Factbites
 Where results make sense
About us   |   Why use us?   |   Reviews   |   PR   |   Contact us  

Topic: Mac Roman


Related Topics

In the News (Tue 10 Nov 09)

  
  Mac OS Roman - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Mac OS Roman is a character encoding primarily used by Mac OS to represent text.
Mac OS Roman is a superset of the original Macintosh character set, used in System 1.
Mac OS Roman is also referred to as MacRoman or the Apple Standard Roman character set.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Mac-Roman   (210 words)

  
 MAC OS - GoGoSearch.com   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-31)
Mac OS, which stands for Macintosh Operating System, is a range of graphical user interface-based operating systems developed by Apple Computer for their Macintosh computers.
Mac OS history}}The "classic" Mac OS is characterized by its total lack of a command line; it is a completely graphical operating system.
Mac OS X x86 was first available for sale in the Apple Store in January 2006.
www.gogosearch.com /mac_os.htm   (2189 words)

  
 MacDisucssion.com: Features - Mac Security The Intego Way - Interview - Laurent Marteau, CEO
While Apple includes a firewall in Mac OS X, this firewall, IPFW, is very limited in scope, at least for the average user.
Many would say that the Mac OS is now ultimately an extremely safe and stable base for the network environment, whether you compare it to Windows or not.
We are strongly committed to Mac OS X and the Macintosh platform in general, and plan to continue offering new, innovative products to ensure the security and privacy of Mac users around the world.
www.macdiscussion.com /article_show.php3?article_id_var=252   (1962 words)

  
 Mac International - GNU Emacs Manual   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-31)
Mac uses non-standard encodings for the upper 128 single-byte characters.
The Mac clipboard and the Emacs kill ring (see Killing) are synchronized by default: you can yank a piece of text and paste it into another Mac application, or cut or copy one in another Mac application and yank it into a Emacs buffer.
The reason for this two-pass decoding is to avoid subtle differences in Unicode mappings between the Mac OS system and Emacs such as various kinds of hyphens, to deal with UTF-16 data in native byte order with no byte order mark, and to minimize users' customization.
www.gnu.org /software/emacs/manual/html_node/Mac-International.html   (495 words)

  
 Dr. J's On-Line Survey of Audio-Visual Resources for Classics: Roman Civ: General   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-31)
Founding of Rome, Roman expansion, Hannibal, Sulla, Julius Caesar, defeat of the Gauls, the Senate, Virgil, Trajan, Hadrian’s Wall, the Pax Romana, Constantine, Barbarians, Huns, Roman roads.
Chronicles the emergence of the Roman Empire as the first technological society and the spread of the Iron Age into Europe.
Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire Vol 1 by Edward Gibbon.
lilt.ilstu.edu /drjclassics2/Files/romangeneral.shtm   (3266 words)

  
 Evertype: Irish Keyboard Layouts for Mac OS X
They differed in some other regards, in that “Gaeilge” was based on the Mac OS Celtic character set (used in the Irish and Welsh localizations of OS 6 and 7 and in a number of fonts including those of the CeltScript series) and “Irish Accessories” was based on the standard Mac Roman character set.
This Mac OS X Irish keyboard layout was released as part of OS X 10.2 on 2002-08-24.
In the meantime, to support the Mac Roman character set, the “Irish” keyboard layout has been designed as a subset of the “Irish Extended” keyboard layout to facilitate users’ transition from non-Unicode to Unicode-based fonts.
www.evertype.com /celtscript/ga-keys-x.html   (844 words)

  
 Category:Mac OS - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Mac OS, which stands for Macintosh Operating System, is Apple Computer's operating system for Apple Macintosh computers.
Mac OS was the first commercially successful operating system which used a graphical user interface.
There are 2 subcategories to this category shown below (more may be shown on subsequent pages).
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Category:Mac_OS   (90 words)

