Category : Windows 3.X Files
Archive   : CLIP-WIN.ZIP
Filename : UC.WRI

 
Output of file : UC.WRI contained in archive : CLIP-WIN.ZIP
1¾«‰×½ÛÛÛÛÛÜ¿&Gî}ˆ^"a{Ø ^"a(`ièè ¤4n Ú | ÃGÃ
 Ú | ÃGÃßÌÂÖÃGÃúÿÿÿ-üÿÿÿ-$ œÈ«ÊûÊBĖÌÚÄâÌ Ä}ΤÄ1ÎqÅÌÏ ÆlÍs̜ȫÊüÿÿÿ-ú-ú-ü-
$È§Ê¨È¯Ê²È“ʚȋʐȧÊ$¯ÈSÊÇÈ[ÊÜÈ#ÊÄÈʯÈSÊ$ÙÈãÉñÈëÉɳÉîÈ«ÉÙÈãÉ$ÉsÉÉ{É0ÉCÉÉ;ÉÉsÉ$-ÉÉEÉ ÉZÉÓÈBÉËÈ-ÉÉ$WɓÈoɛȄÉcÈlÉ[ÈWɓÈ$É#șÉ+È®ÉóǖÉëǁÉ#È$«É³ÇÃÉ»Ç×ɃǿÉ{ǫɳÇ$ÔÉCÇìÉKÇÊÇèÉ ÇÔÉCÇ$ýÉÓÆÊÛÆ)Ê£ÆʛÆýÉÓÆ$&ÊcÆ>ÊkÆRÊ3Æ:Ê+Æ&ÊcÆ$OÊóÅgÊûÅ{ÊÃÅcÊ»ÅOÊóÅ$xʃŐʋŤÊSŌÊKÅxʃÅ$¡ÊŹÊÅÍÊãĵÊÛÄ¡ÊÅ$ÊÊ£ÄâÊ«ÄöÊsÄÞÊkÄÊÊ£Ä$
Ë:ÄËRÄ:ËgÄBËOÄ
Ë:Ä$zËdÄrË|ĪˑIJËyÄzËdÄ$êˍÄâË¥Ä̺Ä"Ì¢ÄêˍÄ$Z̶ÄRÌÎĊÌãĒÌËÄZ̶Ä$œÌ¦Ä´Ì®ÄÉÌvıÌnĜ̦Ä$ ÅÌ6ÄÝÌ>ÄîÌÄÖÌÄÝÌÄçÌÄñÌÄÛÌûÃÅÌ6Ä$(ÍÄ Í1ÄXÍFÄ`Í.Ä(ÍÄ$˜ÍCĐÍ[ÄÈÍoÄÐÍWĘÍCÄ$ÎlÄ΄Ä8ΘÄ@΀ÄÎlÄ$ xΕÄpέÄyΰĉΨÄqΠÄ`ÎÏÄxÎ×ĉΨÄxΕÄ$cÎÅKÎÅ6Î?ÅNÎGÅcÎÅ$?ÎiÅ7΁ÅoΖÅwÎ~Å?ÎiÅ$¯Î“ŧΫÅßÎÀÅçΨůΓÅ$ϼÅÏÔÅOÏéÅWÏÑÅϼÅ$ÏåŇÏýÅ¿ÏÆÇÏúŏÏåÅ$ÇÏ<ƯÏ4ƚÏlƲÏtÆÇÏ<Æ$Ï¬Æ…ϤÆpÏÜƈÏäƝϬÆ$sÏÇ[ÏÇFÏLÇ^ÏTÇsÏÇ$IόÇ1τÇϼÇ4ÏÄÇIόÇ$ÏüÇÏôÇòÎ,È
Ï4ÈÏüÇ$õÎlÈÝÎdÈÈΜÈàΤÈõÎlÈ$ËÎÜȳÎÔȞΠɶÎÉËÎÜÈ$¡ÎLɉÎDÉuÎ|ɍ΄ɡÎLÉ$xμÉ`δÉLÎìÉdÎôÉxμÉ$OÎ,Ê7Î$Ê#Î\Ê;ÎdÊOÎ,Ê$&ΜÊΔÊúÍÌÊÎÔÊ&ΜÊ$ýÍ ËåÍËÑÍ<ËéÍDËýÍ Ë$ÔÍ|˼Ít˨ͬËÀÍ´ËÔÍ|Ë$«Íì˓ÍäËÍ̗Í$Ì«ÍìË$‚Í[ÌjÍSÌdÍcÌTÍ]ÌLÍuÌt̓̂Í[Ì$Í`ÌÍHÌäÌ3ÌÜÌKÌÍ`Ì$¤Ì6̬ÌÌtÌ ÌlÌ!̤Ì6Ì$4Ì Ì<ÌôËÌßËüË÷Ë4Ì Ì$ÄËâËÌËÊ˔˵ˌËÍËÄËâË$T˸Ë\Ë Ë$ˋËË£ËT˸Ë$äʎËìÊvË´ÊbˬÊzËäʎË$tÊeË|ÊMËDÊ9Ë<ÊQËtÊeË$Ê<Ë Ê$ËÔÉËÌÉ(ËÊ<Ë$”ɘÉûÊdÉçÊ\ÉÿʔÉË$$ÉêÊ,ÉÒÊôȾÊìÈÖÊ$ÉêÊ$´ÈÁʼȩʬȣʲȓʚȋʌȳʴÈÁÊ-ðü-
$×ήſΦŪÎàÅÂÎèÅ×ήÅ$¶Î
Æ®Î"ÆÇÎ+ÆÄÎ3ÆÜÎ=ÆéÎƶÎ
Æ$ÇÎvƯÎnƪÎ{ƔÎsƌ΋ƺΛÆÇÎvÆ$RÎuÆZÎ]Æ ÎGÆÎ_ÆRÎuÆ$ÞÍJÆæÍ2ƬÍƤÍ4ÆÞÍJÆ$jÍÆrÍÆ8ÍñÅ0Í ÆjÍÆ$öÌôÅþÌÜÅÄÌÆżÌÞÅöÌôÅ$‚ÌÉŊ̱ÅP̛ÅH̳łÌÉÅ$̞Å̆ÅÜËpÅÔˈÅ̞Å$™ËsÅ¡Ë[ōËTœËFÅ{Ë<ÅmËbřËsÅ$ËÅ¨Ë ÅªËÅÇËÅÏË÷ĜËäĐËÅ$ÛËÔÄóËÜÄÌ¥Äð˝ÄÛËÔÄ-ð-'ÿÿðð
 Ú | ÃGÃßÌÂÖÃGÃ-ü-j$3ËÅHÊâÅEÊ÷Å<ÊÆ.ÊÆÊÆ Ê ÆóÉÆÝÉÆÇÉÆ´ÉõŧÉáşÉÌŜɶşɢŧɐŴɂÅÇÉyÅÝÉwÅóÉzŠʂÅʏÅ.Ê Å<Ê´ÅEÊËÅHÊËÅ@ÊàÅ=ÊóÅ5ÊÆ)ÊÆÊÆÊÆóÉÆßÉÆËÉƺÉñÅ®ÉßŦÉÌŤɸŦɦŮɖźɉÅËɁÅßÉ~ÅóɁÅʉÅʔÅ)ʤÅ5ʶÅ=ÊËÅ@ÊËÅHÊH$"ôÅþÉðÅ
ÊèÅÊÜÅ ÊÍÅ#Ê»ÅÊ®ÅʦÅÊ£ÅòɦÅßÉ®ÅÏÉ»ÅÅÉÍÅÁÉÚÅÃÉæÅÉÉïÅÒÉóÅßÉçÅßÉäÅ×ÉÞÅÑÉÍÅÌÉÀÅÏÉ·ÅØɲÅäÉ°ÅòɲÅÊ·Å
ÊÀÅÊÍÅÊ×ÅÊßÅÊäÅÊèÅþÉôÅþÉ--ú-ü-6$ËÅHÊâÅEÊ÷Å<ÊÆ.ÊÆÊÆ Ê ÆóÉÆÝÉÆÇÉÆ´ÉõŧÉáşÉÌŜɶşɢŧɐŴɂÅÇÉyÅÝÉwÅóÉzŠʂÅʏÅ.Ê Å<Ê´ÅEÊËÅHÊ--6$ËÅ@ÊàÅ=ÊóÅ5ÊÆ)ÊÆÊÆÊÆóÉÆßÉÆËÉƺÉñÅ®ÉßŦÉÌŤɸŦɦŮɖźɉÅËɁÅßÉ~ÅóɁÅʉÅʔÅ)ʤÅ5ʶÅ=ÊËÅ@Ê--H$"ôÅþÉðÅ
ÊèÅÊÜÅ ÊÍÅ#Ê»ÅÊ®ÅʦÅÊ£ÅòɦÅßÉ®ÅÏÉ»ÅÅÉÍÅÁÉÚÅÃÉæÅÉÉïÅÒÉóÅßÉçÅßÉäÅ×ÉÞÅÑÉÍÅÌÉÀÅÏÉ·ÅØɲÅäÉ°ÅòɲÅÊ·Å
ÊÀÅÊÍÅÊ×ÅÊßÅÊäÅÊèÅþÉôÅþÉ--'ÿÿ
 Ú | ÃGÃßÌÂÖÃGÃ--@$yƞÉyÆ)ÊwÆEÊ¿ÆEÊÔÆCÊçÆ>ÊöÆ6ÊÇ+ÊÇÊÇòÉÇÓÉǸÉöÆ­ÉçÆ¥ÉÔƠɿƞÉyƞɿƦÉÓƨÉãÆ­ÉýƾÉ
ÇÖÉÇòÉ
ÇÊýÆ&ÊãÆ7ÊÓÆ<Ê¿Æ>ʿƦÉyƞÉ----&$yƞÉyÆ)ÊwÆEÊ¿ÆEÊÔÆCÊçÆ>ÊöÆ6ÊÇ+ÊÇÊÇòÉÇÓÉǸÉöÆ­ÉçÆ¥ÉÔƠɿƞÉyƞÉ--$ ¿Æ¦ÉÓƨÉãÆ­ÉýƾÉ
ÇÖÉÇòÉ
ÇÊýÆ&ÊãÆ7ÊÓÆ<Ê¿Æ>ʿƦÉ--'ÿÿ
 Ú | ÃGÃßÌÂÖÃGÃ--R$'jǽÉWÇÀÉFÇÇÉ8ÇÒÉ-ÇàÉ&ÇñÉ$ÇÊ&ÇÊ-Ç'Ê9Ç6ÊHÇAÊXÇHÊjÇJÊ|ÇHʌÇAʛÇ6ʧÇ'Ê®ÇÊ°ÇÊ®ÇñɧÇàɜÇÒɎÇÇÉ}ÇÀÉjǽÉ^ÇÆÉzÇÇɑÇÓÉ¢ÇèɦÇõɨÇʦÇÊ¢ÇʑÇ4ÊzÇ@ÊlÇBÊ^ÇAÊ^ÇÆÉjǽÉ----6$jǽÉWÇÀÉFÇÇÉ8ÇÒÉ-ÇàÉ&ÇñÉ$ÇÊ&ÇÊ-Ç'Ê9Ç6ÊHÇAÊXÇHÊjÇJÊ|ÇHʌÇAʛÇ6ʧÇ'Ê®ÇÊ°ÇÊ®ÇñɧÇàɜÇÒɎÇÇÉ}ÇÀÉjǽÉ--$
^ÇÆÉzÇÇɑÇÓÉ¢ÇèɦÇõɨÇʦÇÊ¢ÇʑÇ4ÊzÇ@ÊlÇBÊ^ÇAÊ^ÇÆÉ--'ÿÿ
 Ú | ÃGÃßÌÂÖÃGÃ--,$ºÇÁɺÇ%ʽÇ3ÊÄÇ?ÊÏÇFÊÞÇIÊÈCÊÈ4ÊÈEÊXÈEÊVÈ%ÊVÈÁÉÈÁÉÈ-ÊÈ5ÊÈ9ÊûÇ7ÊöÇ-ÊöÇÁɺÇÁÉ----,$ºÇÁɺÇ%ʽÇ3ÊÄÇ?ÊÏÇFÊÞÇIÊÈCÊÈ4ÊÈEÊXÈEÊVÈ%ÊVÈÁÉÈÁÉÈ-ÊÈ5ÊÈ9ÊûÇ7ÊöÇ-ÊöÇÁɺÇÁÉ--'ÿÿ
 Ú | ÃGÃßÌÂÖÃGÃ--„$@{ÈÊmÈ ÊdÈ+ÊbÈ6ÊeÈ?ÊmÈFÊzÈJʌÈKÊ¢ÈHʺÈEÊÁÈGÊÃÈHʾÈNÊÍÈLÊ×ÈFÊÜÈ>ÊÝÈ6ÊÚÈ.ÊÒÈ'ÊÇÈ#ʸÈ#ʓÈ&ʂÈ#ÊÈʄÈʒÈÊ£ÈʺÈÊÌÈÊÙÈÊàÈùÉâÈêÉÞÈÜÉÕÈÎÉÇÈÄÉÒȽÉÕȵÉÒȲÉÎÈ´ÉÌȹÉÊȽÉÆÈÀÉ»ÈÀɣȽɍÈÀÉ{ÈÇÉoÈÒÉgÈßÉeÈíÉgÈûÉoÈÊ{ÈʘÈʘÈÌɜÈÅɤÈÃÉ«ÈÅɯÈÌɯÈÊ«ÈʤÈʜÈʘÈÊ{ÈÊ----l$4{ÈÊmÈ ÊdÈ+ÊbÈ6ÊeÈ?ÊmÈFÊzÈJʌÈKÊ¢ÈHʺÈEÊÁÈGÊÃÈHʾÈNÊÍÈLÊ×ÈFÊÜÈ>ÊÝÈ6ÊÚÈ.ÊÒÈ'ÊÇÈ#ʸÈ#ʓÈ&ʂÈ#ÊÈʄÈʒÈÊ£ÈʺÈÊÌÈÊÙÈÊàÈùÉâÈêÉÞÈÜÉÕÈÎÉÇÈÄÉÒȽÉÕȵÉÒȲÉÎÈ´ÉÌȹÉÊȽÉÆÈÀÉ»ÈÀɣȽɍÈÀÉ{ÈÇÉoÈÒÉgÈßÉeÈíÉgÈûÉoÈÊ{ÈÊ--$ ˜ÈʘÈÌɜÈÅɤÈÃÉ«ÈÅɯÈÌɯÈÊ«ÈʤÈʜÈʘÈÊ--'ÿÿ
