructions and errata are provided on a separate insert. The company is preparing an all-purpose manual but it wasn't ready in the early versions of the program. Unison World does promise to send a copy of the new manual to registered owners (so fill out your registration cards) as soon as it is ready. It doesn't really matter though, the manual provided is nice heavy paper stock, attractively printed, and easy to read. It will look very nice on your bookshelf where it will sit while you play with the program. Like The Print Shop, PrintMaster is so user- friendly you won't want or need to take much time reading instructions. The best part of this program is in the experience. At a time when it seems so many software companies are rushing to port over their best sellers to the 520 ST, many of them fail to make use of the GEM desktop or the mouse. As a result, we users are left to flounder with the same tired old function keys and control key combinations of someone else's system. True, we get a program proven in the marketplace and usually free of major bugs, but it's often not enough to compensate for the inconvenience we have to accept. Not PrintMaster, though. It was ported over, true enough, but Unison World at least had the grace to include the use of the mouse for function selection. It makes all the difference for someone who is a convert from the old school. The menu selections are sometimes too close together for broad movements but judicious use of the mouse will get you what you want. For those of you just dying to go back to the horse and buggy days, the arrow keys work too. No GEM desktop is provided but you don't really miss it because of the nice screen design of the program. The clip art in PrintMaster is generally a cut above what I've seen in similar graphic programs but it still doesn't matthe capabilities of the 520 ST in high resolution. But then neither do most printers. I liked the quality of the pictures, many of them were quite detailed and much more than simple outline drawings. The only complaint I have at all about the art is that the picture of the computer in the graphics library is the very image of an IBM PC instead of the more advanced Atari 520 ST! (Fortunately you can exercise this beastie with the graphic editor). The fonts which were included in the package were more than adequate for most needs (they each have three styles including an outline and 3D version) but I thought the borders were a little on the skimpy side. I suspect that will be corrected in future additions to this program. PrintMaster has a graphic editor more complete than most. You can edit any one of the more than 100 pieces of pre-designed art, flip it horizontally, or invert it black for white. The size of the canvass is small and you may have problems using the mouse here but the editor's commands are displayed along the right hand side and the x- y position of the cursor is displayed underneath so there's no need to flip back and forth between screens. Unfortunately, Printmaster won't accept graphics done in Degas or Neochrome format so you are limited to the pieces of art included on the disk or what is available in the optional Artgallery I ($29.95). The graphics included in PrintMaster aren't really clip art in the true sense of the word because they can only be put in certain specified places on the greeting cards and banners. That can be annoying if you can't fit your message around the preset placement options. It is here that the lack of graphic and layout flexibility of PrintMaster cannot rival the versatility of programs like Typesetter ST or Degas. The preset format of the PrintMaster options are sometimes restricting. Still, there seem to be enough options available for most situations and the practical limit will usually be defined by your own imagination anyway. One of the more pleasing additions to PrintMaster is the calendar option. In this option you can design your own personal monthly or weekly calendar with special days carrying your own message. Each page of the calendar can have its own graphics which highlight the season or some commemorated event. Great for refrigerator doors or family bulletin boards! There are also options which allow you to design and print your own letterhead stationery, make signs, or create banners about as long as your patience. In addition,PrintMaster has a preview feature which allows you to actually see how the finished product will look before you print. One of the problems with a program like PrintMaster is that it is completely useless unless you have a printer which is supported by the software. Playing with the editor and waiting for PrintMaster to go through its layout process can be more than a little frustrating if the program bombs when it comes time to print. In addition, close usually isn't good enough. An -Epson compatible- printer, for example, had better be very compatible or you'll find your greeting card slipping over the perforations of your fan-fold paper. Make sure before you buy that your printer is on the list of printer drivers. That, however, is one of the advantages of buying a program that has already been around the block a time or two. You aren't stuck with just one driver and a promise of more to follow. PrintMaster has more than a dozen printer drivers already built in. Unison World also provides a troubleshooting paper as another insert, suggesting printer drivers for printers not specifically listed. Also, I found the technical support personnel at Unison World very helpful when I found I had an incompatibility problem with the suggested printer driver for my NEC Pinwriter. There was also a curious slip of paper in the box which advertised a backup copy of PrintMaster for $5.00. As far as I can tell, the program isn't copy protected so I'll admit to being a little mystified at the offer. The bottom line: PrintMaster is a superior graphics program as long as you understand the purpose for which it was designed. It won't help you become a graphic artist in the manner of Degas and Neochrome, but within the constraints of the program it's very flexible and so easy to use you won't have to spend more than a few minutes with the manual. Compared to other graphic programs of its type, PrintMaster is superior and a very good value for the money. And it's fun -- and in the world of micro-computing that's usually what it's all about.