  
 Unicode Keyboards for Mac OS
In Mac OS X, installable keyboard layouts may be of one of four scripts: Roman, Cyrillic, Central European, or Unicode.
For best compatibility with all applications you should in most cases use the "Roman" script, even if your keyboard includes characters that cannot be translated into Mac OS's Roman (or "MacRoman") encoding.
Also on the plus side, a keyboard layout assigned to the "Unicode" script allows you to switch between it and your main Roman keyboard with command-space (the keyboard shortcut for switching between layouts of the same script is the more cumbersome command-option-space).
www.wordherd.com /keyboards   (2117 words)

  
 [No title]
In Mac OS 8.5 and later versions, code point # 0xDB is changed to EURO SIGN and maps to U+20AC; the standard # Apple fonts are updated for Mac OS 8.5 to reflect this.
There is # a "currency sign" variant of the Mac OS Roman encoding that still # maps 0xDB to U+00A4; this can be used for older fonts.
# # In all Mac OS encodings, fonts such as Chicago which are used # as "system" fonts (for menus, dialogs, etc.) have four glyphs # at code points 0x11-0x14 for transient use by the Menu Manager.
www.unicode.org /Public/MAPPINGS/VENDORS/APPLE/ROMAN.TXT   (872 words)

  
 International Character Set Support on the Mac
The Mac uses a non-standard encoding for the upper 128 single-byte characters.
This is useful for editing documents in native Mac encoding.
The result is that you can yank a piece of text and paste it into another Mac application, or cut or copy one in another Mac application and yank it into a Emacs buffer.
www.nongnu.org /emacsdoc-fr/manuel/mac-international.html   (241 words)

  
 MacOSX-TeX Digest #250 - 02/28/02
The keywords used to specify the encoding inside=20= the source file have changed, for example "Mac OS Roman" has changed to=20= "Mac Roman" to remain consistent with naming conventions in Apple=AE's=20= application kit.
The keywords used to specify the encoding inside the source file have changed, for example "Mac OS Roman" has changed to "Mac Roman" to remain consistent with naming conventions in Apple=AE's application kit.
The keywords used to specify the encoding >inside the source file have changed, for example "Mac OS Roman" has >changed to "Mac Roman" to remain consistent with naming conventions >in Apple®'s application kit.
www.tug.org /mail-archives/macostex-archives/2002-March/004879.html   (2678 words)

  
 MacWindows News Archives, July-August 1999
Macs and PCs with Skyline can communicate with each other at 2 MB/sec, or with other IEEE 802.11 devices, including Apple's iBook running the Airport wireless option.
Currently, the QuickTime streaming server is free with Mac OS X Server, and the Darwin Streaming Server, which includes source code.
There is now a Mac menubar (in addition to the old key commands), and better Windows mouse support that fixes some problems with single and double clicking.
www.macwindows.com /news0799.html   (14275 words)

  
 MUG News - Canadian MacExpo Pics, Roman Events, & Mac Security At The MUG Center || The Mac Observer   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-31)
It's a great way to meet other Mac users, and most MUGs are a lot of fun.
Mac observers can now play Party Poker for Mac as well as Mac casino games by going to MacPokerOnline.com.
The Mac Observer is an independent publication and has not been authorized, sponsored, or otherwise approved by Apple Computer, Inc.
www.macobserver.com /article/2002/02/18.3.shtml   (755 words)

  
 Marc Liyanage - Software - Mac OS X Packages - PostgreSQL
NOTE: On Mac OS X 10.3 (and possibly later), it seems you have to adjust some system configuration parameters first.
PostgreSQLX is another distribution of PostgreSQL for Mac OS X that looks very promising.
pgsqlformac at sourceforge.net is a distribution of postgresql for Mac OS X similar to mine here, except that it seems to install into /Library, so if you prefer that to installation into /usr/local this might be worth looking at.
www.entropy.ch /software/macosx/postgresql   (679 words)

