Merge pull request #57 from polluks2/master

Fixed some typos
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Andy McFadden 2023-01-14 15:16:34 -08:00 committed by GitHub
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11 changed files with 13 additions and 13 deletions

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@ -508,7 +508,7 @@ The file type, displayed as its hexadecimal code and the common three-letter mne
Tip: clicking in the file type box and then typing a letter takes you to the next entry whose mnemonic begins with that letter. This can make it easier to find an entry by "name".
.topic IDH_PROPS_AUXTYPE
The file's auxilliary type. Sometimes used to indicate information about the file (such as a 'BIN' load address), sometimes used to distinguish between files with the same file type (such as the various application-specific 'CFG' config file formats).
The file's auxiliary type. Sometimes used to indicate information about the file (such as a 'BIN' load address), sometimes used to distinguish between files with the same file type (such as the various application-specific 'CFG' config file formats).
Enter a four-digit hexadecimal number.

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@ -91,7 +91,7 @@
<P STYLE="margin-top:0;margin-bottom:0;"><FONT FACE="Courier New" SIZE="2">&nbsp;&nbsp; GetPort():@Port</FONT></P>
<P STYLE="margin-top:0;margin-bottom:0;"><FONT FACE="Courier New" SIZE="2">&nbsp;&nbsp; FreeMem():FreeBytes/4</FONT></P>
<P STYLE="margin-top:0;margin-bottom:0;"><FONT FACE="Courier New" SIZE="2">&nbsp;</FONT></P>
<P STYLE="margin-top:0;margin-bottom:0;"><FONT FACE="Courier New" SIZE="2">A "/" and a digit after a parmeter means it takes the specified number</FONT></P>
<P STYLE="margin-top:0;margin-bottom:0;"><FONT FACE="Courier New" SIZE="2">A "/" and a digit after a parameter means it takes the specified number</FONT></P>
<P STYLE="margin-top:0;margin-bottom:0;"><FONT FACE="Courier New" SIZE="2">of bytes.&nbsp; (When making a tool call, you must push space on the stack</FONT></P>
<P STYLE="margin-top:0;margin-bottom:0;"><FONT FACE="Courier New" SIZE="2">for any result values *before* pushing the input values.)</FONT></P>
<P STYLE="margin-top:0;margin-bottom:0;"><FONT FACE="Courier New" SIZE="2">&nbsp;</FONT></P>

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<P STYLE="margin-top:0;margin-bottom:0;"><FONT FACE="MS Sans Serif" SIZE="2">&nbsp;</FONT></P>
<P STYLE="margin-top:0;margin-bottom:0;"><FONT FACE="MS Sans Serif" SIZE="2">When CiderPress encounters data that it can't interpret, it stops trying to read from that section of the WAV file.&nbsp; For this reason, damaged entries will usually be shorter than undamaged ones.&nbsp; If a file appears to have the correct length but the checksum still doesn't match, it means the signal was sufficiently distorted to make a '0' bit look like a '1' bit, which is actually pretty hard to do.&nbsp; In most cases the decoder will either make an accurate determination or will conclude that the signal is too distorted to process.&nbsp; So far only one case has been found where the checksum was deliberately altered, as part of a copy protection scheme (Sargon II).</FONT></P>
<P STYLE="margin-top:0;margin-bottom:0;"><FONT FACE="MS Sans Serif" SIZE="2">&nbsp;</FONT></P>
<P STYLE="margin-top:0;margin-bottom:0;"><FONT FACE="MS Sans Serif" SIZE="2">If the tape has more than one program on it, you can usually tell if it's multiple copies of the same thing by comparing lengths and checksums.&nbsp; If the checkums say "good" but have different values, you probably have two different programs, or two slightly different versions of the same program.</FONT></P>
<P STYLE="margin-top:0;margin-bottom:0;"><FONT FACE="MS Sans Serif" SIZE="2">If the tape has more than one program on it, you can usually tell if it's multiple copies of the same thing by comparing lengths and checksums.&nbsp; If the checksums say "good" but have different values, you probably have two different programs, or two slightly different versions of the same program.</FONT></P>
<P STYLE="margin-top:0;margin-bottom:0;"><FONT FACE="MS Sans Serif" SIZE="3">&nbsp;</FONT></P>
<P STYLE="margin-top:0;margin-bottom:0;"><FONT FACE="MS Sans Serif" SIZE="3"><B>Saving the Data</B></FONT></P>
<P STYLE="margin-top:0;margin-bottom:0;"><FONT FACE="MS Sans Serif" SIZE="2">&nbsp;</FONT></P>

