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-
- ATARI EXPLORER ONLINE MAGAZINE
-
- August 1, 1992 Volume 1, Number 10 Issue #92-10
-
- Published and Copyright (c)1992, Atari Computer Corporation
- 1972-1992 (20 Years Of Service)
-
-
- ~ Editor In-Chief......................................Ron Kovacs
- ~ Contributing Editor...................................Ed Krimen
- ~ Contributing Writer...................................Bob Smith
- ~ AtariUser Magazine Editor.............................John Nagy
- ~ Atari Corporation....................................Bob Brodie
-
-
-
- | | | TABLE OF CONTENTS | | |
-
-
- ||| The Publishers Workstation..............Bob Brodie
- Atari Update on Falcon and Atari specifically!
-
- ||| Z*Net Newswire.....................................
- Latest Industry Update
-
- ||| 4th Annual MIST Atarifest Report.....Dr. Paul Keith
- Report on last week's User Group Show!
-
- ||| Line Noise................................Ed Krimen
- Formerly Perusing GEnie - New Name, Same Content!
-
- ||| The Wacky World Of ST Gaming...........Eric Bitton
- Part 2 of a 2 Part Series
-
- ||| Run That By Me, Again!....................Bob Smith
- Humor material
-
- ||| Run A Better BBS.........................Regen Weed
- From the Z*Net Archives!
-
- ||| GEnie News Update.............................GEnie
- RT news from all over GEnie
-
- ||| Connecticut Atarifest Update..........Press Release
- Upgrades to be performed at the show!
-
- ||| News From The Disktop..................Ron Albright
- Z*Net PC second runner up!
-
- ||| 38400 Baud For Your HST................Erno Meffert
- Upgrade your modem, PIC file attached to issue!
-
- ||| Hints and Tips.....................................
- Articles from the Z*Net Archives
-
- ||| Supporting Shareware................Terry Schrieber
- Help support shareware!!
-
-
-
- | | | THE PUBLISHERS WORKSTATION
- | | | By Bob Brodie
- | | | ----------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
- Welcome Mike and Darren!!!
- ==========================
-
- We're completing our first week in Sunnyvale with Darren Meer and Mike
- Lindsey at the helm of Atari Explorer. Darren is finding his way around
- Sunnyvale, and Atari, while Mike has been busy in Oregon finishing up
- some details on Atari Advantage. Thanks to all of you that have taken
- the time to send along your message of greeting to Darren and Mike, I
- know that they appreciate your welcome.
-
- John Jainschigg has completed the last issue of Atari Explorer under his
- direction. Many of you have expressed concern about the direction that
- Explorer will take without the guidance of John's able hand. I trust
- that our selection of qualified ATARI editors in Darren Meer and Mike
- Lindsey will go far to allay your concerns. We were attracted to
- Lindsey and Meer because of their consistent quality that they have
- brought to all of their publications, from Atari Advantage to ST
- Informer. Our executives insisted that we obtain people that are well
- versed in our platform, and Darren and Mike fill that bill admirably.
- We're very excited to have them on the team at Atari. As they get
- settled in, they will also be taking over the publishers role of Atari
- Explorer Online as well.
-
- Our plans at Atari Explorer Online continue to be something of a "farm"
- for writers to brought on board in the printed edition. And we're
- looking for writers! Our writers are not compensated by cash, but by
- opportunities to review hardware and software, and free online time on
- the major networks. Presently, I've allocated three internal accounts
- to utilitized by staff writers for Atari Explorer Online. These
- accounts are totally free, with no charges at all. You can even be
- online during prime time at no charge! If you're interested, please
- contact Ron Kovacs, Editor-in-Chief of Atari Explorer Online Magazine.
- Please cc: me on the letter as well. Naturally, any material that does
- appear in the printed version of Atari Explorer will be reimbursed at
- competitive rates. This is a great opportunity for the budding writers
- in the Atari Community to begin making a higher profile appearance than
- they ever had before. We look forward to hearing from *YOU* !!!
-
- More Winds of Change
- =====================
-
- Switching to a corporate viewpoint, we're continuing our efforts at
- "right sizing" Atari Corp. Atari Canada is evolving into a sales
- office, still headed up by Geoff Earle. All support services will be
- handled out of Sunnyvale, as we move to something of an Atari North
- America. Current plans call for the Atari Canada BBS to be continued,
- under the supervision of yours truly, Bob Brodie. I'm looking at the
- BBS now in use in Canada and evaluating how it's being used. If you
- have some suggestions for improvements, please drop me a note and share
- your thoughts with me about it!
-
- We've completed our port of UNIX to our platform as well. Looking
- toward the marketing of the product, present impressions are that we
- will have a great text based UNIX to offer to students when Atari System
- V is set up on the Falcon 030. But for the full power of UNIX, with a
- complete windowing environment, we'd prefer to wait for a 68040 based
- machine. Until those products are ready, we're going to table our plans
- for UNIX. Since the port is done, and we're in a holding pattern on
- UNIX, most of the remaining UNIX staff is no longer with the company.
- Project manager Art Pruzynski has moved into a US Sales position, and is
- working closely with James Grunke now. Art brings years of computer
- sales experience to this position, and his expertise will allow James to
- return his focus to his primary strength, the music market. Art will
- also be working closely with yours truly, and I'll be making all the
- appropriate introductions to bring him up to speed on current events in
- TOS side of our business.
-
- National Sales Manager Mike Groh is also no longer with Atari. Mike's
- departure followed his recent trip through the southeast of the US,
- including an appearance at the Blue Ridge Atarifest in Asheville, North
- Carolina. While Mike may no longer work for our company, he still has
- the heart of an Atarian. While he was cleaning out his office, among
- the first things he secured was his copies of Calamus and Tracker/ST.
- "Gotta have it!" says Mike! Sunnyvale employees gathered together on
- Friday night to give Mike a good send off at a local jazz club in the
- Silicon Valley. Always a bright spot at any gathering of Atarians,
- Mike's unique perspective will be missed in Sunnyvale. Best wishes in
- the future, Mike!
-
- "Right sizing" efforts are being applied in other areas as well. We're
- taking a much smaller group to Germany for the Atari Messe, and may
- cancel or modify some other travel plans as well. Every effort is
- being made to ensure that all of our efforts are cost effective, and
- allow us to visit as many regions as possible. I suspect that we will
- not be returning to the same region more than once this year, though.
- We'll keep you posted on the status of this important factor.
-
- Falcon 030 update
- =================
-
- As predicted earlier in the year, the public unveiling of the Falcon 030
- will be at the Atari Messe in Duesseldorf, Germany in late August.
- We'll be releasing the specifications on this exciting new unit BEFORE
- the show, though. Sam Tramiel has directed me to set up a couple of
- online conferences for him to meet the public to share this information
- with our anxious userbase. While plans are not concrete yet, we'll be
- sure to pass along the date of the conferences as soon as they have been
- determined. I expect that to happen toward the end of next week.
-
- We have a number of developer units out in the field already, and the
- reports from our registered developers have been very exciting! There
- will be a host of applications primed to take advantage of the
- capabilities of the Falcon 030! Look for some of these to be unveiled at
- the Atari Messe as well!!
-
- We're also on target for our visit to the Boston Computer Society as
- well, where we'll have the first public showing of the Falcon 030 in
- North America. Set for September 23, at a general meeting of the Boston
- Computer Society, this event will signal the start of the Falcon roll
- out in the US. Naturally, we'll report on the event fully in Atari
- Explorer Online. I'm sure those NOT in the New England area will be
- very interested in hearing how the public receives this exciting
- product! According to the Boston Computer Society, they are expecting
- over 1,000 people for this meeting. Since the hall holds just under 700
- people, they are making plans to have monitors in adjoining rooms for
- the rest of the attendees.
-
- A New Network!
- ==============
-
- Bill Scull, sysop of The Twilight Zone BBS (407-831-1613) in Florida has
- launched a new BBS network, called AtariNet. Based on the well known
- FidoNet standard, the network is up and running now. Give Bill a holler
- if your interested in getting in on the ground floor of an up and coming
- network! Any BBS capable of handling the FIDO technology is welcome! A
- longtime sysop, Bill is well equipped to help you get your system up and
- running. I've personally spent many hours on the phone with Bill
- discussing the FNET. He's a wealth of information on that front, too.
- He can also be reached via the FNET at Node #304.
-
- Don't forget how to contact us!
- ===============================
-
- Here's how to get a hold of me if you'd like to share your insights
- with me:
-
- Atari Corporation
- 1196 Borregas Ave.
- Sunnyvale, CA 94089-1302
-
- voice: 408-745-2052
- fax: 408-745-2088
- GEnie: BOB-BRODIE
- Delphi: BOBBRO
- FNET: Node 319 or Node 706
- CIS: 70007,3240
-
- Thanks for reading Atari Explorer Online!!
-
-
-
- | | | Z*NET NEWSWIRE
- | | | Latest Industry Update
- | | | ----------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
- 25000th FILE UPLOADED
- The GEnie ST RT recently received File Number 25,000.
-
-
- ATARI ADVANTAGE SOLD
- Atari Advantage was sold to Castle Publishing in Texas. As we reported
- last week, the former editors were hired as editors for the Atari in-
- house publication, Atari Explorer Magazine and gave up the Advantage
- publication. For more information see the Publishers Workstation column
- in this edition of Atari Explorer Online.
-
-
- COPYRIGHT AGENCY TO COMBAT PIRACY
- IPS/Moscow Times - Russia's new copyright agency pledged last week to
- combat video, audio and software piracy as control over intellectual
- property in Russia continues to weaken in a chaotic market. The RAIS,
- the country's first true copyright organization, has been granted
- official status by the government and plans to enforce new copyright
- legislation. This means Russia is ready to sign the 106 year-old "Bern
- Convention," an international agreement on protecting intellectual
- property which czarist Russia or the Soviet Union had never signed.
- Under RAIS guidelines, Russia's print and broadcast media will be
- required for the first time to obtain permission and pay for material.
- In addition, copyright protection after an author's death will extend
- from 25 to 50 years. As for software, the Russian parliament adopted a
- bill last month to outlaw piracy.
-
-
- CIS OFFER
- By tapping into Adnet Online, CompuServe members can browse job
- opportunities advertised by hundreds of Fortune 1000 companies. Members
- select from more than two dozen categories and then narrow their search
- by geographic location. Job listings are available for specific
- regions of the United States, as well as for Canada and countries
- throughout the world. The Adnet database is updated weekly, and
- advertisements generally run for two weeks. CompuServe members
- contact employers directly, usually by sending resumes by postal mail
- or facsimile. CompuServe members have unlimited access to Adnet Online.
- Adnet is one of more than 30 basic services offered to CompuServe
- members for the flat monthly fee of $7.95. Members choosing to access
- CompuServe's 1,700 other service areas pay $12.80 per hour when using a
- 1,200 or 2,400 bits per second modem. For more information about
- CompuServe or a free introductory membership with a $15 usage credit,
- call 800-848-8199 and ask for representative 377.
