-- Michel Lenoble | Litterature Comparee | NOUVELLE ADRESSE - NEW E-MAIL ADDRESS Universite de Montreal | ---> lenoblem@ere.umontreal.ca C.P. 6128, Succ. "A" | MONTREAL (Quebec) | Tel.: (514) 288-3916 Canada - H3C 3J7 | (4) --------------------------------------------------------------25---- Date: Mon, 26 Apr 93 16:13:51 EDT From: Bronwen Heuer <BRONWEN@SBCCVM> Subject: KanjiMaster I am attempting to find more information about a program called KanjiMaster which won an award from EDUCOM in 1990. It was written by Dezso Benedek, Clate Sanders, and Junko Majima. Years backit was being marketed by Hyperglot Software Company, Inc. in Knoxville Tennessee. The 800 number they gave is no long correct. Does anyone have information on where to find this program? Has anyone used it? If so I would appreciate hearing about your experience with it. \bronwen bronwen heuer phone (516) 632-8054 instructional computing frank melville, jr. memorial library s1460 stony brook, ny 11794-3350 bronwen@ccvm.sunysb.edu (5) --------------------------------------------------------------69---- Date: Mon, 26 Apr 1993 15:16:45 +0100 From: "Simon A. Rakov, Maguire and Kirshner Fellow, University Subject: Mac Hardware query At Oxford our Mac SE's always hang up the first time that we use MacTCP. You turn on the machine, try any program that uses MacTCP, and the machine hangs. Our traditional response to this has been to press the reset button at the rear left of the machine, after which the machine restarts and MacTCP works perfectly. Does anyone have any insight into why MacTCP does not work the first time? The specs of the Mac SEs are: 4MB RAM running System 7.0 with tuner; Built-in Ethernet card; MacTCP 1.1 with MacTCP Prep installed in the Control Panels folder; MacTCP DNR installed in the System Folder. MacTCP settings seem to be OK because we've tried changing them and have only made things worse. Please send any suggestions, comments, etc. to my e-mail address, below. Thanks very much for your time. Yours, Simon Rakov Maguire & Kirshner Fellow, University of Oxford rakov@vax.ox.ac.uk (6) --------------------------------------------------------------30---- Date: Sat, 24 Apr 1993 11:16:44 -0600 From: rajones@ux1.cso.uiuc.edu Subject: high-end OCR Our university library is looking for some high-speed, high-volume optical character recognition hardware and software. Can anyone tell me who the leaders are now? Calera? Caere? Kurzweil? Any suggestions and advice will be appreciated. --------------------------------------------------------------------------- Robert Alun Jones Professor of Sociology, History and Religious Studies University of Illinois Urbana, IL 61801 Home: (217) 367-3899 Office: (217) 333-4969 Fax: (217) 333-5225 E-mail: rajones@ux1.cso.uiuc.edu (7) --------------------------------------------------------------47---- Date: Fri, 23 Apr 1993 15:21:24 +0100 From: simionat@unive.it Subject: compiling a bibliography: how can computer resources help? A friend of mine is compiling a bibliography for her dissertation. Now - I guess - the usual way would be to go to a library, browse the index by subject (Dewey classification) or by authors, have a look at the books and select the desired ones. How could one use computers to this purpose? I don't know if OPACS allow subject searches, and how flexible they are with that. Of course they can provide search-by-keyword capabilities, but I wouldn't call that a clever and productive way. Do they allow something like browsing a Dewey index? Also, are dissertations and papers made available on the net? I know of some cases, but is there at least a systematic database of such references - this would allow one to contact the person who actually wrote the papers. OPACS are freely accessible - what more could offer pay-services such as Magic On-line, Uncover, and so on? One last thing: is posting to specific lists the only possible thing? And is there a hierarchically structured list of the (main) Usenet lists around the world? Thanks. ___________________________________________________________________ Marco Simionato tel : 39 - (0)41 5225570 Univeristy of Venice Computing centre fax : 39 - (0)41 5225570 Dorsoduro 2408/B email: simionat@unive.it 30123 Venezia, ITALY ___________________________________________________________________