home
***
CD-ROM
|
disk
|
FTP
|
other
***
search
/
Simtel MSDOS 1992 June
/
SIMTEL_0692.cdr
/
msdos
/
sysutl
/
timgen10.arc
/
BATMAN.MSG
next >
Wrap
Text File
|
1989-09-21
|
7KB
|
131 lines
WOW! BATMAN'S OWN NAVAL OBSERVATORY!
Robin: HOLY TIMEPIECE, BATMAN! Your own Naval
Observatory!
Batman: That's right, Robin. TIMEGEN, the Time Generator from
Life Sciences Editorial Services, lets any computer transmit
time signals in Naval Observatory format so people can
dial it on their modems with TIMESET (ver. 5.0) to get
accurate time for their own computers.
Robin: WOW! That sounds like fun!
Batman: Well, it is fun and easy to use, Robin, but it's a serious
program. Organizations with far-flung stations, including
several right here in the Gotham City area, have a need
to synchronize all their computer clocks. This includes
police and other government agencies, banks (who want
to make every penny of "float" income they can off your
deposit right up to the last millisecond before they have
to start honoring any checks you might want to write on
it), utilities, communication firms, and many other
organizations with branch offices.
This highly accurate program makes it unnecessary for all
the computers in a system to call the Naval Observatory.
Only a central computer needs to do it with TIMESET.
TIMEGEN can then be set up to turn that accurately set
computer into a "bulletin board" specializing in Naval
Observatory-style time signals. You can set it up to run
continuously on a dedicated computer with automatic
corrections for clock drift every few hours from the Naval
Observatory itself, or only for certain periods of the day.
The program can be configured to generate Universal
Time signals from local computer time in any time zone
in the world.
After the central computer's clock has been set accurately
by calling the real Naval Observatory with TIMESET
version 5, TIMEGEN lets local computer users synchronize
to it by modem with their own copies of TIMESET
version 5. All they have to do is configure their own
copies of TIMESET to dial TIMEGEN instead of the
Naval Observatory. That not only reduces the burden on
a vital public service, it can save an awful lot in long
distance phone bills.
Robin: HOLY BUSINESS EXPENSES! But I'll bet the program
costs a lot.
Batman: Well, Robin, TIMEGEN is not in the public domain, it's
copyrighted, and it's not free. The man who developed it
worked very hard to make it a sophisticated, attractive,
highly dependable, and easy to use timesetting program,
and he would like to be compensated for his effort. There
is a shareware price tag, but it's modest -- only $25.
Robin: Seems reasonable to me, especially for people who use the
program for money-making purposes or have access to
appropriations. I mean, bankers don't give away money,
do they? They rent it out at high fees. Electric
companies don't give away electricity. They charge an arm
and a leg for it and they keep asking for more and more
money every year. And governments pay for guns, cars,
radars, highway cameras, and two-way radios for their
police. They don't ask businesses to donate those things.
Scientific instrument companies don't give instruments to
scientists, no matter what worthy things they are doing in
their labs. The scientists pay for them out of their grants
or institutional funds. And the Defense Department
doesn't get its toilet seats free from the Salvation Army.
It pays $600 apiece for them, and it thinks nothing of
paying $20-$40 for a diode that can be had for 49 cents
at Radio Shack. WOW! What's 25 bucks to people like
that?
Batman: That's right, Robin. I don't mind paying $25 for this fine
program even though I have no appropriations and don't
even get tax deductions for pursuing villains like The
Joker. God knows I've tried to get tax deductions for our
work, but the damned IRS keeps saying, "Sorry, Mr.
Batman. Unless you and Mr. Robin can show an income
from your pursuit of criminals, you can't deduct the cost
of it." I hear that every time I'm called in for an audit,
which is annually. Sometimes I feel my crime fighting
efforts aren't appreciated at all by those bureaucrats.
Robin: HOLY WAYS AND MEANS COMMITTEE! All this
time I thought you were just a rich dude looking for tax
loopholes, buying an expensive custom-built car like the
Batmobile and fine tailormade capes, masks, and leotards
for us so you could get a writeoff! Speaking of The Joker,
isn't it about time for our nightly pursuit of that
scoundrel?
Batman: Right. But first let's load TIMEGEN on the Batcomputer
so it can dial the Naval Observatory for the exact time,
then be ready to transmit accurate time signals to us while
we're going after The Joker. I've installed TIMESET
version 5 in the Batmobile's own computer so we can stay
synchronized by car phone with the Batcomputer here.
Split-second timing is essential when you're pursuing a
clever fiend like The Joker. Incidentally, TIMESET and
TIMEGEN were written by the same man, so we can be
sure the two programs are mutually compatible.
Robin: HOLY COINCIDENCE! You mean both programs were
written by Pete Petrakis, the science writer who is owner
and founder of Life Sciences Editorial Services, Annapolis,
Maryland and gets more and more involved in computer
programming with each passing year?
Batman: He's the one.
Robin: WOW! Did you send him his shareware registration fee?
Batman: I thought you'd never ask. I sent him the money
yesterday, for both TIMESET version 5 and TIMEGEN.
TIMEGEN can't work without Professional TIMESET
anyway, so I figured I'd take care of both at the same
time.
Robin: HOLY INTEGRITY! You're OK, Batman!
Batman: Well, Robin, would you expect anything less of a champion
of honor, virtue, decency, and the American Way?
Robin: WOW!