home
***
CD-ROM
|
disk
|
FTP
|
other
***
search
/
The Devil's Doorknob BBS Capture (1996-2003)
/
devilsdoorknobbbscapture1996-2003.iso
/
Dloads
/
100UTILI
/
CDBOX210.ZIP
/
CD-BOX.DOC
< prev
next >
Wrap
Text File
|
1992-07-15
|
64KB
|
1,327 lines
╒════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════╕
│ CD-Box v2.10 - (C) Jeffrey Belt, 1992 │
╘════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════╛
Quick start:
0. You must have a VGA display (color), a mouse, and an Adlib or
SoundBlaster card (v1.50 or above) - a hard disk is also highly
recommended.
1. Create a directory in which you put all CD-BOX.* files, and every music
file (.CMF, .MOD, .MUS, .ROL and .VOC) you can find, either as is or
stored in .ZIP files. Also make sure SBFMDRV.COM, SOUND.COM, PLAY.EXE,
SPUTROL.COM, VPLAY.EXE and PKUNZIP.EXE (if you don't have them all, do
the best you can) are on the PATH (or the SOUND environment variable)
somewhere.
2. Type CD-BOX and press Enter (the first time CD-Box is run, the directory
scan may take a looooong time, especially if you have many songs - be
patient, it will go much faster the second time).
3. Fool around and see what CD-Box can do.
IF YOU HAVE TROUBLE, before you conclude that CD-Box is useless, see part III,
troubleshooting.
If you have players others than those listed above, check out CD-BOX.CFG.
If you like and use CD-Box, see part VI (at the end).
If you want more details:
* Type CD-BOX/? at the DOS prompt
* Read the rest of this document!
══════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════
Acknowledgments
AdLib Music Synthetizer Card is a registered trademark of AdLib, Inc. Also,
SOUND.COM is copyrighted by AdLib, Inc.
SoundBlaster is a registered trademark of Creative Labs, Inc. Also,
SBFMDRV.COM and VPLAY.EXE are copyrighted by Creative Labs, Inc.
PKUNZIP is copyrighted by PKWARE, Inc.
CD-Box supports by default the following drivers/players (you are free to
change this by editing the CD-BOX.CFG file):
SBFMDRV.COM and VPLAY.EXE from Creative Labs, Inc. They come with the
SoundBlaster.
SOUND.COM from Adlib, Inc. It comes with the AdLib Music Synthetizer Card
(which I bought before switching to a SoundBlaster, but I have no
regrets...). There also is a SB-SOUND.COM from Creative Labs, Inc;
rename it to SOUND.COM for SPUTROL to work (or load it before running
CD-Box).
SPUTROL.COM from the Sputter package, available from VersaWare (Adrienne
Cousins) (that one is Shareware). Last thing I know it was on
nic.funet.fi, and snake.mcs.kent.edu.
PLAY.EXE which is completely anonymous (I downloaded it from a FTP server
somewhere which IT got from THE TASTE/MG BBS, 718-252-4529, as
ADLIBMUS.ZIP, with no accompanying documentation, no author name, no
nothing).
Other player programs I've heard of are, and you might try with CD-Box are:
SPUTCMF from the Sputter package, PLAYROL from Tracy Harton, MODPLAY from
Mark J Cox, WOWII from Thomas Meyer... See CD-BOX.CFG for details.
Exactly which program does what in detailed at the beginning of part II.
══════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════
TABLE OF CONTENTS
══════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════
Part I: How to use CD-Box
Part II: General questions & answers about CD-Box
(including exactly which drivers/players are needed,
some FTP addresses, how CD-Box interacts with them...)
Part III: Trouble-shooting
Part IV: Version history, how you can help, and thanks
Part V: License & absence of warranty
Part VI: How to show your appreciation for CD-Box
══════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════
Compatibility
CD-BOX v2.10 IS FULLY COMPATIBLE WITH ALL VERSIONS OF CD-BOX ABOVE 2.00. You
can overwrite the old CD-Box files with the new ones, provided the old
version is v2.00, v2.01 or v2.02. If you're one of those who still have
CD-Box v1.61 or below, CD-Box will ask you to delete the SONGS.DAT file.
══════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════
New features in CD-Box v2.10:
Major changes:
- Internal support for .MOD files
- CD-Box now gets its data about drivers and players from a configuration
file, CD-BOX.CFG. The default drivers/players supported are almost the
same as in CD-Box v2.01, but you can easily change that and have it
support any driver/player you happen to have. See CD-BOX.CFG for details.
- CD-Box also provides DUAL internal/external support. For instance, CD-Box
can play .CMF files by itself (it needs only the driver), but if you wish,
you can force it to use an external driver (this is implemented to get
CD-Box ready for more internal support), or even try to use both. See also
CD-BOX.CFG.
- Files... mode added
Minor changes:
- more free memory for .MUS/.MOD/.VOC files!
- format unplayable -> .XXX pilot light & songs grayed when selected
- /L parameter added
- 4 animations added (UFO, Boat, Rocket, Spin)
- mouse driver completely rewritten -> light gradients on mouse pointers
- a correct "About" dialog
- better packing for CD-BOX.RSR (a bit smaller, yet contains 100K more!)
- better CRASH! message
- temporary drive redirection (Temp=)
- "fast play" (right clicking on song) turns off "Loop" (whew!)
Fixed bugs:
- mouse-at-double-its-horizontal-position-on-certain-drivers bug
- bug caused by too long song titles
- explicit error message instead of crash if PKUNZIP not found while analyzing
- random animation timeout not depending on processor speed any more
- "Rem." and "Total" keep their settings throughout the whole playback
- weird button behaviour when in Random mode
══════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════
PART I: CD-BOX
══════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════
*** What does CD-Box do?
──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
CD-Box is, stated simply, a program which plays back music files on the AdLib
Music Synthetizer Card and the SoundBlaster card. However, it is also very
pretty and fun to use - it runs in 256 colors and uses the mouse (not the
keyboard).