-
-
-
-
- | | | 4TH ANNUAL MIST ATARIFEST SHOW REPORT
- | | | By Dr. Paul Keith, Z*Net News Service Correspondent
- | | | ----------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
- Close to 500 Atarians crammed into the Castleton Conference Center on
- July 25, 1992. This was the fourth annual Mid Indiana ST Atarifest, and
- the second year in a row it was held in Indianapolis. I didn't have as
- much time to spend at MIST as I would have liked to, so this will not be
- as detailed as I would have liked. My apologies to anyone that I may
- have overlooked in this report.
-
- The happy throng that attended the MIST Show was decidedly upbeat, with
- a strong core of user group people from all over the midwest in
- attendance. Vendors reported outstanding sales! D.A. Brumleve was
- heard to say that she had recouped her expenses in the first five
- minutes of the show! All in all, most developers were reporting
- outstanding sales! Vendors exhibiting at the show included WizWorks!,
- Dr. Bobware, Clear Thinking Software, CodeHead Technologies, D.A.
- Brumleve, Ditek International, Electronic Spinster Graphics, ICD, DMC
- Publishing, It's Not A Game Machine (INAGM), Mars Merchandising, Maxwell
- CPU, MegaType, Missionware, MS Designs, Rising Star Computers, and Atari
- Corp.
-
- This years show featured a Lynx tournament, and ample trading tables for
- the user groups attending the show. Show organizers were happily
- reporting attendance from Pennsylvania, Texas, Wisconsin, Alabama, and
- many other states. As other shows have done lately, the seminar
- schedule was set to a minimum, with only ONE presentation being given
- during the show. Atari's Bob Brodie gave the lone presentation at the
- conclusion of the day. MIST Show organizers indicated that they would
- have loved to had more, but this years event had less space available
- than they'd had in the past, effectively wiping out the conference
- space.
-
- The halls of the conference center were packed most of the day, as show
- goers enjoyed the presence of the vendors to the utmost. Joining Bob
- Brodie in the Atari booth was GEnie Sysop Jeff Williams. Bob and Jeff
- were both decked out in non-matching GEnie shirts, and spent their time
- explaining the many advantages of being online for less!
-
- Bob laughingly reported that he should have had a button made up saying
- "Ask me about the Falcon Computer...NEXT MONTH!" It's clear that the
- userbase is VERY anxious to see the Falcon, and many users are looking
- to dispell the rumors about the Falcon and replace the rumors with
- FACTS! Bob didn't do much to help with that, though. He pretty much
- held tight with the information that has been stated before, "a 68030
- based system, with DSP, more color than you can see, more sound than you
- can hear, in a 1040 case! You'll want more than one!!!" He also
- indicated that TT030's were in excellent supply now. The TT030 may also
- be up for a price reduction to increase it's competitiveness against the
- DOS clones.
-
- Bob did promise that he would be setting dates for online conferences
- with Sam Tramiel on GEnie and Delphi in the very near future. This
- promises to be a memorable evening, one that all Atarians online should
- be sure to take advantage of!! Be sure to watch for the announcements
- online and from the Z*Net News Service!
-
- Jeff handled a drawing, as GEnie gave out free online time to lucky
- winners at the show. Mario Perdue was staffing the Ditek booth,
- showing off DynaCadd on a TT030 running MultiTOS. MultiTOS continues to
- evolve since the first North American showing at ACE '92 in Toronto.
- Most of the show goers asking about MultiTOS came away with big smiles
- on their faces. Looks like Atari has another major upgrade to TOS ready
- to launch.
-
- ICD was still clearing out their supplies of 8 bit goodies, better
- get'em while you can, gang! ACTION! cartridge, Basic XE, Basic XL, and
- other OSS favorites are up for grabs at clearance prices! If you're
- still using your eight bit, you should be sure to have ALL of these
- priceless programs!
-
- Rising Star was staffed by Doug Hodson and Ginger. They indicated that
- software sales had been terrific at the show. Rising Star carries a
- complete line of productivity and game titles for the ST from every
- major developer.
-
- Branch Always Software, featured company president Darek Mihocka, who as
- usual, arrived fashionably late for the show. Darek was showing
- GEMULATOR, his emulator for the ST and shooting more video tape for his
- GEMULATOR video. The GEMULATOR video is just $5. Availability is Real
- Soon Now.
-
- John Eidsvoog from CodeHead Technologies was showing off Calligrapher to
- appreciative crowds. The TOS Extension Card continues to be a popular
- show item at these events. Reports were that CodeHead sold out of
- everything that they brought to the show.
-
- D.A. Brumleve was showing off her software to empower young learners
- with her typical gusto. Dorothy reported that this was one of the best
- shows ever for her.
-
- User groups from across the midwest were selling used hardware and
- software in the center of the aisle, as well as encouraging people to
- join their group. Without a doubt, user group support is the backbone
- of the Atari Community. User groups appearing at the show included
- ASCII, EAUG, CUSTUG, STAR, and LCACE. Show organizers had printed up
- T-Shirts for sale that proclaimed "Support? We don't need no stinking
- support! Indy Atarifest '92.
-
- Like I stated when I began this report, I really wish I had MORE time
- available to soak up all the vendors and events. However, an excellent
- time was had by all and next year we hear that there will be a multi-
- platform event at MIST. So stay tuned!!
-
- For the lastest Atari News and Computer industry updates, stay tuned to
- the Z*Net Newswire from the Z*Net News Service. Z*Net PC a third runner
- up in the 1992 Quill Awards of the DPA.
-
-
-
-
- | | | LINE NOISE
- | | | Compiled by Ed Krimen
- | | | ----------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
- (Editors Note: We have changed the TITLE of Ed's column without his
- knowledge! :-) )
-
-
- Some messages may have been edited for content, correct spelling, and
- grammar.
-
-
- TOS 2.06: WHO NEEDS IT!?!
- -------------------------
- -=> In the "Atari Corporation Online" category (14)
- -=> from the "TOS Utilities from Atari" topic (32)
-
- Message 55 Sat Jul 25, 1992
- T.GIRSCH [T.J.] at 03:40 EDT
-
- Mark -
-
- Why do I need TOS 2.06? I've personally never had the problem, and I
- haven't seen a TOS desktop in almost a year. NeoDesk comes up
- automatically at boot, and as far as I'm aware, there's nothing TOS 2.06
- does that NeoDesk does not.
-
- Of course, I could be wrong, it happens all the time. 8^)
-
- -TJ
- ----------
- Message 56 Sat Jul 25, 1992
- M.FARMER2 [Mark Farmer] at 06:50 EDT
-
- Well I use Hotwire myself so I know what your saying. I just had to
- many problems with 1.06 TOS running programs.
- ----------
- Message 59 Sat Jul 25, 1992
- S.SANDERS2 [SDS] at 16:01 EDT
-
- T.GIRSCH:
-
- Aside from bug fixes and the new desktop, one thing many users forget
- about is features that are added to the OS for programmers to enhance
- their applications. My best advice is to upgrade. It ends up helping
- everybody.
-
- If you know anything about MS Windows, then you'll know that when
- version 3.1 came out you practically _had_ to upgrade from 3.0.
- Microsoft added a lot of new features to the OS and developers on that
- platform usually abandon older versions as soon as new ones come out.
- All users end up benefiting because developers don't have to worry about
- backward compatibility.
-
- So what's your point... Right now, Atari developers have to put an
- enormous amount of thought and effort into making sure their programs
- work with the 10- 15 TOS versions still in use. Many new features which
- exist in newer versions of TOS _are not_ taken advantage of because they
- wouldn't work on many machines. The more users that upgrade, the less
- we'll have to plan on TOS 1.0 users with single-sided floppies and 512k
- of RAM.
-
- In the future many of my company's products will only run on TOS 1.4 and
- greater and we will be developing 'MultiTOS only' applications.
- Hopefully my company and others will release applications of a quality
- high enough to justify most users to upgrade so applications as a whole
- can be of better quality.
-
- -Scott @ SDS
- Member IAAD
- ----------
- Message 64 Wed Jul 29, 1992
- GRIBNIF [Dan] at 17:06 EDT
-
- TOS 2.06 is really a lot like 1.4. About the only things it has
- added (besides the new desktop) are cookie jar support, a handful of new
- AES calls, and support for other CPU's and new hardware (like the FPU,
- SCC serial ports, and HD floppy drive.)
-
- The differences between 1.4 and 2.06 at the GEMDOS (the part of the
- operating system that does file i/o) level are minuscule. However, if
- you still have TOS 1.0 or 1.2, then I do strongly suggest going to 1.4
- or 2.06 because there were some major changes made in this area for 1.4.
-
- Of course, NeoDesk will run no matter what TOS version you have, and it,
- as always, is far superior to Atari's desktop. <grin>
-
- Dan
- ======================================
-
-
- POOF!! NO MORE DEALERS!
- ------------------------
- -=> In the "Atari Corporation Online" category (14)
- -=> from the "General Help or Questions" topic (5)
-
- Message 55 Tue Jul 28, 1992
- J.MEEHAN3 [>> Joe M << ] at 06:31 EDT
-
- Have you noticed it is becoming more difficult to find an Atari dealer?
- Well, I have news for you, buddy. It's getting more difficult to find
- any dealer.
-
- The other day I went looking for some chips to extend the memory in my
- HP Laser Jet printer. I went to three DOS stores that I had been at
- before. Each was closed, or totally gone (like replaced by a Pizza
- shop). It seems there is a lot of hard times these days. I had the
- same experience on the phone when I tried to find the chips and in two
- other states. One store I stopped at was in its last day of going out
- of business sale.
-
- BTW the first place I found chips was at Team Computers in Detroit, they
- are an Atari dealer. <grin>
-
- >> Joe Meehan <<
- ----------
- Message 56 Tue Jul 28, 1992
- D.A.BRUMLEVE [kidprgs] at 11:15 EDT
-
- You know, Joe, I think you are right. Our local paper had an article in
- the business section last month in which the demise of three independent
- clone stores was lamented. I had relied on one of these stores for my
- supply of power cords (where do those things go?) and inkjet cartridges.
- ======================================
-
-
- 1.44M HIGH DENSITY UPGRADES
- ---------------------------
- -=> In the "Atari Corporation Online" category (14)
- -=> from the "High Density Drives / AJAX chip" topic (36)
-
- Message 32 Thu Jul 23, 1992
- M.DRYSDALE [Drys] at 06:01 EDT
-
- For those of you just joined the discussion......
-
- EVERY STe (again STe, yes MEGA STe too) is ready for TOS 2.06. Just
- remove the old TOS and plug in the new chips. No boards or
- modifications are needed. ALL STs can use the Ajax. It is the
- replacement for the WD1772 and is in all newly manufactured STs.
-
- EVERY MEGA STe and TT is ready for a 1.44 (or 2.88) floppy drive.
- Install TOS 2.06 or 3.06 (TOS 2.05 and 3.05 DO NOT work), the Ajax chip,
- a 1.44 (or 2.88) mech, and flip dip switch #7. Yes it will still read,
- write, format, 360K (single-sided) and 720K (double-sided) disks as well
- as other perverse and extended format disks (IBM, SPECTRE, Mac, Etc).