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<P STYLE="margin-top:0;margin-bottom:0;"><FONT FACE="MS Sans Serif" SIZE="2">&nbsp;</FONT></P>
<P STYLE="margin-top:0;margin-bottom:0;"><FONT FACE="MS Sans Serif" SIZE="2">The pathname and modification date will be displayed but may not be changed.&nbsp; (To change the pathname, use the <A HREF="t42.htm">rename</A> feature.)&nbsp; The file type will be shown in the drop-down box, and may be changed by selecting a new entry.&nbsp; Tip: if you click in the drop box and type a letter, you will move to the next entry that begins with that letter.&nbsp; This can make it easier to find a file type by its three-letter abbreviation.</FONT></P>
<P STYLE="margin-top:0;margin-bottom:0;"><FONT FACE="MS Sans Serif" SIZE="2">&nbsp;</FONT></P>
<P STYLE="margin-top:0;margin-bottom:0;"><FONT FACE="MS Sans Serif" SIZE="2">The auxilliary type (usually called "aux type") is shown as a 4-digit hexadecimal number, and may be edited freely.</FONT></P>
<P STYLE="margin-top:0;margin-bottom:0;"><FONT FACE="MS Sans Serif" SIZE="2">The auxiliary type (usually called "aux type") is shown as a 4-digit hexadecimal number, and may be edited freely.</FONT></P>
<P STYLE="margin-top:0;margin-bottom:0;"><FONT FACE="MS Sans Serif" SIZE="2">&nbsp;</FONT></P>
<P STYLE="margin-top:0;margin-bottom:0;"><FONT FACE="MS Sans Serif" SIZE="2">The type description is based on both the file type and the aux type.&nbsp; For example, type "LBR $E0" with aux type "8002" is listed as a "ShrinkIt (NuFX) document" in the Apple File Type Notes.</FONT></P>
<P STYLE="margin-top:0;margin-bottom:0;"><FONT FACE="MS Sans Serif" SIZE="2">&nbsp;</FONT></P>