CD-Box's main features:
- A pretty interface and fun animation - CDs pop up and down and start and
stop spinning, pages scroll... including random events I'll let you
discover!
- Support for .CMF, .MOD, .MUS, .ROL and .VOC music/sound files (.CMF, .MOD
and .VOC files work with SoundBlaster only). These files can also be
stored in .ZIP files to save disk space - CD-Box will find them and play
them from the archive (using a RAM drive if you want).
- CD-Box allows you to easily program a selection of songs; it waits for you
to select ALL the songs before starting to play the first one.
- Instead of selecting songs, you can tell CD-Box how long you want the
playback to last, and CD-Box will automatically select songs for you.
You can even do that from the DOS command line (or a batch file), and
CD-Box will play the songs, then exit right back to DOS.
- CD-Box makes it easy to choose files in which to pick songs (using Files
mode, one of the latest additions) - so if you ZIPped your songs by
category, you can tell CD-Box which categories to use!
- No data file to keep to date; bank filenames and song titles can be
modified directly from CD-Box, which will save your changes to disk.
CD-Box also knows the titles and lengths of numerous songs, and when it
encounters unknown songs, can sometimes (it depends on the format)
extract data from the files on disk.
- CD-Box is able to examine the SOUND environnment variable and of loading
drivers and player programs from there if necessary (as any good
SoundBlaster software should do).
──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
And now, the fun part: how CD-Box works
You run it by typing CD-BOX at the DOS prompt. Obvious, really. You are then
in...
══════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════
*** SELECT MODE: to select and play songs
──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
- Move between the pages by clicking on the "Rewind" and "Forward" buttons.
Pressing the RIGHT mouse button on "Rewind" and "Forward" brings you to
the first and last page, respectively.
- Select one or more songs to play by clicking on the small button next to
the songs' names; they will be played back in the order you selected
them. The digital display changes color and displays the total length
time of your selection.
- Click on "Loop" if you want your selection to be played over and over
again.
- Click on "Play" to play the songs - you'll be in Play mode (see below).
- Clicking on "Random" brings you into Random mode. You can then select the
total playing time you wish, by clicking on the "Rewind" and "Forward"
buttons; pressing the RIGHT mouse button brings up the minimum and
maximum playing time, respectively. Once the desired time is displayed
on the digital display, click on "Play". CD-Box will randomly select
additional songs until the desired time is reached, then play the songs.
******************************************************************************
NOTE: Certain songs may be of unknown length (they were not known to CD-Box
and they have never been played yet). When such a song is selected, CD-Box
supposes the length is zero. Therefore, if you use the "Random" button and
suchs songs are chosen, the actual playing time may be far longer than the
playing time you entered; so try not to use "Random" before you have played
all the songs (if you do, Esc still works). Of course a way to play all the
songs is to use Random mode and choose the maximum playing time.
******************************************************************************
- Clicking on "Random" while in Random mode, exits Random mode.
- Clicking on the wide "Unselect" button will unselect ALL the songs.
- Finally, click on "Eject" to quit.
══════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════
*** PLAY MODE: while songs are being played back
──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
- Each song is played in turn, and then de-selected, unless "Loop" is in the
down position, in which case they are reselected to be played again
later.
- Pressing Esc while a song is playing interrupts the current song, and
CD-Box starts looking for the next one. If you press Esc between songs,
playback stops entirely (songs not yet played remain selected). You've
got to press Esc twice quite fast to stop the playback in fast mode.
If the cursor is a yellow arrow, you also have access to the real-time clock
and the following functions (.CMF and .MOD files only (for now!)):
- Stop: stops playback entirely (same as pressing Esc between songs).
- Skip: interrupts the current song (same as pressing Esc while playing).
- Pause/Resume: toggle it once to pause the music, and toggle it again to
have it pick up where it left off.
- Rem.: if pressed, the digital display shows the time left until the song
or the total selection ends (see next button), as far as CD-Box can
tell; if not, the digital display shows the time elapsed since the
beginning of the song or the total selection.
- Total: if pressed, the digital display shows the time elapsed or left (see
previous button) for the current song; if not, it shows the time elapsed
or left for the whole selection. Got it?
Play mode switches back to Select mode when playback ends (whether you
interrupted it or not).
══════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════
*** MODIFY MODE: used to modify bank files and song titles
──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
Click on the wide "Modify" button to enter Modify mode. All the songs will be
unselected, and the row of buttons will flip and reveal another set of
buttons. "Rewind" and "Forward" work the same.
- You can display the song titles, bank files or filename by clicking on one
of the three buttons at the right.
- If you click on a small button next to a song, a dot cursor will appear
and you will be able to modify whatever is displayed, using the keyboard
(Backspace, Enter and Escape do the ovious things). Any changes you type
in will be automatically saved to disk once you exit CD-Box.
══════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════
*** GOTO MODE: used to jump to a specific title (or filename, see Files mode)
──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
Click on "Goto...", and an alphabetic set of buttons will appear. From there,
simply choose a letter, and CD-Box will "Rewind" or "Forward" directly to
the page containing the first song starting by the letter you selected, and
flash that song briefly. If no such song exists, CD-Box tries with the next
letter, and the next, and may finally give up by giving an error message.
When you exit Goto mode, either automatically, or by clicking on Goto a second
time, you will be brought back to the same mode you were in before entering
Goto mode. Goto is accessible from all modes.
══════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════
*** FILES MODE: to tag/untag files for scanning
──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
GENERAL WARNING: this mode is the latest implemented. It seems to be working
okay, so I included it in this release, but it has not been as thouroughly
tested as the rest of CD-Box - therefore, there may be some bugs (I don't
think so but you never know). Use at your own risk!
Click on "Files...", and CD-Box will save any changes you have made (bank
files, song titles, whatever), and promptly forget all the songs in memory.
Files names will then be displayed instead of song titles. These files are
NOT the song files themselves, but rather the files CD-Box scanned to get
the songs in memory - the difference is that .ZIP files will be displayed as
such, instead of having a separate entry for each file in the .ZIP file (as
is the case in Modify mode when the "File" button is pressed).
