1233 lines
60 KiB
Plaintext
1233 lines
60 KiB
Plaintext
Volume 6, Number 18 1 May 1989
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+---------------------------------------------------------------+
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| _ |
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| / \ |
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| /|oo \ |
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| - FidoNews - (_| /_) |
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| _`@/_ \ _ |
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| International | | \ \\ |
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| FidoNet Association | (*) | \ )) |
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| Newsletter ______ |__U__| / \// |
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| / FIDO \ _//|| _\ / |
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| (________) (_/(_|(____/ |
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| (jm) |
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+---------------------------------------------------------------+
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Editor in Chief: Vince Perriello
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Editors Emeritii: Dale Lovell
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Thom Henderson
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Chief Procrastinator Emeritus: Tom Jennings
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Contributing Editors: Al Arango
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FidoNews is published weekly by the International FidoNet
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Association as its official newsletter. You are encouraged to
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submit articles for publication in FidoNews. Article submission
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standards are contained in the file ARTSPEC.DOC, available from
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node 1:1/1. 1:1/1 is a Continuous Mail system, available for
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network mail 24 hours a day.
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Copyright 1989 by the International FidoNet Association. All
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rights reserved. Duplication and/or distribution permitted for
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noncommercial purposes only. For use in other circumstances,
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please contact IFNA at (314) 576-4067. IFNA may also be contacted
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at PO Box 41143, St. Louis, MO 63141.
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Fido and FidoNet are registered trademarks of Tom Jennings of
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Fido Software, 164 Shipley Avenue, San Francisco, CA 94107 and
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are used with permission.
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We don't necessarily agree with the contents of every article
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published here. Most of these materials are unsolicited. No
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article will be rejected which is properly attributed and legally
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acceptable. We will publish every responsible submission
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received.
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Table of Contents
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1. ARTICLES ................................................. 1
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386 Memory Manager - a Quick Look ........................ 1
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Counter-Propaganda for Mr. Witherspoon ................... 4
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Universal Mayhem Update .................................. 6
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2. COLUMNS .................................................. 15
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The Veterinarian's Corner: Fleas! ........................ 15
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Notes From Bureaucracy South (Part 2) .................... 17
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A Public Service Announcement ............................ 19
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3. LATEST VERSIONS .......................................... 20
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Latest Software Versions ................................. 20
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And more!
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FidoNews 6-18 Page 1 1 May 1989
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=================================================================
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ARTICLES
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=================================================================
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Bill Bolton
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3:711/403
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386MAX Memory Manager
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A BBS Application Oriented Product Peek
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I was after a way to get more Transient Program Area on the 386
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server on the Software Tools BBS LAN that supports 3:711/403 and
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3:3/113. There are maintenance tasks that run on the server and
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some of them are quite memory hungry. I have been using a plethora
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of small utilities to shadow ROMs and squeeze the maximum grunt out
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of the 386 but felt that there had to be more that could be done.
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I'd seen the ads from Qualitas for a utility called "386MAX" that
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promised to do some wonderful things with 386 memory management, so
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I decided to buy a copy and have a look at it.
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386MAX allows you to fill the empty memory spaces between the ROMs
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above 640K with memory that can be used for a variety of purposes.
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It automatically moves any BIOS or EGA ROMS into fast RAM in this
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area and then makes the rest available for whatever use you can put
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it too. This area between 640K (A0000 hex) and 1M (10000 hex) is
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termed "high memory" by 386MAX.
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I found I was able to load the Lantastic REDIR program into the
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high memory, along with OPUSCOMM, SHARE and FASTOPEN... increasing
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my TPA in low memory from 450K to 486K. It looks as though other
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TSRs could also be loaded up there. The 386MAX documentation has
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some advice about what you should and shouldn't attempt to load in
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high memory.
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386MAX uses F0000 to 100000 for showing the BIOS ROMs etc and with
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my EGA, Perstor and Lantastic card installed at their default
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locations, the high memory area was split into three chunks of 16K,
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48K and 64K. It turned out that this was less than optimum for
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loading some of the things I wanted to get into high memory.
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A quick look at the Lantastic documentation showed that I could
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readdress the Lantastic card memory space, so I moved it from the
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default of D8000 to E8000 (so it sits right under the shadowed ROM
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area) and this gave me a 112K contiguous area of high memory that
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allowed me to load all the things I wanted.