-
- If you have an ST (the older stuff) or STe, adding a 1.44 floppy will be
- much more complex, AND MAY NOT BE POSSIBLE AT ALL. First try the OPI
- [Omnimon Peripherals, Inc.] drive product. Or, do all of the above for
- the MSTe, hand-wire a switch, and wire for a switchable 8/16MHz signal
- for the drive. Of course if you try to read/write a disk with the
- switch in the wrong position....fffftt. Best bet: buy a MEGA STe.
-
- Owners of older STs (NOT STe's) who want TOS 2.06, go directly to
- Codehead (do not pass GO) and get the TEC board.
-
- Mike Drysdale, TEAM COMPUTERS
-
- If you want to have some fun right now, MEGA STe owners ONLY, flip dip
- switch #7 (it's under the hard drive) and go to format.
- ======================================
-
-
- DOOMSDAY FOR DEC?
- -----------------
- -=> In the "Flaming - Debating - Discussions - Rumors" category (18)
- -=> from the "Atari 'Falcon' Project" topic (20)
-
- Message 98 Thu Jul 23, 1992
- J.ALLEN27 [FAST TECH] at 23:30 EDT
-
- If it makes you feel better, Atari is not the only company to be blind
- to great opportunities and market shifts, just look at Wang and DEC.
- Hell, DEC was a $12 BILLION company, and they've blown it as bad or
- worse than Atari ever did. I know a lot of people around here who doubt
- DEC will survive.
- ----------
- Message 99 Fri Jul 24, 1992
- M.PERDUE [Mario] at 01:41 EDT
-
- Jim,
-
- I'll bet DEC wishes they had the Lynx to fall back on, huh? :^)
- ======================================
-
-
-
- OUCH! POWER SURGES
- -------------------
- (Home Office/Small Business Roundtable)
- -=> In the "Office Technology, Equipment, and Supplies" category (5)
- -=> from the "Power Protection Equipment" topic (29)
-
- Message 6 Mon Jul 20, 1992
- K.PHILLIPS4 [Ken P] at 22:19 EDT
-
- Lighting strikes are but one way power surges can occur. They can (and
- do) occur every time....
-
- ...the electric company opens and closes a switch to reroute power off
- lines that are being serviced.
-
- ...a car or truck hits a pole with enough force to cause a 'phase-out'
- (two lines touch).
-
- ...a cat or a mouse scratches itself on two poles in a switch box or a
- transformer housing.
-
- Ken
- ----------
- Message 7 Mon Jul 20, 1992
- NASS [Joni] at 23:05 EDT
-
- I live here in Upstate New York. Last summer we lost our fax to
- lightning that came in via the phone line. It fried it so bad it needed
- to be sent back to the company for repair. Luckily it only cost us
- $134. So... now, if a storm is moving toward us, I just unplug the
- computers, the word processor, and the fax -- just to be sure, even
- though I have a line conditioner on one of the computers.
-
- = Joni =
- ----------
- Message 8 Tue Jul 21, 1992
- T.DUCHESNEAU [Tom] at 06:06 EDT
-
- Power surges are caused by many other things besides lightning. I just
- received the latest issue of the American Power Conversion (APC)
- newsletter. It had a very interesting article detailing the wild power
- fluctuations during a series of California earthquakes back in April.
- The data was captured by APC Power chute software from an APC SmartUPS.
- The disruptions went on for several days.
-
- ...Tom
- ----------
- Message 9 Tue Jul 21, 1992
- T.DUCHESNEAU [Tom] at 06:37 EDT
-
- Joni, you bring up a good point. All electrical connections with the
- outside world should be surge protected. Phone lines are a notorious
- source of surge damage because people forget about them. Most
- manufacturers of surge protection equipment make some models with phone
- surge built in.
-
- This is especially important on a network as everything is connected
- together and one surge can damage every machine on your network. I have
- a customer in Vermont who unplugged every machine on the network because
- of a bad thunderstorm, but forgot the ground on the network cable. The
- file server disk and disk controller, plus two or three network cards
- were damaged.
-
- ...Tom
- ----------
- Message 10 Tue Jul 21, 1992
- TELASKA [Paul] at 09:38 EDT
-
- The largest, most comprehensive power quality study in history is now
- underway; it's a little more than half way through its five year run,
- involving sampling points taken at random locations throughout North
- America. The partial results now available already make it very clear
- that the vast majority of power aberrations originate WITHIN THE USERS'
- PREMISES. As equipment becomes more sophisticated (switch-mode power
- supplies, SCR dimmers, etc.), it tends to throw unwanted products back
- onto the power line where they can then be picked up by nearby users.
- This becomes especially critical in large office buildings where the
- density of high-tech equipment can be very high indeed.
-
- Of course, not all of these aberrations are necessarily going to be
- damaging to equipment. And the damage they do will probably be much
- less dramatic and noticeable (at least immediately) than a lightning
- strike! However, that makes them all the more insidious, doesn't it.
- A little hit here, a little nudge there, and after a while your hard
- drive goes south. You think maybe it was "just time for the ol' drive
- to go on to Hard Drive Heaven", but the truth is, many of those
- "natural" equipment failures are just the result of accumulated trauma
- from bad power. Very hard to document on a case by case basis, but very
- easy to see statistically when comparing protected vs. non-protected
- equipment.
-
- -=[ Paul ]=-
- ======================================
-
-
-
-
- | | | THE WACKY WORLD OF ST GAMING - PART 2/2
- | | | By Eric Bitton
- | | | ----------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
- The following article is reprinted in Atari Explorer Online by
- permission of AtariUser magazine. It MAY NOT be further reprinted
- without specific permission of AtariUser. AtariUser is a monthly Atari
- magazine, available by subscription by calling (818) 332-0372.
-
- ---
- Mindscape UK:
- This company doesn't actually design anything, they just do marketing
- and distribution.
-
- Current stuff: Blue Max: Aces Of The Great War (horrible)
- Captain Planet (ack!)
- Captive (cool futuristic Dungeon Master)
- Knightmare (improved Captive interface, fantasy setting),
- Legend (fantasy RPG by the designer of Bloodwych).
-
- In the works: Captive II, Moonstones (fantasy RPG)
- Skid Marks (3-D racing)
- Ultima VI: The False Prophet.
- ---
-
- Mirrorsoft UK:
- This company is out of business. It belonged to Robert Maxwell's Mirror
- Group and crumbled along with the rest of his financial empire. Acclaim
- stepped in and bought whatever was left. This is bound to annoy Ocean,
- since they relied greatly on games licensed from Acclaim to make their
- money, and Acclaim wants to go onto computer software in addition to
- console cartridges. Things will get particularly sticky from here, so
- pay attention. Here's what's still floating around under the Mirrorsoft
- label:
-
- Flight Of The Intruder
- Falcon: The Classic Collection (Falcon plus mission disks 1 and 2)
- Wolfpack (WWII submarine)
-
- Under the Imageworks label:
- First Samurai
- Mega lo Mania
- Teenage Mutant Hero Turtles: The Arcade Game (the British government
- didn't like the connotations of the word "ninja", so it's "hero"
- instead).
-
- Under the Mirror Image budget label:
- Austerlitz
- Bloodwych
- Carrier Command
- Defender Of The Crown
- Federation Of Free Traders
- King Of Chicago
- Onslaught
- Rocket Ranger
- RVF Honda
- Speedball
- Starglider II
- Strike Force Harrier
- 3D Pool
- TV Sports Football
- Xenon II: Megablast.
-
- Games that were in development for Mirrorsoft and were grabbed by other
- companies:
-
- Cannon Fodder (now under Virgin UK)
- Fire And Ice (Renegade UK)
- Legend (Mindscape UK)
- Lure Of The Temptress (Virgin UK)
-
- Games that are still in development limbo:
- Alien 3
- Battle Of Britain Jubilee (Their Finest Hour with real 3D polygons, from
- Rowan "Falcon" Software)
- Bill Elliott's NASCAR Challenge
- Blade Warrior (that one looked neat)
- Drop Soldier
- Duster
- Mega lo Mania II.
- ---
-
-
- Novagen UK:
- This company has often been compared to a glacier because, 1) they've
- been around forever and, 2) they move very slowly. Some of you 8-bit
- users are bound to remember Encounter and Mercenary, sold by good old
- Datasoft way back when. Well, both of those made it to the ST, and a
- few sequels too! Damocles is in fact Mercenary, redone with 3-D
- polygons and a whole solar system to play around in. Backlash is an
- Encounter style tank shoot'em'up but without those big columns to avoid.
- The newest release is Mercenary III: The Dion Crisis. No more flying
- around recklessly in this one, you have to use the mass transit systems
- (cabs, buses, commuter ships, spaceships, etc...) and you can interact
- with people, sort of. Interesting. In the works: Paul Woakes (the
- boss) only knows...
- ---
-
-
- Ocean UK:
- This is your basic big-time, conversion-releasing, license-grabbing,
- behemoth of a software company. They spend big bucks on stuff like The
- Simpsons, Smash TV, The Addams Family, Terminator 2, the Robocops,
- Darkman, and sometimes, the games are actually playable. Now that their
- main source of licenses, Acclaim, has grabbed the wreckage of
- Mirrorsoft, Ocean is going to be in a bit of a bind. Heaven forbid they
- should actually release original games (he said, tongue firmly planted
- in cheek). Anyway, currently out:
-
- The Addams Family (platform)
- Epic (Battlestar Galactica all over again)
- Ninja Collection (Double Dragon, Dragon Ninja, and Shadow Warriors)
- Parasol Stars (Bubble Bobble part 3)
- The Rainbow Collection (contains Bubble-Bobble, Rainbow Islands, and The
- New Zealand Story)
- Robocop 3 (in 3-D)
- The Simpsons: Bart Versus The Space Mutants
- Smash TV
- Space Gun
- Terminator 2: Judgement Day
- 2-Hot 2-Handle (Shadow Warriors Golden Axe, Total Recall, and Ivan
- 'Ironman' Stewart's Super Off Road)
- WWF Wrestlemania.
-
- In the works:
- Billy The Kid
- Push-Over (platform)
- Retaliator II (flight simulator)
- SimEarth (from Maxis)
- Snow Bros
- Wizkid (sequel to Wizball).
-
- Ocean's budget label is called The Hit Squad.
- ---
-
-
- Oxford Softworks UK:
- This company specializes in classic board games. Out now:
- Intelligent Strategy Games (you get chess, bridge, go, backgammon, and
- draughts, which is checkers), works in color and monochrome.
-
- In the works: Omar Sharif's Bridge.
- ---
-
-
- Palace UK:
- Another mixed bag kind of company. Silmarils used to hang out here but
- they now have their own company, Daze Marketing UK. Palace is better
- known for Barbarian, a game that was banned in Germany because of its
- violence: you could decapitate your opponent. Epyx released that game
- as Death Sword. Out now:
-
- Boston Bomb Club (Simarils)
- Crystals Of Arborea (Silmarils)
- Demoniak (text adventure with a few pictures)
- Hot Rubber (UK version of Grand Prix 500 II)
- Metal Mutant (Silmarils)
- Sliders (soccer meets Marble Madness)
- Swap (puzzler).
-
- In the works:
- Complex
- Hostile Breed
- Super Barbarian (sequel to Barbarian and Barbarian II).