All files are selected by default. You can browse through the list using
"Rewind" and "Forward" as usual, and "Goto..." a specific filename... and
when you click on "Rescan", CD-Box will rescan ONLY the files left selected.
Thus, if you left all the files selected, CD-Box will reload all the songs
and nothing will be changed. If you unselected them all, CD-Box will load no
songs.
This serves as a "filter" for the songs displayed in CD-Box, and used by (for
instance) Random mode. If your songs are ZIPped by category, switching to
Files mode and choosing only certain categories will tell CD-Box to display
and use only the songs in these categories. If you don't use .ZIP files at
all, then probably Files mode will not be of much use to you.
Note that the files displayed are not all the files in the directory, but
rather those that contain songs. Also, if you specified /L at startup, any
unplayable files in the directory will not be displayed. And, if you
specified file specifications at startup (for instance, CD-BOX *.MOD
Z*.ZIP), only the files matching these specifications will be displayed.
All this is cumulative, of course. The command line serves as a first
filter, and Files mode then enables you to choose the filtered files by
hand.
Files mode much simpler to use than to describe, believe me... try it!
══════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════
*** DEBUG MODE: to have a quick look at CD-Box's startup
──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
This is not really a mode in the sense of those described above, but is a
command-line parameter important enough to be included here. Typing CD-BOX/D
at the DOS prompt:
* checks the CD-BOX.CFG file for errors, reporting any, so that you can
correct them;
* displays, for each driver and player, whether it was found or not;
* scans the directory for songs, displaying each song name in turn, so that
you may find which song exactly makes CD-Box crash (if any).
══════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════
PART II: GENERAL QUESTIONS
══════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════
*** How does CD-Box play songs?
──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
It depends on the format. For each format, CD-Box follows these rules:
* If there is a section about this format in CD-BOX.CFG ([<format>]), then
CD-Box will provide external support, and:
* If there is a "Dual=yes" statement in the section, and CD-Box has
internal support for this format (.CMF or .MOD), then CD-Box will
first try playing such songs using its own routines, and, if this
fails (error while loading or whatever), use the external player.
* If there is no such statement in the section, then CD-Box will ALWAYS
use this player to play the song, using the parameters given in
CD-BOX.CFG.
* If there is no section on this format in CD-BOX.CFG, then CD-Box will use
its internal routines to play the song, if any. CD-Box currently
provides internal support for .CMF and .MOD files.
* In all other cases, CD-Box will NOT play songs of this format (the
corresponding pilot light above the song names is grayed).
Usually you'll want CD-Box to play songs by itself; it's by far the easiest
way, there's no player to install, and you can pause, resume and stop the
song using the mouse. However, you would use an external player if:
* CD-Box provides no internal support for the corresponding format
* Or the sound given by the player you have is better than that of CD-Box,
or the player supports a wider range of capabilities (what if you've got
the AdLib and have a player which can play .CMF on your card?), so you
might want to override CD-Box's routines for that format.
Note that even if CD-Box does have internal support for some formats, it may
still need the corresponding driver. See right below for details.
══════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════
*** Exactly what programs do I need for each song format?
──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
In addition to CD-BOX.EXE (the program), CD-BOX.RSR (the resource file), and
CD-BOX.CFG (the configuration file), you need songs to play, and a player
program in most cases. The default (you can change that, see CD-BOX.CFG for
details) music playback programs supported by CD-Box and the corresponding
song formats are:
┌─────────────────────────────┐
│ Creative Music Files (.CMF) │ SoundBlaster only
└─────────────────────────────┘
You need the sound driver SBFMDRV.COM from Creative Labs, Inc, and it
has to be loaded in memory before CD-Box is run. (You can remove it by
typing SBFMDRV /U once you exit CD-Box). No other program is
necessary, .CMF routines are programmed directly into CD-Box.
┌────────────────────────┐
│ Amiga MOD files (.MOD) │ SoundBlaster only
└────────────────────────┘
You need nothing except lots of memory; CD-Box is linked to internal
.MOD playing routines.
┌────────────────────┐
│ Music files (.MUS) │ AdLib & SoundBlaster
└────────────────────┘
You need PLAY.EXE. Each .MUS file also needs a .SND bank file, so be
sure to put them in the directory too. (ex: AGNES.MUS and AGNES.SND,
MULL.MUS and MULL.SND...)
Note: .MUS bank files (.SND files) are different from Macintosh raw
sound files (.SND extension also) - the former contain instrument data
and the latter a complete digitized sound. Macintosh .SND files can be
converted to .VOC using appropriate utilities such as SOX, available
at garbo.uwasa.fi in pc/sound (that holds for other formats such as
.AU and .WAV).
┌─────────────────────┐
│ ROLand files (.ROL) │ AdLib & SoundBlaster
└─────────────────────┘
You need SPUTROL.COM, and the sound driver SOUND.COM from AdLib, Inc;
but you don't have to load it before running CD-Box. SPUTROL will
itself load it if necessary, and unload it when done. .ROL files also
need at least one .BNK bank file, which usually is STANDARD.BNK.
If you have SB-SOUND.COM from Creative Labs, Inc, rename it to
SOUND.COM so that SPUTROL can detect it (unless you use another player
which properly detects SB-SOUND...)
Since many of you asked... ROL2CMF will convert .ROL to .CMF so you
can use CD-Box's internal routines instead of SPUTROL. ROL2CMF is
widely available on FTP servers, such as saffron.inset.com, directory
pub/sound/players.
┌─────────────────────────────────┐
│ SoundBlaster VOiCe files (.VOC) │ SoundBlaster only
└─────────────────────────────────┘
You need VPLAY.EXE. These are digitized sound files and not real music
files, so the space taken up on disk can be HUGE.
┌────────────┐
│ .ZIP files │ All formats
└────────────┘
You need PKUNZIP.EXE (see section on .ZIP files below).
All the song files have to reside in CD-Box's directory; the program files do
not have to, but make sure CD-Box has access to them (through a PATH
statement for instance). CD-Box also examines the SOUND environnment
variable and is able to load drivers and players from there if necessary.