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The batch files that load to the network had to be modified to
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indicate to the LANBIOS where the LAN card was addressed but that
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was a few moments work with an editor. 386MAX also had to be told
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that the Lantastic card was using the space from E8000 to F0000 by
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using a "RAM=E800-F000" statement on its command line.
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I found that some programs seem to need quite a bit of free space
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in high memory to load, even though they don't actually use a lot
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of space once loaded. FASTOPEN, for instance, only occupies about
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9K when loaded with a generous amount of buffer space, but would
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FidoNews 6-18 Page 2 1 May 1989
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not load at all into high memory when the largest contiguous chunk
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was only 64K. When I increased that to 112K I had no problem
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loading FASTOPEN.
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386MAX can give a number of useful displays of memory utilisation.
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Unfortunately most of them cannot be reproduced in Fidonews. I
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have modified several to get a reasonable approximation of the
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information displayed on the screen, though in each case
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information had to be deleted in order to meet Fidonews
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presentation requirements.
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Figure 1 is part of the overall system memory assignment display,
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the nice graphic part on the top had to be chopped....
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Extended memory usage...
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ROM mapping region = 80 KB, C000-C400, F000-10000
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Program storage = 88 KB
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EMS memory = 0 KB
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Remaining ext memory = 872 KB
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High DOS memory = 128 KB, C400-C800, CC00-E800
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Low DOS memory = 0 KB
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Total extended memory = 1168 KB, shadow RAM recovered = 144KB
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Total expanded memory = 0 KB, in use = 0 KB,
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available = 0 KB
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==> Loading programs in LOW memory...
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==> 88 KB available in HIGH memory, largest block is 75 KB.
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The current state is ON.
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FIGURE 1.
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The Figure 2 shows how the memory area from 0K to 1M is utilised...
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386MAX -- Version 4.04 -- A Memory Manager for 386 Systems
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(C) Copyright 1987-8 Qualitas, Inc. All rights reserved.
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+---------------------------------------------+
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| MEMORY MAP for RESIDENT PROGRAMS |
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+--------------+------+------+------+---------+
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| | Hex | Hex | Hex | Decimal |
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| Name | Start| End | Owner| Length |
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+--------------+------+------+------+---------+
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| DOS & drvrs | 09B2 | 149B | | 44,672 |
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| | | | | |
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| | | | | |
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| COMMAND.COM | 149B | 156F | 149C | 3,376 |
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| | 156F | 1573 | -Avl-| 48 |
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| COMMAND.COM | 1573 | 16EB | 149C | 6,000 |
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| FASTOPEN.EXE | 16EB | 16F8 | CC01 | 192 |
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| | 16F8 | 1717 | -Cur-| 480 |
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| | 1717 | 1718 | -Avl-| 0 |
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| 386MAX.COM | 1718 | 1777 | 1719 | 1,504 |
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| SERVER.EXE | 1777 | 2614 | 1778 | 59,840 |
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| | 2614 | 2633 | -Avl-| 480 |
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| | 2633 | 2664 | 2634 | 768 |
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| | 2664 | A000 | -Cur-| 498,096 |
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+-High DOS Mem-+------+------+------+---------+
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| Dev=QMMXXXX0 | C400 | C4D2 | C401 | 3,344 |
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FidoNews 6-18 Page 3 1 May 1989
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| Dev=386MAX$$ | | | | |
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| | C4D2 | C7FF | -Avl-| 12,992 |
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+- RAM or ROM -+ C7FF | CC00 | 0AA6 | 16,384 |
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| FASTOPEN.EXE | CC00 | CE39 | CC01 | 9,088 |
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| SHARE.EXE | CE39 | CF72 | CE3A | 4,992 |
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| REDIR.EXE | CF72 | D233 | CF73 | 11,264 |
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| OPUSCOMM.COM | D233 | D544 | D234 | 12,544 |
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| | D544 | E800 | -Avl-| 76,720 |
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+--------------+------+------+------+---------+
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FIGURE 2.
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Figure 3 shows another handy function which indicates the relative
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speeds of the various memory components in your system.....
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386MAX -- Version 4.04 -- A Memory Manager for 386 Systems
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(C) Copyright 1987-8 Qualitas, Inc. All rights reserved.
