Global Village Powerport
Platinum P.C. card Fax Modem
Estimated price: $339.00
Company: Global Village

The Global Village Platinum PC Card or the Platinum Pro PC Card is the ideal modem to make your PowerBook computer a truly mobile solution. The Platinum PC Card is so easy to use that you can master its use in mere minutes. The modem comes with Global Village’s GlobalFax 2.5 fax software, GlobalFax OCR (character recognition software), and PC Card Enhancement software that helps your modem interact with your application software and your computer much easier. In addition, you will love the Quicklauncher utility which provides easy access to all your Internet and communication software.
Continue reading »
HTML Basics Part I
HTML or Hypertext Markup Language, is the language that you use to construct pages for the World Wide Web. HTML is very basic and can be read by any Web browser on a variety of different operating systems. Because HTML is so basic in nature it is very easy to learn. You can design your own Web page very easily and quickly. So if you don’t have a Web page yet, here is a basic guide to help you get started.
The first thing you need to do is decide which text program you’re going to use to make your page. All Web pages need to be in ASCII or plain text format in order to be read by a Web browser. This is easy, all this means is that you have to use a very simple word processor like Simple Text, or a program designed specifically for making Web pages. Some more powerful word processors also have the option to let you save a page in ASCII format instead of their own format. I believe the easiest way to make a page for the Web is to use an HTML editor like Web Weaver 2.5.3. You can find this excellent program on the Web at http://www.northnet.org/best/. Web Weaver is shareware and you can try it and see if you like it before you have to pay anything. Web Weaver not only saves files in ASCII format but has palettes that let you write HTML tags with just one click. This takes away the tedious typing that you would normally have to do to insert HTML tags. You can actually learn a lot from using Web Weaver.
Continue reading »
PowerBook 190CS
Estimated price: $1,999
Company: Apple Computers
Apple has come a long way with it’s new line of PowerBooks. Past models were extremely limited in performance and storage. The new PowerBooks, which include the 190, 5300, and Duo 2300, come with the same features you expect from the best desktop Macs.
The 190CS, the one I used for this review, comes with 8mb’s of RAM and a 500mb hard drive. You have the option of a gray scale or color dual-scan display, and the speedy Motorola 68LC040/66 processor. The 190 and the 5300 are essentially the same machine, except the 5300 comes with a 100mhz PowerPC processor and a considerably higher price tag. The 190 has excellent features, including PC card slots, an expansion bay, a full size keyboard, and an improved trackpad that is not even available on the 5300.
Continue reading »
Once you have finally configured your Internet Connection software (after a few calls to the tech support center of your Internet Provider!) you have only to click one or two buttons and your surfing the net with the best of them. Depending on what type of software your Internet Provider (IP) offers you for connecting to the Internet, you may even get lucky and not have to call them in the first place. Many Internet Providers offer bundled software at no extra charge that configures everything for you.
Once you are connected, you just launch the software for the task you wish to accomplish. (ie. Netscape to search the Web, Claris emailer for email, and Fetch for FTP, and you’ll be pointing and clicking your way around the net!)
What happens on the other end of the line is what this column is all about. You know the familiar sound your modem makes when you dial in to your IP, but you may be surprised to learn what is going on there that you don’t know about!
Continue reading »
p>It seems certain that the World Wide Web will become, if it has not already, central to entertainment, business and social activities. Look how large the Web is now, with so many people not even online yet. Probably many of your friends have heard of the Internet or use it at work, but do not have it in their homes. Just imagine what will happen when the “Internet Box” becomes widely available. As you read this, technology is available to let people connect to the Internet without having to go out and buy a Mac (or, I suppose, one of those other non-Macs). In many locations, you will be able to hook up to the Internet with a box right on your television. The cable that carries your television channels into your home can also carry the Internet.
The companies that provide Internet service can’t even accurately tell how many new Web pages are added every day. Several months ago, I heard the estimate of about 20 to 50 million people having access to the Internet and that amount increases by an estimated 15 percent per month. This makes the Web the place to be if you have any information you would like others to see. The next step for My Mac was obvious, soon after I started writing for My Mac, I began putting together our Web site.
Continue reading »
Last Month, we compared having a direct Internet connection using an Internet Provider vs. using a major Online service, such as America Online. People who spend 12 hours or more online per month using a major Online service had a bill that was higher than the fee an Internet Provider would charge for Unlimited Internet access. So if you find your Online expenses increasing, upgrading to a dial up PPP account with an Internet Provider could save you a substantial amount of money and give you an unlimited on-line experience. The World Wide Web is also quickly becoming more graphically friendly and will make expensive online services obsolete.
