245 lines
14 KiB
Plaintext
245 lines
14 KiB
Plaintext
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: The Curse BBS :
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Written by: The Incognito
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Welcome to a little Curse History. How the ideas of The Curse BBS originated.
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Let's begin.
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I've always been interested in computers and technology since Junior High. The
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very first computer I ever used was the PET Commodore with a whopping 8K of
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incredible sight when I saw someone made the computer print something a set
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number of times. It was impressive (for a Junior High kid). Later I found out
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it was something called a "FOR-NEXT" statement. I started to get interested in
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what a computer could do.
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a Computer Land to see the price of a Commodore PET computer. Commodore had a
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new PET out with 16K of memory. I asked the salesman how much would it cost.
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He walked over to an Apple ][+, which they used to keep all their records and
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inventory, and printed out the list price which was only $1295 dollars. Well,
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to a 14 year old kid that was a lot of money. I never did buy a PET, and I
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still thank God today.
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Well, moving out the PET Commodore stage I started to use Apples. Now in
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never use all that memory. And it used a disk drive?! What was that? I was
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only used to tape drives! It just got more interesting as it went along. I
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found (stole) my first disk in school and used that to put my programs on.
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First, I could not figure out how to put stuff on the disk. With the PET you
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just inserted the tape in the cassette drive and push play or record. Nothing I
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demonstrated how to put DOS on the disk by the INIT command. I started to
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collect simple 80 sectors programs (my Piracy career begins) and I started to
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make simple games. I remember one game that I wrote called "The Gray Horizon"
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which was an airplane combat/war simulation game written in Applesoft BASIC. It
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took me a long time to write it. First on paper, which expanded more than 40
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sheets, and finally I coded (typed) the monster in. It ended up more than 123
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obsession. I had a "nice" collection of wares and started into the realm of
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trading. That is where I met some more influential people. Some of them were
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THE original pirates. Such as "The Super Pirates of MPLS", "R2D2E2" and other
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local and national know groups.
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From trading I entered the world of telecommunications. I thought writing games
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where interesting but it did not (at the time) come close to how one computer
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could talk to another. Still not yet a proud owner of a computer system I used
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the school's Apple ][+ with a 300 baud coupler modem (a modem in which you had
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to attach in the phone's receiver). The very first board I called was "The
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Safehouse". I logged on as my name (not my alias). I still didn't understand
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how the bbs worked. Among the options on the menu I saw CHAT. So I did and
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questions (which I thought was perfectly normal) like "is this your job?" and
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"how do you run a board?". The sysop was very patient and answer all my
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questions. Back then there were no losers. Really, there was no such thing as
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a l-o-s-e-r. A public Apple BBS system was a fairly new idea. I guess people
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didn't mind the ignorance as much. Anyway, the sysop I chatted with I later
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found out was Apple Bandit. The Safehouse was great. It was interesting. It
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was fun. It used the original Net-Works. It even had the classic configuration
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test:
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..................
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..................
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How Many Lines do you See? #
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But it quickly changed. It gained more popularity. I needed an alias.
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Something other than my original name. After a day of thought and looking
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through the dictionary for some suggestions I came across "Incognito" and have
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collaboration of people who sat around trading software. The first one I went
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some of the early members such as The Burglar (Dan) and Apple Bandit (John,
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sysop of The Safehouse). At this party I recall The Burglar cracking a "new"
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ware called "The Serpent's Star". Boy, could that kid's little fingers move as
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he typed. Boot Tracing was very big at the time. He cracked the ware and I
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Z
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V$Z: to my collection. As there were more pirate parties held (at different
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people's houses) there existed more people that attended them. Back then Hot
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Rod was just another face in the crowd. Rod really didn't get his start till a
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little later. At the later parties MPG was always fashionably late. I still
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never owned a computer. I had more than 50+ disks of wares and no computer.
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But that changed.