 Ú | ÃGÃßÌÂÖÃGÃ--X$*ÉœÉvɟÉbɨÉQɶÉDÉÇÉ<ÉÛÉ9ÉðÉ;ÉÊDÉÊRÉ0ÊdÉ=ÊxÉEʎÉHÊ£ÉEÊ·É=ÊÉÉ0Ê×ÉÊàÉÊâÉðÉßÉÛÉ×ÉÇÉÊɶɹɨɤɟɍɜɇɤɗɤɧɨɵɯÉÁɸÉÓÉÒÉØÉáÉÚÉòÉØÉÊÓÉÊÌÉÊÁÉ+ʧÉ;ʗÉ?ʇÉ@ʇɤɍɜÉ----6$ÉœÉvɟÉbɨÉQɶÉDÉÇÉ<ÉÛÉ9ÉðÉ;ÉÊDÉÊRÉ0ÊdÉ=ÊxÉEʎÉHÊ£ÉEÊ·É=ÊÉÉ0Ê×ÉÊàÉÊâÉðÉßÉÛÉ×ÉÇÉÊɶɹɨɤɟɍɜÉ--$$‡É¤É—ɤɧɨɵɯÉÁɸÉÓÉÒÉØÉáÉÚÉòÉØÉÊÓÉÊÌÉÊÁÉ+ʧÉ;ʗÉ?ʇÉ@ʇɤÉ--'ÿÿ
 Ú | ÃGÃßÌÂÖÃGÃ--$ìÉÁÉBÊRʔÊÉɔÊÁɎÊÅÉ\ÊÊ(ÊÁÉìÉÁÉ----$ìÉÁÉBÊRʔÊÉɔÊÁɎÊÅÉ\ÊÊ(ÊÁÉìÉÁÉ--'ÿÿ
 Ú | ÃGÃßÌÂÖÃGÃ--Z$+ÚÊÊ,ËÊ+ËöÉ%ËæÉËØÉËÌÉËÄÉôʾÉãʽÉÒÊÀÉÂÊÇɵÊÑɤÊìÉ¡Ê
Ê¥ÊÊ­Ê-ʹÊ:ÊÇÊCÊÖÊHÊæÊJÊöÊHÊËCÊË9ÊË,Ê!Ë&ÊË"ÊË"ÊË&Ê Ë4ÊË=ÊéÊCÊÝÊ@ÊÚÊ7ÊÚÊÊÚÊÊÚÊÍÉÞÊÆÉæÊÃÉîÊÅÉòÊÍÉòÊÊÚÊÊÚÊÊ----H$"ÚÊÊ,ËÊ+ËöÉ%ËæÉËØÉËÌÉËÄÉôʾÉãʽÉÒÊÀÉÂÊÇɵÊÑɤÊìÉ¡Ê
Ê¥ÊÊ­Ê-ʹÊ:ÊÇÊCÊÖÊHÊæÊJÊöÊHÊËCÊË9ÊË,Ê!Ë&ÊË"ÊË"ÊË&Ê Ë4ÊË=ÊéÊCÊÝÊ@ÊÚÊ7ÊÚÊÊ--$ÚÊÊÚÊÍÉÞÊÆÉæÊÃÉîÊÅÉòÊÍÉòÊÊÚÊÊ--'ÿÿ
 Ú | ÃGÃßÌÂÖÃGÃ--,$6ËÁÉ8ËÜÉ8Ë*Ê7ËEÊtËEÊsË1ÊsËÚÉzËÎɁËÈɊËÅɒËÇɘËÈɛËÅə˽ɐ˼ɅËÀÉ{ËÇÉsËÒÉsËÁÉ6ËÁÉ----,$6ËÁÉ8ËÜÉ8Ë*Ê7ËEÊtËEÊsË1ÊsËÚÉzËÎɁËÈɊËÅɒËÇɘËÈɛËÅə˽ɐ˼ɅËÀÉ{ËÇÉsËÒÉsËÁÉ6ËÁÉ--'ÿÿ
 Ú | ÃGÃßÌÂÖÃGÃ--B$¦ËÁɧËÜɧË(ʦËEÊÚËEÊÚËÚÉëËÐÉðËÒÉòËÚÉòËEÊ%ÌEÊ%ÌÚÉ6ÌÐÉ;ÌÒÉ=ÌÚÉ=ÌEÊpÌEÊpÌßÉoÌÕÉkÌÍÉ\ÌÁÉQÌÀÉEÌÁÉ6ÌÇÉ%ÌÒÉÌÂÉÌ¿ÉíËÆÉÚËÒÉÚËÁɦËÁÉ----B$¦ËÁɧËÜɧË(ʦËEÊÚËEÊÚËÚÉëËÐÉðËÒÉòËÚÉòËEÊ%ÌEÊ%ÌÚÉ6ÌÐÉ;ÌÒÉ=ÌÚÉ=ÌEÊpÌEÊpÌßÉoÌÕÉkÌÍÉ\ÌÁÉQÌÀÉEÌÁÉ6ÌÇÉ%ÌÒÉÌÂÉÌ¿ÉíËÆÉÚËÒÉÚËÁɦËÁÉ--'ÿÿ
 Ú | ÃGÃßÌÂÖÃGÃ--&$zÌÁÉÂÌ3ʱÌCÊ©ÌEʤÌCʛÌ>ʕÌAʖÌHÊ¢ÌMʸÌHÊÇÌ:ÊÍÆÉ;É
ÍÁÉàÌʶÌÁÉzÌÁÉ----&$zÌÁÉÂÌ3ʱÌCÊ©ÌEʤÌCʛÌ>ʕÌAʖÌHÊ¢ÌMʸÌHÊÇÌ:ÊÍÆÉ;É
ÍÁÉàÌʶÌÁÉzÌÁÉ--'ÿÿ
 Ú | ÃGÃßÌÂÖÃGÃ--Z$+VÍʨÍʧÍöÉ¡ÍæəÍØɍÍÌɀÍÄÉp;É_ͽÉNÍÀÉ>ÍÇÉ1ÍÑÉ ÍìÉÍ
Ê!ÍÊ)Í-Ê5Í:ÊCÍCÊRÍHÊbÍJÊrÍHʂÍCʏÍ9ʛÍ,ʝÍ&ʛÍ"ʗÍ"ʓÍ&ʇÍ4Ê|Í=ÊeÍCÊYÍ@ÊVÍ7ÊVÍÊVÍÊVÍÍÉZÍÆÉbÍÃÉjÍÅÉnÍÍÉnÍÊVÍÊVÍÊ----H$"VÍʨÍʧÍöÉ¡ÍæəÍØɍÍÌɀÍÄÉp;É_ͽÉNÍÀÉ>ÍÇÉ1ÍÑÉ ÍìÉÍ
Ê!ÍÊ)Í-Ê5Í:ÊCÍCÊRÍHÊbÍJÊrÍHʂÍCʏÍ9ʛÍ,ʝÍ&ʛÍ"ʗÍ"ʓÍ&ʇÍ4Ê|Í=ÊeÍCÊYÍ@ÊVÍ7ÊVÍÊ--$VÍÊVÍÍÉZÍÆÉbÍÃÉjÍÅÉnÍÍÉnÍÊVÍÊ--'ÿÿ
 Ú | ÃGÃßÌÂÖÃGÃ--,$²ÍÁÉ´ÍÜÉ´Í*ʳÍEÊðÍEÊïÍ1ÊïÍÚÉöÍÎÉýÍÈÉÎÅÉÎÇÉÎÈÉÎÅÉÎ½É Î¼ÉÎÀÉ÷ÍÇÉïÍÒÉïÍÁɲÍÁÉ----,$²ÍÁÉ´ÍÜÉ´Í*ʳÍEÊðÍEÊïÍ1ÊïÍÚÉöÍÎÉýÍÈÉÎÅÉÎÇÉÎÈÉÎÅÉÎ½É Î¼ÉÎÀÉ÷ÍÇÉïÍÒÉïÍÁɲÍÁÉ--'ÿÿ
 Ú | ÃGÃßÌÂÖÃGÃ--$ ÖΒɗ΢ÉwΩÉqάÉoΰÉrβÉyβɎέɎÎEÊÖÎEÊÖΒÉ----$ ÖΒɗ΢ÉwΩÉqάÉoΰÉrβÉyβɎέɎÎEÊÖÎEÊÖΒÉ--'ÿÿ
 Ú | ÃGÃßÌÂÖÃGÃ--^$-ϜÉÏ¢ÉïΰÉäÎÄÉàÎÙÉäÎîÉïÎýÉÏÊÏÊÏÊ"ÏúÉÏøÉÏùÉÏüÉõÎöÉëÎéÉèÎÙÉìÎÅÉ÷γÉ
ϧÉ%ϤÉ%Ï@ÊÏBÊ Ï@ÊÏ:ÊøÎ/ÊõÎ-ÊñÎ.ÊïÎ1ÊðÎ5ÊúÎ>ÊÏDÊÏGÊ+ÏEÊ8ÏAÊCÏ:ÊNÏ0Ê\ÏÊaÏÊbÏòÉ]ÏÎÉOϳÉFÏ©É:Ï¢ÉϜÉ----^$-ϜÉÏ¢ÉïΰÉäÎÄÉàÎÙÉäÎîÉïÎýÉÏÊÏÊÏÊ"ÏúÉÏøÉÏùÉÏüÉõÎöÉëÎéÉèÎÙÉìÎÅÉ÷γÉ
ϧÉ%ϤÉ%Ï@ÊÏBÊ Ï@ÊÏ:ÊøÎ/ÊõÎ-ÊñÎ.ÊïÎ1ÊðÎ5ÊúÎ>ÊÏDÊÏGÊ+ÏEÊ8ÏAÊCÏ:ÊNÏ0Ê\ÏÊaÏÊbÏòÉ]ÏÎÉOϳÉFÏ©É:Ï¢ÉϜÉ--'ÿÿ
 Ú | ÃGÃßÌÂÖÃGÃ--^$-ªÏœÉÏ¢É{Ï°ÉpÏÄÉlÏÙÉpÏîÉ{ÏýɎÏʛÏÊ©ÏÊ®ÏúÉ«ÏøɧÏùɑÏüɁÏöÉwÏéÉtÏÙÉxÏÅɃϳɖϧɱϤɱÏ@ʤÏBʗÏ@ʌÏ:ʄÏ/ʁÏ-Ê}Ï.Ê{Ï1Ê|Ï5ʆÏ>ʑÏDʪÏGÊ·ÏEÊÄÏAÊÏÏ:ÊÚÏ0ÊèÏÊíÏÊîÏòÉéÏÎÉÛϳÉÒÏ©ÉÆϢɪϜÉ----^$-ªÏœÉÏ¢É{Ï°ÉpÏÄÉlÏÙÉpÏîÉ{ÏýɎÏʛÏÊ©ÏÊ®ÏúÉ«ÏøɧÏùɑÏüɁÏöÉwÏéÉtÏÙÉxÏÅɃϳɖϧɱϤɱÏ@ʤÏBʗÏ@ʌÏ:ʄÏ/ʁÏ-Ê}Ï.Ê{Ï1Ê|Ï5ʆÏ>ʑÏDʪÏGÊ·ÏEÊÄÏAÊÏÏ:ÊÚÏ0ÊèÏÊíÏÊîÏòÉéÏÎÉÛϳÉÒÏ©ÉÆϢɪϜÉ--'ÿÿ
 Ú | ÃGÃßÌÂÖÃGÃ--T$(øÏEʉÐEʓÐDʕÐAʑÐ<ʆÐ;ÊiÐ>ÊRÐ>ÊpÐʄÐõɍÐÙɎÐÂɆаÉwФÉbМÉGКÉ-ОÉЩÉкÉþÏÏÉÐÝÉÐêÉÐíÉÐêÉÐåÉÐÚÉÐÏÉ
ÐÃÉйÉаÉ'ЩÉ6ФÉGТÉRФÉYЫÉ[дÉYпÉFÐáÉ/ÐÊøÏEÊ----T$(øÏEʉÐEʓÐDʕÐAʑÐ<ʆÐ;ÊiÐ>ÊRÐ>ÊpÐʄÐõɍÐÙɎÐÂɆаÉwФÉbМÉGКÉ-ОÉЩÉкÉþÏÏÉÐÝÉÐêÉÐíÉÐêÉÐåÉÐÚÉÐÏÉ
ÐÃÉйÉаÉ'ЩÉ6ФÉGТÉRФÉYЫÉ[дÉYпÉFÐáÉ/ÐÊøÏEÊ--'ÿÿðð
