Path: utzoo!attcan!uunet!lll-winken!lll-tis!helios.ee.lbl.gov!pasteur!ucbvax!decwrl!purdue!bu-cs!bloom-beacon!mit-eddie!uw-beaver!fluke!moriarty
From: moriarty@tc.fluke.COM (Jeff Meyer)
Newsgroups: comp.sys.mac
Subject: Symantec Utilities for the Mac (SUM) -- yow!
Keywords: rather a lot for your $30
Message-ID: <4226@fluke.COM>
Date: 28 Jun 88 08:07:45 GMT
Sender: news@tc.fluke.COM
Lines: 65

A little while ago, someone posted that owners of MacZap could upgrade to
SUM (Symantec Utilities for the Mac) $30, as Symantec had bought MacZap for
use in SUM.  Well, to whoever passed that information to the net, thank you!

Got SUM in the mail today, and it is NICE.  First of all, beautiful manual
explaining every step of the recovery process -- this was my biggest gripe
with MacZap, as the "average novice user" needed help with it.  The manual
should be all they help they need -- good use of graphics, showing each step
of the way with screen dumps, etc.  Rather thick -- looks like a learning
guide for Word or something in that realm.

What it comes with:

--  Disk Clinic, which is the equivalent to the "guide program" that MacZap
    had (maybe it was called Disk Clinic too, I don't remember).  Cleaner
    interface.

--  Guardian, which has a number of features.  This is both a program and an
    INIT, and has a number of features.  If you install Guardian on your
    disk, it aids in recovery of your disk in case it crashes.  It has the
    option of keeping a list of files deleted from the disk, so that you can
    quickly and easily recover them (looks like it saves the sectors the
    files were located at).  It also stops any operation which would write
    zeros over the disk's directory.

--  Floppy Recover, HFS Recover and Scanner from MacZap... but with exact
    instructions on how to use them in a number of situations.

--  HD TuneUp, a disk optimizer.  About equivalent to PowerUp, I think --
    very fast, and runs on the startup disk.  It doesn't create one
    contiguous free space like Disk Expre, which is very hand when making
    large disk partitions, but otherwise, really slick... also a VERY fast
    analyzer which gives a fragmentation percentage.

--  HD Partition.  Yup, a disk partitioner DA!  And an automounter INIT!
    Haven't gotten it to work with my tape drive yet (the LaCie drive and
    Rainy Day, which demands that the partition matches the tape partition
    exactly for an image restore -- Hard Disk Partition works with this,
    though), but that's a rather special case.

--  (But wait, there's more!)  QuickCopy, a combination of floppy copier and
    initializer, much like Disk Dup+ and MassInit.

--  Symantec Tools.  File editor tool, like FEdit or MacTools on the Copy II
    Mac disk.

-----

There's probably some other stuff I've forgotten, but cripes!  For a $30
upgrade fee, I got a much clearer, better (I suppose, obviously no disk
crashes yet) program, plus a File Editor, disk partioner, optimizer and disk
copier. Pretty nice...

And I get a free debugger for my Lightspeed C compiler in a couple weeks!
God, I love this country!

[I have no connection with Symantec, other than being either very pleased or
 damned pleased (in the case of Lightspeed C) with their products]

                                "If this is foreplay, I'm a dead man!"
---
                                        Moriarty, aka Jeff Meyer
INTERNET:     moriarty@tc.fluke.COM
Manual UUCP:  {uw-beaver, sun, microsoft}!fluke!moriarty
CREDO:        You gotta be Cruel to be Kind...
<*> DISCLAIMER: Do what you want with me, but leave my employers alone! <*>