Bob,
I transfer files from my Mac to my PC all the time. It's easy because of how
incredibly versatile and full-featured Macs are, and because Windows has
imitated the Mac OS so well. Just take a PC-formatted 3 1/2" diskette, stick
it into your Mac floppy drive, drag your stack's icon onto the floppy's icon
to copy the stack onto the diskette, do a command-Y, take the diskette out
of the Mac, stick it into your PC's diskette drive, double-click on "My
Computer", double-click on the A: drive icon, click once on the icon for
your stack, do a control-C, navigate to your Runtime Revolution folder in
the Program Files folder, double-click on the icon for the folder that
contains the Revolution application ("revolution.exe"), then hit control-V
to paste the stack into the folder. If your stack's file name doesn't have
an extension of ".rev", give it that extension by renaming it (you can
either rename the file the same way you would in the Mac OS or use the
right-click menu and select "Rename"). Then double-click the stack file and
it should open in Revolution. Good luck!
Tommy Simmons
Employment Law Advisory Network, Inc.
www.employmentlawadvisors.com

P.S. If you don't have a floppy drive on your Mac and nothing else works,
you can e-mail the stack to me, and I'll e-mail it back to you in a form
that you should be able to pick up on your PC.

----- Original Message -----
From: Robert Presender <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Thursday, September 06, 2001 6:51 PM
Subject: Mac to PC


> Hi,
> Just bought a Windows PC.  Downloaded Rev for Windows OK.
> Have been working on an application on the Mac (OS 9.2.1, BP G3).
>
> Tried to email an attachment of the work in progress from the Mac to
> the PC, but the Windows PC won't recognize the attachment.
>
> Is there any way that I can transfer the on-going work (so far one
> main stack and four substacks) from the Mac to the PC?  Really don't
> look forward to starting from scratch on the PC.
>
> Since this is my first experience with a PC,  which computer would be
> easier to use for development.
> Should I develop on the Mac, build for both OS', and then check the
> Windows version on the PC?
>
> It's a good thing I don't do this for a living, I'd starve!!!!!!!
>
> Any help will be appreciated.
>
> Regards,
>
> Bob

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