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<P STYLE="margin-top:0;margin-bottom:0;"><FONT FACE="MS Sans Serif" SIZE="2">There are actually three formats here.&nbsp; All of them convert common symbols and accented characters from the IIgs fonts to Windows fonts.&nbsp; Not all of the symbols have equivalents, but many of them do.&nbsp; Text written in languages other than English should convert correctly.</FONT></P>
<P STYLE="margin-top:0;margin-bottom:0;"><FONT FACE="MS Sans Serif" SIZE="2">&nbsp;</FONT></P>
<P STYLE="margin-top:0;margin-bottom:0;"><FONT FACE="MS Sans Serif" SIZE="2">The supported formats are:</FONT></P>
<UL STYLE="margin-top:0;margin-bottom:0;margin-left:10pt;"><LI><FONT FACE="MS Sans Serif" SIZE="2">Teach document (GWP $5445).&nbsp; The "Teach" application on the Apple IIgs created these, which have text in the data fork and formatting information in the resource fork.&nbsp; Font size and style changes are supported, accented characters are converted, and an attempt is made to convert the typeface to something similar to the original.&nbsp; The results are ususally pretty good.</FONT>
<UL STYLE="margin-top:0;margin-bottom:0;margin-left:10pt;"><LI><FONT FACE="MS Sans Serif" SIZE="2">Teach document (GWP $5445).&nbsp; The "Teach" application on the Apple IIgs created these, which have text in the data fork and formatting information in the resource fork.&nbsp; Font size and style changes are supported, accented characters are converted, and an attempt is made to convert the typeface to something similar to the original.&nbsp; The results are usually pretty good.</FONT>
<LI><FONT FACE="MS Sans Serif" SIZE="2">AppleWorks GS Word Processor (GWP $8010).&nbsp; Same basic features as "Teach", plus some basic formatting features like centered and justified paragraphs.&nbsp; The "header" and "footer" sections are displayed at the top of the converted document.</FONT>
<LI><FONT FACE="MS Sans Serif" SIZE="2">Generic (GWP, any aux type except the two above).&nbsp; Does a IIgs text conversion without any other reformatting.&nbsp; If you have a text file that uses symbols or accented characters from the IIgs font values, you can change its file type to GWP to enable this converter.</FONT></UL>
<P STYLE="margin-top:0;margin-bottom:0;"><FONT FACE="MS Sans Serif" SIZE="2">&nbsp;</FONT></P>
@ -118,7 +118,7 @@
<P STYLE="margin-top:0;margin-bottom:0;"><FONT FACE="MS Sans Serif" SIZE="3">&nbsp;</FONT></P>
<P STYLE="margin-top:0;margin-bottom:0;"><FONT FACE="MS Sans Serif" SIZE="3"><B>Super Hi-Res Graphics (PIC/PNT or 32K BIN, 320/640x200)</B></FONT></P>
<P STYLE="margin-top:0;margin-bottom:0;"><FONT FACE="MS Sans Serif" SIZE="2">&nbsp;</FONT></P>
<P STYLE="margin-top:0;margin-bottom:0;"><FONT FACE="MS Sans Serif" SIZE="2">First introduced on the Apple IIgs, Super-Res was the first mode largely devoid of video idiosyncracies.&nbsp; When you set pixels to certain colors, the output on an RGB monitor was exactly what you expected.&nbsp; The resolution, which could be changed on every line, was 200 lines of either 320 pixels across with 4 bits of color per pixel, or 640 pixels across with 2 bits of color per pixel.&nbsp; The way colors in the file were translated to colors on screen involves some minor color palette gymnastics.&nbsp; The output of the converter is a 256-color 640x400 BMP.</FONT></P>
<P STYLE="margin-top:0;margin-bottom:0;"><FONT FACE="MS Sans Serif" SIZE="2">First introduced on the Apple IIgs, Super-Res was the first mode largely devoid of video idiosyncrasies.&nbsp; When you set pixels to certain colors, the output on an RGB monitor was exactly what you expected.&nbsp; The resolution, which could be changed on every line, was 200 lines of either 320 pixels across with 4 bits of color per pixel, or 640 pixels across with 2 bits of color per pixel.&nbsp; The way colors in the file were translated to colors on screen involves some minor color palette gymnastics.&nbsp; The output of the converter is a 256-color 640x400 BMP.</FONT></P>
<P STYLE="margin-top:0;margin-bottom:0;"><FONT FACE="MS Sans Serif" SIZE="2">&nbsp;</FONT></P>
<P STYLE="margin-top:0;margin-bottom:0;"><FONT FACE="MS Sans Serif" SIZE="2">Super-Res images were also the first to be regularly compressed, which isn't surprising since they're 4x as large as standard hi-res.&nbsp; CiderPress can convert images in the following formats:</FONT></P>
<P STYLE="margin-top:0;margin-bottom:0;"><FONT FACE="MS Sans Serif" SIZE="2">&nbsp;</FONT></P>