- ---
-
-
- Pocket Power UK:
- Super cheap game re-issues in teeny packaging. Most of the games were
- designed by Logotron, now defunct. Out now:
-
- Archipelagos
- Bad Company
- Beyond The Ice Palace
- Deflektor
- Eye Of Horus
- Quadralien
- Starblaze
- Stargoose
- StarRay
- ---
-
-
- Rainbow Arts (Germany):
- Interesting stuff here:
- Logical (puzzler)
- Masterblazer (an ST conversion of Lucasfilm's legendary Ballblazer)
- Turrican II: The Final Fight (killer platform shoot'em'up).
-
- In the works:
- Centerbase (futuristic trade and strategy game)
- Fate: Gates Of Dawn (fantasy RPG)
- Mad TV
- M.U.D.S. (Mean Ugly Dirty Sport)
- Rescue On Fractalus (ST version of the classic Lucasfilm fractals-using
- flight simulator/shoot'em'up)
- Rotator (overhead view tank shoot'em'up)
- Transatlantic (shipping simulation)
- ---
-
-
- Renegade UK:
- Four months before the fateful crash of Mirrorsoft, the Bitmap Brothers
- decided to leave Imageworks and start their own company. Pretty lucky
- guys, I would say! Aside from Bitmap Brothers designs, Renegade has
- also rescued Graftgold's Fire And Ice from the Mirrorsoft wreckage. Out
- now:
-
- Cadaver: The Pay Off (scenario disk for Cadaver)
- Gods (platform game)
- Magic Pockets (a cutesy version of Gods)
-
- In the works:
- Bitmap Brothers Volume 1 (Xenon, Cadaver, and Speedball 2)
- Bitmap Brothers Volume 2 (Speedball, Gods, and Xenon 2: Megablast)
- Chaos Engine
- Fire And Ice (cutesy platform game)
- Sensible Soccer (which looks good so far)
- ---
-
-
- Simulations Canada:
- Text-only war games that use the computer as a referee. Latest release:
- Pacific Storm: The Solomon's Campaign.
- ---
-
-
- Software Projects UK:
- Budget stuff. If you had a Commodore C64 and played games like Manic
- Miner and Jet Set Willy on it, your ST versions are here!
- ---
-
-
- Starbyte (Germany):
- So-so games. Out now:
- Crime Time (graphic adventure).
-
- In the works:
- Crown
- Lords Of Doom
- The Return Of Medusa
- Spirit Of Adventure
- ---
-
-
- Storm UK:
- Design team The Sales Curve used to work for Virgin, but they decided to
- start their own software company. Some of their past achievement
- includes the nice conversion of Silkworm. Out now:
-
- Big Run (Jaleco coin-op, pretty bland)
- Danny Sullivan's Indy Heat (similar to Super Sprint)
- Double Dragon III: The Rosetta Stones
- Final Blow (boxing)
- Rod Land (this one is a lot better than it looks. I hate the box it
- comes in).
-
- In the works:
- Asylum
- Brute Force
- The Lawnmower Man (movie tie-in)
- Solar Jetman
- ---
-
-
- System 3 UK:
- Another company that takes forever to release stuff. Most famous for
- their Last Ninja series and the ultra-cool IK+. Out now:
-
- System 3 Premier Collection (Tusker, IK+, Flimbo's Quest, and Ninja
- Remix).
-
- In the works:
- Changeling
- Constructor
- International Karate Deluxe
- The Last Ninja III
- Myth (August)
- Silly Putty
- Turbo Charge
- Vendetta
- ---
-
-
- Thalamus UK:
- Mostly 8-bit stuff, with the occasional ST game here and there. Out now:
-
- Armalyte: The Final Run (sequel to classic 8-bit game Armalyte, like
- R*Type, but a lot tougher).
-
- In the works:
- Arsenal F.C.
- Restrictor
- ---
-
-
- Thalion (Germany):
- Company started by a bunch of hackers (or so they say). The first batch
- of products wasn't that great. The second batch was a slight
- improvement. Out now:
-
- A320 Airbus (simulation of said airliner)
- Enchanted Land (platform)
- Tangram (puzzler)
- Thalion: First Year (Chambers Of Shaolin, Seven Gates Of Jambala, Warp,
- and Leavin' Teramis).
-
- In the works:
- Dragonflight II (RPG)
- Tower FRA (air traffic control)
- ---
-
-
- Titus (France) has the dubious distinction of having consistently
- released some of the stupidest and worst computer games of all times.
- Titles like Crazy Cars, Fire And Forget, Offshore Warrior, Crazy Cars
- II/F-40 Pursuit Simulator, Knight Force, Dark Century, Wild Streets, and
- Galactic Conqueror (ESPECIALLY Galactic Conqueror!!) send hardened ST
- gamers scurrying for cover. Out now:
-
- Blues Brothers (okay platform game)
- Crime Does Not Pay (lame)
- Duck Tales: The Quest For Gold
- Prehistorik
- Titus The Fox (platform)
-
- In the works:
- Arachnophobia
- Battle Storm
- The Brainies
- Crazy Bikes
- Crazy Cars III
- ---
-
-
- Trojan UK:
- This company sells a light gun that looks suspiciously like the one
- supplied with the old Atari XEGS. I tried mine, but it didn't work, so
- they must have rewired the plugs. They program their own games to go
- with it, and Ocean's Space Gun is the first third party game to use the
- gun. Out now:
-
- Cyber Assault (futuristic DM-style shoot'em'up)
- The Enforcer (gangster-era shoot'em'up)
- Firestar (kinda like Defender)
- ---
-
-
- Turcan Research Systems UK:
- Peter Turcan has programmed several wargames over the years that were
- marketed by Arc UK and PSS UK (a division of Mirrorsoft, so it's out of
- business too). These wargames were all text-driven and used a 3-D
- display. Instead of clicking on icons, you simply type something like
- "move 1st battalion East 5 miles", a rather interesting concept. Since
- PSS went down, Mr. Turcan was forced to go his own way. His new one,
- Dreadnoughts, uses the same engine as all the other wargames, and deals
- with naval combat during World War I.
- ---
-
-
- 21st Century Entertainments UK:
- Oh yeah, sure, games so good they seem to come from the 21st Century, do
- tell. Don't be fooled by the shiny new name, this is actually Hewson UK
- in disguise. Hit and miss pretty much describes this company. One of
- their biggest hit was Nebulous (sold as Tower Toppler by Epyx in the US).
-
- Out now:
-
- Deliverance (sequel to Stormlord, a Hewson game)
- Moonfall (very boring)
- Rubicon (shoot monsters, nothing special)
-
- In the works:
- Nebulus 2 (delayed over and over)
- ---
-
-
- UBI Soft (France):
- Interestingly varied games, and another really good racer. Out now:
-
- Maupiti Island (graphic adventure with speech by Lankhor)
- Ten Great Games (Ferrari Formula 1, Rick Dangerous, Pick'N'Pile, Night
- Hunter, Carrier Command, Satan, Superski, Chicago 90, Xenon 2:
- Megablast, and Pro Tennis Tour)
- Unreal, and Vroom (very nice, very fast Formula 1 racing game by
- Lankhor).
-
- In the works:
- B.A.T. II (futuristic graphic adventure)
- Celtic Legends (fantasy wargame)
- Dyna-Blaster/Bomber-Man
- Lightquest
- Star Rush
- ---
-
-
- US Gold UK has been around for a long time and is mostly known for its
- average (and sometimes terrible) coin-op conversions, as well as the odd
- movie tie-in and original design. They also coded three SSI AD&D
- titles: Dragons Of Flame, Heroes Of The Lance, and the more recent
- Shadow Sorcerer. Quality varies greatly from one title to the next, so
- try before you buy! They also distribute Delphine titles and have a
- budget label called Kixx. They used to distribute Millenium (UK)
- products, but that company is now with Electronic Arts (UK). Currently
- available:
-
- Alien Storm (Golden Axe with aliens)
- Bonanza Brothers
- Final Fight
- Gauntlet III: The Final Quest
- The Godfather: Action Game
- MAX (Maximum Action Xtra, a compilation containing Night Shift, Saint
- Dragon, SWIV, and Turrican II), Mega Twins, OutRun Europa, and Shadow
- Sorcerer (SSI).
-
- Coming soon:
- Citadel Of The Black Sun
- G-Loc (braindead sequel to Afterburner)
- Greyhawk
- Magic Sword
- Menander Brothers
- The Quest For Adventure Series #1 (contains Operation Stealth, Mean
- Streets, and Indiana Jones And The Last Crusade Adventure Game)
- Street Fighter II (the blockbuster coin-op).
-
- Millenium titles currently available:
- The Adventures Of Robin Hood
- Horror Zombies From The Crypt
- James Pond 2: Codename Robocod
-
- For newer titles, see Electronic Arts (UK). Current Delphine titles:
- Another World (GREAT! It's like a movie! You gotta check this one out!)
- and Cruise For A Corpse.
- ---
-
-
- Virgin UK:
- In addition to the games released by the US office, there is also Jimmy
- White's Whirlwind Snooker, an incredibly sophisticated and eye-popping
- snooker simulation; designer Archer MacLean is working on a sequel based
- on pool and billiards. Also coming soon is Dune (out for PC and looking
- good), Space Shuttle (total 3-D simulation), Lure Of The Temptress
- (gives Monkey Island a run for its money), Apocalypse, Cannon Fodder,
- Floor 13, and Rookies. Virgin also has two budget game lines: 16 Blitz
- and Tronix.
- ---
-
-
- Zeppelin UK:
- Nothing but budget stuff here. Try before you buy.
-
- Most of the information used in this article came from my monthly
- online guide to current and upcoming ST games. I began publishing the
- electronic newsletter in May 1989, and while originally called ZENOBOT'S
- Guide, it's now the "ST Gaming Digest." It's edited by yours truly, and
- is available on GEnie and distributed via several Los Angeles bulletin
- board systems: The O'Mayer V (213-732-0229), The Jungle (213-254-9534),
- and The London Smog (714-546-2152). Topic 22 in category 9 (games) of
- the ST Roundtable (GEnie) is used to handle feedback about STGD.