  
 Color Classic III Rumored
Enter the Mac Plus: 1 MB (expandable to 4) and SCSI for up to seven fast (for 1986) hard drives.
All information on The Rumor Mill (and the rest of Low End Mac) is copyright ©1999-2004 by Cobweb Publishing, Inc., unless otherwise noted, and may not be reproduced in any form without prior consent.
Low End Mac is an independent publication and has not been authorized, sponsored, or otherwise approved by Apple Computer, Inc. Apple and the Apple Logo are trademarks of Apple Computer, Inc. All other trademarks are the property of their respective holders.
lowendmac.com /rumormill/2k1130.html   (1457 words)

  
 TSM Client Installation for Mac OS X
The node name refers to the machine that will be backed up and is generally the first part of the name of the machine -- the "nnn" part of "nnn.xxx.uky.edu" -- and you must have the node name to configure your backup client.
A full backup of a typical Mac OS X system will include several gigabytes of data and will take several hours, depending on the speed of the machine, the network capacity, and the actual amount of data included.
Files with names containing characters not in the Mac Roman code page cannot be backed up and they are logged in the error log when encountered.
www.uky.edu /ComputingCenter/DataStorage/TSMDocs/macosx   (821 words)

  
 [chinese mac] Home
Every copy of Mac OS X 10.3 and 10.4 comes with complete, built-in support for the Chinese language.
Although 10.1 and 10.2 also support Chinese, we recommend that you upgrade to 10.3 or 10.4 if you intend to use Chinese on a regular basis in OS X. In addition, all OS 9 CDs worldwide include Chinese support.
WorldScript is Apple's trademark for the technology that allowed the Mac OS to support multiple languages before OS X. It is also built into the Carbon framework in OS X. In WorldScript, each language has a "script" that supports the standard character set and encoding for that language.
www.yale.edu /chinesemac/index.html   (346 words)

  
 MacNN | MacNN | The Macintosh News Network
Mac OS 9.1 comes with version 2.6 of these fonts, but these new updates from MS are version 2.9.
As was stated by somebody else, the 2.90 versions of Arial and Times New Roman have been posted by Microsoft in 2000.
Adobe tutorials for Mac enthusiasts.: Total Training produces high quality, award-winning video tutorials to get you up to speed fast.
www.macnn.com /news/3518&startNumber=10   (575 words)

  
 GNU Emacs Manual: Mac OS
Much of this works in the same way as on other platforms and is therefore documented in the rest of this manual.
The Mac keyboard ordinarily generates characters in the Mac Roman encoding.
Note that not all Mac Roman characters that can be entered at the keyboard can be converted to ISO Latin-1 characters.
www.ualberta.ca /~neitsch/sunsite.ualberta.ca/Mirror/gnu/Manuals/emacs-21.2/html_chapter/emacs_36.html   (872 words)

  
 Mac News First. | MacMinute News
EarthDesk requires Mac OS 9.1 or later, or Mac OS X 10.1 or later.
The update is available for both Mac OS X 10.3 (Panther) and Mac OS X 10.2 (Jaguar) via the Software Update preference pane.
The application requires Mac OS X 10.2.8 or later to run, and can be used to update Web content on iAssist-enabled servers only.
www.macminute.com /2004/05/25/from=12400   (1632 words)

  
 CV for webpage
Roman to Early Byzantine history and topography of Greece and Asia Minor
“Inhumation and cremation at Early Roman Kenchreai (Corinthia) in local and regional context,” in A. Faber, P.
Fasold, M. Struck, and M. Witteyer, eds., Inhumations in the Roman Empire from the 1st until the End of the 3rd Century A.D.: Proceedings of an International Colloquium (Schriften des Archäologischen Museums Frankfurt 20, Frankfurt), forthcoming [38 pp.
www.macalester.edu /~rife/webcv.html   (1813 words)

  
 LaserKurdish for Mac (Roman, Cyrillic & Arabic), Êóðäñêèé, Software - Mac, Ñèñòåìà, Øðèôòû, Mac
LaserKurdish includes four fonts in Arabic script, one in Roman and one in Cyrillic.
Five keyboard layouts are included, two for Arabic (traditional Arabic layout and phonetic), two for Cyrillic (traditional Russian and transliterated), and one for Roman script.
Mac SE-30 or newer, System 7.1 or newer.
www.worldlanguage.com /Russian/products/826.htm   (430 words)

  
 system fonts interacting with websites - macosx.com - Mac Support
When I deactivated the fractions, my Mac Mail browser was no longer getting weird characters, but I still get them online.
Completely trashing the Fractions fonts is all but necessary, but you also have to "manage" all the duplicate fonts in all three of the Library folders as well.
Mine was set at Mac Latin or something like that.
macosx.com /forums/showthread.php?p=1315162#post1315162   (316 words)