 Ú | ÃGÃßÌÂÖÃGÃ-ü-n$5ßÓ¤ÄÔåÄGÔÔĂÔÉÄ ÔÈĽÔÊÄÙÔÑÄòÔÞÄüÔÉÄ Õ¸ÄÕ«Ä(Õ¡ÄMՓÄuՆÄpÕÂÄiÕÅfÕCÅiÕaÅoÕ~Åh՜ÅfÕºÅhÕÙÅlÕøÅzÕ6ƄÕtÆ«ÕÅÆ»ÕïÆÈÕÇÑÕGÇÖÕuÇ×Õ¥ÇÓÕÖÇÃÕèǯÕôDŽÕôÇ~ÕÈ{ÕAÈÕgȆÕwȒՅȏ՝ȐճșÕÜÈ¥ÕɯÕ-ɼÕ1ÉÉÕ0ÉÕÕ*ÉáÕ!ÉõÕ ÉÖóÈÖÂÈ֑ÈÖaÈÖ0È ÖÿÇÖÍÇÿՙÇÖ~ÇÖcÇÖ2Ç-ÖÿÆ<ÖçÆNÖÑÆcÖ¾Æ{֮Ɛ֮ƅÖÖÆuÖüÆhÖ#ÇeÖ8ÇeÖNÇeÖ ÇkÖ÷ÇrÖPÈsÖ§ÈoÖÑÈhÖùÈ]ÖÉMÖBÉ7ÖcÉրÉø՚ÉÍկɻհɨծɘհɑյɋսɅÕÙɄÕ÷ɊÕʑÕʚÕ*ʯÕ*Ê©ÕWʜՇʘՠʖոʘÕÏÊ¡ÕæʌÕðÊyÕÿÊUÕ$ËCÕ6Ë1ÕDËÕLËÕLËüÔIËóÔCËãÔ3ËÖÔËÇÔ ËÍÔþÊÕÔóÊíÔßÊ%Õ½Ê<Õ«ÊEÕ ÊJՔÊMՆÊKÕvÊEÕdÊ:ÕOÊ-ÕFÊÕAÊþÔ?ʺÔHʛÔHʎÔEʂÔ>ÊxÔ4ÊpÔ&ÊkÔÊiÔøÉhÔßÉdÔÕÉ[ÔÍÉLÔÖÉBÔáÉ;ÔïÉ7ÔÿÉ6Ô!Ê=Ô@Ê8ÔWÊ,ÔkÊ
ԍÊäÓ­ÊÔÓ¾ÊÏÓÅÊÉÓÑÊÂÓÑʼÓÕʲÓàÊ«ÓüʜÓ
ˇÓËnÓË9ÓË ÓËÓË ÓËûÒËðÒðÊðÒÛÊõÒÒÊþÒÉÊÓÁÊ1Ó½ÊiӶʂӯʖӡʢӌʥÓkʯÓcʲÓYʲÓ@ʝÓ5ʋÓ(Ê}ÓÊqÓÊFÓ¶ÉDӕÉHÓuÉQÓUÉ_Ó7ÉqÓɇÓÉ ÓèÈ»ÓÔȺÓÂȵӱȦӑȟӁȜÓpȝÓ^È¥ÓKȘÓGȈÓEÈgÓ@ÈZÓ:ÈRÓ2ÈRÓ$È[ÓÈiÓÄÇlӜÇkÓvÇeÓPÇZÓ-ÇIÓ Ç0ÓïÆ/ÓäÆ1ÓÛÆ;ÓÍÆGÓ¿ÆMÓ®Æ`Ó­ÆnÓ±ÆyӸƀÓÃƉÓßƏÓþƅÓ
Ç~ÓÇtÓAÇpÓgÇpӏÇqÓÝÇmÓÈkÓ
ÈdÓ È‰Ó7ȲÓEÈÝÓNÈ
ÔRÈgÔRÈÀÔRÈÌÔ<ÈÓÔ%ÈÖÔðÇÖÔ»Ç×Ô¡ÇÝԈÇ×Ô|ÇÏÔsǼÔeÇ«ÔVÇ¥ÔLÇ£Ô?ǔÔ?ǔÔïƞÔìÆ¥ÔçƬÔ×ƲÔÇƸÔÁÆÀÔ½ÆÃÔ°ÆÂԥƹԑƱÔ~ƯÔuƲÔlÆVÔfÆþÓeÆFÓfÆ>ÓjÆ:ÓpÆ9Ó}Æ=ӋÆ>ӗÆ;ӖÆ4ӈÆ.ÓsÆ.ÓhÆ0Ó]ÆSÓ[ÆyÓUƜÓGÆ©Ó<ƲÓ,Æ´ÓƱÓÆ ÓƉÓõŀÓéÅyÓÛÅtÓÁÅuÓ©Å{ӓŃÓœÓUŗÓ?ŘÓ7ŖÓ'ŖÓœÓņÓÖāÓÁĀӬĄәďӆĜӅĦӉĴәĻӡÄÄÓ§ÄÏÓ©ÄßÓ¤Ä--ú--'ÿÿðð
 Ú | ÃGÃßÌÂÖÃGÃ-üÿÿÿ-*$.ÔuÅ!ÔzÅÔyÅ÷ÓnÅêÓiÅÝÓhÅÒÓoÅÉÓ~ÅÃÓvÅÁÓnÅÆÓ_ÅÏÓQÅ×ÓCÅòÓBÅÔHÅÔOÅ&ÔYÅ,ÔeÅ.ÔuÅ--úÿÿÿ--'ÿÿðð
 Ú | ÃGÃßÌÂÖÃGÃ-üÿÿÿ-$ ÎÔužÔjŪÔbŗÔbŎÔfņÔoŁÔiŀÔcńÔVŔÔ<ÅÎÔ<ÅÎÔuÅ--úÿÿÿ--'ÿÿðð
 Ú | ÃGÃßÌÂÖÃGÃ-üÿÿÿ-6$oÔ¿ÅfÔÈÅ^ÔÓÅYÔâÅ[ÔòÅrÔþÅ~ÔƃÔƍÔÆvÔ ÆYÔÆ;ÔÆ Ô$ÆÔÆ ÔÿÅ1ÔôÅ?ÔèÅCÔÕÅ@ÔÎÅ<ÔÊÅ0ÔÇÅ&ÔÄÅ%ÔÀÅ'Ô¸ÅoÔ¿Å--úÿÿÿ--'ÿÿðð
 Ú | ÃGÃßÌÂÖÃGÃ-üÿÿÿ- $Ô2ÆyÔ@ÆiÔPÆEÔOÆ5ÔKÆ/ÔIÆ'ÔAÆ0Ô3Æ;Ô-ÆIÔ,ÆXÔ.ÆuÔ5ƂÔ6ƍÔ2Æ--úÿÿÿ--'ÿÿðð
 Ú | ÃGÃßÌÂÖÃGÃ-üÿÿÿ-$
%Õ ÇÕÇ
ÕÇÕöÆûÔéÆëÔáÆúÔêÆÕ÷ÆÕÇ%Õ Ç--úÿÿÿ--'ÿÿðð
 Ú | ÃGÃßÌÂÖÃGÃ-üÿÿÿ-$4ÕÈÇ2ÕËÇ.ÕÈÇÕ»ÇúԖÇÕ­Ç4ÕÈÇ--úÿÿÿ--'ÿÿðð
 Ú | ÃGÃßÌÂÖÃGÃ-üÿÿÿ->$BÓ*È[ÓîÇeÓ³ÇcÓwÇXÓ=Ç8ÓÇÆ+ӌÆ'ÓuÆ$ÓPÆÐÔkÆÅԏƵ԰ƣÔÑƔÔòƍÔǎÔ$ǒÔ6ǛÔIÇ©Ô\ǽÔoÇÖԄÇàԔÇäÔ©ÇâÔÃÇÝÔàÇÏÔÈÊÔ<ÈÈÔXÈBÓ*È--ú-->$BÓ*È[ÓîÇeÓ³ÇcÓwÇXÓ=Ç8ÓÇÆ+ӌÆ'ÓuÆ$ÓPÆÐÔkÆÅԏƵ԰ƣÔÑƔÔòƍÔǎÔ$ǒÔ6ǛÔIÇ©Ô\ǽÔoÇÖԄÇàԔÇäÔ©ÇâÔÃÇÝÔàÇÏÔÈÊÔ<ÈÈÔXÈBÓ*È--'ÿÿðð
 Ú | ÃGÃßÌÂÖÃGÃ-üÿ-H$"9Ä<Å9Ä«Æ?ÄØÆOÄÿÆiÄ ÇŠÄ;DZÄPÇÜÄ_Ç ÅhÇ;ÅkÇkÅhǚÅ_ÇÅÅPÇìÅ;Ç
Æ Ç'ÆÿÆ7ÆØÆ=Æ«Æ=ÆPÅ8Æ<Å.Æ5Å$Æ<ÅÆPÅÆ«ÆÆÒÆ ÆõÆðÅÇÐÅ,Ç©Å>Ç}ÅJÇMÅOÇÅMÇÅ<Å9Ä<Å--ú--H$"9Ä<Å9Ä«Æ?ÄØÆOÄÿÆiÄ ÇŠÄ;DZÄPÇÜÄ_Ç ÅhÇ;ÅkÇkÅhǚÅ_ÇÅÅPÇìÅ;Ç
Æ Ç'ÆÿÆ7ÆØÆ=Æ«Æ=ÆPÅ8Æ<Å.Æ5Å$Æ<ÅÆPÅÆ«ÆÆÒÆ ÆõÆðÅÇÐÅ,Ç©Å>Ç}ÅJÇMÅOÇÅMÇÅ<Å9Ä<Å--'ÿÿ
 Ú | ÃGÃßÌÂÖÃGÃ--$ ]Æ<ÅaƨÅaÆëÆ]ÆMÇ$ÇMÇ ÇëÆ Ç¨Å$Ç<Å]Æ<Å----$ ]Æ<ÅaƨÅaÆëÆ]ÆMÇ$ÇMÇ ÇëÆ Ç¨Å$Ç<Å]Æ<Å--'ÿÿ
 Ú | ÃGÃßÌÂÖÃGÃ--l$4<È-ŃǀŃDZÅ]Ç­ÅKÇ®ÅFDZÅDǼÅFÇÄÅKÇÉÅ]ÇÊÅrÇÇŃÇÆŃÇÀƆÇâƍÇÿƙÇǨÇ.ǺÇ?ÇÏÇLÇæÇUÇþÇ[ÇÈ\Ç0ÈYÇHÈRÇ`ÈGÇvÈ8ljÈ%ǚÈǨÈôÆ©ÈèÆ¢ÈâƚÈäƓÈîƋÈÇ~ÈÇoÈ!Ç]È+ÇOÈ-ÇEÈ'Ç>ÈÇ<È Ç<ÈÆÅzÈÊŅÈÊŎÈÈŔÈÃŖȼŔȴŎȯÅzÈ­Å<ȱÅ<È-Å----l$4<È-ŃǀŃDZÅ]Ç­ÅKÇ®ÅFDZÅDǼÅFÇÄÅKÇÉÅ]ÇÊÅrÇÇŃÇÆŃÇÀƆÇâƍÇÿƙÇǨÇ.ǺÇ?ÇÏÇLÇæÇUÇþÇ[ÇÈ\Ç0ÈYÇHÈRÇ`ÈGÇvÈ8ljÈ%ǚÈǨÈôÆ©ÈèÆ¢ÈâƚÈäƓÈîƋÈÇ~ÈÇoÈ!Ç]È+ÇOÈ-ÇEÈ'Ç>ÈÇ<È Ç<ÈÆÅzÈÊŅÈÊŎÈÈŔÈÃŖȼŔȴŎȯÅzÈ­Å<ȱÅ<È-Å--'ÿÿ
 Ú | ÃGÃßÌÂÖÃGÃ--<$ÊÈ«ÅÏÈþÅÏÈ÷ÆÍÈMǒÉMÇŽÉ ÇŽÉùřÉåŤÉÔžɾÅËɹÅØÉ·ÅæɹÅóɾÅþÉÂÅÊÁŠʽÅÊ·ÅÊ©Å
ʟÅüɛÅìɛÅÉɧŧɿřÉÏŎÉáŎɫÅÊÈ«Å----<$ÊÈ«ÅÏÈþÅÏÈ÷ÆÍÈMǒÉMÇŽÉ ÇŽÉùřÉåŤÉÔžɾÅËɹÅØÉ·ÅæɹÅóɾÅþÉÂÅÊÁŠʽÅÊ·ÅÊ©Å
ʟÅüɛÅìɛÅÉɧŧɿřÉÏŎÉáŎɫÅÊÈ«Å--'ÿÿ
 Ú | ÃGÃßÌÂÖÃGÃ--¦$Q[Ë)Ç?Ë<ÇËLÇóÊXÇÓÊ\DZÊYǑÊQÇvÊCÇ_Ê1ÇLÊÇ>ÊÿÆ5ÊàÆ2ʾÆ6ʟÆAʃÆQÊkÆgÊXƀÊHƛÊ<Æ·Ê5ÆÓÊ3ÆË:Æ;ËCÆ[ËRÆ[ËæÅYËÚÅUËÐÅNËÉÅCËÂÅ'˺Å˸ÅßʼÅÂÊÇŪÊØŕÊîŋÊ÷ŀÊýÅuÊþÅkÊüÅeÊ÷ÅbÊïÅeÊåÅnÊÙŀÊËŕʾÅÇÊ«ÅüÊ Å,˜ÅZ˞ņˣů˭ÅÒ˽ÅðËÓÅýËáÅÌñÅÌÆÌ/ÆÌHÆÌçÆÌÇ$Ì5Ç/ÌMÇ[ËMÇ[Ë)Ç[ËÇ?Ë ÇË0Ç