-
- How to reach the ST game companies (I swear, some of these keep their
- address information as a trade secret!):
-
- American companies:
-
- The Avalon Hill Game Company, 4517 Harford Road, Baltimore, MD, 21214,
- (301) 254-9200
-
- Digitek, 708 W. Buffalo avenue, Suite 200, Tampa, FL, 33603, (813)
- 933-8023
-
- FTL Games, (619) 453-5711
-
- InnerPrise Software Inc., 128 Cockeysville Road, Hunt Valley, MD, 21030
- (410) 560-2434
-
- Lucasfilm, PO Box 10307, San Rafael, CA, 94912, (415) 721-3300
-
- MegaSoft Entertainment, 137 W. Bay Area, Webster, TX, 77598, (713)
- 338-2231
-
- Merit Software, 13635 Gamma Road, Dallas, TX, 75244, (800) 238-4277
-
- Microdaft, 1012 S. Main Street, Taylor, PA, 18517
-
- Mindcraft, 2341 205th Street, Suite 102, Torrance, CA, 90501, (310)
- 320-5215
-
- Psygnosis, 29 Saint Mary's Court, Brookline, MA, 02146, (617) 731-3553
-
- Readysoft, 30 Wertheim Court, Unit 2, Richmond Hill, Ontario, Canada,
- L4B 1B9, (416) 731-4175
-
- Sierra, PO Box 485, Coarsegold, CA, 93614, (209) 683-8989
-
- Simulations Canada, PO Box 452, Bridgewater, NS, Canada, B4V 2X6
-
- Spectrum Holobyte, 2061 Challenger Drive, Alameda, CA, 94501, (510)
- 522-3584
-
- Sublogic, 501 Kenyon Road, Champlain, IL, 61820, (217) 359-8482
-
- Virgin, 711 W. 17th Street, Suite G9, Costa Mesa, CA, 92627, (714)
- 833-8710
-
- European companies:
-
- Celebrity Software
- Lonsdale House, Woodland Park
- Colwyn Bay, LL29 7HA (0492) 531830
-
- Codemasters
- PO Box 6
- Leamington Spa, Warwickshire, CV32 OSH (0926) 814132
-
- Core Design Ltd
- Suite C, Tradewinds House, 69/71a Ashbourne Road
- Derby, DE3 3FS (0332) 297797
-
- Daze Marketing Limited
- Dagmar House, 12 Old Street
- London, EC2V OAB
-
- Domark Group Ltd
- Ferry House, 51-57 Lacy Road
- London, SW15 1PR
-
- Electronic Arts
- Langley Business Centre, 11-49 Station Road
- Langley, Nr. Slough, Berkeshire SL3 8YN (0753) 549442
-
- Empire Software
- 4 The Stannets, Laindon North Trade Center
- Basildon, Essex, SS15 6DJ (0268) 541126
-
- Gremlin Graphics Software Ltd
- Carver House, 2-4 Carver Street
- Sheffield, S1 4FS
-
- Microprose
- Unit 1, Hampton Road Industrial Estate
- Tetbury, Gloucestershire, GL8 8LD (0666) 504326
-
- Mindscape International
- The Coach House, Hooklands Estate
- Scaynes Hill, West Sussex, RH17 7NG (0444) 831761
-
- Ocean Software Limited
- 6 Central Street
- Manchester, M2 5NS (061) 832-6633
-
- Renegade UK
- C1 Metropolitan Wharf, Wapping Wall
- London, E1 955
-
- Storm (Sales Curve)
- Lombard Business Centre, 50 Lombard Road
- London, SW11 3SU (071) 585-3308
-
- Turcan Research Systems
- 83 Greencroft Gardens
- London, NW6 3LJ (071) 625-8455
-
- UBI Soft
- 8 & 10 rue de Valmy
- Montreuil Sous Bois, Paris, 93100, France (1) 48-57-65-52
-
- US Gold Limited
- Units 2/3, Holford Way
- Holford, Birmingham, B6 7AX (021) 625-3366
-
-
-
-
- | | | RUN THAT BY ME, AGAIN!
- | | | By Bob Smith
- | | | ----------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
- Many things happen when you are participate in your chosen career(s).
- Some of which are sad, some of which are mundane and some of which are
- funny and humorous. They may not be funny at the time, but when you
- look back these happenings take on the guise of being extremely comical.
- The following quotes are actual statements found on insurance and police
- reports where car drivers attempted to summarize the details in the few
- words possible.
-
- Sit back and enjoy these humorous quotes and if any of you actually have
- experienced these, by all means don't tell anybody.
-
- "Coming home, I drove into the wrong house and collided with a tree that
- I don't have."
-
- "The other car collided with mine without giving warning of it's
- intentions."
-
- "I thought my window was down, but I found it was up when I put my hand
- through it."
-
- "I collided with a stationary truck coming the other way."
-
- "A pedestrian hit me and went under my car."
-
- "A truck backed through my windshield into my wife's face."
-
- "The guy was all over the road and I had to swerve a number of times
- before I hit him."
-
- "I pulled away from the side of the road, glanced at my mother-in-law,
- and headed for the embankment."
-
- "As I approached the intersection, a sign suddenly appeared in a place
- where no stop sign had ever appeared before.
-
- "My car was legally parked as it backed in the other vehicle."
-
- "I told the police that I was not injured, but on removing my hat, I
- found that I had a fractured skull."
-
- "The pedestrian had no idea which direction to run, so I ran over him."
-
- "The indirect cause of this accident was a little guy in a small car
- with a big mouth."
-
- "An invisible car came out of nowhere, struck my vehicle and vanished."
-
- "I saw a slow moving sad faced old gentleman as he bounced off the hood
- of my car."
-
- "I was sure the old fellow would never make it to the other side of the
- road when I struck him."
-
- "I was thrown from my car as it left the road. I was later found in a
- ditch by some stray cows."
-
- "The telephone pole was approaching. I was attempting to swerve out of
- it's way, when it struck my front end."
-
- "I was on my way to the doctor with rear end trouble when my universal
- joint gave way causing me to have an accident."
-
- "I had been driving for 40 years when I fell asleep at the wheel and had
- an accident."
-
- "In my attempt to hit a fly I drove into a telephone pole."
-
- While we are on the subject of humor, let me tell you that a lot of
- power is needed to generate laughter. In the same vain, there are other
- kinds of power producing units. Have you ever had the urge to know
- exactly how to upgrade your personal Nuclear Power facility and how it
- is built? What follows is an excellent example of what you didn't want
- to know.
-
- If you have experienced a power let down with your personal nuclear
- reactor then the following information is vital to you. Read it
- carefully so that you fully understand it and make sure that you be the
- first on your block to have this upgrade. Never suffer from power
- shortage again.
-
- Now available, the QBX-1, add on nuclear reactor provides backup power
- for as long as 12 years. When the card senses a power failure,
- explosive bolts eject moderator and control rods from the reactor's
- interior within 20 microseconds, bringing the reactor to its fully rated
- output of 20kW in less than a millisecond. Over its 12 year life, the
- reactors power decreases by 25% to 15 kW.
-
- Integral heat fins provide convection cooling of the reactor's 500W
- power dissipation while the reactor remains in its standby condition.
- IF your computer's fans can't furnish 400 CFM of forced air for cooling,
- consider buying the manufacturer's heavy water cooling jacket and
- stainless steel pump module, which fits conveniently under a desk or
- workbench. Latches on each side of the reactor module let you quickly
- exchange the radioactive core, should you need to replace it. An
- optional circular viewing port of lead glass lets you check the
- reactor's internal mechanical assemblies.
-
- To protect users from undue radiation, each reactor includes a shielding
- kit, comprising five self-stick lead plates and 20 radiation monitoring
- film badges. The lead plates mount inside your computer's enclosure and
- reduce the gamma rays that cause soft errors to floppy disk and RAM
- data. For further protection, consider buying the manufacturer's 200-
- ft extension cords for the keyboard and monitors.
-
- Because the reactor can supply more than enough power for your computer,
- you can sell excess power to your local utility company. An add-on
- phasing and metering kit (PMK-1) lets you connect your reactor to the
- local power grid, Each PMK-1 includes standard power sale contract and
- Rural Electrification Board rules and regulations.
-
- Although not required in all localities, each reactor package includes a
- standard 23-volume site-evacuation plan. The plan includes blank forms
- for you to fill in the name and address of your reactor site and then
- mail to the Nuclear Regulatory Commission. As an option, the
- manufacturer supplies the plans on 22 disks in STWriter format. User
- friendly templates let you type in the information so that your word
- processor can create a complete, printed document.
-
- Reactor prices start at $2.3 million with delivery expected in seven
- years.
-
- Well, there you go, now you can run right out, get in your vehicle and
- go straight to the post office to drop your money order in the mail. Oh
- yes, don't get hit by any moving houses, trees and above all don't try
- and kill any flies.
-
-
-
-
- | | | RUN A BETTER BBS
- | | | By Regan Weed, VAUG
- | | | ----------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
- Really, when you stop to think about it, most BBS's are the same. Most,
- if not all, have E-Mail, areas for general information, buy & sell,
- files to download, etc., etc.. So what makes one BBS better than
- another?
-
- SOFTWARE
- A case can be made for the particular BBS software the system is
- running. Older programs may not feature much in the way of flexibility,
- such as "On-line Games" or " Color".
-
- HARDWARE
- Obviously you can do more with a Mega ST2 and 40 Meg hard drive then
- with a 1040ST. But, bigger is not always better, and there's more to
- running a BBS than having lots of downloads!
-
- SYSOP (Systems Operator)
- Each BBS has a different flavor (even with the same software) because of
- this person. The SysOp is the catalyst and when you choose one BBS over
- another many times it's because of the SysOp. So what do you (the
- SysOp) need to do to 'Run a better BBS'? First have a 'message area'
- that reflects the interest of most users. If you have a 'general
- information' sub-section watch it for trends and open new sub-sections
- to fill the needs of your users. If there's a users group in your area,
- have a section setup for them to leave club messages. Keep things
- current by removing old messages. If things slow down in a message
- section start a discussion. If, after a period of time, it's still
- inactive, delete that section and try a new subject.
-
- AVOID COMPLAINING
- Not enough messages posted, not enough users uploading ect. Once you
- start casting blame on your users you'll kill the board, and fast! If
- you wish to see more uploads then set a fair upload/download ratio, say
- 10 to 1. You can't make people respond to a message base or play an
- On-line game so don't even try. Some SysOp's limit the users time to
- try and get them to do more on their BBS. This is a little like trying
- to get blood from a stone - not exactly the way to get a favorable
- reaction!
-
- TIPS
- Keep your log-on screen messages up-to-date and short (if there's no way
- to by-pass it). You have to remember your out-of-town users and their
- phone bills!
-
- When you have a limited system for downloads, try rotating half of your
- files every two to three weeks.
-
- Don't butt-in. Only use 'Chat' mode when your called or you'll make
- your users feel like their every move is being watched.
-
- Try your best and keep in mind.... A good BBS is just as much work as
- bad one!
-
-
-
-
- | | | GENIE NEWS UPDATE - ALL AREAS
- | | | ----------------------------------------------------------------
- | | | ----------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- QB1 PRESEASON BEGINS
- WHO: New York Jets & Philadelphia Eagles
- WHEN: August 1st, 3:00 pm eastern
- WHERE: Your ABC station / M1030 or QB1 on GEnie
-
- Please join us as the 1992/93 QB1 season gets underway. Close to 150
- NFL & College games will be offered this year and lots of prizes
- awarded. The preseason schedule has been posted and pass plans are now
- available to make playing on a weekly, monthly, or season basis very
- econimical. Visit the QB1 menu page for more details.
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
-
- ATARI RT NEWS 7.5 (Edited)
-
- NEW FEATURE!!! Darlah's Treat - The Free File Of The Month!
- The ST Roundtable is happy to announce a new service to ST Roundtable
- members. Introducing "Darlah's Treat," a file that can be downloaded
- directly from the main ST Roundtable menu here on Page 475. For free!
- Simply select menu item 9 on Page 475 to download the free file of the
- month. See Category 1, Topic 12 in the Bulletin Board for more details.
-
- BULLETIN BOARD
- Programming support is available in the Atari ST Roundtable's Bulletin
- Board. Whether you program in assembly, basic, C or any other
- programming language available for the ST/STe/TT you can find help from
- the authors, distributors, Atari Corporation, and knowledgeable users.
