home
***
CD-ROM
|
disk
|
FTP
|
other
***
search
/
Games Encyclopedia
/
gamesencyclopedia1995.iso
/
strategy
/
curses
/
cursinfo.doc
< prev
next >
Wrap
Text File
|
1993-02-06
|
16KB
|
334 lines
C U R S E S !
THIS DOCUMENT CONTAINS THE FOLLOWING IMPORTANT INFORMATION:
Important Information
Software License Information
Warranty Information
Getting Started
Support Information
Order Form
Updated: February 1993
REVIEWERS: If you plan to review this software for publication, *please*
contact us first to make sure you have the most recent update of the
software and that the ordering information supplied to your readers will be
accurate. We would appreciate receiving copies of anything you publish
about this software.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
I M P O R T A N T I N F O R M A T I O N
Dear Software User:
I want you to get the highest possible benefit from this software. If you
believe you received an incomplete, outdated or damaged disk, please
contact me.
Rosemary K. West
R.K. West Consulting
P.O. Box 8059
Mission Hills, CA 91346
For additional help, see "Support Information" below.
If for any reason you are unable to reach me at the above address, please
contact me through the Association of Shareware Professionals, 545 Grover
Rd., Muskegon MI 49442-9427, or send a Compuserve Mail message to ASP
Ombudsman 70007,3536.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
S O F T W A R E L I C E N S E I N F O R M A T I O N
This file contains important license information regarding the use of the
subject software. This information applies to individual users who wish to
evaluate or use the software, or to pass copies out to friends and
associates.
Disk Vendors and Distributors, BBS Sysops, User Groups, Computer Clubs,
Subscription Services, Disk-of-the-Month Clubs, etc., should refer to the
VENDOR.DOC file for complete information relating to them. If you charge a
fee or compensation of any kind in connection with providing copies of
software, you are a Disk Vendor.
User License:
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
This software is NOT a public domain program. It is Copyright by Rosemary
K. West as indicated on the program and its documentation.
This software and accompanying documentation are protected by United States
Copyright law and also by International Treaty provisions. Any use of this
software in violation of Copyright law or the terms of this limited license
will be prosecuted to the best of our ability. The conditions under which
you may copy this software and documentation are clearly outlined below
under "Limited Distribution License".
Licensee shall not use, copy, rent, lease, sell, modify, decompile,
disassemble, otherwise reverse engineer, or transfer the licensed program
except as provided in this agreement. Any such unauthorized use shall
result in immediate and automatic termination of this license.
All rights not expressly granted here are reserved to R.K. West Consulting.
Limited Distribution License:
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
As the copyright holder of the software, Rosemary West dba R.K. West
Consulting authorizes distribution by individuals only in accordance with
the following restrictions.
(Disk Vendors and Distributors, BBS Sysops, User Groups, Computer Clubs,
Subscription Services, Disk-of-the-Month Clubs, etc., should refer to the
VENDOR.DOC file for complete information relating to them.)
Individuals are hereby granted permission by R.K. West Consulting to copy
the software diskette for their own personal use or for the personal use of
other individuals, ONLY when the following conditions are met.
The software package is defined as containing all the material listed in
the PACKING.LST text file. The software package, including all related
program files and documentation files, CANNOT be modified in any way and
must be distributed as a complete package, without exception. If any files
listed in the PACKING.LST text file, or the PACKING.LST file itself, are
missing, then the package is not complete and distribution is forbidden.
Please contact us to obtain a complete package suitable for distribution.
No price or other compensation may be charged for the software package. If
you charge ANY kind of fee for materials or services when you make or
distribute copies of the package, you are considered a disk vendor and must
comply with the terms outlined in VENDOR.DOC.
The software package CANNOT be sold as part of some other inclusive
package. Nor can it be included in any commercial software packaging offer,
without a written agreement from R.K. West Consulting.
The PRINTED User's Guide may not be reproduced in whole or in part, using
any means, without explicit written permission from R.K. West Consulting.
No part of the disk-based documentation may be distributed in PRINTED
(hardcopy) form.
The software package cannot be "rented" or "leased" to others.
You may not use, copy, rent, lease, sell, modify, decompile, disassemble,
otherwise reverse engineer, or transfer the licensed program except as
provided in this agreement. Any such unauthorized use shall result in
immediate and automatic termination of this license.
