Subject: Re: Mac->IIgs AppleTalk -- possibly my only option, a good one? Path: lobby!newstf02.news.aol.com!audrey04.news.aol.com!not-for-mail From: supertimer@aol.com (Supertimer) Newsgroups: comp.sys.apple2 Lines: 43 NNTP-Posting-Host: ladder07.news.aol.com X-Admin: news@aol.com Date: 27 Dec 1999 06:14:07 GMT References: <385bdf12.0@news1.svn.net> Organization: AOL http://www.aol.com Message-ID: <19991227011407.05360.00002059@ng-fr1.aol.com> "Paul Grammens" wrote: >> It means that if you were going to >> extract a file with ShrinkIt! GS, ShrinkIt! GS won't give a >> sh*t if the file passed through a Mac and got a resource >> fork tacked on. > >He he... but what about the chicken/egg problem of getting Shrinkit! GS onto >your IIgs via Mac? There's two solutions to this. On the ground ftp server in the Mac folder is a DiskCopy image containing ShrinkIt! GS, so that'll provide you with the chicken so you can hatch other eggs. Also on the ground ftp server is a ShrinkIt! GS self extracting archive in a MacBinary wrapper. Simply pass this through a Mac onto a ProDOS or HFS disk and you'll end up with a *GS/OS program file* which, when run on the IIGS, self extracts the ShrinkIt! GS program inside. The self-extracting archive couldn't care less if it had a resource fork. After all, if you tack a comment to a file in the GS Finder, you've got a resource fork too and yet your GS program and data files still run. >At least, I've tried to extract files and gotten the >dreaded message "Your file has been forked up by some Mac, so I can't >extract it." But I was probably using the 8 bit version of Shrinkit. >-Paul Indeed that message was from the 8-bit version. IIGS resource forks will produce the same message. Try taking an .shk file under the GS Finder and adding a Finder comment to it. Then try unshrinking with 8-bit ShrinkIt!. You get the same message. Naturally, ShrinkIt! GS does not care. In fact, ShrinkIt! GS can also compress and extract files that have resource forks. These files can't be extracted with 8-bit ShrinkIt!. Try shrinking an rSound with ShrinkIt! GS and then extracting it with the 8-bit program, for example. It won't work.