Ë3ÇüÊ0ÇóÊ&ÇïÊÇïʅÆòÊlÆúÊ\ÆËTÆËRÆ'ËUÆ9Ë\Æ[ËlÆ[ËÇ[Ë)Ç----„$@[Ë)Ç?Ë<ÇËLÇóÊXÇÓÊ\DZÊYǑÊQÇvÊCÇ_Ê1ÇLÊÇ>ÊÿÆ5ÊàÆ2ʾÆ6ʟÆAʃÆQÊkÆgÊXƀÊHƛÊ<Æ·Ê5ÆÓÊ3ÆË:Æ;ËCÆ[ËRÆ[ËæÅYËÚÅUËÐÅNËÉÅCËÂÅ'˺Å˸ÅßʼÅÂÊÇŪÊØŕÊîŋÊ÷ŀÊýÅuÊþÅkÊüÅeÊ÷ÅbÊïÅeÊåÅnÊÙŀÊËŕʾÅÇÊ«ÅüÊ Å,˜ÅZ˞ņˣů˭ÅÒ˽ÅðËÓÅýËáÅÌñÅÌÆÌ/ÆÌHÆÌçÆÌÇ$Ì5Ç/ÌMÇ[ËMÇ[Ë)Ç--$$[ËÇ?Ë ÇË0Ç
Ë3ÇüÊ0ÇóÊ&ÇïÊÇïʅÆòÊlÆúÊ\ÆËTÆËRÆ'ËUÆ9Ë\Æ[ËlÆ[ËÇ--'ÿÿ
 Ú | ÃGÃßÌÂÖÃGÃ--p$6.ΖÅÎnÅÖÍQÅ£Í=ÅnÍ5Å8Í7ÅÍDÅÒÌ[źÌkŤÌ~Ő̓Å̪ÅdÌÚÅUÌÆOÌDÆUÌzÆdÌ®ÆÌßƐÌõƤÌ
ÇÒÌ-ÇÍDÇ8ÍQÇnÍSÇ£ÍKÇÖÍ7ÇÎÇ.ÎòÆ7ÎßÆ6Î×Æ1ÎÒÆ(ÎÓÆ ÎÚÆÎïÆæÍǶÍ+ǜÍ4ǁÍ9ÇfÍ;ÇJÍ:ÇJÍNÅfÍMŁÍPŶÍ^ÅæÍwÅý͇ÅΚÅ!ήÅ(εÅ,ηÅ1ζÅ6αÅ7ΪÅ.ΖÅ----p$6.ΖÅÎnÅÖÍQÅ£Í=ÅnÍ5Å8Í7ÅÍDÅÒÌ[źÌkŤÌ~Ő̓Å̪ÅdÌÚÅUÌÆOÌDÆUÌzÆdÌ®ÆÌßƐÌõƤÌ
ÇÒÌ-ÇÍDÇ8ÍQÇnÍSÇ£ÍKÇÖÍ7ÇÎÇ.ÎòÆ7ÎßÆ6Î×Æ1ÎÒÆ(ÎÓÆ ÎÚÆÎïÆæÍǶÍ+ǜÍ4ǁÍ9ÇfÍ;ÇJÍ:ÇJÍNÅfÍMŁÍPŶÍ^ÅæÍwÅý͇ÅΚÅ!ήÅ(εÅ,ηÅ1ζÅ6αÅ7ΪÅ.ΖÅ--'ÿÿ
 Ú | ÃGÃßÌÂÖÃGÃ--$ WÎ<Å[ΨÅ[ÎëÆWÎMÇÏMÇÏëÆϨÅÏ<ÅWÎ<Å----$ WÎ<Å[ΨÅ[ÎëÆWÎMÇÏMÇÏëÆϨÅÏ<ÅWÎ<Å--'ÿÿ
 Ú | ÃGÃßÌÂÖÃGÃ--$ CÏ«ÅFÏ÷ÅFÏüÆCÏMÇÐMÇÐüÆÐ÷ÅЫÅCÏ«Å6$>Ï\Å@ÏPÅGÏEÅQÏ<Å]Ï5Å~Ï+Å£Ï(ÅÇÏ+ÅèÏ5ÅôÏ<ÅþÏEÅÐPÅÐ\ÅÐhÅþÏsÅôÏ|ÅèσÅÇύţϐÅ~ύÅ]σÅQÏ|ÅGÏsÅ@ÏhÅ>Ï\Å----$ CÏ«ÅFÏ÷ÅFÏüÆCÏMÇÐMÇÐüÆÐ÷ÅЫÅCÏ«Å--6$>Ï\Å@ÏPÅGÏEÅQÏ<Å]Ï5Å~Ï+Å£Ï(ÅÇÏ+ÅèÏ5ÅôÏ<ÅþÏEÅÐPÅÐ\ÅÐhÅþÏsÅôÏ|ÅèσÅÇύţϐÅ~ύÅ]σÅQÏ|ÅGÏsÅ@ÏhÅ>Ï\Å--'ÿÿ
 Ú | ÃGÃßÌÂÖÃGÃ--z$;éÐÞÅéЫÅ'ЫÅ*ÐüÅ*ÐÇ'ÐeÇìÐeÇéÐÇéÐÞÆ÷ÐðÆ ÑÿÆ5ÑÇhÑǃÑǞÑÇ·ÑÇÐÑÇæÑöÆúÑáÆ ÒÈÆÒ©Æ҆Æ"Ò^ÆÒ6ÆÒÆ ÒôÅúÑÚÅæÑÆÅÐѵŷѩŞѡŃѝÅhѝÅNÑ Å5ѦÅѰŠѼÅ÷ÐÌÅéÐÞÅéÐöÅþÐÝÅÑËÅ'Ñ¿Å:ѸÅJѶÅWÑ·Å_ѺÅbѾÅbÑýÆ_ÑÇWÑÇJÑÇ:ÑÇ'ÑüÆÑðÆþÐÞÆéÐÅÆéÐöÅéÐÞÅ----R$'éÐÞÅéЫÅ'ЫÅ*ÐüÅ*ÐÇ'ÐeÇìÐeÇéÐÇéÐÞÆ÷ÐðÆ ÑÿÆ5ÑÇhÑǃÑǞÑÇ·ÑÇÐÑÇæÑöÆúÑáÆ ÒÈÆÒ©Æ҆Æ"Ò^ÆÒ6ÆÒÆ ÒôÅúÑÚÅæÑÆÅÐѵŷѩŞѡŃѝÅhѝÅNÑ Å5ѦÅѰŠѼÅ÷ÐÌÅéÐÞÅ--*$éÐöÅþÐÝÅÑËÅ'Ñ¿Å:ѸÅJѶÅWÑ·Å_ѺÅbѾÅbÑýÆ_ÑÇWÑÇJÑÇ:ÑÇ'ÑüÆÑðÆþÐÞÆéÐÅÆéÐöÅ--'ÿÿðð
 Ú | ÃGÃßÌÂÖÃGÃ-üÿ-,$ ÄÈ4ÄÈ4ďÈ2ÄÕȐÄÕȎďȎÄȶÄÈÌÄ ÈÒÄÈÓÄÈÔÄÈÑÄÿÇÈÄþÇúÃþÇñÃÿÇîÃÈðÃÈöÃ È ÄÈ--ú--,$ ÄÈ4ÄÈ4ďÈ2ÄÕȐÄÕȎďȎÄȶÄÈÌÄ ÈÒÄÈÓÄÈÔÄÈÑÄÿÇÈÄþÇúÃþÇñÃÿÇîÃÈðÃÈöÃ È ÄÈ--'ÿÿ
 Ú | ÃGÃßÌÂÖÃGÃ--8$áÄþÇâÄÈâĨÈáÄÕÈ.ÅÕÈ.ÅKÈ;Å@ÈKÅ<ÈXÅ?È\ÅDÈ^ÅKÈ^Å°È]ÅÕȬÅÕÈ«Å°È«ÅTȨÅBȟÅ4ȐÅ*È}Å&ÈfÅ(ÈQÅ-È?Å6È.ÅAÈ.ÅþÇáÄþÇ----8$áÄþÇâÄÈâĨÈáÄÕÈ.ÅÕÈ.ÅKÈ;Å@ÈKÅ<ÈXÅ?È\ÅDÈ^ÅKÈ^Å°È]ÅÕȬÅÕÈ«Å°È«ÅTȨÅBȟÅ4ȐÅ*È}Å&ÈfÅ(ÈQÅ-È?Å6È.ÅAÈ.ÅþÇáÄþÇ--'ÿÿ
 Ú | ÃGÃßÌÂÖÃGÃ--`$.ƅÈmƅÈkÆnÈeÆZÈYÆGÈKÆ9È9Æ.È%Æ'ÈÆ%ÈúÅ)ÈåÅ2ÈÔÅ?ÈÇÅOȾÅbȺÅwȺŌȿšÈÊŵÈÙÅÆÈëÅÒÈÿÅÙÈÆÛÈ(ÆØÈ<ÆÑÈNÆÅÈ]Æ´È_Æ­È]ƨÈXƧÈRƬÈCƾÈ4ÆÊÈ%ÆÏÈÆÑÈÆÎÈÆÂÈƅÈÆ{ÈÆ:ÈÆ0ÈÆ-ÈÆ0È#Æ:È#Æ{ÈÆ{ÈƅÈ----N$%ƅÈmƅÈkÆnÈeÆZÈYÆGÈKÆ9È9Æ.È%Æ'ÈÆ%ÈúÅ)ÈåÅ2ÈÔÅ?ÈÇÅOȾÅbȺÅwȺŌȿšÈÊŵÈÙÅÆÈëÅÒÈÿÅÙÈÆÛÈ(ÆØÈ<ÆÑÈNÆÅÈ]Æ´È_Æ­È]ƨÈXƧÈRƬÈCƾÈ4ÆÊÈ%ÆÏÈÆÑÈÆÎÈÆÂÈƅÈ--$Æ{ÈÆ:ÈÆ0ÈÆ-ÈÆ0È#Æ:È#Æ{ÈÆ{È--'ÿÿ
 Ú | ÃGÃßÌÂÖÃGÃ--$ ÞÆþÇ`ÇäÈßÇÈÝÇýÇÚÇüÇ×ÇþǐÇ|ÈIÇþÇÞÆþÇ----$ ÞÆþÇ`ÇäÈßÇÈÝÇýÇÚÇüÇ×ÇþǐÇ|ÈIÇþÇÞÆþÇ--'ÿÿ
 Ú | ÃGÃßÌÂÖÃGÃ--$ ïÇ+ÈðÇJÈðÇ´ÈïÇÕÈ=ÈÕÈ<È´È<ÈJÈ=È+ÈïÇ+È&$íÇ ÈðÇÈúÇûÇÈ÷ÇÈöÇ$È÷Ç1ÈûÇ;ÈÈ>È È;ÈÈ1ÈÈ$ÈÈÈ ÈÈÈúÇÈðÇÈíÇ È----$ ïÇ+ÈðÇJÈðÇ´ÈïÇÕÈ=ÈÕÈ<È´È<ÈJÈ=È+ÈïÇ+È--&$íÇ ÈðÇÈúÇûÇÈ÷ÇÈöÇ$È÷Ç1ÈûÇ;ÈÈ>È È;ÈÈ1ÈÈ$ÈÈÈ ÈÈÈúÇÈðÇÈíÇ È--'ÿÿ
 Ú | ÃGÃßÌÂÖÃGÃ--.$KÈ+ÈMÈMÈMȲÈLÈÕțÈÕȚȺȚÈKÈ£È<È­È3ȸÈ0ÈÃÈ3ÈÊÈ4ÈÎÈ0ÈÏÈ*ÈÌÈ&ÈÀÈ$ȲÈ)ȤÈ3ȚÈAȚÈ+ÈKÈ+È----.$KÈ+ÈMÈMÈMȲÈLÈÕțÈÕȚȺȚÈKÈ£È<È­È3ȸÈ0ÈÃÈ3ÈÊÈ4ÈÎÈ0ÈÏÈ*ÈÌÈ&ÈÀÈ$ȲÈ)ȤÈ3ȚÈAȚÈ+ÈKÈ+È--'ÿÿ
 Ú | ÃGÃßÌÂÖÃGÃ--H$"@ÉøÇõÈÈõÈ-ÈæÈ,ÈßÈ,ÈÜÈ2ÈßÈ7ÈæÈ8ÈõÈ6ÈõțÈùȵÈÉÈÈÉÕÈ'ÉÚÈ;ÉÚÈNÉÒÈ_ÉÄÈkÉ°ÈlÉ«ÈiÉ©ÈfɪÈcÉ®È[ɾÈMÉÇÈDÉÅÈ@ɺÈ@É6ÈYÉ7ÈaÉ7ÈdÉ2ÈaÉ-ÈYÉ,È@É-È@ÉøÇ----H$"@ÉøÇõÈÈõÈ-ÈæÈ,ÈßÈ,ÈÜÈ2ÈßÈ7ÈæÈ8ÈõÈ6ÈõțÈùȵÈÉÈÈÉÕÈ'ÉÚÈ;ÉÚÈNÉÒÈ_ÉÄÈkÉ°ÈlÉ«ÈiÉ©ÈfɪÈcÉ®È[ɾÈMÉÇÈDÉÅÈ@ɺÈ@É6ÈYÉ7ÈaÉ7ÈdÉ2ÈaÉ-ÈYÉ,È@É-È@ÉøÇ--'ÿÿ