U.S. Government Information: Use, duplication, or disclosure by the U.S.
Government of the computer software and documentation in this package shall
be subject to the restricted rights applicable to commercial computer
software as set forth in subdivision (b)(3)(ii) of the Rights in Technical
Data and Computer Software clause at 252.227-7013 (DFARS 52.227-7013). The
Contractor/manufacturer is R.K. West Consulting, P.O. Box 8059, Mission
Hills, CA 91346-8059.
All rights not expressly granted here are reserved to R.K. West Consulting.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
***************** IMPORTANT WARRANTY INFORMATION ****************
*** PLEASE READ THIS INFORMATION CAREFULLY ***
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
WARRANTY:
~~~~~~~~~
The software is provided AS IS. R.K. WEST CONSULTING MAKES NO WARRANTY OF
ANY KIND, EXPRESSED OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING WITHOUT LIMITATION, ANY
WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND/OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
R.K. WEST CONSULTING SPECIFICALLY DISCLAIMS ALL OTHER WARRANTIES, EXPRESS
OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO, ANY IMPLIED WARRANTY OF
MERCHANTABILITY AND/OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
GETTING STARTED
ALWAYS MAKE A BACKUP COPY of the original disk before you do anything. (See
the DISKCOPY command in your DOS manual.) Put the original in a safe place,
and use the copy as the master disk when you install the program.
Note that in all of the following examples, if your drive letters or
directory names are different, you can simply use the same command, but
with your actual drive letter and directory name. For example, we refer to
the floppy drives as drive A and drive B. If yours are really called drive
D and drive E, then use D and E instead of A and B. In our hard disk
example, the subdirectory is called WEST. But you can name it something
else. For example, if you name it GAMES, just use GAMES in the command
instead of WEST.
INSTALLING TO A FLOPPY DISK WHEN YOU HAVE TWO FLOPPY DRIVES: Put the master
disk in drive A. Put a new, formatted disk in drive B. Enter this command:
COPY A:*.* B:
You should see the file being copied to the disk in the B drive. When all
the files have been copied, the B disk is your working disk.
INSTALLING TO A FLOPPY DISK WHEN YOU HAVE ONE FLOPPY DRIVE: Put the master
disk in drive A. Have a new disk ready. Enter this command:
DISKCOPY A: B:
The computer will display messages telling you when to put the "source
disk" or the "target disk" into the drive. The "source disk" is your master
disk. The "target disk" is your new disk.
INSTALLING TO A HARD DISK: The first thing you need to do is create a
subdirectory on the hard disk. (If the subdirectory has already been
created, you don't have to create it now.) For example, if you decide to
name the subdirectory WEST, you would start at your C> prompt, and use the
following sequence of commands:
CD\
MD WEST
CD \WEST
Now put the master disk in the A drive and enter this command:
COPY A:*.*
You should see all the files being copied. When the copying is finished,
you are ready to run the program.
NEED MORE SPACE? If you are running programs on floppy disks you may not
have enough disk space for the data files created by the program. You can
remove the documentation files, which the program does not need, from your
working disk. However, these files contain important information which you
will need for reference, so do not delete them from your master disk. To
delete the documentation files, put the working disk in the A drive and
enter this command:
DEL A:*.DOC
PROGRAM FILES: Program files can be identified by the extension EXE or COM
after the file name. To run the program, simply type its name. For example,
if you have a program named TAROT.EXE, type TAROT and press <ENTER>.
DOCUMENTATION AND INSTRUCTIONS: Most of our instruction manuals are in
special program files which allow you to view the manual on screen or print
it. These files have the COM or the EXE extension, and have "DOC" somewhere
in the filename. Simply enter the appropriate command. For example, if you
have the program CURSES!, the instruction manual would be called
CURSEDOC.EXE. To view the manual, type CURSEDOC and press <ENTER>. You can
page through the document on screen, or print it by pressing <ALT><P>. For
a list of helpful commands, press <F1>.
Files which have the DOC or TXT extension are ASCII format files (also
called DOS Text files) which can be viewed or printed using DOS commands.