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<P STYLE="margin-top:0;margin-bottom:0;"><FONT FACE="MS Sans Serif" SIZE="2">&nbsp;</FONT></P>
<P STYLE="margin-top:0;margin-bottom:0;"><FONT FACE="MS Sans Serif" SIZE="2">One caution: if you format a disk for ProDOS, and then format it with your camera, you may find that it still appears to have some ProDOS files on it.&nbsp; (CiderPress should identify it as an MS-DOS "FAT" filesystem, but if the camera uses a non-standard boot block it may not be detected correctly.)&nbsp; Some files may appear to be damaged.&nbsp; This is because the camera's format routine didn't zero out all of the blocks, so some of the ProDOS directory structure is still present.&nbsp; Attempting to read or write files to the volume as if it were a ProDOS disk is not recommended.&nbsp; The safe way to switch between Apple II and Windows formatting is to use the image-copy tool to overwrite the entire CF card.&nbsp; Be aware that formatting with a camera can reduce the number of blocks available on the drive, which will make copying images onto it impossible: the image copier only works if the destination volume is at least as large as the source volume.</FONT></P>
<P STYLE="margin-top:0;margin-bottom:0;"><FONT FACE="MS Sans Serif" SIZE="2">&nbsp;</FONT></P>
<P STYLE="margin-top:0;margin-bottom:0;"><FONT FACE="MS Sans Serif" SIZE="2">The speed at which CF cards are read or written depends primarly on your card reader.&nbsp; USB2.0 readers will be faster than USB1.x, and Firewire, PCMCIA, or IDE interfaces will usually be faster than USB2.0.&nbsp; Also, some cards have a higher speed rating than others.&nbsp; Speeds of 200-400KB/sec are typical when copying from a USB1.x device, while writing to it may reach 700KB/sec.&nbsp; Writing tends to be faster than reading because of block caching.</FONT></P>
<P STYLE="margin-top:0;margin-bottom:0;"><FONT FACE="MS Sans Serif" SIZE="2">The speed at which CF cards are read or written depends primarily on your card reader.&nbsp; USB2.0 readers will be faster than USB1.x, and Firewire, PCMCIA, or IDE interfaces will usually be faster than USB2.0.&nbsp; Also, some cards have a higher speed rating than others.&nbsp; Speeds of 200-400KB/sec are typical when copying from a USB1.x device, while writing to it may reach 700KB/sec.&nbsp; Writing tends to be faster than reading because of block caching.</FONT></P>
<P STYLE="margin-top:0;margin-bottom:0;"><FONT FACE="MS Sans Serif" SIZE="2">&nbsp;</FONT></P>
<P STYLE="margin-top:0;margin-bottom:0;"><FONT FACE="MS Sans Serif" SIZE="2">CiderPress assumes that the first partition on a CFFA card will be ProDOS or HFS.&nbsp; If it's not, the image will not be detected as CFFA.</FONT></P>
<P STYLE="margin-top:0;margin-bottom:0;"><FONT FACE="MS Sans Serif" SIZE="3">&nbsp;</FONT></P>
@ -56,7 +56,7 @@
<P STYLE="margin-top:0;margin-bottom:0;"><FONT FACE="MS Sans Serif" SIZE="3">&nbsp;</FONT></P>
<P STYLE="margin-top:0;margin-bottom:0;"><FONT FACE="MS Sans Serif" SIZE="3"><B>Hard Drives</B></FONT></P>
<P STYLE="margin-top:0;margin-bottom:0;"><FONT FACE="MS Sans Serif" SIZE="2">&nbsp;</FONT></P>
<P STYLE="margin-top:0;margin-bottom:0;"><FONT FACE="MS Sans Serif" SIZE="2">Apple II or Macintosh hard drives can be connected, assuming you have the necessary hardware (e.g. SCSI interface).&nbsp; Non-SCSI drives, such as the Applied Ingenuity InnerDrive or Vulcan drives, may not be formatted with the Macintosh partioning scheme and hence may be inaccessible.</FONT></P>
<P STYLE="margin-top:0;margin-bottom:0;"><FONT FACE="MS Sans Serif" SIZE="2">Apple II or Macintosh hard drives can be connected, assuming you have the necessary hardware (e.g. SCSI interface).&nbsp; Non-SCSI drives, such as the Applied Ingenuity InnerDrive or Vulcan drives, may not be formatted with the Macintosh partitioning scheme and hence may be inaccessible.</FONT></P>
<P STYLE="margin-top:0;margin-bottom:0;"><FONT FACE="MS Sans Serif" SIZE="2">&nbsp;</FONT></P>
<P STYLE="margin-top:0;margin-bottom:0;"><FONT FACE="MS Sans Serif" SIZE="2">Figuring out the size of a hard drive is a bit tricky under Windows, which uses different interfaces in different versions of the OS.&nbsp; Some interfaces return different answers depending on what version you're running.&nbsp; CiderPress currently scans the drive to determine its size.</FONT></P>
<P STYLE="margin-top:0;margin-bottom:0;">