- If you need an answer for something not covered in the current topics
- just start a new one in the appropriate Category. Atari ST Roundtable
- also provides a confidential category for Atari Association of
- Developers (AAD) and Atari Association of Professional Developers please
- read Category 3, topic 34 for admittance and qualifying information.
-
- REALTIME CONFERENCE
- Atari ST Roundtable is proud to announce the opening of a Sunday Help
- Desk to answer your questions on GEnie, Atari ST Roundtable and the line
- of Atari computers. Stop in and ask questions or just visit the Atari
- RT staff and users. The Help Desk starts at 7:00 pm EST Sunday on page
- 475;2.
-
- Monday Night Desktop Publishing Real Time Conferences will feature a
- number of special guests during the next few months. Drop in and get
- the latest info on program features and updates. All conferences begin
- at 10:00 p.m. Eastern Time. Monday DTP conferences - Hosted by Lou
- Rocha [L.ROCHA1] and Nathan Potechin [ISD], Contact: JEFF.W, L.ROCHA1,
- ISD, DARLAH
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
-
- WRITERS.INK @GENIE
-
- TOM CLANCY
- First, mark your calendars for the Sunday, August 30th visit of Tom
- Clancy for a special Real Time Conference. The conference will start at
- 8:30 pm eastern time in the Writers' RTC on page 440. Tom is always an
- entertaining and instructional guest (to say the least). Here's your
- chance to chat with one of the bestselling authors of all time.
-
- MICHAEL CRICHTON
- Next, we've just arranged a Real Time Conference with Michael Crichton,
- author of books such as Andromeda Strain, Terminal Man and Jurassic Park
- (which is now being made into a movie by Steven Spielberg). Michael was
- also the director of the movies Coma and Westworld. The date will be
- sometime in November.
-
- HAND ME THE DUSTPAN
- And news item #3 is the upcoming cleaning and reorganization of the
- Writers' Bulletin Board. The Bulletin Board (BB) will be closed on
- August 18th for a complete overhaul. Old Categories will be moved, new
- Categories will be created and topics will be zapped or moved. Many of
- you will be glad to hear we are adding a new Mystery Category as well as
- a Research area and a Category for young writers and students. We are
- also expanding out Nonfiction area with new Categories for Journalism
- and Technical Writing.
-
- CLEAN SWEEP
- The Bulletin Board has gotten very cluttered. Our goal is to set things
- up so it's easier to find messages... and easier to discuss subjects. A
- majority of topics will be deleted. Some of these will be archived and
- saved. However, if there is a discussion you think is a gem, I'd
- recommend that you save a copy now. With 100s of topics, there is no
- way to let everyone know which ones are going and which ones are staying
- (I'm not even sure yet). If a topic was a favorite, we (or you) can
- restart it.
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
-
-
- | | | CONNECTICUT ATARIFEST '92 TO OFFER SYSTEM UPGRADES
- | | | Press Release
- | | | ----------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
- Repair Expert Offers How-To Lesson in RAM, Speed, TOS Enhancements
-
- HARTFORD, Conn. (July 31, 1992) -- Not everybody can afford to buy a
- brand new computer system, optical character reader, laser printer or
- hard drive, but certain items that are within almost everyone's
- budgetary reach can make a big difference in the way their computer
- performs.
-
- We're talking, of course, about RAM expansion and accelerator boards for
- Atari computers, as well as TOS upgrade kits all of which will be
- available at Connecticut AtariFest '92 (CAF) August 15 & 16 at the
- Sheraton Hotel at Bradley International Airport in Windsor Locks. One
- special exhibitor will enable you to beef up your computing power on the
- spot. In addition to various vendors that will sell their own upgrade
- kits, East Hartford Computer Repair will perform a limited number of
- upgrade installations at the show.
-
- EHCR owner Tom Allard will offer a few demonstrations designed to teach
- the Atari user how to perform an upgrade by installing a board or chip
- that means bigger spreadsheets, fewer waits for processing and improved
- desktop features. For the klutz who'd prefer not to whip up a serving
- of baked circuits and solder surprise, Allard will perform selected
- upgrades for ST/Mega/TT and 8-bit Atari computers.
-
- Based on a recent CAF survey of "EarlyBirds" who pre-registered for the
- Hartford area show, RAM expansion and accelerator boards will be among
- the most sought-after items at the show. When asked what products or
- services attendees expect to buy, many identified upgrade kits.
-
- Allard's demonstrations of RAM upgrades and other system improvements
- will be announced when the seminar schedule is formally set. When he is
- not involved with a seminar, Allard will be on the exhibit floor
- performing electronic wizardry on Atari computers ripe for more power.
- When possible, East Hartford Computer Repair will perform the upgrades
- on the spot. Depending on the complexity of the job, Allard will work
- on some units at his shop and return them after the show.
-
- Newell Industries of Wylie, Texas, has donated some of its upgrade
- products to Connecticut AtariFest '92 for the seminars. Allard will
- install a Newell 1-4 meg upgrade for the 130XE computer which supports
- true Antic banking, compatibility with most Atari-based operating
- systems and provides more than 8,000 sectors of RAMdisk capacity.
- Another demonstration will feature installation of Newell's TAB TOS
- Adapter Board, which enables users of old Atari STs to install up to 1
- meg of ROM and to replace an older TOS with a newer version (up to
- 2.06).
-
- Allard reports that East Hartford Computer Repair is experienced with
- many upgrades of Atari 8-bit and 16-bit computers, peripherals and
- accessories, using the products of Codehead Technologies, Gadgets by
- Small and others. A member of the Atari User Group of Greater Hartford
- says that Allard, who deals in new and used Atari gear, is the best
- source in Hartford for all things Atari and is known for his willingness
- to do any kind of upgrade, modification or repair. He is also described
- as an avid gamer and solid businessman whose workshop is a gathering
- place for Atarians that are members of his extended family.
-
- If you are interested in having Allard perform an upgrade at the show
- and want to bring your computer along, contact him directly to discuss
- what upgrade you are considering, get a price quote and make an
- appointment for Connecticut AtariFest '92. Because of the limited time
- available for work during the show, those with confirmed appointments
- will be given preference. For security reasons, show organizers cannot
- permit visitors to bring their computers onto the exhibit floor without
- prior authorization.
-
- For more information about possible upgrades to your Atari, contact
- Allard at East Harford Computer Repair, 202 Roberts Street, East
- Hartford, CT 06108, or call (203) 528-4448. Allard is also the Sysop of
- a BBS at (203) 568-7693. Or you can drop him some E-mail c/o
- Connecticut AtariFest '92 (Vice Chairman Doug Finch is 76337,1067 on
- CompuServe and D.FINCH7 on GEnie). We will forward it and the rest is
- up to you. Connecticut AtariFest '92 offers the upgrade demonstrations
- as a educational service to qualified individuals. Installing printed
- circuit boards and/or chips requires a degree of experience with
- electronic equipment and should not be taken lightly. Making changes
- and modifications to your computer can void your warranty, and you
- should consult a your dealer, a qualified technician and/or experienced
- user before attempting such an activity. You might want one of them to
- do the job for you rather than risk serious damage to your computer.
- Connecticut AtariFest '92 has arranged these demonstrations, but assumes
- no responsibility for business transactions between vendors and show
- goers. CAF neither endorses nor discourages modifications to original
- products, and will accept no responsibility for problems or damage
- resulting from equipment changes made by vendors, their representatives
- or attendees that elect to make equipment modifications themselves.
-
- For more information about CAF '92, contact:
-
- Brian Gockley, Chairman Doug Finch, Vice Chairman
- Connecticut AtariFest '92 Connecticut AtariFest '92
- GEnie: B.GOCKLEY GEnie: D.FINCH7
- CompuServe: 75300,2514 CompuServe: 76337,1067
- 18 Elmwood Avenue 46 Park Avenue
- Bridgeport, CT 06605 Old Greenwich, CT 06870
- (203) 332-1721 (203) 637-1034
-
-
-
- | | | NEWS FROM THE DISKTOP
- | | | Volume 1, Number 6 - August, 1992
- | | | ----------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
- Copyright (C) 1992 Ron Albright
-
-
- This, and all, issue of "News From The Disktop" is sponsored by the
- Disktop Publishing Association and its member publications. "News From
- the Disktop" features news, product developments, and other information
- of interest to authors, distributors, and readers of electronic
- publications. Items presented here serve to inform the public of the
- electronic publishing industry which is the authorship and publication
- of reading materials in electronic format, rather than traditional,
- paper publishing. Back issues may be found on the Disktop Publishing
- BBS at 205-854-1660.
-
-
- The First Annual "Quills" Announced....
-
- The big news this month is, of course, the announcement of the winners
- of the First Annual "Digital Quill" awards for excellence in electronic
- publishing. After many trials and tribulations - and late entries! -
- the awards were announced to world on July 15, 1992. Here are the
- winners:
-
- =======================================================================
- Regular Computer/Technical Publication
- --------------------------------------
- - a weekly, monthly or bi-monthly publication that has been in
- publication for 6 months or more relating to computers or technology.
- =======================================================================
-
- #1 Winner:
- "Files and Stuff" newsletter; Henry Barfoot and Lupe Tingle, Editors.
-
- #2 First Runner-up:
- "EFFector" (Electronic Frontier Foundation Online) newsletter, Rita M.
- Rouvalis, Editor
-
- #3 Second Runner-up:
- "Z*Net PC" newsletter, Ron Kovacs, Editor.
-
-
- =======================================================================
- Regular Literary Publication
- ----------------------------
- - a weekly, monthly or bi-monthly publication that has been in
- publication for 6 months or more relating to literature, fiction, and/or
- poetry.
- =======================================================================
-
- #1 Winner:
- "Ruby's Pearls," Del Freeman, Editor.
-
- #2 First Runner-up:
- "Intertext," Jason Snell, Editor.
-
- #3 Second Runner-up:
- "QUANTA," Daniel Appelquist, Editor.
-
-
- =======================================================================
- Fiction Book
- ------------
- - an original (eliminating reprints of the "classics" in digital format)
- electronically published novel. Length: 50,000 words, minimum.
- =======================================================================
-
-
- #1 Winner:
- "Tavern," Anastasia Smith; Publisher, UserWare (New York)
-
- #2 First Runner-up:
- "Southern Discomfort," Del Freeman; Publisher, A.C. Aarbus, (Sanford,
- Florida)
-
-
- =======================================================================
- Non-Fiction Book
- ----------------
- - an original non-fiction book in digital format. Length: 35,000 words
- minimum.
- =======================================================================
-
- #1 Winner:
- "Virtual Society," Harvey Wheeler; Publisher, UserWare
-
- #2 First Runner-up:
- "Fictional Writer's Primer," Darvin Harfield and Adam Poszar; Publisher,
- Rabid Rhino (Huntington, IN)
-
- #3 Second Runner-up:
- "A Hitchhiker's Guide to Science Fiction," Ted Husted and Kevin Rhodes;
- Publisher, UserWare
-
-
- =======================================================================
- Short Story
- -----------
- - a single original story appearing either alone or as part of an
- anthology or magazine and published in digital format. This category
- shall exclude reprints of stories originally published in a paper
- publication. Length: 1000 words, minimum.