 Ú | ÃGÃßÌÂÖÃGÃ--0$yÉ+ÈyÉ«È|ɽȆÉÌȔÉÖȧÉÚȾÉØÈÓÉÓÈåÉÊÈõÉ¿ÈõÉÕÈDÊÕÈBÊ«ÈBÊ+ÈõÉ+ÈõɵÈéÉÀÈÙÉÄÈÌÉÁÈÆɵÈÆÉ+ÈyÉ+È----0$yÉ+ÈyÉ«È|ɽȆÉÌȔÉÖȧÉÚȾÉØÈÓÉÓÈåÉÊÈõÉ¿ÈõÉÕÈDÊÕÈBÊ«ÈBÊ+ÈõÉ+ÈõɵÈéÉÀÈÙÉÄÈÌÉÁÈÆɵÈÆÉ+ÈyÉ+È--'ÿÿ
 Ú | ÃGÃßÌÂÖÃGÃ--j$3ÈÊÆÈ®ÊÕȒÊÛÈwÊÖÈcÊÉÈVʵÈQʛÈWʃÈfÊqÈ{ÊfȒÊbÈ®ÊeÈÈÊoÈÈÊCÈÆÊ:È¿Ê4È£Ê0ȖÊ2ȋÊ6ÈyÊFÈpÊLÈhÊLÈdÊGÈiÊ>ÈyÊ3ȍÊ+ȵÊ%ÈÙÊ(ÈøÊ2ÈË;È
ËHÈËWÈËkÈË«ÈËÀÈËÕÈÈÊÕÈÈÊÆÈÈʼȮÊÉÈ¢ÊÉȞÊÇȝʽȝʃȞÊyÈ¡ÊsȬÊoȺÊsÈÈÊyÈÈʼÈÈÊÆÈ----P$&ÈÊÆÈ®ÊÕȒÊÛÈwÊÖÈcÊÉÈVʵÈQʛÈWʃÈfÊqÈ{ÊfȒÊbÈ®ÊeÈÈÊoÈÈÊCÈÆÊ:È¿Ê4È£Ê0ȖÊ2ȋÊ6ÈyÊFÈpÊLÈhÊLÈdÊGÈiÊ>ÈyÊ3ȍÊ+ȵÊ%ÈÙÊ(ÈøÊ2ÈË;È
ËHÈËWÈËkÈË«ÈËÀÈËÕÈÈÊÕÈÈÊÆÈ--$ ÈʼȮÊÉÈ¢ÊÉȞÊÇȝʽȝʃȞÊyÈ¡ÊsȬÊoȺÊsÈÈÊyÈÈʼÈ--'ÿÿ
 Ú | ÃGÃßÌÂÖÃGÃ--$ *ËþÇ,Ë*È,Ë­È*ËÕÈzËÕÈxË­ÈxË*ÈzËþÇ*ËþÇ----$ *ËþÇ,Ë*È,Ë­È*ËÕÈzËÕÈxË­ÈxË*ÈzËþÇ*ËþÇ--'ÿÿ
 Ú | ÃGÃßÌÂÖÃGÃ--X$*¬Ì"țÌȈÌÈtÌþÇ^ÌûÇIÌüÇ3ÌÈÌ È
ÌÈþË*ÈôË>ÈíËSÈëËiÈíËÈô˔Èþ˨È
̺ÈÌÈÈ3ÌÑÈIÌ×È^ÌØÈtÌÔȈÌÌțÌÀȬ̰ǫ̇Ọ̃̄Ȧ̦Ƞ̮ȏ̽È{ÌÇÈfÌÍÈPÌÍÈPÌÈfÌÈ{Ì ÈÌÈ Ì$ȦÌ,ȬÌ/ȯÌ*ȬÌ"È----X$*¬Ì"țÌȈÌÈtÌþÇ^ÌûÇIÌüÇ3ÌÈÌ È
ÌÈþË*ÈôË>ÈíËSÈëËiÈíËÈô˔Èþ˨È
̺ÈÌÈÈ3ÌÑÈIÌ×È^ÌØÈtÌÔȈÌÌțÌÀȬ̰ǫ̇Ọ̃̄Ȧ̦Ƞ̮ȏ̽È{ÌÇÈfÌÍÈPÌÍÈPÌÈfÌÈ{Ì ÈÌÈ Ì$ȦÌ,ȬÌ/ȯÌ*ȬÌ"È--'ÿÿ
 Ú | ÃGÃßÌÂÖÃGÃ--$ ¼ÌþǾÌ*Ⱦ̭ȼÌÕÈ ÍÕÈ
Í­È
Í*È ÍþǼÌþÇ----$ ¼ÌþǾÌ*Ⱦ̭ȼÌÕÈ ÍÕÈ
Í­È
Í*È ÍþǼÌþÇ--'ÿÿ
 Ú | ÃGÃßÌÂÖÃGÃ--$ Í+ÈÍJÈÍ´ÈÍÕÈiÍÕÈhÍ´ÈhÍJÈiÍ+ÈÍ+È&$Í ÈÍÈ&ÍûÇ3Í÷ÇBÍöÇPÍ÷Ç]ÍûÇgÍÈjÍ ÈgÍÈ]ÍÈPÍÈBÍ È3ÍÈ&ÍÈÍÈÍ È----$ Í+ÈÍJÈÍ´ÈÍÕÈiÍÕÈhÍ´ÈhÍJÈiÍ+ÈÍ+È--&$Í ÈÍÈ&ÍûÇ3Í÷ÇBÍöÇPÍ÷Ç]ÍûÇgÍÈjÍ ÈgÍÈ]ÍÈPÍÈBÍ È3ÍÈ&ÍÈÍÈÍ È--'ÿÿ
 Ú | ÃGÃßÌÂÖÃGÃ--N$%ÅÍ@ÈÅÍ+ÈwÍ+ÈxÍLÈxÍ¿ÈwÍÞÈÆÍÞÈÅÍ¿ÈÅͨÈÒ͵Èã;ÈøÍÂÈ
ÎÀÈ!θÈ2ΩÈ>ΓÈBÎtÈ>ÎUÈ2Î>È!Î/È
Î'ÈøÍ%ÈãÍ)ÈÒÍ2ÈÅÍ@ÈÅÍIÈÕÍ8ÈåÍ1ÈðÍ0ÈõÍ3ÈõÍ´ÈðÍ·ÈåÍ·ÈÕͯÈÅ͞ÈÅÍIÈÅÍ@È----6$ÅÍ@ÈÅÍ+ÈwÍ+ÈxÍLÈxÍ¿ÈwÍÞÈÆÍÞÈÅÍ¿ÈÅͨÈÒ͵Èã;ÈøÍÂÈ
ÎÀÈ!θÈ2ΩÈ>ΓÈBÎtÈ>ÎUÈ2Î>È!Î/È
Î'ÈøÍ%ÈãÍ)ÈÒÍ2ÈÅÍ@È--$ ÅÍIÈÕÍ8ÈåÍ1ÈðÍ0ÈõÍ3ÈõÍ´ÈðÍ·ÈåÍ·ÈÕͯÈÅ͞ÈÅÍIÈ--'ÿÿ
 Ú | ÃGÃßÌÂÖÃGÃ--Z$+œÎ=ȜÎþÇOÎþÇPÎÈPγÈOÎÕȜÎÕȜÎÃȨÎÎȵÎÖÈÔÎÛÈæÎÙÈöÎÓÈÏÊÈÏ¿ÈϱÈÏ¡È"πÈÏ_ÈÏOÈÏAÈÏ6ÈöÎ-ÈæÎ'ÈÔÎ%ÈÄÎ&ȵÎ*ȨÎ2ȜÎ=ȜÎKÈ¥Î@ȯÎ8ȹÎ3ÈÅÎ0ÈÊÎ1ÈÍÎ7ÈÍÎÉÈÊÎÏÈÅÎÐÈ°ÎÇȜεȜÎKȜÎ=È---->$œÎ=ȜÎþÇOÎþÇPÎÈPγÈOÎÕȜÎÕȜÎÃȨÎÎȵÎÖÈÔÎÛÈæÎÙÈöÎÓÈÏÊÈÏ¿ÈϱÈÏ¡È"πÈÏ_ÈÏOÈÏAÈÏ6ÈöÎ-ÈæÎ'ÈÔÎ%ÈÄÎ&ȵÎ*ȨÎ2ȜÎ=È--$
œÎKÈ¥Î@ȯÎ8ȹÎ3ÈÅÎ0ÈÊÎ1ÈÍÎ7ÈÍÎÉÈÊÎÏÈÅÎÐÈ°ÎÇȜεȜÎKÈ--'ÿÿ
 Ú | ÃGÃßÌÂÖÃGÃ--\$,‰Ï%ÈpÏ(È[Ï2ÈIÏ@È;ÏSÈ2ÏhÈ/Ï~È1ϖÈ;Ï­ÈJÏÁÈ]ÏÏÈsÏØȉÏÛȟÏØȵÏÏÈÈÏÁÈ×Ï­ÈáϖÈãÏ~ÈàÏhÈ×ÏSÈÉÏ@È·Ï2È¢Ï(ȉÏ%ÈyÏ0ȋÏ.ȝÏ1È­Ï7ȼÏAÈÈÏNÈÑÏ]È×ÏnÈÙπÈ×ϒÈÑÏ£ÈÈϲȼϾȭÏÈȝÏÎȋÏÑÈyÏÏÈyÏ0ȉÏ%È----6$‰Ï%ÈpÏ(È[Ï2ÈIÏ@È;ÏSÈ2ÏhÈ/Ï~È1ϖÈ;Ï­ÈJÏÁÈ]ÏÏÈsÏØȉÏÛȟÏØȵÏÏÈÈÏÁÈ×Ï­ÈáϖÈãÏ~ÈàÏhÈ×ÏSÈÉÏ@È·Ï2È¢Ï(ȉÏ%È--($yÏ0ȋÏ.ȝÏ1È­Ï7ȼÏAÈÈÏNÈÑÏ]È×ÏnÈÙπÈ×ϒÈÑÏ£ÈÈϲȼϾȭÏÈȝÏÎȋÏÑÈyÏÏÈyÏ0È--'ÿÿ
 Ú | ÃGÃßÌÂÖÃGÃ--j$3gÐÆÈMÐÕÈ1ÐÛÈÐÖÈÐÉÈõϵÈðϛÈöσÈÐqÈÐfÈ1ÐbÈMÐeÈgÐoÈgÐCÈeÐ:È^Ð4ÈBÐ0È5Ð2È*Ð6ÈÐFÈÐLÈÐLÈÐGÈÐ>ÈÐ3È,Ð+ÈTÐ%ÈxÐ(ȗÐ2È£Ð;ȬÐHȲÐWÈ´ÐkȴЫȵÐÀȼÐÕÈgÐÕÈgÐÆÈgмÈMÐÉÈAÐÉÈ=ÐÇÈ<нÈ<ЃÈ=ÐyÈ@ÐsÈKÐoÈYÐsÈgÐyÈgмÈgÐÆÈ----P$&gÐÆÈMÐÕÈ1ÐÛÈÐÖÈÐÉÈõϵÈðϛÈöσÈÐqÈÐfÈ1ÐbÈMÐeÈgÐoÈgÐCÈeÐ:È^Ð4ÈBÐ0È5Ð2È*Ð6ÈÐFÈÐLÈÐLÈÐGÈÐ>ÈÐ3È,Ð+ÈTÐ%ÈxÐ(ȗÐ2È£Ð;ȬÐHȲÐWÈ´ÐkȴЫȵÐÀȼÐÕÈgÐÕÈgÐÆÈ--$ gмÈMÐÉÈAÐÉÈ=ÐÇÈ<нÈ<ЃÈ=ÐyÈ@ÐsÈKÐoÈYÐsÈgÐyÈgмÈ--'ÿÿ
 Ú | ÃGÃßÌÂÖÃGÃ--.$ÉÐ+ÈËÐMÈËвÈÊÐÕÈÑÕÈѺÈÑKÈ!Ñ<È+Ñ3È6Ñ0ÈAÑ3ÈHÑ4ÈLÑ0ÈMÑ*ÈJÑ&È>Ñ$È0Ñ)È"Ñ3ÈÑAÈÑ+ÈÉÐ+È----.$ÉÐ+ÈËÐMÈËвÈÊÐÕÈÑÕÈѺÈÑKÈ!Ñ<È+Ñ3È6Ñ0ÈAÑ3ÈHÑ4ÈLÑ0ÈMÑ*ÈJÑ&È>Ñ$È0Ñ)È"Ñ3ÈÑAÈÑ+ÈÉÐ+È--'ÿÿ
 Ú | ÃGÃßÌÂÖÃGÃ--P$&àÑ=ÈÔÑ2ÈÇÑ*ȸÑ&ȨÑ%ȖÑ'ȆÑ-ÈnÑAÈ_Ñ_ÈZрÈ_Ñ¡ÈnѿȆÑÓȖÑÙȨÑÛÈÇÑÖÈÔÑÎÈàÑÃÈàÑÕÈ/ÒÕÈ-Ò¦È-Ò,È/ÒþÇàÑþÇàÑ=ÈàÑKÈàѵÈÍÑÉÈ·ÑÑȱÑÏȯÑÉȯÑ7ȲÑ1È·Ñ0ÈÃÑ3ÈÍÑ8ÈàÑKÈàÑ=È----6$àÑ=ÈÔÑ2ÈÇÑ*ȸÑ&ȨÑ%ȖÑ'ȆÑ-ÈnÑAÈ_Ñ_ÈZрÈ_Ñ¡ÈnѿȆÑÓȖÑÙȨÑÛÈÇÑÖÈÔÑÎÈàÑÃÈàÑÕÈ/ÒÕÈ-Ò¦È-Ò,È/ÒþÇàÑþÇàÑ=È--$ àÑKÈàѵÈÍÑÉÈ·ÑÑȱÑÏȯÑÉȯÑ7ȲÑ1È·Ñ0ÈÃÑ3ÈÍÑ8ÈàÑKÈ--'ÿÿððwÍîÇBÎåÈ