To see if CD-Box detects properly your drivers and player programs, type
CD-BOX/D at the DOS prompt.
══════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════
*** How do I tell CD-Box to support other drivers/players?
──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
If you have a player program that meets the following restrictions:
- it can be run in "quiet" mode, i.e. no output of ANY kind while running,
no error messages, no nothing.
- it does not switch to a specific video mode (for instance, text mode) when
run.
then CD-Box can support it. Modify the CD-BOX.CFG configuration file using
any ASCII text editor to do this.
══════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════
*** How do I add or remove songs to CD-Box?
──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
The song titles displayed in CD-Box depend entirely on the music files in the
current directory (either in .ZIP archives or not). If you want to add songs
to CD-Box, simply put them in the current directory. To remove them, delete
the files. In other words, CD-Box always reflects the current directory -
only the file names are replaced by song titles.
The above paragraph is modified by the fact that if you specify file
specifications on the command line (for instance, CD-BOX *.ZIP NEW*.*), the
song titles will be those found in the specified files only.
══════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════
*** What's all this about .ZIP files?
──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
CD-Box is able to look into .ZIP files to see if there are any songs there; if
it finds any, the corresponding title will appear on the main screen, and
the song will be treated just as any other song. This means your songs can
be packed in .ZIP files in CD-Box's directory to save space; CD-Box will
find them anyway.
*** When does CD-Box uncompress the songs stored in .ZIP files?
Unpacking occurs in two cases only:
- at startup, if a song found in a .ZIP archive is not known to CD-Box, it
will exploded using PKUNZIP.EXE so that it can be analyzed. The program
will try to extract the most information from the file (title and length
in particular); the "Analyzing song" indicator is lit up. When done,
CD-Box will remove the unpacked file.
- just before playing a song stored in a .ZIP archive, the ".ZIP" indicator
lights up and CD-Box invokes PKUNZIP.EXE to explode the song file, and
the bank file if necessary. When done playing, the unpacked files are
removed also.
*** Where are files exploded to?
Files temporarily extracted from .ZIP files reside on:
- the drive/directory specified by the Temp= statement in CD-BOX.CFG;
- if Temp= is not specified, the drive/directory specified by the TEMP
environnment variable;
- if TEMP doesn't exist, to the default drive/directory.
Always make sure there's enough room to hold the largest expanded song!
*** What program is necessary to take full advantage of this feature?
PKUNZIP.EXE from PKWare, Inc. If you don't have it, or if it is not reachable
through a PATH statement, and if you have .ZIP files in CD-Box's directory,
the message "Unable to explode song" will appear. CD-Box may also crash at
startup.
The bottom line: using .ZIP files with CD-Box is pretty easy and
straightforward. In the case of .MUS and .ROL music files, it also saves an
average of 80% of disk space!!! Believe me, IT'S WORTH IT!
══════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════
*** Dual support? What's that?
──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
.CMF and .MOD files: it means CD-Box can play this format by itself. So you
have three choices:
* The easiest: just let it play the songs and don't worry about anything
else.
* If CD-Box won't play this format on your particular computer, you can try
overriding its routines by telling it to use an external player (ex:
AdLib users might have a .CMF player that works on their card). You
simply have to insert the appropriate statements in CD-BOX.CFG.
* CD-Box can also use both: try playing the format by itself, and if that
fails, use an external player; you have to insert whatever is needed to
run the player in CD-BOX.CFG, and add a "Dual=yes" statement (ex: CD-Box
may not be able to play all your .MOD files, so you might want to use an
external player for the ones it cannot play. See .MOD files in part III,
trouble-shooting).
══════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════
*** Is there any way I can skip the animation?
──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
Indeed there is. Type CD-BOX/F at the DOS prompt.
You can also skip the title screen, but still have the animation, by pressing
a key while CD-Box is loading (before it switches to graphics mode).
══════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════
*** Are there any shortcuts to make things happen more quickly?
──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
Try clicking the RIGHT mouse button. For instance, clicking the right mouse
button on a song button plays the song immediately, or clicking the right
mouse button on the "Rewind" and "Forward" buttons go to the beginning and
end of the song index, respectively. But if that's still too slow for you,
the /F parameter is even faster, but then you'll skip ALL the animations.
══════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════
*** What does that "XXX duplicate!" message at startup mean?
──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
This can only happen if you use .ZIP files; it means you have two or more
files which have exactly the same filename in the CD-Box directory. CD-Box
ignores all duplicate filenames and remembers only the first one found. It's
not an error, it's a warning, but it can be annoying.
You have the same file twice in the directory (one in a .ZIP file, another in
a .ZIP file or simply in the directory). So delete one or rename the other.
══════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════
*** How does CD-Box remember the title and length of songs?
──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
Files found in the current directory are the ones loaded, and the bank file
and title given depend on the following criteria:
- If there is a SONGS.DAT file in the directory, and if it contains that
song, CD-Box loads the data from it (SONGS.DAT is an external database
CD-Box uses to remember songs).
- Otherwise, if CD-Box knows that song intrisically (there is another
database directly programmed into CD-BOX.RSR), the data is read from
there.
- If all this fails, then CD-Box tries to make the best possible guesses:
+ bank file: usually BNK974.BNK, or filename.SND, or none.
+ song title: extracted from disk (.CMF and .MOD), otherwise same as
filename.
+ length: 0 (unknown), except for .ROL files, where the length is
computed directly from the file on disk.
All this is recorded in CD-Box's external database (SONGS.DAT); if the
database doesn't exist, it is created. Any changes you make, and of course
the changes in length as computed when playing the song, take over the
default values, and are recorded as well.
All changes are actually written to disk when you quit CD-Box (Eject).
At the time of this writing, CD-Box intrinsically knows about 150 songs, but
this number keeps changing. Type CD-BOX/I at the DOS prompt to know exactly
how many.
══════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════
*** How can I tell CD-Box to load only the song files my system supports?
──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
If you're missing some drivers or player programs, you might want CD-Box to
load only the files it can play, instead of loading them all and issuing an
error message each time. Give it the /L parameter at startup (CD-BOX /L).