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<P STYLE="margin-top:0;margin-bottom:0;"><FONT FACE="MS Sans Serif" SIZE="2">&nbsp;</FONT></P>
<P STYLE="margin-top:0;margin-bottom:0;"><FONT FACE="MS Sans Serif" SIZE="2">The sizes used are for the entire partition.&nbsp; If you formatted a 32MB ProDOS volume in a 1GB partition on a CFFA card, CiderPress will treat it as a 1GB volume, even though ProDOS is only on the first part of it.&nbsp; Extracting that ProDOS volume may be awkward.</FONT></P>
<P STYLE="margin-top:0;margin-bottom:0;"><FONT FACE="MS Sans Serif" SIZE="2">&nbsp;</FONT></P>
<P STYLE="margin-top:0;margin-bottom:0;"><FONT FACE="MS Sans Serif" SIZE="2">Hard drives with Macintosh-style partioning have explicit filesystem identification for each partition.&nbsp; That is, each partition will be labeled as ProDOS, HFS, a device driver, or whatever is appropriate.&nbsp; CiderPress does not currently have the ability to change these labels.&nbsp; Copying the wrong thing onto a partition, such as putting a ProDOS volume into a partition meant for HFS, could have unexpected results.</FONT></P>
<P STYLE="margin-top:0;margin-bottom:0;"><FONT FACE="MS Sans Serif" SIZE="2">Hard drives with Macintosh-style partitioning have explicit filesystem identification for each partition.&nbsp; That is, each partition will be labeled as ProDOS, HFS, a device driver, or whatever is appropriate.&nbsp; CiderPress does not currently have the ability to change these labels.&nbsp; Copying the wrong thing onto a partition, such as putting a ProDOS volume into a partition meant for HFS, could have unexpected results.</FONT></P>
<P STYLE="margin-top:0;margin-bottom:0;"><FONT FACE="MS Sans Serif" SIZE="2">&nbsp;</FONT></P>
<P STYLE="margin-top:0;margin-bottom:0;"><FONT FACE="MS Sans Serif" SIZE="2">Bear in mind that old hard drives are pretty slow by today's standards.&nbsp; A 2GB drive purchased in the mid-1990s will deliver 4-5MB/sec on bulk reads, which means it'll take about 8 minutes to back up the entire drive.&nbsp; These drives tended to have small caches and slow seeks though, so it can take 30 seconds to a minute for the contents of the disk to be loaded, because scanning the list of files requires lots of single-block reads.</FONT></P>
<P STYLE="margin-top:0;margin-bottom:0;"><FONT FACE="MS Sans Serif" SIZE="2">&nbsp;</FONT></P>

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<P STYLE="margin-top:0;margin-bottom:0;"><FONT FACE="MS Sans Serif" SIZE="2">&nbsp;</FONT></P>
<P STYLE="margin-top:0;margin-bottom:0;"><FONT FACE="MS Sans Serif" SIZE="2">You can also copy documents to other programs.&nbsp; To select the entire document, click on the document to set the input focus, then hit Ctrl-A to select all and Ctrl-C to copy it to the clipboard.&nbsp; Switch to another application (Windows WordPad and Microsoft Word are the most appropriate) and hit Ctrl-V to paste.</FONT></P>
<P STYLE="margin-top:0;margin-bottom:0;"><FONT FACE="MS Sans Serif" SIZE="2">&nbsp;</FONT></P>
<P STYLE="margin-top:0;margin-bottom:0;"><FONT FACE="MS Sans Serif" SIZE="2">Bear in mind that not all applications support all formats.&nbsp; Pasting text into Windows notepad, which doesn't support Rich Text Format, will cause highlighed BASIC listings and formatted AppleWorks documents to be converted to plain text.&nbsp; Pasting graphics into Notepad doesn't work at all.</FONT></P>
<P STYLE="margin-top:0;margin-bottom:0;"><FONT FACE="MS Sans Serif" SIZE="2">Bear in mind that not all applications support all formats.&nbsp; Pasting text into Windows notepad, which doesn't support Rich Text Format, will cause highlighted BASIC listings and formatted AppleWorks documents to be converted to plain text.&nbsp; Pasting graphics into Notepad doesn't work at all.</FONT></P>
<P STYLE="margin-top:0;margin-bottom:0;"><FONT FACE="MS Sans Serif" SIZE="2">&nbsp;</FONT></P>
<P STYLE="margin-top:0;margin-bottom:0;"><FONT FACE="MS Sans Serif" SIZE="2">Click "Done" to close the window.</FONT></P>
<P STYLE="margin-top:0;margin-bottom:0;"><FONT FACE="MS Sans Serif" SIZE="2">&nbsp;</FONT></P>