- =======================================================================
-
-
- # 1 Winner:
- "The Woofbard Curse," C.G. Burner
-
- #2 First Runner-up:
- "Clarice and the Big Red One," Mary Ellen Wooford
-
- #3 Second Runner-up:
- "The Morals of the Ethical Woman," William Slattery
-
-
- =======================================================================
- Publishing software
- -------------------
- - a software program (Shareware or traditionally marketed) designed for
- publishing text and/or graphics and facilitating their distribution and
- viewing. Nominations will be accepted from users as well as original
- authors.
- =======================================================================
-
-
- #1 Winner:
- "DART," Ted Husted, UserWare
-
- #2 First Runner-up:
- "Writer's Dream," Jeff Napier, Another Company
-
- #3 Second Runner-up:
- "BDEXX," Anthony Hursh, Dead Moose Enterprises
-
-
- Over fifty entries were received for the various categories with the
- "Short Story" category, alone, having twenty works. Judging was done on
- a "100 points possible" scoring system. There were 12 judges, selected
- from the DPA membership. Selection of judges was based on the members'
- qualifications and writing expertise.
-
- Winners will be notified as soon as possible and will receive a
- certificate, suitable for framing, for their achievement.
-
- Congratulations to all the winners and thanks to all who submitted for
- the awards. We look forward to next years awards and expect to see a
- doubling of the entries and a wealth of new publications.
-
- The news was quickly picked up by the wire services. CompuServe's
- "Online Today" electronic news service ran a story as did NewsBytes
- (which, according to their information, provides "independent computer
- and telecommunications news to an estimated 4.5 million readers on major
- online networks, via magazines, newspapers, and newsletters, worldwide.)
- The full text of these stories can be read on the Disktop Publishing BBS
- (205-854-1660).
-
- The press heats up...
-
- If you still believe - as you lie under a rock in the Grand Tetons -
- that disktop publishing is not a "hot topic," you need to crawl out and
- get to the nearest library. June's ink carried two major pieces on the
- growing disktop publishing industry.
-
- First, "Time" magazine's May 18, 1992 issues (page 69) carried "Read A
- Good PowerBook Lately?" by Philip Elmer-Dewitt. After discussing the
- PowerBook from Apple and its ability to read books from Voyager on disk,
- the article close with the following:
-
- "Ultimately, it may be the economics of publishing, not the aesthetics,
- that determine what shape literature will take. [Ed. Note: Surprise,
- Philip! Economics has dictated what we read for years...]...Old-
- fashioned books will probably never be entirely displaced, but as the
- cost of digital information continues to fall, and the environmental and
- production costs of paper keep rising, the pleasure of buying and
- reading a new hardbound volume may someday be limited to the few that
- can still afford it."
-
- Next, the venerable June 21, 1992 New York Times ran "The End of Books"
- by novelist Robert Coover in their Sunday "Book Review" section. Coover
- colorfully recants the premise of electronic publishing in observing
- that in the electronic age "you will often hear it said that the print
- medium is doomed and outdated technology, a mere curiosity of bygone
- days destined soon to be confined forever to those dusty unattended
- museums we now call libraries. Indeed, the very proliferation of books
- and other print-based media, so prevalent in this forest-harvesting,
- paper-wasting age, is held to be a sign of feverish moribundity, the
- last futile gasp of a once vital form before it passes away forever,
- dead as God." Amen!
-
- After spewing forth such pedantic prose, Coover does get down to
- describing the benefits and attractions of electronic publishing. His
- discussion centers on hypertext and how it can enhance reading. He
- extols hypertext by noting that "true freedom from the tyranny of the
- line [and the page] is perceived as only really possible now at last
- with the advent of hypertext, written and read on a computer, where the
- line in fact does not exist..." Again, waxing eloquent, Coover notes the
- following:
-
- "Moreover, unlike print text, hypertext provides multiple paths between
- text segments...hypertext presents a radically divergent technology,
- interactive and polyvocal, favoring plurality of discourses over
- definitive utteranance and freeing the reader from domination by the
- author. Hypertext reader and writer are said to become co-learners or
- co-writers, as it were, fellow-travelers in the mapping and remapping of
- textual (and visual, kinetic and aural) components, not all of which are
- provided by what used to be called the author."
-
- When one is able to cut through the prose (which ain't always easy,
- folks!), Coover does put forth a lot of information about how it feels
- to read and write hypertext documents. He includes a sidebar which
- offers a numbers of addresses and contacts for electronic publications.
- Alas, the DPA and its members were not included. Still, some
- principally academic publications were listed. These included
- "Postmodem Culture" (a refereed electronic journal out of the University
- of North Carolina), "EJournal" (edited by Ted Jennings at SUNY at
- Albany) and "Leonardo" (from the International Society for the Arts,
- Science, and Technology [ISAST]). The article spans three full pages
- and certainly is a harbinger of future coverage in the publishing
- literature about the electronic reading genre. If anyone is interested
- in a reprint, drop me a SASE and I will get you a photocopy.
-
- Then, Newsweek's June 29th issue carried "The Literary Circuit-ry" (pp.
- 66-7) by Michael Rogers. It begins with the following:
-
- "Bibliophiles, take cover: the electronic book is on its way. These
- days most books and magazines start out on computer screens. So why not
- just eliminate the messy business with ink and save some trees? But
- does this mean we permanently trade soothing expanses of cool paper for
- glowing phosphors? Perhaps even abandon the pleasure of reading in the
- tub, lest literature lead to electrocution? Hardly. No one is about to
- replace your dogeared le Carre with an edition that requires four AA
- cells (not included). Not yet, anyway. Larry Shiller, president of the
- Bureau of Electronic Publishing, says, "Maybe adults don't read on
- screen, but their children do. Wait one generation and all the
- marketing problems will disappear."
-
- We couldn't agree more! The article itself dealt principally with the
- Voyager series of electronic books for the Apple Powerbook line of
- computers and a little about IBM multimedia software. There was a nice
- photo of a young lady reading a book on a Powerbook by the ocean as two
- rollerbladers zoom by. Truly, a picture of the future.
-
- Perhaps the most important for the DPA membership to carry away from the
- article was a quote from futurist Paul Saffo. He said: "You can't
- outbook the book just by adding electronics. Publishers will need to
- offer something books can't." It has been the premise of the DPA that
- there is a great of difference between producing a commercially-viable
- publication and putting some ASCII text on disk. There must be some
- advantage for choosing to use the digital format. Perhaps it is that
- the information is time-sensitive and electronic publication is the best
- way to disseminate it. Perhaps the material is a reference work that
- would benefit from having the facilities of a computer to use it (for
- searching, cross-referencing, etc.). Perhaps the document can be
- enhanced by applying a hypertext or multimedia interface. Certainly,
- financial considerations can play a part. Finally, if disktop
- publishing is the only way one can afford to circulate the material, so
- be it. But, as Saffo suggests, there has to be an advantage over print,
- at least as the industry matures, for electronic publications to be a
- success.
-
- What all this means is that when the New York Times and Newsweek catch
- wind of something, then it is truly a trend to be reckoned with. And,
- for the DPA and its members, it is a trend we were well-aware of all
- along. The air around the electronic publishing industry is charged
- with excitement and we feel lucky to be a part of it. Time to grab on
- and hold tight to the reins. It's going to be some ride!
-
- (Nota Bene: Paul Saffo had a column in the June 7, 1992 New York Times
- called "The Electronic Future is Upon Us." In it, he says: "Paper's role
- in publishing is a remnant, and the power of choice is on everyone's
- monitor." GREAT quote, worthy of someone's business slogan. "The Power
- of Choice!")
-
- Still doubt it?...
-
- If you are still one of those who doubts that the market will ever exist
- for paperless books and, particularly, if you are one that holds that
- the lack of a hardware platform to read books will never exist is
- sufficient numbers to provide a market read this:
-
- Linda Rohrbough reported in the July 16 NewsBytes that, according to
- market research firm SRI International estimates, palm-top, personal
- information appliances, hand-held computers, sub-notebooks, personal
- digital assistants, and picocomputers are all names for a computer you
- will become increasingly familiar with and, more, you will probably be
- carrying around in the next five years. SRI reports that this market
- will grow to 17 million units annually by 1995. Market Intelligence
- Research says projected growth in this market is expected to reach $50
- billion by 1998. Pen computers are expected to grow fastest, company
- officers said.
-
- If the market research reports are correct, we should expect to see a
- lot of people with these small computers, especially pen-based units, in
- the next five years. And, if the market penetration for these machines
- is going to be so large, don't you think they might like something to
- read off their machines? Write a book and put it out on disk. Just do
- it!
-
- Floppyback Scoops Paper Publisher....
-
- The signal that electronic publishing has, indeed, arrived comes from
- Floppyback Publishing International (FPI). The small New Jersey
- publisher has released information about how the company's imminent
- release of the novel "The Angel of Death" caused the books paper
- publisher to change the entire schedule and the size of the initial
- printing run.
-
- The story goes like this. Author Bruce Gilkin and FPI's Paul Peacock
- struck a deal to publish the book on disk (using UserWare's DART
- interface) and carried through an active publicity campaign for the
- book's on-disk release. Copies of the novel-on-disk were sent
- throughout the publishing industry. FPI's campaign for the book, which
- deals with Vietnam veteran Bruce Gilkin's experiences with Post-
- Traumatic Stress Disorder, was so effective it brought endorsements from
- Rolling Thunder, Pointman Ministries, the Philadelphia Veteran's Center,
- and other large veteran's groups. Due to growing publicity surrounding
- the book and the endorsement of the book by a growing number of
- veteran's organizations, the book publisher for "Angel" pushed up the
- numbers for the initial press run to 100,000, a number almost unheard of
- for a novel of this type. Even more significantly, the book publisher
- pushed the publication date ahead from one year to just three months.
-
- FPI President Paul Peacock commented on the implications of this
- development by noting "There are three significant points here. The
- first is that the hardcover publisher brought forward the publication
- schedule once they had seen the publicity generated by the diskette.
- This can only be good news for authors and publishers. The second point
- is that the book is still coming out first in floppyback. I think it's
- the first time that a book that's due to come out in hardcover has come
- out in floppyback. This demonstrates the maturity of the electronic
- media market. The third is that the floppyback is priced at $15 and is
- $10 less than the price of the hardcover, but Bruce is not losing out in
- any way." Peacock notes that since the cost of producing a book on disk
- is so much less than a paper version, the lower price still allows for
- a significant profit for both author and publisher.
-
- FPI Inc. is a creator and distributor of floppybacks. Its motto is
- "Liberation!" and its mission, according to Peacock, is to provide
- authors a means of getting their work into the marketplace directly. "I
- am an author myself," he says, "and that's really why I started the
- business. Floppyback publishing can be a great way for authors to go."
-
- The floppyback can be ordered directly for $15 in IBM compatible format
- by calling FPI order fulfillment at 1-800-526-9153. All major credit
- cards are accepted. FPI can be reached at P.O. Box 2084, Hoboken, NJ
- 07030 or at 201-963-3012. FPI Inc. is a member of the Disktop
- Publishing Association.
-
- What this means to authors everywhere is that we now have another weapon
- in our armory in the constant battle to get noticed by paper publishers.