For example, if you have a typical setup, you can print a document called
CURSINFO.DOC using this command: TYPE CURSINFO.DOC > PRN
To view this file on screen, you would enter: TYPE CURSINFO.DOC | MORE
(Successful use of MORE assumes that the correct DOS files are in your
path. If this is not the case, you can simply use TYPE CURSINFO.DOC, but
the file may scroll up out of view.)
You can also view and print this kind of file with most word processors,
using "ASCII", "DOS Text" or "Non-document" format.
CHANGES AND UPDATES: Sometimes changes are made in a program after the
manual is completed. Information about such changes will appear on disk in
a text file called UPDATE.DOC. If this file appears on your disk, you
should read it to get the latest important information about the software.
NEW VERSIONS: Sometimes a new version of a program will ask permission to
update your data files. Do not answer "yes" unless you have already made a
backup copy of your data. Don't copy the backed-up data back into the
directory after the files have been updated. This backup is simply
insurance against data damage or loss. You should make backups regularly.
HELPFUL INFORMATION: Check your program disks for files named README.1ST or
UPDATE.DOC. You won't always find these files, but if you do they may
contain additional helpful information, including facts about
troubleshooting and software support.
BE SMART! Before installing new versions of any software, make backups of
all the old files. This protects you in case of an error during the
installation/update process. Remember that power surges, hardware failure,
and user errors can all lead to data loss or damage. Make backups of your
data on a regular basis. If you wonder how often you need to back up your
word processing documents, mailing lists, spreadsheets, etc., ask yourself,
"How many days worth of work can I afford to lose?" We recommend that you
use a system of three or more sets of backup disks which you rotate on a
daily basis. That way, if something unfortunate happens to one set of
backups, you will have another set available. A few minutes spent making
daily backups can save you hours of heartbreaking work trying to recreate
lost data.
BAD DISK? It seems that in hot weather we are more likely to get complaints
about "bad" or unreadable disks. Floppy disks are susceptible to heat,
moisture and magnetism. A disk that sits all day in a hot mailbox or truck
where temperatures exceed 100 degrees is likely to be damaged. Disks which
have been exposed to magnetism may become unreadable.
Before assuming a disk is bad, try it on another computer. It may be that
your computer's drive heads are dirty or slightly misaligned. Suspect this
if you often get disk error messages with different disks. An inexpensive
head cleaning kit may help solve the problem.
Sometimes the round disk gets trapped inside its square casing and
generates an error because it can't rotate freely. Remove the disk from the
drive and tap each of the four edges sharply on the surface of your desk.
This may loosen the disk. Try reading the disk again.
Norton Utilities and Mace Utilities both have features that can sometimes
revive unreadable disks. Any serious computer user should have one of these
or a similar utility package.
In any case, if we sent you an unreadable disk, we will be happy to replace
it with a fresh copy of the same program. If you received an unreadable
disk from a disk vendor, the vendor should replace it for you.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
S U P P O R T I N F O R M A T I O N
This software has been thoroughly tested, and complete instructions are
contained in the user's manual.
We do not charge any fee for this program, and therefore do not normally
offer free support. Nevertheless, we will respond to brief, mailed
inquiries, and will try to provide enough help to get you up and running,
or respond to error messages. (However, we reserve the right to terminate
contact with users who in our judgment are unreasonable or abusive, or who
have system problems which transcend the scope of this software.) We
appreciate receiving a self-addressed, stamped envelope with your inquiry.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
If you liked CURSES! please send us a self-addressed, stamped envelope to
receive a free catalog of unusual software.
Mail To: R.K. West Consulting
P.O. Box 8059
Mission Hills, CA 91346-8059
U.S.A.
Your Name: ________________________________________________
Address: __________________________________________________
__________________________________________________
Phone: __________________________________________________
DOS Version______ Do you have a hard disk?_____ If yes, what size?_______
Tell us where you found this program! _____________________________________
_____________________________________
_____________________________________
Important: If you purchased this disk from a rack, bin or shelf in a
retail store, grocery, airport, bookshop, etc., or found it on
CD-ROM, please tell us the company name or brand-name logo which
appeared on the package or disk label, and include any other
information which might identify the company that actually
produced the disk. Thank you!
________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________
What are your comments about this software? (Use other side if needed)