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<P STYLE="margin-top:0;margin-bottom:0;text-indent:-17pt;margin-left:17pt;"><SPAN STYLE="margin-left:-17pt;text-indent:0pt;width: 17pt"><FONT FACE="Symbol" SIZE="2"><B> </FONT></span><FONT FACE="MS Sans Serif" SIZE="2">Free Space:</B> how much free space is on the disk.&nbsp; For formats like CFFA, which just hold other disk images, this is meaningless.</FONT></P>
<P STYLE="margin-top:0;margin-bottom:0;text-indent:-17pt;margin-left:17pt;"><SPAN STYLE="margin-left:-17pt;text-indent:0pt;width: 17pt"><FONT FACE="Symbol" SIZE="2"><B> </FONT></span><FONT FACE="MS Sans Serif" SIZE="2">Writable Format:</B> says whether or not CiderPress is capable of adding and deleting files on disks with this format.&nbsp; Currently this is "yes" for DOS 3.3, ProDOS, and UCSD Pascal.</FONT></P>
<P STYLE="margin-top:0;margin-bottom:0;text-indent:-17pt;margin-left:17pt;"><SPAN STYLE="margin-left:-17pt;text-indent:0pt;width: 17pt"><FONT FACE="Symbol" SIZE="2"><B> </FONT></span><FONT FACE="MS Sans Serif" SIZE="2">Damaged: </B>this indicates whether or not CiderPress believes the disk is damaged.&nbsp; If it does, the disk will be marked read-only, and attempts to add or delete files will be blocked.</FONT></P>
<P STYLE="margin-top:0;margin-bottom:0;text-indent:-17pt;margin-left:17pt;"><SPAN STYLE="margin-left:-17pt;text-indent:0pt;width: 17pt"><FONT FACE="Symbol" SIZE="2"><B> </FONT></span><FONT FACE="MS Sans Serif" SIZE="2">Notes:</B> if CiderPress detects damage or other anomalies when scanning the disk, they wll be noted here.</FONT></P>
<P STYLE="margin-top:0;margin-bottom:0;text-indent:-17pt;margin-left:17pt;"><SPAN STYLE="margin-left:-17pt;text-indent:0pt;width: 17pt"><FONT FACE="Symbol" SIZE="2"><B> </FONT></span><FONT FACE="MS Sans Serif" SIZE="2">Notes:</B> if CiderPress detects damage or other anomalies when scanning the disk, they will be noted here.</FONT></P>
<P STYLE="margin-top:0;margin-bottom:0;"><FONT FACE="MS Sans Serif" SIZE="2">&nbsp;</FONT></P>
<P STYLE="margin-top:0;margin-bottom:0;"><FONT FACE="MS Sans Serif" SIZE="2">More information about the different disk formats can be found <A HREF="t18.htm">here</A>.</FONT></P>
<P STYLE="margin-top:0;margin-bottom:0;"><FONT FACE="MS Sans Serif" SIZE="3">&nbsp;</FONT></P>

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<P STYLE="margin-top:0;margin-bottom:0;"><FONT FACE="MS Sans Serif" SIZE="2">&nbsp;</FONT></P>
<P STYLE="margin-top:0;margin-bottom:0;"><FONT FACE="MS Sans Serif" SIZE="2">Windows XP:</FONT></P>
<UL STYLE="margin-top:0;margin-bottom:0;margin-left:17pt;"><LI><FONT FACE="MS Sans Serif" SIZE="2">From the "Start" menu, select "Control Panel".</FONT>
<LI><FONT FACE="MS Sans Serif" SIZE="2">Click on "User Accounts".&nbsp; If you only see the current account, and it says "limited user", you're not an administator and cannot proceed further.</FONT>
<LI><FONT FACE="MS Sans Serif" SIZE="2">Click on "User Accounts".&nbsp; If you only see the current account, and it says "limited user", you're not an administrator and cannot proceed further.</FONT>
<LI><FONT FACE="MS Sans Serif" SIZE="2">Click on the account you want to change.</FONT>
<LI><FONT FACE="MS Sans Serif" SIZE="2">Click on "Change my account type".</FONT>
<LI><FONT FACE="MS Sans Serif" SIZE="2">Click the "Computer Administrator" radio button.&nbsp; Click "change account type".</FONT>

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<LI><FONT FACE="MS Sans Serif" SIZE="2">UNIDOS / AmDOS / OzDOS (two DOS volumes on an 800k disk)</FONT>
<LI><FONT FACE="MS Sans Serif" SIZE="2">ProSel Uni-DOS / DOS Master (DOS volumes embedded in an 800K ProDOS disk)</FONT>
<LI><FONT FACE="MS Sans Serif" SIZE="2">CFFA fixed-size partitions (4-part and 8-part formats)</FONT>
<LI><FONT FACE="MS Sans Serif" SIZE="2">Macintosh-style partitoning (for CD-ROMs and SCSI hard drives)</FONT>
<LI><FONT FACE="MS Sans Serif" SIZE="2">Macintosh-style partitioning (for CD-ROMs and SCSI hard drives)</FONT>
<LI><FONT FACE="MS Sans Serif" SIZE="2">///SHH Systeme MicroDrive partitioning</FONT>
<LI><FONT FACE="MS Sans Serif" SIZE="2">FocusDrive partitioning</FONT></UL>
<P STYLE="margin-top:0;margin-bottom:0;"><FONT FACE="MS Sans Serif" SIZE="2">&nbsp;</FONT></P>