Function
UltraClip creates and manages a virtual clipboard for the Windows environment. It lets you

* create mini-clipboards that store snapshots of the Windows clipboard
* create OLE objects with embedded or linked data
* view graphical thumbnails for quick retrieval
* track the contents of the Windows clipboard in an iconic window
* print proof sheets of the thumbnails or graphics from a disk file
* save and retrieve the mini-clipboard objects as .CLP files
* directly create mini-clips from .BMP, .PCX, .GIF and .WMF (Aldus) images stored on disk
* save and restore the current UltraClip desktop and all its objects
* edit and manipulate mini-clips with text objects < 55K
* edit OLE objects by double-clicking

Prerequisites
UltraClip requires Windows 3.1.

Constraints
UltraClip stores everything in memory - you'll need sufficient memory to support whatever you wish to store. Large color bitmaps can consume several megabytes, so beware. UltraClip ignores owner-display formats. Not compatible with the original release of Norton Desktop for Windows 1.0. Printing requires a print driver that supports StretchDIBits.

Installation
Installing UltraClip involves two operations:

* Copy UC.EXE and the help file UC.HLP to any suitable directory.

*Carefully Install the CTL3D.DLL in the windows system directory using the following steps:

1. Check your Windows system directory for CTL3D.DLL, usually c:\windows\system.
2. If you don't find it, copy the new one into the system directory
3. If you find an existing copy, try using UltraClip with it - if it works, stick with it.
4. If it doesn't work, rename the old version to CTL3D.OLD, copy the new version into
the system directory, and test it.
5. If other programs have problems (this shouldn't happen), delete CTL3D.DLL, and
rename CTL3D.OLD to CTL3D.DLL. UltraClip is not compatible with your system.


Launch UltraClip from the Program Manager or your favorite menu system. UC does not have any special path or directory requirements.

Upgrades from Earlier VERSIONS
F Unfortunately, UltraClip 1.7 does not read the desktop save files used by earlier versions. A slight change in format was needed to accommodate the OLE data streams. The best strategy would be to export the most needed miniclips as .CLP files, then load them into UC 1.7 as needed.

Introduction
A Few Terms
Clipboard - refers to the Windows clipboard
miniclip - refers to the child windows in UltraClip which contain mini-clipboards


The UltraClip Display Window
UC is an MDI application with a button and status bar along the top of the window area, and separate windows for each mini-clipboard.

The status bar is arranged as follows:

Buttons(left to right):
Cut to Clipboard - copy currently active window to clipboard , then delete image window
Copy to Clipboard - copy currently active window to clipboard
Paste from Clipboard - create new image window from clipboard
Delete Window - remove image window from UC
Clear Clipboard - delete current contents of clipboard
Array - tile the image windows in a grid for easy viewing

In the middle :
a small iconic view of the current contents of the clipboard if displayable.

To the right :
several 3D boxes giving various pieces of information about the active mini-clip window and system configuration:

top row:
Format sizes associated with the active mini-clip
bottom row:
Status of Auto Paste mode(P)
Status of AutoTrack mode(T)
Status of AutoSave mode(S)
Free Global memory
Module/program name of source of data

In the open area are miniclips which display thumbnails of the objects currently stored in UltraClip. Each miniclip has its own window. You can drag these windows around in the display area, iconize them, tile them or use the other options on the Window menu. If you zoom a miniclip, the object is displayed full size. If you resize the main window, the miniclips are retiled automatically.

The Windows Clipboard & OLE
The Clipboard is largely a convention that lets programs share data directly via system memory. When you "copy" to the clipboard, your application formats various blocks of global memory and turns them over to the Clipboard (the Windows system) to manage. Any application can retrieve those blocks from the system, make copies, and interpret them as best as it can. An application can use both predefined formats and custom formats when creating the data for the clipboard. Since the various formats usually refer to the same general item , we can collectively call them a clipboard 'object' which has various formats. When you copy to the clipboard or empty it, you remove the existing object and replace it with another.