Note that in this case CD-Box will also ignore songs in .ZIP archives if
PKUNZIP.EXE cannot be found.
Unplayable songs (i.e. missing driver or player) are grayed when you select
them in CD-Box.
══════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════
*** What are the command line parameters?
──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
CD-BOX/? gives you a quick summary. Otherwise, here are the details:
* filespec: instead of scanning the entire directory, CD-Box will scan only
the files matching your file specifications. For instance, if you want
CD-Box to load the .MUS and .ROL files only, type CD-BOX *.MUS *.ROL;
or if you just got a brand new archive containing new songs called
ALLNEW.ZIP, and you want CD-Box to scan only that archive, type CD-BOX
ALLNEW.ZIP. An alternative is to use Files mode (see above). The
default for filespec is, of course, *.*.
* /F: All non-essential animation is skipped, including the title screen,
CDs popping up and down, buttons flipping over... Use this parameter
if CD-Box runs too slowly on your computer, or if you're a little
short on memory (you get thrown back to DOS with messages like "Not
enough memory to load..." or "VGA Sprite Manager has run out of
memory!").
If you don't specify the /F parameter, you can still skip the title
screen by pressing a key while CD-Box is loading (before it switches
to graphics mode).
* /I: Displays how much memory CD-Box detects and reserves for animation
purposes, and also how many songs are in the internal and external
databases.
* /L: Tells CD-Box NOT to load the song formats which cannot be played (i.e.
a driver is not loaded or missing or a player program is missing). In
other words, CD-Box does not load songs which corresponding pilot
light is grayed. This includes .ZIP files; they will not be scanned if
PKUNZIP.EXE cannot be found.
* /P: Loads CD-Box, plays n minutes of music by switching to Random mode,
and then exits back to DOS upon completion of the last song. If Esc is
pressed between songs, playback interrupts just as usual, and normal
operation is resumed: you can then use the mouse to choose songs,
change titles...
* /R: Removes the files specified on the command line from the external
database (SONGS.DAT). You have to specify the complete filenames (no
wildcards), not the song titles. For instance, to remove the files
IMPACT7.MOD and SPACETR.MOD from SONGS.DAT, you would type CD-BOX /R
IMPACT7.MOD SPACETR.MOD. You shouldn't ever need to do this, except in
extremely rare cases where CD-Box would have fouled up and recorded a
song length of 45613248756:18 for a specific song...
* /V: Displays the contents (filename, bank filename, title and length) of
the external database (SONGS.DAT) on the screen, pausing when the
screen is full. Blank entries in the Bank column indicate the file
does not need any bank file (.CMF, .MOD and .VOC), and blank entries
in the Length column indicate the length of the song is not known (0).
If you want to save this listing to a file, specify a filename, like
this:
CD-BOX /V=filename
Output will be saved to the file filename.TXT.
* /D: This is a debugging tool which displays:
- whether any errors were found in CD-BOX.CFG;
- the complete paths to all the drivers and players specified in
CD-BOX.CFG, if found;
- the name of each file as it is read and analyzed from the
directory when CD-Box starts up. I left it because CD-Box does
not verify whether a music file is valid or not before analyzing
it. So, if you try to run CD-Box and you get a "CRASH!", try
using /D, and chances are you'll spot the file which is invalid.
REMOVE THIS FILE FROM THE DIRECTORY!
There are a few checking routines to prevent this, however, so you
might get an "Invalid .ROL file" message or equivalent. In that
case, remove the file too.
Duplicate songs are also displayed and reported.
══════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════
*** I have an AdLib card, is there a way I can play .CMF/.MOD/.VOC files?
──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
Yes... if you have a player which can do that. CD-Box can't. If you have FTP
or News access, ask around, I've heard of an AdLib .CMF player, and of
something to make the AdLib play .MODs. Whether they exist, and can be made
to run with CD-Box (using CD-BOX.CFG) is another matter.
══════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════
*** Is there anything else I should know about CD-Box?
──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
Well... there is. There are random animations happening at irregular
intervals. If you don't use the /F parameter and are patient, you should see
some from time to time.
══════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════
PART III: TROUBLE-SHOOTING
══════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════
CRASHES DURING SONG ANALYSIS
══════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════
*** I get a "PKUNZIP either not found or crashed..." error message
──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
Run CD-BOX/D. If PKUNZIP.EXE is found, then CD-Box will say so... and crash
while analyzing files stored in a .ZIP archive. Try unZIPping this archive
by hand, and see what happens. The problem may be that the temporary drive
or directory (Temp= in CD-BOX.CFG, or TEMP in your environnment) is invalid.
If PKUNZIP.EXE is not found, then you have a song in a .ZIP archive that
CD-Box tried to explode, but couldn't. CD-Box can read .ZIP files by itself,
but cannot extract files. So either make PKUNZIP.EXE available through the
path, or delete the .ZIP archive.
Another solution is to tell CD-Box not to load songs from .ZIP files if
PKUNZIP.EXE is not available; in that case, start CD-Box with the /L
parameter.
══════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════
*** I get a "CRASH!" message while CD-Box analyzes a song
──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
Type CD-BOX/D to find the file that makes CD-Box crash. Then:
* If it's while analyzing an uncompressed song, it means the song has an
invalid format, and CD-Box crashes when trying to extract meaningful
values like song title and song length. Delete that song file!
* If it's while analyzing a .ZIP archive, it means the .ZIP is either empty
or is corrupted. Put something in it, fix it or get rid of it!
══════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════
REFUSAL TO PLAY CERTAIN SONGS
══════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════
*** CD-Box displays a "Driver not found" message!
──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
.CMF:
You're trying to play a .CMF file but haven't loaded the SBFMDRV driver before
starting CD-Box. Having SBFMDRV.COM on disk is not enough, it has to be
loaded too (you can always unload it afterwards by typing SBFMDRV/U).