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In May 1984 I bought my first computer. An Apple //e with 64k. This was too
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cool for words. I think I never left my room for days. I got a copy of
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Net-Works to see how one would run a bulletin board system. It made me more
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interested in the telecommunication world so naturally I got a modem. And of
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course it was an Apple-Cat. I wrote a small bbs with Net-Works. I had to name
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it something. Back then boards like Pirate's Harbor, Pirate's Bay, Pirate's
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Cove, etc was popular. So I decided to call my bbs Pirate's Curse. It was just
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a test. No one really called it besides my friends. I got more serious and got
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another disk drive and a 212 upgrade (for Apple-Cat so it could do 1200 baud)
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then looked for a different piece of software that didn't have so many bugs. I
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found GBBS. It was the old version of GBBS (the DOS 3.3 version) that had no
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features whatsoever. I started to write the new software. I called it The
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Curse BBS. It went up June 1984.
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I advertised the board on other bbs' and it started to get a bit active. I met
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"PHBI" (The Phederal Bureau of Investigation). At the time Greg Shauffer (who
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wrote GBBS) put a backdoor in his software. Unknown to me someone crashed the
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board. Luckily I made a back up just the day before. Well, I put the board
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back up and called Hot Rod to come over to help me locate the backdoor that
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allowed you to drop into basic. It was heavily encrypted, but, Rod found it as
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was able to disable it by a simple POKE. There The Curse was uncrashable.
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PHBI was also GBBS. Darc Deathe was still hunting for the backdoor. The
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backdoor was relatively unknown. I helped Dave (Darc Deathe) and gave him the
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simple POKE. Fortunately Dave and the sysop of PHBI (Black Knight) had their
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differences and Darc Deathe came over to The Curse. And then, the mods began.
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Finding the hidden backdoor helped me and Dave learn more about the GBBS driver.
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Since Dave stripped apart the Driver looking for the backdoor he knew it inside
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and out. He started to add mods like a fast word-wrap. No board at the time
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had this type of modification. The board got incredibly more popular. I got
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more drives and more ideas came to mind. The creation of The Junk Walls, The
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to the driver. Things such as Auto-Center text, Left Justify, Right Justify,
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Tab, Reverse Text, Macros and so on. In fact it grew so much that we started to
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run out of keys (Ctrl-A, Ctrl-B, etc) to use for the mods. Pretty soon we would
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have to use ESC-CTRL-A, etc keystrokes. The driver got to 16 sectors (which was
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normally 6-8 sectors). And the main program got so large I kept of getting out
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of memory errors. So I had to break it up in modules. This is where the idea
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of breaking a board up into sections was first created. No other bbs had
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to use the Apple's CHAIN program. Because CHAIN loaded over part of the driver
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of the indirect JMPs and JSRs CHAIN did. But after a lot of hair pulling Dave
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finally moved it high in the driver. Now, The Curse was getting better and
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better. What made it so popular was the mods. No other board had the features
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of The Curse. It was very interesting and original. I recall having a 10
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sector text file just explaining what all the control characters did. All of
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this added to The Curse's success. I was on some other popular systems at the
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time (Adventure's Tavern, Devil's Possession, Spectrum, etc). Those days of
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calling bbs' were great. There were so many wares released, it helped
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strengthened the increased activity of the pirate world. Couple months passed
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was over at my house and we had a new ware called "How About a Nice Game of
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Chess?". After Rod cracked it, which didn't take very long, we put a title page
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on it. Now, most pirates had "Call these RAD boards..etc" on their title pages
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but I wanted something different. At the time Apple Bandit used "Kbye" when he
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finished chating or talking with people. So I came up with "K-Kool". And we
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put on the title page "Call These K-Kool boards..etc". In fact Dave (Darc
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Deathe) stated "Watch how fast people start using that word". And amazingly
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people did. Too many people started to use the word that it got downgraded. It
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used to be a hip thing to say. I remember when Rabid Rasta put out his humorous
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text file called "The Real Pirate's Guide" in which he said "Real Pirates Don't
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Care About The Curse's K-Kool mods". It seems the creation of new and original
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mods might be getting out of hand (overkill). But, everyone seemed to enjoy it
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and The Curse prospered because of it. Plus, I had way too much fun
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creating/making them to stop.
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I remember when Glenn (The Doc) ran The Spectrum, which was also extremely
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popular, and he had some serious problems with his software. So I gave him
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mine. He modified it and ran The Spectrum of what was The Curse BBS. I think I
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heard that he said he got it from someone else or wrote it himself. But now
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Glenn himself admits that the software of The Spec was The Curse. Anyway, The
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it all halted to a sudden crash when the Secret Service came to my house in
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November of 1984 and confiscated all my equipment. Read my file "My Day With
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the Secret Service Man" for more information on this. The Curse went down.