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+-------------------------------------------------------------+
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| Timing memory accesses, please wait a moment... |
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+-------------------------------------------------------------+
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| MEMORY ACCESS TIMES |
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+----------+-------------+--------+---------+-----------------+
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| Starting | Range | | Average | Ratio to Fastest|
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| Address | Start End | Length | Time s | (1.0 = fastest) |
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+----------+------+------+--------+---------+-----------------+
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| 00000000 | 0 | 640 | 640 | 494 | 1.0 * |
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| 000A0000 | 640 | 736 | 96 | 5039 | 10.2 **********>|
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| 000B8000 | 736 | 768 | 32 | 8413 | 17.0 **********>|
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| 000C0000 | 768 | 800 | 32 | 494 | 1.0 * |
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| 000C8000 | 800 | 816 | 16 | 5039 | 10.2 **********>|
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| 000CC000 | 816 | 928 | 112 | 494 | 1.0 * |
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| 000E8000 | 928 | 960 | 32 | 5039 | 10.2 **********>|
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| 000F0000 | 960 | 1896 | 936 | 494 | 1.0 * |
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| 001DA000 | 1896 | 2104 | 208 | | Absent |
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| 0020E000 | 2104 | 2192 | 88 | 494 | 1.0 * |
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+----------+------+------+--------+---------+-----------------+
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FIGURE 3.
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386MAX can do a lot of other tricks with extended memory in a 386
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PC, including making it look like EMS memory. I don't have a need
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for most of it's other facilities for my BBS LAN applications so I
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haven't investigated them thoroughly, though they all seem to work
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well in a brief test.
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The "high memory" capability alone has made 386MAX a very useful
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tool for me and it is certainly worth a look for anyone using a 386
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PC.
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-----------------------------------------------------------------
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FidoNews 6-18 Page 4 1 May 1989
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Daniel Tobias
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1:380/2
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I'm not sure if political propaganda is a particularly
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appropriate topic for FidoNews (TJ himself got flamed quite
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a bit for his foray in that area last year), but since
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Claude F. Witherspoon started it...
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In FidoNews 609, Mr. Witherspoon, of node 1:288/525,
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reprinted an allegorical tale lifted (I'm not sure with or
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without copyright permission) from Reader's Digest,
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paralleling the collapse of Chinese civilization under heavy
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opium use, to a predicted collapse of American civilization
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due to the present illegal drug culture.
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Such "moral" stories always oversimplify facts for the
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purpose of propaganda. I'm sure the causes of the decline
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in China were many and varied, and it's possible the
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widespread drug use was more a symptom of the society's
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decadence than the direct cause of its fall. But I'm no
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history student, so I won't claim to know the answers there.
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But I do object to the attempt by conservatives to claim
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that the fabric of society will be damaged beyond repair if
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people are allowed to freely pursue "immoral" lifestyles.
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Whether the subject be sex, drugs, or rock-and-roll, the
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forces of social repression are always agitating for
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restrictions on individual liberty in the name of preserving
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civilization against decadence.
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My position, however, is that one of the most important
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parts of American civilization is its general tradition of
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personal freedom, social tolerance, and individualism. If
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these are trampled on in the name of "morality", more will
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be lost than gained.
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Drugs can cause much harm to their users. Cocaine,
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heroin, and nicotine are all addictive and harmful to the
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health, and people would be best off staying away from them
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altogether. Alcohol and marijuana might perhaps be safely
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used in moderation, but can be abused with harmful effects
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to the user (and to others if the user drives under the
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influence), so shouldn't be regarded as "harmless." I
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myself don't make regular use of any of these substances.
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Yet, the "war on drugs" causes even more harm than the
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drugs themselves. It doesn't stop users from getting their
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drugs, but it does create a great crime problem surrounding
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the distribution of drugs and their artificially-high cost
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which leads users to steal to pay for their next fix. (When
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is the last time you saw somebody commit burglary to support
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his cigarette smoking habit?)
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Various hysterical measures now being practiced or
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proposed in the name of the "war on drugs" are harmful to
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the Constitutional principles of this country. For
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FidoNews 6-18 Page 5 1 May 1989
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instance, cars, boats, and planes are being seized without
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due process of law if minute quantities of pot are found.