Others:
The driver specified in the CD-BOX.CFG file could not be found. Either the
driver is not on the PATH or SOUND environnment variable, or the driver name
is mispelled in the CD-BOX.CFG file. Typing CD-BOX/D at the DOS prompt may
help.
══════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════
*** CD-Box displays a "Player program not found" message!
──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
You have tried playing a song, and the associated player program was not found
(the pilot light at the top should be grayed). Make note of the format
causing problems, then run CD-Box with the /D parameter. If the
corresponding program is displayed as "not found.", then you can't play
these songs, unless:
* You get the program and put it in CD-Box's directory, the directory from
the SOUND environnment variable, or somewhere on your PATH.
* Or you modify the CD-BOX.CFG file to have CD-Box support another player
you might have for that format. See CD-BOX.CFG for details.
══════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════
*** CD-Box displays a "Don't know how to play" message!
──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
There's something wrong in the CD-BOX.CFG file. Either the player= or
parameters= command is missing, and both must be present.
.CMF: since CD-Box supports this format internally, you can also remove the
[CMF] section in CD-BOX.CFG (if there is one). This way, CD-Box won't try to
look for external drivers and/or players, and will use its own code to play
the songs.
.MOD: same as above
══════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════
*** CD-Box doesn't play the song, and there is no error message!
──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
If CD-Box acts as if it will play a song, but in fact doesn't play it at all,
and no error is generated, it may be because the song needs more memory to
play - often the case with .MOD files above 250 KB, or with certain complex
.ROL files. I'm working on ways to decrease the (huge) memory requirements
of CD-Box, but I can't do much better than the current version. Freeing DOS
memory and loading drivers high is definitely a bonus.
Another possibility is that the player got an error (usually out of memory,
but it could be corrupted bank file or something else), but reported none.
CD-Box is then fooled into thinking everything was okay. Try playing the
song by hand under DOS (using full pathnames, if the song is exploded on a
different drive/directory), and see what happens.
══════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════
*** CD-Box displays "Unable to explode song"!
──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
CD-Box can't find PKUNZIP.EXE. Either make it available to CD-Box, remove any
.ZIP files containing songs you may have in CD-Box's directory, or run
CD-Box with the /L parameter.
.MUS and .ROL only: there is a second possibility: CD-Box has not found
the bank file. Try changing the name of the bank file associated to the
song, or if the name is okay, check that it is in the same .ZIP archive than
the song.
══════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════
TROUBLE WITH .MOD FILES
══════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════
*** CD-Box displays "Error loading .MOD"!
──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
CD-Box recognizes only 31-instrument .MOD files; you may have .MODs it won't
play even though players like ModPlay do. There are two solutions to this:
* Use an external player to play .MOD files, either overriding completely
CD-Box's routines or using dual support (giving CD-Box a chance to play
the song and telling it to use the external player if it can't)
* If you have ModEdit (or maybe another .MOD editor), load and save the .MOD
files. ModEdit will always save the song as a 31-instrument .MOD, so it
will be playable by CD-Box (it works all the time for me). I have a
batch file that does this automatically as soon as I get new .MODs...
══════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════
*** .MOD files sound terrible!
──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
Apart from using an external player, you can try changing the "MixingSpeed="
statement in CD-BOX.CFG. The higher the value, the better, but CD-Box's
feedback will slow down accordingly while playing .MOD files and might even
hang if you specify a value that is too high for your computer. The default
is 10000 Hz, 15909 Hz gives good results on computers fast enough.
══════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════
*** Clicking on "Pause" while playback doesn't really pause!
──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
Well, YOU try pausing a .MOD file without killing it completely. Great fun.
No, seriously, if pausing doesn't work, just resume and try pausing again -
it works when they aren't too many instruments around. CD-Box has the same
pausing problems as ModPlay... no wonder, I use almost the same routines!
══════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════
HARDWARE TROUBLE
══════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════
*** I get a "VGA Sprite Manager has run out of memory" message!
──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
The VGA Sprite Manager is the routine responsible for animating sprites on the
VGA screen, not messing up the background, being able to superpose different
sprites on different planes, and preventing flicker. However, it also needs
a LOT of memory; 64 KB + the sprites to move, so it usually amounts to about
80 - 90 KB. So either free more memory before running CD-Box, or use the /F
parameter. The animations will be skipped, and the Sprite Manager will not
be invoked. But chances are you're too short on memory to play songs anyway.
══════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════
*** CD-Box returns suddenly to DOS and I get a "CRASH!" message!
──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
Well, you stumbled on a bug. I left all the checking routines on in CD-Box's
code, so that instead of hanging up and forcing you to reboot, it exits to
DOS (in most cases).
Restart CD-Box and try not to do it again - if you use CD-Box normally, you
shouldn't get any bug. It's when you try to insist (for example, a .MOD song
might not play because of insufficient memory, so don't try clicking on the
song button 10 times to try to play it anyway), that CD-Box crashes. I, of
course, am trying to get the number of bugs to an absolute minimum (very
close to zero).
══════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════
*** I get "Not enough memory to..." messages and CD-Box returns to DOS!
──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
You have a fatal memory overflow. You have to free more memory; run CD-Box by
itself under DOS, not as a shell from another program. You can also try
typing CD-BOX /F at the DOS prompt, and if you can get to the main screen,
you may be safe... but you may also be too short on memory to play songs
anyway.
══════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════
*** I have a SoundBlaster but am not able to play any songs!
──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
I have a SoundBlaster v1.50 so I'm sure CD-Box runs with this card. Above
versions should work, as well as any SoundBlaster compatible card - it runs
on the AdLib, and net users of CD-Box v2.01 report that it works with the
SoundBlaster Pro. However, a net user reported that it didn't work with his
SoundBlaster v1.05. Maybe the use of CD-BOX.CFG can solve this problem, but
nothing is guaranteed - I have no way to test that.
══════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════
*** I have trouble with my mouse!
──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
YOU SHOULDN'T. CD-Box v2.01 did have problem with furry creatures, but this
version should NOT any more. I left the following paragraph from CD-Box's
v2.01 anyway...
