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Path: news.uh.edu!barrett
From: markus@TechFak.Uni-Bielefeld.DE (Markus Illenseer)
Newsgroups: comp.sys.amiga.reviews
Subject: REVIEW: Meeting Pearls Volume I CD-ROM
Followup-To: comp.sys.amiga.misc
Date: 3 Aug 1994 16:28:18 GMT
Organization: The Amiga Online Review Column - ed. Daniel Barrett
Lines: 420
Sender: amiga-reviews@math.uh.edu (comp.sys.amiga.reviews moderator)
Distribution: world
Message-ID: <31ogj2$gd0@masala.cc.uh.edu>
Reply-To: markus@TechFak.Uni-Bielefeld.DE (Markus Illenseer)
NNTP-Posting-Host: karazm.math.uh.edu
Keywords: freeware, CD-ROM, shareware
Originator: barrett@karazm.math.uh.edu
PRODUCT NAME
Meeting Pearls Volume I CD-ROM
[MODERATOR'S NOTE: The reviewer is associated with the maker of
this product but is not making any money from the product's sale.
See the BACKGROUND INFORMATION section, below, for more details.
- Dan]
BRIEF DESCRIPTION
The Meeting Pearls Volume I CD-ROM is a compilation of various
software packages taken from the public domain (PD) and freely distributable
(FD) scene. The compilation contains quite a lot of good and often used
packages. Shareware CD.
AUTHOR/COMPANY INFORMATION
Name: Stefan Ossowski Schatztruhe
Address: Gesellschaft für Software mbH
Veronikastraße 33
45131 Essen
Germany
Telephone: +49 201 78 87 78
Fax: +49 201 79 84 47
The compilation licence is held by
Angela Schmidt
Finkenweg 26
89233 Neu-Ulm
Germany
Main places to buy the CD-ROM in Germany currently are Stefan
Ossowski Schatztruhe (address is above) and
GTI Home Computer Centre
Zimmermuehlenweg 73
61440 Oberursel
Germany
Telephone: +49 6171 8 59 34
Fax: +49 6171 83 02
BTX: *GTI#
In the USA:
Amiga Library Services
610 North Alma School Road, suite 18
Chandler, AZ 85244-3687
USA
Telephone: (602) 917-0917
Fax: (602) 917-0917
Other dealers will follow.
LIST PRICE
Suggested retail price is DM 19.80 or about $13 (US).
Street price will be about the same.
If you like the CD and the compilation, you are obligated to send a
small shareware fee to support the making of the current CD and a probable
future CD in the series. There is no set shareware fee -- you decide how
much to contribute.
SPECIAL HARDWARE AND SOFTWARE REQUIREMENTS
HARDWARE
Any Amiga equipped with a CD-ROM drive. This includes the
A570, A1270, CDTV, CD32 or any supported third party CD-ROM
drive.
512KB of RAM required. At least 2 MB RAM is recommended,
though 5-8 MB is more comfortable.
A hard drive is required if you plan to copy or install
some of the software packages on your Amiga.
SOFTWARE
AmigaDOS 1.3 or higher required.
Works fine with AmigaDOS version 2.
AmigaDOS version 3 is highly recommended.
A CD-ROM filesystem is required such as AsimCDFS, AmiCDROM,
Babel CDFS, Xetec CDFS, etc. The Commodore CDFS, supplied
with AmigaDOS 3.1, is known to have some bugs with the
tested CD, but it is suitable to get most of the stuff on the
disc. AmiCDROM is on the CD itself.
COPY PROTECTION
None.
MACHINE USED FOR TESTING
Amiga 3000, 2 MB Chip RAM, 12 MB Fast RAM
Several hard drives.
Apple CD300 (same as Sony CDU-8003A) CD-ROM drive.
AmiCDROM Version 1.10.
REVIEW
In a general overview, I would like to explain the why, what and
wherefrom of this CD-ROM. I then will review the installation and the
compilation of the CD.
