Recent Questions with Answers
last updated December 5, 1993
Suggestion:
You may want to use the
Search
command under the
File
menu to quickly locate information in this document.
This document contains answers to questions regarding
How do I download an image or sound to my machine, rather than viewing or hearing it?
After selecting
Load to Local Disk
(formerly
Binary Transfer Mode) using the
Options
menu, clicking the mouse button on a hyperlink causes Mosaic to prompt you for a local file save, regardless of the document's file type.
To tell Mosaic that a particular file type should
always
be written to a file, set its viewer to
mosaic-internal-dump
with a
mailcap
file.
Why don't WAIS URL's work?
NCSA Mosaic now offers native
wais
support, see
here
for more details
(especially the section on Mosaic, WAIS, and Gateways).
Why can't I view .rgb images?
Mosaic may report an error if you access a link that points to an .rgb format image, meaning xv-3.00 is not being used. Since xv-3.00 is now available and can view .rgb files, all you need to do is download xv-3.00 from
ftp.cis.upenn.edu in /puv/xv
and compile it.
xv-3.00 is shareware for personal use only. Commercial, government, and institutional users must register their copies of xv-3.00.
I can't view a file in format BLARGH via NCSA Mosaic!
See the answer to the question
Why don't my multimedia X resources work anymore?
How do I access an ftp site that is missing from Mosaic's list?
To enter an ftp site directly, select
Open
from the
File
menu and enter the URL in the text field, for example:
ftp://siggraph.org/
Alternatively, you could use
this form-based service.
How do I search?
To search the current document for a text string, choose
Find In Current
(formerly
Search) from the
File
menu.
Other than that, you will only be able to perform a search if the document you are viewing is attached to a searchable index.
If you are running Mosaic with Motif 1.2 or under HP/UX and are having problems with text entry fields (such as those for search keywords), more information is available
here.
Even though I'm on an SGI (or a Sun, or an HP), the Audio Annotate menubar entry is greyed out. Why?
Because you don't have
/usr/sbin/recordaiff
(for SGI) or
/usr/demo/SOUND/record
(for Sun) or
/usr/audio/bin/srecorder
(for HP) in place; more information is
here.
I can pull down group listings from my news servers but not any actual articles!
Your NNTP server apparently doesn't like to return articles named by message ID -- it will only return articles identified by group and article number. This is very bad, as the URL scheme Mosaic uses can only identify news articles by message ID. Your NNTP server is in violation of the NNTP spec (RFC 977) and should be investigated by your news administrator. (If your admin declares your NNTP server to be properly working, then feel free to send us a bug report, but we'll need read access to your NNTP server to do anything at that point.)
Viewers that run in the background, such as igif, do not work!
This problem usually occurrs on SGIs, where GL programs fork into background processes on startup, by default. To use
igif
as your gif viewer, simply use the -f flag, by inserting the following line in your mailcap file:
image/gif; igif -f %s
Here is more
information on mapping MIME types to external viewers.
Is there a news group or mailing list discussing Mosaic?
Currently, the Usenet newsgroup
comp.infosystems.www
and the mailing list www-talk@info.cern.ch.
Here is more info on World Wide Web
Where can I find Mosaic for a particular system?
The binaries are on NCSA's ftp server, ftp.ncsa.uiuc.edu, in the directory
/Mosaic/Mosaic-binaries.
Select the
.message
file for further information.
Here is information on using Mosaic on
other, unsupported systems.
What software (image viewers, sound players, etc.) do I need to support Mosaic?
See the FAQ document,
Other Mosaic/WWW Software,
under
NCSA Mosaic Multimedia Resources.
How do I edit hypertext? (or) Is there an HTML text editor?
See the FAQ document,
Other Mosaic/WWW Software,
under
HTML Converters and Editors
How do I set up a server? (or) How do I provide information to the Web?
The first-order solution is to simply place the documents you wish to serve on an anonymous ftp server and serve them that way. The corresponding URL would be
file://machine.name/directory/filename
The advanced solution, for greater performance and flexibility, is to set up an HTTP (HyperText Transfer Protocol) server. There are several available; NCSA distributes a public-domain server, at ftp.ncsa.uiuc.edu in
/Mosaic/ncsa_httpd, with full
online documentation.
The document you'll find most useful in creating your own HTML documents is the
Help on HTML
document in Mosaic's pull-down help menu.
How do I create the postage stamp images commonly used as hyperlinks to larger images?
The utility xv3.0, used for displaying images, also crops, expands, etc. You can download xv3.0 from
export.lcs.mit.edu/contrib
and compile it.
Can a Mosaic hotlink run an external application?
Yes, see
this document on executing shell scripts inside Mosaic.
Can I put a hypertext link in an annotation?
Yes and no. Since the Annotate menu uses a normal, everyday Motif text widget for entering and editing annotations, there's no fancy hypertext editing capability -- yet.
However, if you understand
HTML, you can freely use anchors in your annotation text (since NCSA Mosaic displays annotations as preformatted text, using the
<pre>
tag, which recognizes anchors).
You may want to begin your annotation with the </pre> tag.
Why do you use a layer of indirection for audio annotations? Why not just have the annotation hyperlink point directly at the audio file?
Because then there'd be no way for you to subsequently delete the annotation, using the current scheme of things.
After installing the CERN HTTP daemon, inlined images do not appear:
The CERN HTTP daemon continues to corrupt images and other forms of binary data. The easiest thing to do is to use the NCSA HTTP daemon instead (ftp.ncsa.uiuc.edu in /Mosaic/ncsa_httpd; binaries and source are available), as it will always pass through data unchanged and your images will show up correctly.