UltraClip allows you to take a snapshot of the clipboard and preserve it as a miniclip. These snapshots are also stored in global memory, just like the original, but have a longer life. Together they form a virtual clipboard where objects persist after a cut or copy, where you can pick and choose one for quick retrieval, and even manipulate its text. You can also save the miniclips to disk for later retrieval as .CLP files.

OLE is an advanced protocol for sharing data among Windows applications. One approach is to copy OLE data to the clipboard for pasting into a client application. Ultraclip supports OLE 1.0 in two ways. You can save all the data on the clipboard as a regular miniclip (and restore it later), or you can create an OLE miniclip which actually contains an OLE object. Both linked and embedded objects are supported. There is much more system support for these OLE objects than for simple clipboard data - the OLE libraries manage the binary data, read and write it to disk, and even control the display. One unique feature of an OLE object is that you can double-click on it and edit the data in the server application.

Operation
Using UltraClip
Once UC is running, just use the paste icon or menu option to paste the current contents of the Clipboard into UC. If there is an object on the Clipboard, UC makes a copy, creates a miniclip, and displays it. You can store as many miniclips as memory and resources allow. If OLE data is present, you can also create an OLE miniclip - select Edit/Link or Edit/Embed as desired.

To restore a miniclip to the Windows Clipboard so that other applications can use it, highlight the window you wish to access, and either click the Copy button, choose Edit/Copy from the menus, or right-click the window's title bar. This will copy the object to the Clipboard, replacing whatever was there before. You can also choose Edit/Cut (or the Cut Button) to copy the object to the Clipboard and delete the miniclip.

To selectively copy one or more formats (in a particular miniclip) to the Clipboard, right-click (secondary button) anywhere inside the miniclip. A dialog box with the available formats will appear. Click on the formats you are interested in, then OK to copy the selected formats to the Clipboard. The miniclip retains a copy of all the formats until you close it, or exit the program. If you chose the wrong format the first time, just repeat the copy.

You can configure several options for UltraClip using the File/Configure menu option. Choose the startup mode you desire and it will take effect the next time you start UltraClip.

Clicking the array button arranges the miniclips in a grid much like a slide-sorter for your camera. The default sizes the thumbnails to 125 pixels square and fits as many as possible in the current window area. See the configuration section for changing the default.

You can clear the current contents of the Clipboard using the Edit/Clear menu or the Clear button. This may free up some memory if the Clipboard is currently storing a large image.

When you depress an icon button, the status display box temporarily displays a brief explanation of the action.

You can edit and manipulate the text in a miniclip if the text size is < 55 K.The Edit/Modify menu option opens an edit window where you can change, add, move, append to Clipboard, and delete text. Double clicking with the left (primary) mouse button will also open an edit window.

You can edit an OLE miniclip by double-clicking the object. The host application will start where you can use all its facilities in editing. Before exiting choose Update to transfer the data back to UltraClip.

The Edit/Append menu choice appends the text object in the active miniclip to whatever text is on the clipboard. You can use these options repeatedly to combine text in nearly any fashion.

AutoPaste, AutoTrack and AutoSave Modes
AutoPaste - UltraClip has an Auto Paste mode that will automatically paste every new object placed on the Clipboard (except those copied from UC). To activate AutoPaste choose the Edit/Start AutoPaste menu option or click the status box with the right mouse button. The status box displays P or _ depending on the current status of AutoPaste.

AutoTrack - UltraClip will display an iconic miniature of the current contents of the Clipboard if you configure AutoTrack to be active. This iconic display will also appear when UltraClip itself is iconized, and will be updated whenever the Clipboard changes.

UltraClip uses 3 special icons when there are no public graphic formats on the clipboard:

X - Clipboard is empty
T - Clipboard has only Text and non-displayable formats
01 - Clipboard has only binary (non-displayable) formats

AutoSave - You can have UltraClip automatically save the UC desktop every n minutes. You set this option in the File/Configuration dialog. When you first start UltraClip, it checks the AutoSave time period. If the period is > 0 it turns on AutoSave. Then, every n minutes UC checks to see if there are any miniclips on the desktop. If so, it puts up a dialog asking if you really want to overwrite the desktop save file. You have three choices:

Yes: autosave will now run automatically for the rest of the session
No: start over counting the minutes and repeat the query process until you answer Yes or Cancel
Cancel: autosave is suspended for the session or until you reactivate it

Thus you are queried at the start of each session to help insure that the desktop save file is not accidentally overwritten.

The Miniclip Windows
Each miniclip displays a thumbnail of the object it is 'storing' - either a graphic or an unformatted dump of text. When you paste an object into UC, it stores all the available formats as well as building a thumbnail image if a graphic format is found.

If you create an OLE miniclip, the display is controlled by the OLE libraries as are the available formats. Regretfully these objects display rather more slowly than the UC thumbnails which are optimized for speed. The available formats for restoring to the clipboard are also determined by the OLE system.

If the object contains no displayable formats, the miniclip displays the program name that put the data on the Clipboard, and the formats that are available for copying. You may have to zoom the window to see all the text if there are many formats.

The title bar of the miniclip window displays the origin of the image - the file name if read from disk, or the module that put the object on the Clipboard (if available).

If you zoom a miniclip, the graphic is redrawn full size. Depending on the size and complexity of the object, this can take a while the first time. The delay is caused by the time needed to create the full image - initially, only the thumbnail is built. The full graphic is cached in memory, though, so you don't need to wait a second time.

Zoomed miniclips have scroll bars that let you move around the image or scroll through text. Please note that only ten screens of text are maintained for scrolling - this limitation is currently needed for performance reasons. Graphics are available for scrolling regardless of the image size.

Status Windows
UltraClip displays several pieces of information to help manage the environment. There are status boxes for:

*AutoPaste status
*AutoTrack status
*AutoSave status
*free global memory
*source of data in the clip window
*major formats and size stored in the clip object
*iconic clipboard view

You can right click on several of these status displays and UC will pop-up an expanded view of the status:

*Free memory -->Free memory + free system resources
*Formats --> all formats available + global size
*iconic view--> all formats on the clipboard

Drag & Drop Interface
There are several ways of getting work done in UltraClip. The menu choices are the most familiar. In
addition there are several situations where you can right click on a window to start a particular action -
see Mouse Work for a description.

A third approach uses the drag and drop object metaphor. The idea is that you select an object and 'drop' it
on an icon or area that symbolizes what you want to accomplish. The cursor changes to an up-arrow when over an item that will accept a drop. In UltraClip two objects are 'droppable': miniclips and the iconic clipboard window. Select a miniclip, then click inside it and drag - the cursor changes to an up arrow. Here are the players for drag and drop:

Source Target Action
miniclip Cut button copy to clipboard and delete
Copy button copy to clipboard
Delete button delete miniclip
Array button array the open miniclips
Clipboard icon copy miniclip to clipboard

clipboard Paste button create a miniclip from clipboard
(icon) Clear button empty clipboard contents
Client area create a miniclip from clipboard

If you have many palette-intensive miniclips, you may have to wait a second when you select a new
miniclip - Windows is at work updating the image displays, and will miss the mouse drag if you start too
soon.

Edit windows for text also use drag and drop - see next topic.


Manipulating Text
You can edit and manipulate text objects which are less then 55K in size. Two options are available on the Edit menu:

* Append to Clipboard: takes the text object in the active miniclip and appends it to the text on the Clipboard. The resulting new text object replaces the old one on the Clipboard.

* Modify Text: opens an editing window where you can rearrange, add and delete text.

You can also open an edit window by double clicking inside the miniclip with the left (primary) mouse button. AutoPaste is suspended whenever an edit window is open.

The edit window has several features:

* Drag & Drop Editing:
Select a block of text, then move the cursor back over the text and press. The cursor changes to an up arrow, and you can 'drag' the text to any new position in the text. If you reach the edge of the edit window, the window will automatically scroll the remaining text into view. You can spot your 'drop' by following the caret( a light gray bar) which shows the current insertion point.

If you hold down the CTRL key when you drop the text, the selected text will be copied to the new spot without deleting the source. Otherwise, the text is moved and the source is deleted.
!!If you attempt to increase the amount of text beyond 55K, you will find that the additional text is not accepted and should receive a warning. Save your work, and export the text to the clipboard for use in a work processor such as Write which supports large text blocks.

* Speed Keys:
The delete and backspace keys delete and remove text as you would expect. You can use Ctrl-Home and Ctrl-End to jump to top/bottom of text respectively. Shift-Ctrl-Home & Shift-Ctrl-End jump and select text from the current insertion point to the top or bottom of the text. Ctrl-Ins copies selected text to the clipboard, while Shift-Ins pastes from the clipboard.

* Adding Text:
You can add text by clicking an insertion point in the existing text, and typing. Hitting the Enter key ends one line and starts the next.

* Copy & Paste Buttons:
These buttons copy selected text to the Clipboard, and paste text from the Clipboard respectively. You can also use the speed keys for copy and paste mentioned above. If there are insufficient local resources for the paste operation, a warning message is put up to alert you that the paste failed.

* Append Button:
Select a block of text and append it to whatever text is already on the Clipboard. The total size of the new text must be less then 64K. You can use this feature repeatedly to rearrange text in almost any fashion.

UltraClip will let you open multiple edit windows, but only one for a given miniclip. This feature would, though, let you transfer text fragments from one text object to another (via the clipboard) with good control over where the text goes in the second window.

Files
Using .CLP Files
Ultraclip can save and read .CLP files that are compatible with the Clipboard Viewer application that comes with Windows. To save a regular miniclip as a .CLP file, highlight it by clicking on the title bar, and choose File/Save from the file menu. Supply a suitable file name, and your clip object is saved to disk. You can load one or more .clp files by choosing File/Open, selecting the CLP file type, and selecting the file/files you wish to load. Each clip object will be loaded into its own window with a thumbnail . You can copy it to the clipboard or hold for later retrieval (or print a thumbnail sheet).

To save an OLE miniclip as a .CLP file, copy it first to the clipboard and paste it as a regular miniclip which you can then save to disk.

Using .BMP, .PCX, .GIF and .WMF Files
UltraClip can read Win 3.0 style bitmap files(.BMP), .PCX version 5 files, .GIF single image as well as Aldus-style metafiles (the kind produced by Corel, Arts & Letters, and other draw programs). Choose File/Open, select the file type you are interested in, and highlight the filenames you wish to load.
In this situation, UltraClip does a bit more than just load the format into a miniclip. For .BMP files, both a memory DIB image and a bitmap & palette object are created. You can copy one or all to the clipboard as needed. PCX and GIF files are translated into a comparable DIB image, and a corresponding bitmap and palette are constructed. For metafiles, UC creates a Picture file as well as a DIB image and bitmap/palette pair. Thus you can use UC to rasterize metafiles and create bitmap objects from DIB and PCX images if needed.

Text Files
UltraClip will read text files off the disk and create a miniclip. File size is limited by available memory but editing capacity is much more limited. A text file can contain only printable characters plus CR, LF, Tab and EOF characters.

The Desktop
The menu options Desktop/Save and Restore let you save the contents of all existing miniclips to disk and restore them later. This includes OLE miniclips. You can specify the drive and save file name using the configure option. Please note that the desktop save file can be very large if you have a number of large objects in memory - it consumes roughly as much disk space as the in-memory images. For example, if UltraClip has reduced your free global memory from 8MB to 5MB, you can expect the desktop save file to use roughly 3 MB of disk space.

Printing
Printing Thumbnails
UltraClip includes a simple print option that lets you print 'proof sheets' of the current thumbnails. In the Edit/Configure options dialog you can specify the grid used to position the printed thumbnails:

m Across by
n Down with a margin of
x Inches.

During printing, new thumbnails are created to optimally fill the available space with a caption built from the filename or module name.
Be patient when starting a print - creating a page with 24 or 30 thumbnails is quite system intensive considering the scaling and (in most cases) color conversions. Don't try a print without sufficient memory - the print manager can consume considerable disk and memory resources. The quality of the output depends somewhat on the printer driver, as does the speed of the operation.