  
 MacAddict Forums / Create a text based iPod game
My guess is that the parser is not reading the files correctly (duh!?!).
I have used TextEdit with plain text encoding Western Roman (MacOS) and UTF-8.
I moved the Main.linx and error files to the Notes folder on the iPod.
www.macaddict.com /forums/topic/53899   (772 words)

  
 Mac OS Journal - November 2000   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-31)
For example, at the top of this window, you see "Mac OS Journal - November 2000".
That's in the title tag of the html file that your browser is displaying right now.
That code is what is responsible for displaying this page, this column about the web, in this issue of Mac OS Journal.
www.macosjournal.com /issues/0011/simplyweb.shtml   (1182 words)

  
 Empty boxes in barcode with Code 128 or Interleaved 2 of 5 Barcode Fonts
These problems are experienced because all Code 128 font and Interleaved 2 of 5 fonts use extended ASCII characters that do not work the same on all operating systems, applications and language settings other than ISO Latin 1.
The main problem with the Macintosh computer is that it uses the MAC Roman character set and Windows PCs uses ISO Latin 1.
This plug-in prints from the upper ASCII characters from ASCII 133-145 from the MAC Roman character set (see the chart below) and works cross-platform between PC's and MAC's in this way.
www.idautomation.com /kb/fonts-macintosh.html   (484 words)

  
 GNU Emacs Manual
You can use input methods provided either by LEIM (see section Q.4 Input Methods) or the Mac OS to enter international characters.
To use the former, see the International Character Set Support section of the manual (see section Q.
The Mac clipboard and the Emacs kill ring (see section H.7 Deletion and Killing) are connected as follows: the most recent kill is copied to the clipboard when Emacs is suspended and the contents of the clipboard is inserted into the kill ring when Emacs resumes.
www.delorie.com /gnu/docs/emacs/emacs_549.html   (299 words)

  
 Macalester vs Lake Forest (9/3/05)
M 1-10 L38 Vernon rush for 8 yards to the LFC30 (Roman Shklover;Louis Bertuca).
L 2-1 M46 A. Washington rush to the MAC45, fumble forced by Kaplan, fumble by A. Washington recovered by MAC Riley at MAC45.
M 2-8 L28 Vernon rush for 3 yards to the LFC25 (Roman Shklover).
www.macalester.edu /athletics/football/stats05/090305mc.htm   (3922 words)

  
 [chinese mac] OS 9
It is easier to read in Chinese, and for Roman text it is the same as Geneva.
It uses a combination of dictionary data with character frequency data to perform a rolling conversion of the input string as you type.
To enter single-byte Roman characters, press the caps lock key and type as you normally do.
www.yale.edu /chinesemac/pages/os9.html   (2925 words)

  
 Icarus Fallen :: Am I a Mac Roman Catholic?   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-31)
A friend of mine, a luteran theologian and IT specialist recommended an article to me, where the author argues that Macintosh devotion has some features of an implicit religion.
Well, the first Mac I ever used was Mattias' Mac when I was a Witherspoon Fellow in the fall of 2003, and I have gotten my own one just in the past Novemeber, so I'd probably rank as a Mac convert.
But it's because so far I've been really satisfied with my Mac, and not because I believe the Mac technology will bring us some sort of salvation.
www.icarusfallen.us /blog/_archives/2006/3/4/1796219.html   (679 words)

Try your search on: Qwika (all wikis)

Factbites
  About us   |   Why use us?   |   Reviews   |   Press   |   Contact us  
Copyright © 2005-2007 www.factbites.com Usage implies agreement with terms.