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1994-07-27
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Path: news.uh.edu!barrett
From: markus@techfak.uni-bielefeld.de (Markus Illenseer)
Newsgroups: comp.sys.amiga.reviews
Subject: REVIEW: Gold Fish CD-ROM Set
Followup-To: comp.sys.amiga.misc
Date: 27 Jul 1994 23:54:50 GMT
Organization: The Amiga Online Review Column - ed. Daniel Barrett
Lines: 422
Sender: amiga-reviews@math.uh.edu (comp.sys.amiga.reviews moderator)
Distribution: world
Message-ID: <316s4a$mot@masala.cc.uh.edu>
Reply-To: markus@TechFak.Uni-Bielefeld.DE (Markus Illenseer)
NNTP-Posting-Host: karazm.math.uh.edu
Keywords: freeware, CD-ROM
Originator: barrett@karazm.math.uh.edu
PRODUCT NAME
Gold Fish CD-ROM Set
BRIEF DESCRIPTION
The Gold Fish CD-ROM is a 2 CD Set which contains the Fred Fish
AmigaLibDisks 1 to 1000 in archived and unarchived form.
AUTHOR/COMPANY INFORMATION
Name: Amiga Library Services
Address: 610 North Alma School Road, Suite 18
Chandler, AZ 85244-3687
USA
Telephone: (602) 917-0917
FAX: (602) 917-0917
In Germany, the CD may be purchased from:
Stefan Ossowski Schatztruhe
Gesellschaft für Software mbH
Veronikastraße 33
45131 Essen
Germany
Telephone: +49 201 78 87 78
Fax: +49 201 79 84 47
and
GTI Home Computer Centre
Zimmermuehlenweg 73
61440 Oberursel
Germany
Telephone: +49 6171 8 59 34
Fax: +49 6171 83 02
BTX: *GTI#
Other dealers will follow.
LIST PRICE
Suggested retail price is $24.95 (US), or approximately DM 39,90.
Street price varies in a wide range, so please compare. Amiga Library
Services offers the CD for $19.95 by direct sale. In Germany the price is
higher due to import tax and shipping fees.
All mentioned prices are for the complete CD set containing two CDs,
although the CDs are packaged in one single (special) jewel box.
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
As 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.
Throughout this review, when the word 'disk' is used, I mean a
floppy disk from the Fred Fish library (the AmigaLibDisks). The word
'disc' is used to mean a CD-ROM. Please don't be confused. :-)
BACKGROUND INFORMATION
The long awaited Golden Fish is here. It is the assemblage of 8
years of tremendous work of thousands of authors, artists, magicians, gurus
and, last but not least, Fred Fish. Here is a little history about how
this disc came to be.
Since the the Amiga's introduction in late 1985, in the days of
net.micro.amiga (Usenet's dawn), when the real Gurus attempted to discover a
wonderful machine, Fred Fish assembled freely available and distributable
stuff and made it available through a floppy disk-based distribution for
Amiga-freaks all over the world.
The success of his series is without compare. Fred gathered huge
amounts of Amiga 'stuff' by fishing around networks himself, or by having
authors submit their material directly. No other disk series has ever had
similar luck and acceptance over the years - although the number of direct
subscribers was never high enough to make it reasonable to continue the
series....
In 1993, Fred announced that the number of direct subscribers to the
floppy distribution was not large enough to continue the distribution. The
number of subscribers increased from 41 to 75 after a call for subscribers
in mid-1993, but that was still far fewer than the 150 required subscribers
which would be essential to survive.
As a solution, Fred finally decided to go one step further,
switching from floppy disks to modern mass media: CD-ROM. This was an
eventful step with many risks but also many advantages. The 'Fresh Fish CD'
was born. Its success allowed Fred to stop the floppy disk distribution.
The response was rather good. It is too much work for the small company to
continue both floppy disk based and CD based distribution. There are some
other volunteers to continue the floppy disk based distribution (i.e.,
Amazing Computers in the US or SAAR-AG in Germany).
To give the end users a bit of time, he continued his normal
AmigaLibDisk floppy series up to number 1000. This was achieved in December
1993. Since then, Fred has distributed his material on CD-ROM only.
GOLD FISH
The Gold Fish CD-ROM (from now on called GF) is a 2-disc set that
contains all of the original AmigaLibDisk series (except for disk 0, which
was eaten by Fred's dog :-)). Not a single file is missing, except for some
copyrighted material he had to delete, making this disc set a wonderful
treasure to keep you busy for days.
Every floppy disk is made available on the CD in both archived form
(lha archives), and unarchived form (normal directory structure of the
disks). The first CD contains disks 1-1000 in archived form, and disk 1-249
in unarchived form. Disk two contains disks 250-1000 in unarchived form.
This makes 650MB for each CD - the maximum a CD can contain.
The first CD contains the archived floppy disks in a BBS directory
for direct use in a BBS (Bulletin Board System) or on an anonymous FTP site
on the Internet. This directory contains a subdirectory for each disk. In
these thousands of subdirectories are archives for each software package.
There are no archives for the entire disks. A program called 'PufferFish'
creates redistributable - original - Fred Fish floppy disks out of these
archives.
GF comes in a nice, slimline jewel box that holds two CDs in the
space of an ordinary, single-CD jewelbox, for convenient storage.
GF was mastered in the ISO 9660 Mode 2 format (hence no crippled,
MS-DOS format filenames). I couldn't locate any directory-level deeper than
4 or 5; hence, the CD is ISO-compliant and will work with almost every ISO
filesystem.
During the making of a CD, due to a missing 'feature' of the
ISO-9660 filesystem, which is used on every good CD-ROM, the original Amiga
protection bits are gone (e.g., Script, Archive, Execute, and also
filenotes). This makes it impossible to start shell-scripts directly off the
CD if they make use of the S-Bit (Script). Fortunately, there are not that
many tools on GF depending on this. The only (supplied) way to restore a
file's original protection bits is by extracting it from its corresponding
lha archives in the BBS directory.
(A technical note: it *is* possible to store the missing flags and
filenotes. ISO-9660 and the Rockridge Extension do support this, but both
the ISO image (during creation of the CD) and the CD-ROM filesystem have to
support that extension.
INSTALLATION
There is no installation required. A simple 'setup' script expands
search paths to LIBS: and C: on the CD for supplied libraries and commonly
used tools like 'MuchMore'.
USAGE
What to do with such immense source of programs, goodies, tools,
pictures, sounds, and texts?
Indeed, the purpose of an archive CD is limited. It can be seen a
large and useful backup medium, or as useless, hopelessly outdated trashcan.
Your mileage may vary.
One could just browse through the entire disc -- a man-life of work
(mythical man month :-)) and get lost in the depths of icons, directories and
documentation.
One could search for specific stuff. For that purpose, four
methods are