Want to know a little about an unusual
piece of Mac software? Software which remains a secret
from most people? It's a different kind of browser:
Apple Computer's Cyberdog. Actually, Cyberdog is an
unusual browser--but it's also an unusual e-mailer,
newsreader, and a telnet, FTP and Gopher client too.
If you're not entirely happy with the collection of
apps you use for these purposes, consider checking out
Cyberdog; you might want to use some or all of its parts.
Ever wished you didn't have to wait all
day on your browser's back button? Click on Cyberdog's
back button
at the top of the browser window! The back and forward
arrows both work instantly, even if you have disabled
the cache. (Instant sounds too good to be true; you'll
just have to see it to believe it!)
The
Log (available through a pulldown menu) is a CyberItem
record for sites visited over a number of days. You
can display the Log almost instantly, and it's so easy
that way to find and return to some site you went to
last week. There are lots of other functions you may
never have figured could be made easy; it takes no time
to click the Cookies enabler on and off, for example;
or to click the "Toss Cookies" button. Most pages load
faster--much faster--for me with Cyberdog than the other
browsers I'd used before. This is largely because Cyberdog
does a good job of displaying all the text and HTML
links first--making it easy to get a head start on using
the web page before all the graphics have finished downloading.
Cyberdog is intuitive to use, much as
the Mac is intuitive. It's almost more Mac-like than
the Mac itself; the other browsers, even on a Mac, always
reminded me somewhat of my old PC days. With a Mac browser,
I figure, you ought to be able to play around and figure
things out--structure them in different ways for yourself.
Configuring Cyberdog is mostly a matter of playing around
and looking around. Cyberdog eliminates the homepage
browser startup. If you wanted to, you could always
click on one single site every time to start the browser--but
I can't imagine wanting to; I used to hate the time
lost in having to go to the same page every time I wanted
only to go to a certain other spot on the Internet--like
having to first go to the drugstore in order to take
a walk in the park. The Cyberdog browser (and the rest
of that mouthful of other functioning parts) are integrated
into the Mac operating system via OpenDoc editors. You
don't need to know a thing about OpenDoc to use Cyberdog.
Just be happy knowing that the OpenDoc architecture
allows it to operate with a smaller RAM footprint than
it would ordinarily need.
I
can't think of anything you need to know before starting
to use Cyberdog. Do you like to drag and drop? That's
a lot of what you'll do with Cyberdog. . . Drag a double-clickable
sound file to a message window, for instance. Or drag
selected pictures or portions of pictures, which Cyberdog
will show along with the text, like a newspaper. Or
you might drag into a message window a graphics file,
which your recipient can usually double-click to open.
You'll surely drag lots of URL CyberItems to a notebook,
and you'll likely drag many CyberItems from your notebook
to an email message. Or drag an alias of any file anywhere
on your hard disk into a notebook for quick access while
browsing the Internet. The notebooks are quite a convenient
scheme for going places with Cyberdog! You don't have
to use a notebook at all if you don't want to. A regular
Finder folder anywhere on the hard drive also works
well; you can put your CyberItems wherever you want
to and they'll work. They work great in the Apple Menu
too. I really like the way the notebooks look, as well
as many of the menu options associated with them, though
I do use regular folders some too. A notebook stores
URL's--both internal and external--remarkably efficiently.
My largest notebook, for example, uses only 119 k to
store 353 double-clickable CyberItems organized within
29 categories.
If you're attached to a pull down bookmarks
scheme, you can have that with a $10 shareware add-on
from Hutchings
Software: Rapid-I Bookmarks. I use that too; it
works well. With several display options, the Rapid-I
Bookmarks allows for unusually quick visual scanning.
The most significant option it offers is the pull down
menu's ability to open an external browser, such as
Netscape, if the need arises. This is sometimes desirable
when JavaScript is used in a web page's design, as Cyberdog
doesn't currently have the ability to handle JavaScript
web sites. Java--not the same as Java Script--is handled
well by Cyberdog, though. It works via Apple's Macintosh
Runtime for Java -- available as a free download (version
2.0 and future) on the MacOS 8 CD from Apple (version
1.0.2). Many Cyberdog users will occasionally open another
browser when they run into JavaScript sites. How often
that happens depends on the sites someone likes to visit.
A messed-up display rarely happens to me though, so
I haven't used the Bookmark feature to open another
browser. I don't even have another browser, as the extra
space for another one on my 500 MB hard drive doesn't
seem worth the infrequent potential benefit. My favorite
Cyberdog part is the e-mail part. You have to see it
to believe it!
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