- If you are having trouble convincing a publisher that your book is
- marketable (which, as we all know, is all that really matters to them),
- why not put it out on disk? Find a disktop publisher to do it for you if
- you don't have the time yourself. Then, market it like crazy and gather
- the sales slips, endorsements, and readers comments from the on-disk
- version. Show these to the book people. It will give you needed clout
- in your negotiations. And, who knows? You may just decide to stay on-
- disk and keep more of the profits. Get out that manuscript and get it
- out on disk. Just do it!
-
- Z*NET PC newsletter returns...
-
- After a nearly 3 months hiatus, we are pleased to see the return of Ron
- Kovacs "Z*NET PC" newsletter back online with a July 27, 1992 issue.
- The DPA had received several queries as to the whereabouts of Z*NET from
- interested readers and we had contacted Ron earlier on CompuServe. He
- explained then that "Things are finally progressing forward. I am
- compiling a new staff and revamping the entire magazine. I am focusing
- more attention on the Z*Net News Service, which is something I have been
- looking to do for some time. Z*Net PC will continue publishing in a few
- days and hopefully will begin weekly release thereafter." True to his
- word, Z*NET PC, Issue #33 was on CompuServe 7/27/92 (and now on the DPA
- BBS). We're glad to see Kovacs and staff, members of the DPA, are still
- putting out the same quality news and reviews they have always been
- known for. Z*NET PC was "Second Runner-up" in the 1992 Quills.
-
- New Members - Welcome Aboard!
-
- Steven Hudgik, The HomeCraft Small Business Journal (P.O. Box 974,
- Tualatin, OR 97062), is the latest member of the DPA family. Steve
- describes his activities: "I publish the HomeCraft Small Business
- Journal, a on-disk magazine for small businesses. I have two other
- publications ready to go as soon as a staff is put together for them."
- Good luck, Steve, and welcome aboard the DPA!
-
- Final note...
-
- Now that the Quills Awards are over with, the DPA and its membership are
- now in the process of more formally organizing the Association. George
- De Bruin and Don Lokke are putting together a committee to formally
- define the "Charter" for the DPA. It should include election of
- officers and standing committees, dues, definition of purposes, and
- other details that are long overdue. I will be stepping down as
- Director of the DPA as soon as elections are held and a new slate of
- officers are designated by the membership. It's time for us to devote
- the next 3 months getting tightly defined and focused and that is what
- we are going to do. I challenge each DPA member to join actively in
- supporting the process of clarifying our goals and activities. Only by
- hearing what you want the DPA to provide for you can we be the service
- organization we want to be.
-
-
-
-
- | | | 38400 BAUD FOR YOUR HST
- | | | By Erno Meffert
- | | | ----------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
- Some people using a HST modem on a atari ST wished their computer had a
- 38400 Baud modem port for optimal arc transmission. A 38400 baud,
- locked port can be created with some extra hardware.
-
- I, writer of this document, and artist of the picture (attached to the
- this Atari Explorer Issue) will not be responsible for any damage made
- to your equipment while building or using this 38400 baud serial port.
-
- The file SER38400.PI3 contains a picture file which gives you some
- information, how to create a locked 38400 kbaud rs-232 serial port.
-
- The principal is quite simple. Normally Timer D creates the Baudrate of
- the USART in the MFP. In order to give the USART an external clock we
- have to disable the connection between the output of timer D (pin 16)
- and the receiver/transmitter clock (pin 7 and 10) of the USART. The
- easiest way to that is to make a little scratch op the platine.
-
- At this point we have no clock for our usart.To get a new clock signal
- we take a clock signal of 2.4576 Mhz (pin 18 MFP) and divide it by 4.
- To do this, we use a 4040. The result on pin 7 of the 4040 (614400HZ)
- will be our new USART RC/SC. The frequency is this high because the
- USART will devide it by 16. Result is a serial port of 38400K Baud.
-
- I hope this explanation will give you enough information to create such
- a baudrate (if you need it)
-
- For any problems or information you can contact:
-
- Erno Meffert
- postbus 2174
- 6802 CD Arnhem
- Holland
-
- Or using email: QuickBBS ST Arnhem
- 31-(0)85-644262
- Fidonode 2:281/801
-
-
-
-
- | | | HINTS AND TIPS
- | | | From the Z*Net Archives
- | | | ----------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
- EDIT YOUR DESKTOP.INF FILE
- FROM THE Z*NET BBS
- by Richard Guadagno
-
-
- How to edit your DESKTOP.INF file.
-
- If you want to edit your DESKTOP.INF file, the first thing you must do
- is load the DESKTOP.INF file into a Text Editor, or Word Processor. If
- you own FLASH from Antic, use it's BUFFER window. FLASH has great
- editing features. Once you have the file loaded you must decide what
- you want edited.
-
- 1. If you want to edit the name of your TRASH CAN, look for the
- following line.
-
- #T 04 07 02 FF TRASH CAN@ @
-
- Place your cursor on the @ symbol. Then carefully use the [BACKSPACE]
- key to delete the name. Then just type ANY name up to 9 characters,
- you want to appear under your TRASH CAN Icon.
-
- 2. If you want your 'Installed Programs' to be executed from a folder,
- or if you want to install more files. Look for this line. (or one
- like it)
-
- #G 03 04 A:\ARCSHL21.PRG@ *.ARC@
- #G 03 04 A:\ARCSHL21.PRG@ *.LZH@
-
- Simply edit the line by inserting the folder name. Be sure to use the
- backslash '\' like this: A:\FOLDER\FILE.NAME@ Make sure you do not
- delete the @ characters. While you are doing this you can easily add
- more file extenders. Just copy the lines exactly.
-
- The line that starts with #G is for GEM programs.(PRG, APP)
- The line that starts with #F is for TOS programs.(TOS)
- The line that starts with #P is for TTP programs.(TTP)
-
-
- GRAPHICS AND ANIMATION
- ANIMATE 4
- Ctsy CompuServe Atari Forums
-
-
- #: 17827 S2/Games 22-Jan-90 11:06:18
- Sb: #17801-#ANIMA4.ARC
- Fm: SYSOP*Bill Aycock 76703,4061
- To: Terry May 75076,3576 (X)
-
- Terry,
-
- I don't have any .DL? delta animations - never seen one, as a matter of
- fact - and I suppose a lot of folks are the same way. Luckily, patching
- either ANIMATE3 or ANIMATE4 to default to SEQ instead of DL? is very
- simple. All you need to do is:
-
- 1. Boot with the TinyTool accessory or load it into MultiDesk. (If you
- don't already have it, it's TTOOL.ARC in LIB 6 of ATARIPRO.)
-
- 2. Go into TinyTool and click on FILE, then load whichever version of
- ANIMATE you want.
-
- 3. When the little info line says "File offset (beginning=0)":
- - for ANIMATE3, type in $4A03
- - for ANIMATE4, type in $4A90
- and hit return. In a second the file screen will show up, and the
- first three bytes displayed will be DLT (for v3) or DL? (for v4).
-
- 4. Click on the 44 on the first line, then type in 83 and hit return.
-
- 5. Click on the 4C on the first line, then type in 69 and hit return.
-
- 6. Click on the 54 (for v3) or 3F (for v4) on the first line, then type
- in 81 and hit return.
-
- 7. Now the first three characters shown on the upper right should be
- SEQ. Click on the WRITE button at the bottom of TinyTool to write
- your changes to the file.
-
- 8. Ta-daaa! Done!
-
-
-
-
- | | | SUPPORTING SHAREWARE
- | | | By Terry Schreiber
- | | | ----------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
- Most computerists are aware of the many bulletin boards and networks
- available with file areas that are classified as Public Domain software.
- What most of these users don't know is that some of the software they
- regard as free is actually shareware. Shareware is software that has
- been released by the developer for you on a try on a limited basis. If
- you like the program then you are asked to purchase it or updates by
- sending the programmer money. Most developers ask for five or ten
- dollars, or even donations, which is not unreasonable for a program
- compared to the cost of a software package at your local store.
-
- The problem is that most people are using the software and not
- supporting the author. If this continues developers will soon tire of
- the hours of work they spend on programming in comparison to the revenue
- in return. These programmers are not going to get rich from this
- revenue in fact in most cases it doesn't even cover the cost of the
- updates and mailing to get the latest revision to you.
-
- A partial solution our users group came up with was to increase the
- selling price of all disks and magazines twenty-five cents with this
- amount going into a kitty for shareware authors. Each month we will
- draw a name and the total will be sent to that developer. This, of
- course does not mean that the members can't still kick in what they want
- as well sent to the programmer. We are hoping in this way to have not
- only the individual registered for updates but the club as well. I hope
- this plan meets with your approval programmers.
-
- I realize that this is just another one of those pleas to support
- shareware developers, but you should realize that by not paying for a
- program that you are using you are as guilty of a crime as software
- piracy or theft. There may be a few eyes opened with the last
- statement. I'm sure there are programs you use all the time and don't
- even think about. Arcshell, Cheetah, Dcopy these are all in the
- category of shareware. I wouldn't like to estimate but I would guess at
- least ninety percent of the persons using these and other shareware
- programs have not paid for them. Prove me wrong! Please!
-
-
-
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- To sign up for GEnie service call (with modem) (800) 638-8369. Upon
- connection type HHH and hit <return>. Wait for the U#= prompt and type
- XTX99436,GEnie and hit <return>.
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- To sign up for CompuServe service call (with phone) (800) 848-8199. Ask
- for operator #198. You will be promptly sent a $15.00 free membership
- kit.
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- A special limited time offer is available for subscribers to AtariUser
- Magazine. The regular $19.95 subscription price is now just $15.00 for
- a full year or $25.00 a year for first class mailing. For more
- information contact AtariUser at (818) 332-0372. Credit card or billing
- is available. This offer available ONLY via US MAIL!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- Editorial material, including article submissions, press releases, and
- products for evaluation, should be sent to the Z*Net News Service
- Post Office Box 59, Middlesex, New Jersey, 08846.
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- You can subscribe to the bi-monthly hard copy Atari Explorer Magazine
- for $14.95 for 6 issues, $39.95 for 18 issues. Canadian subscribers
- should add $5.00 per 6 issues,foreign subscribers should add $10.00 per
- 6 issues. Checks must be drawn in US funds on a US bank. Send orders
- to Atari Explorer, Post Office Box 6488, Duluth, MN 55806. VISA and
- MasterCard orders, call (218) 723-9202.
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- Reprints from the GEnie ST Roundtable are Copyright (c)1992, Atari
- Corporation and the GEnie ST RT.
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- Atari Explorer Online Magazine is a weekly publication covering the
- Atari computer community. Material published in this edition may be
- reprinted in non-commercial publications unless otherwise noted at the
- top of the article. Opinions presented herein are those of the
- individual authors and do not necessarily reflect those of the staff.
- Atari Explorer Online Magazine is Copyright (c)1992, Atari Computer
- Corporation. Z*Net and the Z*Net Newswire are copyright(c)1992, Z*Net
- News Service/Ron Kovacs.
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- Atari Explorer Online Magazine
- "The Official Atari Online Journal"
- Copyright (c)1992, Atari Computer Corporation
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
-
-