Continue reading »
The Internet is a tremendous and constantly growing wealth of
information. Since you are reading this E-zine, you either have Internet access yourself or know someone who does. For many of you, it is through a major On-line service, such as America Online, CompuServe, etc. Some may have gone with the direct Internet connection, like a PPP or slip account. Some have both. I have a Power Mac 6100/66 hooked up to the Internet directly using a dial up PPP account and I log on to AOL for a few hours a month right over the Internet using AOL’s TCP/IP access method, but more on that later.
What I will try to do in this column is provide some interesting and diverse areas for you to explore as well as discussing and answering your questions about all aspects of the Internet. Are your on-line charges too high? Do you have to sign off just when you find what your looking for because the meter is getting too high? Well, there may be an Internet solution for you that will lower your costs. Have you found some exciting Web sites? Let me know and I will share some of your favorites with the rest of the Mac community. Everyone has different tastes so hopefully I can
generate some excellent feedback. So write in and let us know what you have discovered out there.
The first thing I want to discuss is how you are accessing the Internet. If you are a serious Internet fanatic and your not hooked directly to the Internet, as in a PPP, or SLIP account, then perhaps you should be. Does your AOL bill exceed the national debt? If your paying more than $30.00 per month you could probably save some money and stay on-line longer by accessing the Internet using an Internet Provider. These providers usually charge about 25 to 30 bucks a month, which includes unlimited access and all the software you need to connect. If there isn’t a provider in your local calling area, there will be soon. They are springing up all over the place quickly, and the competition is great so the prices are all coming in line. The major On-line services do provide a nice user friendly
interface that you just can’t find on the raw Internet, but once you get familiar with browsing the World Wide Web you won’t miss it. Some folks (myself included) need the best of both worlds. You can access AOL from the Internet by going through the back door. You stay connected to the Internet and fire up your AOL software. Just select TCP-IP from the main pop-up menu and click sign on as you normally would, and your off and running. You still have to pay the monthly fee, and you are still limited to 5 free hours, but since you have unlimited Internet access you probably only need to log on to AOL for a few hours a month. I log on to AOL for the latest news, surf
their monthly software section, then sign off and go browsing the Web with Netscape. It’s a real nice combination, and the total monthly cost is less than 35 bucks.
If you sign on for just a few hours a month, than a On-line service is probably just right for you. You can still get access to the World Wide Web from AOL, although somewhat slower and less impressive than some of the other commercial browsers out there, like Netscape Mosaic, and many others. The major on-line services have local access numbers all over the country, but what if you don’t live near one? If you have to call long distance to log on with AOL then there may be an alternative. America Online offers an 800 number you can use to log on with. There is a catch, though: They charge you $4.95 /hour just for the phone call. Add the monthly fee and you have about 35 bucks for 5 Hrs. So if there is an Internet Provider in your local calling area., for the same 35 bucks you might be able to get unlimited web access plus your five hours with AOL.
Now for a few Internet Sites! One of the most important sites for us Mac folks is of course Apple’s Home page. You have probably already visited them, but in case you haven’t you should point your browser over to http://www.apple.com/ for all the latest Apple news. What do you use for a surfboard while your surfing? Search engines provide us with an excellent way to search the Web. Yahoo has an easy to use search engine that you can find at http://www.yahoo.com/ This search engine has many extra features that will point you to what’s new, or what’s cool, and many others. The Webcrawler is another nice search engine. Those of you who use AOL will recognize it. You can access it with almost any browser at http://webcrawler.com/ Bob LeVitus has a Web page concerning his new book called Webmaster Macintosh home page. Anyone interested in Web publishing and Mac’s should head over to http://www.versa.com/webmastermac/ for some great information and software!
That’s it for this month’s Internet Connection, I hope you enjoyed it. Next month I’ll have room for more Web sites. As I mentioned before the beauty of the Internet is it’s size and scope. Write me with your favorite sites and I will share some of them in this column. Is there something you can’t find, let me know and Tim and I will see what we can come up with. You can E-mail me at orchard@wn.net or Evz1@aol.com, I’ll be looking forward to hearing some feedback.
In next month’s issue of the Internet Connection I’ll answer some of the letters, give some helpful tips, and share some new Web sites sent in by My Mac readers.















Comments. Be heard!
Book Review
Book Review
MyMac Podcast #385
MyMac Podcast #384