BACKGROUND INFORMATION
Yet another CD-ROM for the Amiga. "Finally, about time," one would
think. "Interesting low price: now what is on that CD for that cheap of a
price? Can't be any good. Let's see. Wow, yet another PasTeX. Hm, NetBSD
0.9, looks more interesting. And, hell, 230MB of pre-installed software
packages throughout the whole range of PD and FD software."
Well, this could have been the thoughts of a potential buyer
reading about this CD-ROM. As I am involved in the making this CD, I know
about the backgrounds and would like to tell about it to you.
Let's make something clear right now. I don't get any money for
writing this review. If this review makes your mouth water, and you buy the
CD - nobody else than the dealer get's your money. The CD was assembled for
free - none of the contributors and the creators of the CD actually gained
any money. All shareware fees are collected by Angela Schmidt.
But if you pay the requested shareware fee, I probably will be
involved. With this money, some hardware will be bought, future meetings
will be supported, and more - to make it possible to produce the next CD in
the series, with more and better support and with more ideas than ever. But
still, we - the small group of freaks - won't get any money for personal
use. Please support the idea of this shareware CD - high quality is not
free, but it can be made for a small and reasonable price.
Wherefrom does this CD come? Who is involved, what were the
reason for making this CD?
WHO
The origin of this CD is - surprisingly enough - UseNet. When
someone found out that a CD-ROM containing 700 Fish disks sold at a price at
a way overpriced $120 (US), he wondered about what to do about it.
Discussions on Usenet (mostly on the German part of the UseNet - high
temperated flamewars even) yielded... nothing. The frontiers were fixed,
everybody was stubborn, and no real solutions were found.
Since then, much had changed. For example it is now far easier to
assemble stuff and make a CD of your own than it was at that time. Even
recently the most honorable Fred Fish, collecting himself software packages
for the Amiga for years and spreading them on his AmigaLibDisks, decided to
switch over to CD-ROMs. Yet, even his CD-ROMs are not that cheap as they
might be, when considering the costs of the making of a CD (including his
work to assemble the stuff!).
The person who got most flamed, and flamed other people during the
discussions about cheap CDs, was Angela Schmidt. She was, and still is,
annoyed about the very fact that PD and FD is distributed on overpriced
CD-ROMs. So everyone told her to make a CD-ROM herself, and as cheap as she
claimed they should be!
WHERE
Flashback.
Over the years, Amiga-freaks in Germany have gathered for computer
meetings throughout the country. A considerably small group of German
students who are active on the German Usenet and Internet met there to
discuss about their beloved Amiga computers, about this and that. They had
brought their computers, set up local networks, worked out new ideas, and
chatted with persons they had never met personally before. Those meetings
also were a good base to start new projects together - such as making a
CD-ROM together.
At the last meeting of this kind, organized by Angela herself, a
large hard drive (1 GB) was hooked up to the local network and made available
to all contributors. Attending the meeting were about 100 well known
people, most of them recognized as FD and PD authors, and sometimes even
commercial developers. Throughout the whole meeting, the drive was filled
with software packages. Often, the authors of the packages themselves
installed their products. Sometimes they even contributed more than they
normally would, because they did not have to bother about disk space. A
future CD-ROM would contain far more than a standard Amiga floppy!
All in all, the drive was finally filled with about 400MB of fine
stuff: the pearls of FD and PD software, gathered at the meeting. "Meeting
Pearls Volume I" was born.
As even a 72-hour meeting doesn't offer enough time to make a CD,
the polishing and refurbishing was done afterwards. Also the CD was filled
up with some new software packages to make use of the capacity of a CD-ROM.
It was intended to make the CD attractive. Not yet another boring
archive CD, not yet another boring GNU-compilation, not yet another Demo
collection. So what's on the CD?
WHAT
The CD was mastered in the ISO 9660 Mode 2 format (hence no
crippled, MS-DOS-type filenames), but it is not really ISO conformant because
it uses directories at a depth greater than 8, which doesn't affect the
exisiting filesystems though.
On the CD are 4 different kind of software package