CD-Box assumes the mouse is 100% Microsoft compatible (200% compatibility or
more preferred). Some people have trouble with their mice (garbage on
screen, focus offset); try using the .SYS or .COM or your mouse driver or
even another driver. I know that some mice don't run well under CD-Box, even
though they're 100% compatible, and they run fine under all other software.
Sometimes changing the driver has worked, sometimes not. I have no perfect
solution (yet).
══════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════
*** That darn program doesn't work AT ALL!
──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
Read the license (part V) if you haven't already done so.
I CANNOT GUARANTEE THAT CD-BOX WILL RUN ON YOUR PARTICULAR COMPUTER.
Let's be reasonable: I cannot guarantee that this program will work for you.
You MUST have a VGA display, a Microsoft compatible mouse, and a lot of free
RAM (at least 500 KB, 550 KB better; if you don't have 640K conventional
memory, forget it - but then who doesn't these days?). This is the very
minimum configuration under which CD-Box will run. If you want to hear the
songs, you need an AdLib Music Synthetizer Card or a SoundBlaster card
(CD-Box does run, but is of absolutely no use without a music card). And if
you have a lot of songs, you need (a little) more memory, too, of course. I
have only tested in on 286s so far, and net users didn't report any problems
with their 386s and 486s; a 8086 might be slow, though. If you have a 8086,
you should try the /F parameter.
As far as I know, this program is free of bugs (except for those mentioned
above). If you find any, TELL ME in detail! There's no chance of the bug
being corrected if I don't know about it!
══════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════
PART IV: EPILOGUE
══════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════
Version history
──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
* 1.00: CD-Box is born
* 1.10: Screen packing/unpacking routines shrink the resource file
* 1.11: Right mouse button support, /? and /F command-line switches.
* 1.20: Increased animation (5 digit display, CD spins)
* 1.50: (Major rewrite) Introduction of the expert database (no data file
needed), new button set to make changes within CD-Box, scrolling
display, /I command line parameter added.
* 1.51: Internal programming upgraded with objects!
* 1.60: CD-Box keeps growing:
- Support for .CMF and .VOC files; increased support for .ROL files, by
being able to compute the playing time from the file on disk.
- /V parameter added, so you can look into SONGS.DAT, and /P parameter
added. At the same time, the internal database has been updated and
expanded to 98 songs.
- Addition of "Goto" mode, and "cleaning up" of the various buttons,
dividing them into three distinct modes with different color themes.
- The scrolling display scrolls up instead of left, and the messages stay
a while on-screen - makes it much easier to read messages, which is
all that display was about in the first place!
* 1.61: "Bug" fix:
- CD-Box starts checking for some cases of invalid .ROL formats, which
made the program crash at startup while analyzing the file. Also, the
/D has been added, so you can see which file causes the error, and
remove it.
- A most subtle bug causing black lines to sometimes appear on the song
buttons has been tracked down and DESTROYED.
- CD-Box's capacity extended to about 300 songs (I haven't tried more).
* 2.00: CD-Box gets better, thanks to the network! (see thanks below)
- Support for .MOD files, thanks to Mark J Cox's "quiet" player ModPlay.
The drawback: I had to reorganize CD-Box's allocation routines so that
they leave enough memory for ModPlay to load large songs (if you have
about 570 KB free before you run CD-Box, a 210 KB .MOD file is about
the maximum CD-Box can load) - so now CD-Box is again split in two
files, CD-BOX.EXE and CD-BOX.RSR. It's no big deal, but...
- INTERNAL SUPPORT FOR .CMF files has been added; now the digits display a
real-time clock (time elapsed & time left & total time elapsed &
left), and you can PAUSE and RESUME the song any time.
- A percentage bar displaying time played/time left (which are recomputed
at the end of each song if the length of the song just played proved
to be longer than CD-Box thought it was) is added.
- Some people felt frustrated not being able to move the mouse all over
the screen. Okay! In this version, you are able to!
- Still more songs added to CD-Box's internal database.
- VGA screens updated and much prettier (thanks to advice on subtle light
reflections), and random animations added!!!
* 2.01: some little glitches fixed, others optimized (duplicates with same
names but different extensions are now accepted as two distinct songs).
Also, the first version to be released on wide-scale servers in the
U.S.A. (SIMTEL and FTP sites supported by the Sound Newsletter).
* 2.02: A few improvements & bug fixes
- All (or most) 2-button cheese eaters should work well now
- About 30 or 40 KB more free for those huge .MOD files.
- A little less runtime errors, and a little more explicit messages.
- Sprites as well as screens are shrinked in the resource file, saving
50 KB (out of 220)! Hurray!
- Some new animations, find them yourself!
* 2.10: Inspired by net feedback...
- INTERNAL SUPPORT FOR .MOD files. This, added to the fact that about
30 KB of memory have been freed (despite CD-Box's growing complexity
- over 1 Megabyte of sources!), means that monsters like "Flip House"
can be played!!!
- CD-BOX.CFG file added for maximum flexibility - CD-Box can now support
ANY player that can run in "quiet" mode. What's more, if the formats
evolve, you can override CD-Box's internal routines with an external
player that supports the evolved format. Also, two parameters (.MOD
mixing speed and temporary drive redirection) can be controlled from
the .CFG file.
- The pilot lights across the top (.CMF .MOD etc) are completely off if
the corresponding format cannot be played (missing driver or player),
so you know whether this format works without having to try and play
a song file; in the same vein, unplayable songs are grayed when you
select them. Also, /L (and /R) parameters added.
- Files... mode added (rather easily to my own surprise - long live OOP!)
- A *lot* of other small improvements...
* Other ideas:
- Keeping the "Forward" and "Rewind" buttons pressed down will quickly go
through the pages, without having to release and press it each time. I
have to find a way to make this work.
- MORE INTERNAL SUPPORT for music files, without having to shell to
external programs.
- Support for any viable format I'll come across (all I need is a quiet
player, freeware if possible (otherwise CD-Box itself might become
shareware))...
- I might work on a Windows version but that's another story...
