Yes, I can verify the author is left handed. I had a command line flag to remap the mouse buttons for you right-ies.
The $HomeMovie video encoding format was quite MGR specific, and designed to run on a Sun 2/120 over a 14.k-baud modem (for typical MGR windows) in real-time; it was possible to transfer MGR sessions to remote workstations.
I got mgr running on a SPARCStation 10 running SunOS 4.13 in 1995. It worked OK, until it crashed the machine, which upset me. We were having an office "uptime" competition.
One thing this article, which is very thorough, and very good, doesn't mention is that all the signalling is in-band via control/escape sequences. Mgr had no analog to xterm. You telent'ed in to some other machine, your shell script did some control sequences, and presto, a new window with a shell on the remote machine showed up.
I believe this article touches on mouse button use. I think Stephen Uhler, the major author of mgr, was left handed, as the default button arrangement definitely was more ergonomic for your left hand.
I don't know for sure, but I distinctly remember that mgr on SunOS was default left handed. Could be the version you had was compiled for right handers.
I think I got mgr source off a free software CD, maybe Walnut Creek brand. I did have to fiddle to get it compiled and working.
Yes, I can verify the author is left handed. I had a command line flag to remap the mouse buttons for you right-ies.
The $HomeMovie video encoding format was quite MGR specific, and designed to run on a Sun 2/120 over a 14.k-baud modem (for typical MGR windows) in real-time; it was possible to transfer MGR sessions to remote workstations.
Nice article, by the way.
I got mgr running on a SPARCStation 10 running SunOS 4.13 in 1995. It worked OK, until it crashed the machine, which upset me. We were having an office "uptime" competition.
One thing this article, which is very thorough, and very good, doesn't mention is that all the signalling is in-band via control/escape sequences. Mgr had no analog to xterm. You telent'ed in to some other machine, your shell script did some control sequences, and presto, a new window with a shell on the remote machine showed up.
I believe this article touches on mouse button use. I think Stephen Uhler, the major author of mgr, was left handed, as the default button arrangement definitely was more ergonomic for your left hand.
Indeed, the signalling is implemented in a really, really clever way.
I had no idea that the author was left-handed; it would be interesting to try MGR with remapped mouse controls, I suppose!
I don't know for sure, but I distinctly remember that mgr on SunOS was default left handed. Could be the version you had was compiled for right handers.
I think I got mgr source off a free software CD, maybe Walnut Creek brand. I did have to fiddle to get it compiled and working.