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Time passed and more time passed. I found out that Darc Deathe had a copy of
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the Old Curse and gave it to Apple Rebel who rewrote it and made it into Proving
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Grounds. So the bare bones of the Proving Grounds software was The Curse BBS.
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I was somewhat relieved that a copy still was around since the Secret Service
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had a copy of mine. Apple Rebel started to sell his bbs software for about
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$100.00. He and Time Lord did add the role playing module, but the insides was
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The Curse. That kind of pissed me off that they were making money off of what
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me and Dave created. Still, there was really no reason to get upset. Time
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put back up The Curse again. But I needed some software, again. At the time
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GBBS used ACOS and I didn't want to learn that, ugh. I found Tele-Cat II+ and
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started to modify. The Curse went back up in December of 1986. In its early
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start it did surprisingly well since the large gap time from 1984 and 1986. I
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converted the old Curse (GBBS) mods to Tele-Cat and again The Curse was growing.
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found it and removed it. Now again, The Curse was uncrashable. Activity
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increased and the board was getting more popular again. I got another drive and
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now The Curse was up to a 3 drive system. Still that wasn't enough room. I
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bought a 5 meg hard drive from The Doc (Glenn). 5 megs for a message-base
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for mods.
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Early in 1987 I put out a file called "Curse Ad". It was an animated
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advertisement of The Curse. It was pretty interesting. The Curse was going
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great. But one problem arose. I had some serious problems with my Apple-Cat
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modem. It seems that the relay switch that made the modem hang up was getting
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stuck all the time so the phone line would never hang up thus the board would be
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Apple-Cat. The routine sometimes worked. As a solution I traded my Apple-Cat
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for one of my friend's Apple-Cat which he never used. The relay problem was
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solved. The Curse was now pretty much trouble free. The board went fine until
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July of 1987. I moved.
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The summer of 1987 I moved so obviously The Curse bbs went down (again). I sold
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my Apple //e system and bought a Apple //gs system. After the move and I was
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situated in my new apartment I decided (again) to put The Curse back up. I only
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had a //gs system. I had a couple problems to solve. From finding a modem to
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software. It was hard to find something that supported the //gs modem ports and
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by Morgam Davis. It seemed to suit my needs at the time. In October of 1987 I
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started to write the new software. Converting the code from Tele-Cat. The
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The Curse was now ProDOS (goodbye DOS 3.3 world). At the time one 3.5 was more
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than enough room (1600 blocks!). But later I was running out of room. I needed
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more storage space.
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In late December I purchased a 20 meg SCSI Hard drive. Now The Curse was 20
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megs and 2400 Baud strong. There existed ample room for any mods I wanted.
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Hence, the Curse Library was created and other creations and adaptations. I
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tried to start something called "The Curse Raffle". I thought it was a great
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idea. The basic concept was that every user would send in $2.00 and at the end
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of the month there would be a drawing. The winning user would get the whole
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pot. Which would be rather substantial if a lot of people entered. Its one
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idea that didn't work. Probably because of the timing. I later removed the
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Curse Raffle and started to work on something more interesting: Curse Wares. I
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wanted The Curse BBS to be a message-base system only. No wares. But there are
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some users that wanted a transfer section. Having a transfer section on The
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Curse would only take away from the board and tie it up more. So I found
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someone to run Curse Warehouse. It would be the opposite of The Curse. A "just
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wares" system. No message base. It would only have all the latest. Mirror
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Image (who ran the very popular Blackwater 100) let me use his system to run the
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warehouse at his house.
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Curse Wares went up in Feb 1988. Now there would be two boards. The Curse for
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the board and Curse Wares for the wares. There would be no tie up in the phone
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lines and the log on procedure would be exactly the same as The Curse so the
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user wouldn't have to memorize two accounts. Both up and both doing well.
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Who knows what fate holds next for The Curse. It will most likely go down
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temporarily because of my moving (again). Or maybe it will stay up and replace
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Curse Wares while I'm relocating. Whatever the case may be The Curse will die
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hard.
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-Incog/Sysop of The Curse BBS
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