• Updated 2023-07-12: Hello, Guest! Welcome back, and be sure to check out this follow-up post about our outage a week or so ago.

"Must Have" Stuff for Every Machine

pee-air

Well-known member
Do you have any "must have" stuff that you install on every 68k or ppc Mac you own? If so, what are they?

These are the things that get installed on to every Mac I own and use:

- Networktime control panel goes on every Mac I have that runs any version of Mac OS prior to 8.6. Networktime sets the date and time from a server on the internet or, in my case, from a server on the local network.

- Stuffit expander goes on every machine I own. Every Mac that has a hard drive has Stuffit expander. It's one of those essential pieces that I always seem to need.

That's about all I can think of off the top of my head. The rest of the "must have" stuff is installed with the system software. Things like simpletext, etcetera.

 

Scott Baret

Well-known member
Andrew Welch's Bomb Shelter goes on just about every Mac I've got.

I also put the Programmer's Key INIT on every Mac I've got that is missing a programmer's switch.

For all of my System 6 Macs, I install TrueType. I also include the SaintFrancis font, which is a TrueType public domain font that is essentially San Francisco.

Did I mention Teach Text? Oh wait, it comes with every installation of the OS.

 

MacMan

Well-known member
RAM Doubler. I've got it installed on most of my System 7 & 8 Macs and it is a far better way to virtually increase RAM than using "Virtual Memory".

There's also a nice little extension called "Sticky Click" which makes drop down menus "stick" like in OS 8 and later. Make life easier, especially with PowerBooks.

 

LCGuy

LC Doctor/Hot Rodder
for 68k Macs at least:

ClarisWorks

NUM 3.1

Stuffit Expander

RAM Doubler and MaxRAM

System Update 3 (for System 7.1)

SuperClock! (for System 7.1)

ResEdit

 

pee-air

Well-known member
I was just going through my old Mac software and I found MacEKG. So I want to add MacEKG to my list of must have software. There's something cool about hearing an old LC III or Quadra say, "Performing system diagnostics," at startup. [:D] ]'>

 

equill

Well-known member
A propos of LCGuy's reference to SuperClock!, I have a vague stirring of memory from Those Days when 68Ks were timeless—in a chronometrically-challenged kind of way—despite the internal Date & Time CP.

I remember that SuperClock! conflicted with D&T in such a way as to freeze the Mac if its settings (Clock, Alarm and whatever) were accessed, but gave no trouble if they were not. Can anyone remember whether there was a more positive work-around for the conflict? The conflict could even become a stand up, knock down, drag out stoush if the clock display of Møire was also enabled at the same time.

To LCGuy's list of desirables, having recently had some business with installing 'System 7.1.3' on two hard drives for PB 160s, I should add the whole suite of retrofits mentioned here, especially the AppearanceCDEV. Just be wary that Finder 7.1.3 is not bundled with Drag and Drop in the downloads from Apple, as promised (mistakenly, with Thread Manager) in that link. It has to be extracted from a System 7.5 Install disk with TomeViewer if you wish to use it. And look instead for Drag and Drop 1.1.1 rather than 1.1.

de

 

MacOS

Well-known member
BeHierarchic for the menu on System7

ApplWindows for a better window behavior

Eyeballs in the menu bar

Bigfood on the Desktop

PopUpFolder for the better Folder behavior

 
Fetch (if it's on the network. I can run FTP sharing on the G5 and get software to the Mac very quickly. Only Fetch has to be installed using a floppy disk or some other slow method. All the other software can be added with Fetch.)

Stuffit Expander (transferred through Fetch as a .sea.bin. all other transfers can now be with .sit)

I don't use too many utilities like the menu bar clock, etc. Very few additional CDEVs, etc. because they can lead to instability.

 

Bunsen

Admin-Witchfinder-General
Symbionts or some other better INIT manager than the Extensions Manager

InformINIT

 

Charlieman

Well-known member
I remember that SuperClock! conflicted with D&T in such a way as to freeze the Mac if its settings (Clock, Alarm and whatever) were accessed, but gave no trouble if they were not.
Not familiar with that problem. There were so many versions of SuperClock (and it was so popular) that I guess the bug got fixed pretty quickly. I do recall a System 6 or 7 bug where if you enabled the Alarm Clock and then removed the Alarm Clock DA, it would continue to generate alerts.

 

defor

You can make up something and come back to it late
Staff member
Popchar

NUM

mode32

Think C++

MacsBug

Paracomp/Macromind Swivel 3D

MacRenderMan

Aldus SuperPaint

Adobe Illustrator '88

MacDraw II

Excel 4

Word 5.1a

JLK

JPEGView

SoundEdit Pro

WindowShade

SoftFPU (for PPC 68k FPU support)

Altsys Fontographer

 
Top