- Any more (viable) suggestions?
══════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════
How you can help with CD-Box
──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
I'm interested in sources or linkable object files to play .MUS, .ROL or .VOC
files, since they allow the mouse to stay in control, the animation to
continue, and the timer and percent bar are then displayed as real-time...
and of course the user does not have to bother about a player program. If
you have Pascal or C sources, or Turbo C .OBJ files that you're willing to
share (provided it is legal to do so, i.e. your work, freeware, public
domain, complete shareware archive), then write me. If I work them in, I'll
acknowledge that in the documentation and in CD-Box itself (the About
button).
I hope I'll be able to go on supporting CD-Box. I'm leaving for military
service (obligatory in France), so I have no idea whether I'll be able to
work on this or not. I think so but I'm not sure. Anyway, this version is
stable and does not seem to be bugged.
══════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════
Thanks to...
──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
CD-Box would not be the program it is without the help from the following
people - thanks to the net!
- Anthony Rumble, for his sources in Pascal of .CMF & .VOC routines
(distributed as SBUTIL11.EXE). I have made my own librairies for .CMF now,
but the critical routines were all supplied by Anthony (his .VOC player
only works for files smaller than 64K, so I couldn't use it, but it's a
good start!). My deepest thanks. Now all I need are .ROL routines that
work...
- Mark J. Cox for his MODOBJ package which I happily registered, giving CD-Box
the opportunity to play great sounding Amiga soundtracks by itself. Mark J
Cox is also the author of ModPlay, a freeware terrific .MOD player which I
highly recommend; if you don't have it, go GET IT! (The latest version
should be at info.brad.uk, in /misc/msdos/mp.)
- Victor Langeveld for reporting two bugs in CD-Box v2.01 with enough detail
to get them fixed in CD-Box v2.10; my heartest thanks. :-)
- Ed Haymore for prompting me to implement the temporary drive redirection,
and for the main idea behind file selecting.
- Dave Komatsu, editor of the Sound Newsletter, and Keith Petersen, maintainer
of the MSDOS, MISC and CP/M archives at SIMTEL, for having accepted my
submission!
- Bruno Deltour for aesthetic remarks; Alain Rousseau for providing me *many*
files from the net when I didn't have access to it; Jean-Francois Moufle
for drawing the car (now much reduced) driving across the bottom of the
screen at odd times; and various friends and relations for their stumbling
on (thankfully rare) bugs, helpful comments and encouragement.
I hope you enjoy the song New Entertainer in the CDBOX210.ZIP archive - I
programmed it myself! It is based, of course, on Scott Joplin's remarkable
Entertainer (from the movie whose French title is "L'arnaque", and the
English title I don't know), so the credit is his.
══════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════
PART V: LICENSE & ABSENCE OF WARRANTY
══════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════
The word "software" below refers to the four files CD-BOX.EXE, CD-BOX.RSR,
CD-BOX.DOC and CD-BOX.CFG.
You may use this software, copy it as many times as you like, give it to
anyone, and distribute it via electronic means. This software may also be
distributed in shareware and/or public domain libraries that charge for
copying and distributing disks, NOT for the software itself.
You may NOT charge or request a donation for a copy of this software, however
made; and you may NOT distribute this program and/or documentation with
commercial products without handwritten permission from the author.
THIS SOFTWARE MAY NOT BE GIVEN AWAY OR DISTRIBUTED WITHOUT ITS DOCUMENTATION;
AND NEITHER PROGRAM NOR DOCUMENTATION MAY BE ALTERED IN ANY WAY.
CD-Box is delivered "AS IS" with no promise to its performance or fitness for
a particular purpose. CD-BOX COMES WITH NO GUARANTEE OF ANY KIND, NOR IS THE
AUTHOR LIABLE FOR DAMAGES OF ANY KIND. The person using this software
assumes all the risks.
The software and documentation are copyrighted (C) Jeffrey Belt 1992.
All trademarks and registered names are acknowledged.
Do NOT use CD-Box if you do not agree to this license.
══════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════
The bottom line
──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
CD-BOX IS FREEWARE.
CD-BOX COMES WITH NO WARRANTY.
CD-BOX CANNOT BE USED FOR COMMERCIAL GAIN.
CD-BOX MUST BE DISTRIBUTED WITH THIS DOCUMENTATION.
The above is simply to make sure that:
* You can copy and give CD-Box to anyone, and use it without any qualms.
* Distributing CD-Box won't make me any trouble - hey, I'm giving it away
for free!
* This documentation stays with CD-Box; it contains acknowledgements and
thanks to people who deserve it. Intellectual property is something many
people don't seem to understand.
══════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════
PART VI: HOW YOU CAN SHOW YOUR APPRECIATION FOR CD-BOX
══════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════
I have put an incredibly huge amount of time in this program (started in
February 1991!), but I don't ask for any money for my work, only fame and
recognition, as they say in the movies. However, one thing I DO ask for is
user feedback. What do you like or don't like in CD-Box? Some of the
improvements of CD-Box v2.10 (as opposed to v2.01) were inspired by such
comments.
If you REALLY like CD-Box, and feel overly generous, a gift is always
appreciated... :-) Any amount (say $5), any currency, even disks will do.
Programming CD-Box is enjoyable, but by no means free...
To my greatest sorrow I currently have no access to the net, until further
notice. I therefore have no e-mail address (the old one belt@aar... will no
longer work). But snail mail works, so don't hesitate to write!
******************************************************************************
*** ***
*** I really insist on user feedback. I'm curious whether CD-Box will be ***
*** successful on the network, and the only way I can know is if each user ***
*** (including YOU) sends me a note. A simple postcard of your home town ***
*** will do. I'm not asking for "gee, you're so good" letters, I simply ***
*** want to know where my creations go. And if you wish to write me for ***
*** comments or suggestions, you are most WELCOME! ***
*** ***
*** Jeffrey Belt ***
*** 7, rue de la Garenne ***
*** 77240 - CESSON ***
*** FRANCE ***
*** ***
******************************************************************************