Printing Graphics Directly from Disk
UltraClip will also directly print thumbnail sheets of graphics files residing on the disk without loading them simultaneously into memory. This feature allows you to print automatically thumbnails for a very large number of graphics images - such as might reside on a CDROM. Use the File/Print from Disk... menu option to choose the files you wish to print. You can select any bitmap, metafile, or .CLP file that UC can read. In addition to the file name, UC titles each page with the drive/subdirectory where the images were found and a sequential page number.

While much less memory intensive than printing the images from memory, you must still ensure that the system has sufficient resources.

General
Memory Checking
UltraClip will monitor the free global memory based on a limit you set in the Edit/Configure dialog. When the free memory drops below the specified minimum, you will be prompted before creating new miniclips. You can defeat this checking by setting the memory limit to 0.

Configuring UltraClip
You can configure UC by choosing Configure from the file menu, or right-clicking on the title bar with the mouse. In addition to setting the startup AutoPaste & AutoTrack mode, you can choose a new thumbnail size and printing setup and specify the desktop save file name. Your choices are written to uc.ini and takes effect with the next object pasted into UltraClip. Please note that existing thumbnails are not recalculated, so it is best to change that parameter at the beginning or end of a session.

You can temporarily toggle the AutoPaste and AutoTrack mode by right-clicking in the respective status windows. There are also menu options to change the current mode under the Edit menu.

OLE
UltraClip supports OLE in two ways: regular and OLE miniclips. Regular miniclips neither embed nor link to objects, but let you store OLE data for embedding and linking in other applications. When you copy an OLE formats into UC, it captures the OLE data; when you restore them to the Clipboard, it places copies of the original data back on the clipboard in the same order and format. The goal is to transparently restore the state of the Clipboard. Of course, if you selectively choose formats to copy to the clipboard, the copy process will not match the original.

OLE miniclips actually create an OLE object managed and displayed by the OLE system libraries (and source application). Within UltraClip these OLE miniclips behave much like the other windows, although they are completely different internally. There are advantages and disadvantages to using OLE. The OLE miniclips display much move slowly, contain fewer formats and are tied to OLE applications. On the plus side, they can be edited from within UltraClip, they require less disk space to store if linked, and they can be automatically updated by the source application.

Manual Configuration Options
There exist several configuration options that you can use to override Ultra Clip's various safety warnings. You would enter one or more of the following lines in the UC.INI file (but not the braces):

[UC]
PromptOnClose=0 {no nag exit from UltraClip}
PromptOnSave=0 {no nag before overwriting desktop save file}
AutoRestore=1 {automatically restore the desktop save file when UC starts}

Known Peculiarities
Occasionally AutoPaste may create multiple clip windows when only one is appropriate. Basically there are two situations: (1) the source application prematurely closes the clipboard before it is done copying all formats (2) you close the source application and it replaces the object on the clipboard with a new one. UltraClip tries very hard to avoid problem number 1, but a slow application can trip it up. This is frustrating - the only fix I know of is to turn off AutoPaste for that application or delete the unwanted (usually incomplete) clip windows. Problem 2 is unavoidable - the "duplicate" object is in fact slightly different from the first, although it may appear identical.
Micrografix Designer 3.1 is unhappy with the MGX_... formats as restored by UltraClip, so they are suppressed even if present on the clipboard.
Frame by FrameMaker seems to use a non-standard clipboard format that fails to render properly in UC.
It is possible to create metafiles in advanced drawing applications (such as Corel Draw) that are simply too complex for Windows to render. Typically Windows crashes when trying to display these files. One possible workaround is to copy sections of the image to the clipboard and store them in UltraClip. If, for example, Corel warns you that a given image is 'too complex' for the clipboard, do not try to display the clipboard version - rather clear the clipboard and start again.
If you click a button and nothing happens, check to see that a clip window is highlighted. If not, click a title bar and try the button again.
If you save an object to disk which includes a 'bitmap' format, and then restore it to an environment running in a different graphics mode, the bitmap format will not display properly and may crash the program. This includes both .CLP files and desktop save files. This is unavoidable - the bitmap format is always device specific, and does not transfer between modes such as VGA and SuperVGA. The solution is to use the DIB format, which is device-independent and should display on any graphics adapter.

Copyright
UltraClip is copyright Doug Overmyer, 1992 and 1993.

Distribution Terms
UltraClip is distributed as freeware - there is no registration fee. If you cannot obatin a copy from an electronic service, I will send one to you for $5 to cover shipping/media/handling.

Doug Overmyer
1817 San Pedro Avenue
Berkeley, CA 94707
USA


Disclaimer
UltraClip carries no warranties. You use it entirely at your own risk. You must determine its suitability for your system and needs.

Source Code
UltraClip is written in Borland Pascal.

Acknowledgements
I wish to thank Nord-Jan Vermeer , Nat Johnson and Christian Gerber whose many suggestions contributed materially to UltraClip. I appreciate your help a great deal! Thanks also to Ron Burke (editor Window/DOS Journal) whose articles inspired drag and drop editing, and to Ron Gery (MS Developers Network) whose articles on palettes finally got through!

Problems, Suggestions
Please drop me a note on Compuserve (71021,2535) or Internet: [email protected]

Author
Doug Overmyer
May 10, 1993

Notices:
Arts & Letters® is a registered trademark of Computer Support Corporation. CorelDRAW® is a registered trademark of Corel Systems Corporation. Micrografx is a registered trademark of Micrografx, Inc. GIF is a a registered trademark of CompuServe Inc.

Notes:
Release 1.1 added OLE support, reworked entirely the storage of objects, display of metafiles, improved error recovery.
Release 1.2:implemented thumbnails, reworked owner-draw format , reworked large metafile display code, added various configuration options.
Release 1.3:added zooming of graphics, selective copy of formats, uniform tiling feature & better scrolling.
Release 1.4:reworked the array feature, added printing, reading .BMP and .WMF files, and reading/writing .CLP files and saving/restoring the desktop,revised autopaste logic.
Release 1.5:read .PCX and .GIF files;helpfile;stay on top option;
Release 1.6:reworked status display;added autotrack clipboard;print from disk;scroll maxed windows,text manipulation functions,drag&drop interface;
Release 1.7:add real OLE client support;autosave option;more status windows; low memory check;
€ jwjs6joGjk÷lgmc+m_8m[šnW¨nS×nOÙnK Ùnow(os%roErkFrgGrdds`rs\}sXsTŠsP®sL   ®s¶swtsto!tk[xgdxcÒy_ïy[AWNS_O³‚K ³‚½‚wÁ‚s˂opƒktƒg„ƒcƒ_ ƒ[¬ƒW*„S2„O;„K ;„E„w…s…oˆkˆg‹c
‹_û‹[$ŒW.ŒSOˆK ˆvw~sÀoÁkægøc|_}[7‘W;‘S~‘O€‘K €‘à‘wæ‘s¬’o’k¬–g°–c&™_6™[s›WŠ›S©O²K ²ÂwҝsVžoožk¡g¡cd¥_k¥[¯¥W´¥SG¬ON¬K N¬`¬wX¯s¯o˲kײgȳcÕ³_æ³[ò³W÷³Sþ³O¶K ¶ ¶w ¶s ¶o¶k¥¶g9¹c_¹_|º[”ºW
»S »O!¼K !¼*¼w;¼sL½oe½k“¾gš¾c"À_'À[¥ÄWÃÄSkÅOqÅK qŲÆwÇÆsÎo&ÎkçÎgòÎc+Ï_?Ï[FÐWRÐSÛÐOèÐK èÐÑw&ÑsìÑoþÑkŠÒg¡Òc÷Ò_ÿÒ[ÓW&ÓS‰×O €
jL jjrj.ðhÐ8 p.ðhÐ8 prjtjL½jLñjL#kLgkL­kLíkLKlL’lLÍlLõlL÷lL.ðhÐ8 p ÷lmL)mL+mL8mL˜nLšnL¨nL×nLÙnLoLoL|oL.ðhÐ8 p |o~oLÑoLpLtpLÌpLòpLHqL—qL™qL›qL#rL%rL.ðhÐ8 p %rErLbsLdsLrsLsL­sLtLtL!tLªtL¬tLÔtL.ðhÐ8 p ÔtÖtLðtLJuLŠuLÊuLøuL1vLmvLovL€vLÑvLÓvL.ðhÐ8 p ÓvãvLWw.hðhÐ8 p.ðhÐ8 pWwZwLewLšwL¨wLÈwLçwLxLxLDxLFxLÐyLÒyL.ðhÐ8 p ÒyïyLÃ|LÅ|Lr~Lt~LALCLNL_LڂL܂L…„L.ðhÐ8 p …„‡„LO†LQ†L‡L ‡LˆLˆLЈL҈LC‰LE‰LbŠL.ðhÐ8 p bŠdŠL7‹L9‹Lù‹Lû‹L$ŒL}LL‡ŽL‰ŽLäŽLæŽL.ðhÐ8 p æŽÿŽL9LtLvL4‘L6‘L}‘LߑL*’L,’Lª’L¬’L.ðhÐ8 p ¬’Â’LÁ“LÓL÷”Lù”Lô•Lö•L£–L¥–Lû—Lý—L$™L.ðhÐ8 p $™&™L6™L¤™L¦™Lº™LΙLá™L÷™LšLPšLišLkšL.ðhÐ8 p kš×šLٚL›LB›Lq›Ls›LŠ›Lñ›L^œLœLƒœLòœL.ðhÐ8 p òœTžLVžLožL£žLƞLéžLŸLBŸLDŸL~ŸL²ŸLäŸL.ðhÐ8 p äŸæŸLJ Lµ L¼ L¾ Lþ L¡L¡L¡LŒ¡LŽ¡L.ðhÐ8 p Ž¡G¢LI¢L ¢L¢¢L.hðhÐ8 p¢¢I£LK£Lr£Lt£L.ðhÐ8 pt££L¥L¥LÓ¥Lè¦Lê¦Lù¦Li¨Lk¨L{¨L©L
©L.ÐðhÐ8 p
©#©LNªLPªLbªL9«L.ÐðhÐ8 p9«;«LE¬LG¬LN¬L`¬LÈ®LÊ®LV¯LX¯L¯L²°LɲL.ðhÐ8 p ɲ˲LײLƳLȳLÕ³LÿµL¶L ¶L ¶Lð¶Lò¶L·L.ðhÐ8 p ··L)·L+·L¶·L7¹L9¹L_¹L”»L–»L¼L!¼L*¼L.ðhÐ8 p *¼;¼LL½LN½Le½La¿Lc¿L ÀL"ÀL'ÀLcÂLeÂL£ÄL.ðhÐ8 p £Ä¥ÄLÃÄLŽÅLÅL–ÅLâÅL@ÆL°ÆL²ÆLÇÆLzÉL
ÊL.ðhÐ8 p
ÊtÊLZÌLëÌLåÎLçÎLòÎL)ÏL+ÏL?ÏLýÏLÿÏLÐL.ðhÐ8 p Ð'ÐL<ÐLBÐLDÐLFÐLRÐLÙÐLÛÐLèÐLÑLÑL&ÑL.ðhÐ8 p &шÒLŠÒL¡ÒLõÒL÷ÒLÿÒLÓLÓLÓL)ÓL$ÔL&ÔL.ðhÐ8 p &Ô.ÔL§ÔL4ÕL¢ÕLQÖL”ÖL)×L‰×LŠ×ÿÿ.ðhÐ8 p Times New RomanSymbol Arial
Palatino

  3 Responses to “Category : Windows 3.X Files
Archive   : CLIP-WIN.ZIP
Filename : UC.WRI

  1. Very nice! Thank you for this wonderful archive. I wonder why I found it only now. Long live the BBS file archives!

  2. This is so awesome! 😀 I’d be cool if you could download an entire archive of this at once, though.

  3. But one thing that puzzles me is the “mtswslnkmcjklsdlsbdmMICROSOFT” string. There is an article about it here. It is definitely worth a read: http://www.os2museum.com/wp/mtswslnk/