From: Steven Champeon - Imonics Development <schampeo@imonics.com>
To: rjc@clark.net
Message Hash: 2eb48c5a69be0355e2a16a97470d78098e2f587aa8d44c8d1679d6f13e6a891e
Message ID: <9507211733.AA17337@fugazi.imonics.com>
Reply To: N/A
UTC Datetime: 1995-07-21 17:34:03 UTC
Raw Date: Fri, 21 Jul 95 10:34:03 PDT
From: Steven Champeon - Imonics Development <schampeo@imonics.com>
Date: Fri, 21 Jul 95 10:34:03 PDT
To: rjc@clark.net
Subject: Re: Netscape the Big Win
Message-ID: <9507211733.AA17337@fugazi.imonics.com>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain
| From owner-cypherpunks@toad.com Fri Jul 21 13:24:22 1995
| From: Ray Cromwell <rjc@clark.net>
| Subject: Re: Netscape the Big Win
|
| > If you used a Mac, all you had to do is click on the URL in your mailer,
| > newsreader, even some text editors, and the correct helper aplication will
| > open the URL.
|
| Yeah, but does it fire up 1 browser process everytime you click on it, or
| will it command an already running browser to follow the link?
You can't have multiple processes running on a Mac. (Unless the application
has a different name -- for example, you *can* have two different copies of
the Netscape application, named "NS1" and "NS2", set as the default "helpers"
for a) news and b) HTTP, should you want to do that...)
What ICeTEe does is send an Open AppleEvent to the browser application.
If it is running, it responds by opening the URL in the browser. If the browser
isn't running, it starts the browser and then opens the URL. The INIT
(extension) patches the System "TextEdit" routines, which are used in most
apps with limited need for text processing. The name of the INIT comes from
its authors, who wrote "InternetConfig", and because it patches "TextEdit".
This isn't to say that Java isn't cool :-)
Steve
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1995-07-21 (Fri, 21 Jul 95 10:34:03 PDT) - Re: Netscape the Big Win - Steven Champeon - Imonics Development <schampeo@imonics.com>