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Drug agents ruthlessly ransack houses of anyone suspected of
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involvement in drugs, and often innocent people get
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victimized in error. Increasing invasions of personal
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privacy are becoming commonplace.
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The correct solution is not repression, but education.
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Teach people of the true effects of various substances, and
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most will choose to stay away from the harmful ones. Those
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who still use drugs will be making an informed choice to
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trade off the possibility of health damage for what they
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regard as a pleasurable activity, which should be their
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right in a free society. They should fully bear the costs
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and risks of their choice, as does somebody who chooses to
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eat unhealthy foods or engage in risky activities like
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skiing or skydiving. You are the self-owner of your own
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body, and it is your right and responsibility to decide what
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substances get placed in it.
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The war on drugs is a war against liberty. We should
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return to the system that prevailed in the nineteenth
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century, when all drugs were legal; incidentally, that was a
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time of unprecedented economic growth in this country,
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disproving the implication of Witherspoon's story that
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allowing drug use will inevitably cause the decay of a
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civilization. Support free enterprise: re-legalize drugs!
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Questions, comments, and constructive criticism can be
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sent to me at 1:380/2. Ad-hominem attacks ("...I hope some
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druggie runs over you and your mother and all you commies go
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to hell for your idiotic beliefs...") can be sent to
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/dev/nul on UNIX machines, or NUL: on MS-DOS machines.
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-----------------------------------------------------------------
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FidoNews 6-18 Page 6 1 May 1989
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Fredric L. Rice
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(103/503.3 Astro-Net)
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(714) 662-2294
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- The abandoned Part 1:
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Hundreds of light years from the nearest planet or star a small,
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cylindrical craft slices its' way through the void, searching
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for landfall. Its' only companion for these last seven years has
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been the hyperspace radio link; a talkative companion who has
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offered a certain measure of comfort on such a long journey as
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this; orders which tell it where to turn and which speeds and
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cross trajectories to perform in its endless search.
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Reporting failures to locate habitable planets has caused the
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remote robot sensor to wonder if it has been forgotten by those
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God-like creatures who created it. A quick nanosecond of panic
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scurries its' way through the remotes' circuitry at this unworthy
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numerical thought and it faithfully continues its search.
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- Battleship SCOR:
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CAPTAIN MALCON OF the battleship SCOR recording, 881128.20.
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"I am uneasy at the recent alliance with SANO and BONP. I know
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that Central High Command feels such an alliance is in the best
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interest of the Republic but still, I have heard certain rumors,
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and attack swarm four, commanded by my brother Divad, hasn't
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reported in last shift. Attempts to gain radio contact have met
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with failure and I must assume the swarm destroyed. No mayday
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was received so perhaps they have met with equipment failure.
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"Meanwhile, SANO and BONP are scheduled to be on patrol along
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the Optemerder arm of the Galaxy, watching for intrusions into
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the Republic, allowing SCOR time to refit and rebuild after our
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encounter with TRIL.
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"Still I am uneasy. SANO's Captain Marker is a clever one and I
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would be hard pressed to fight well against him. BONP's Captain
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I don't know but have heard he is ruthless and isn't adverse to
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buying biological weapons from pirates and using them against
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his enemies.
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"They are too strong and I don't trust them."
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"Meanwhile, we are still making slow progress to our repair
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station and expect to make landfall within two months.
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"Captain Malcon etc... etc..."
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---
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The old and war-scarred battleship SCOR was heavily damaged and
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leaking air as it made its way to spacedock. Many of the crew
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had been killed this time out and many were still in critical
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FidoNews 6-18 Page 7 1 May 1989
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||
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condition down in sick bay. The survivors of the fight were in
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low spirits and there had been talk of mutiny. The instigators
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had been ferreted out and vacuumed as a televised event on all
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ships channels to serve as a reminder to any dissenters of the
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captains authority.
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The bridge was a wreck. Fluid state components smashed by the
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many concussions were leaking and dripping from consoles to
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the floor. Whole control stations had been ripped from the
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flooring braces when the deck plates had buckled upwards and the
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bridge had a slight slant which made the bridge crew
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uncomfortable.
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The air scrubbers had been damaged early in the fight and a
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thick blanket of smoke still hung overhead. Many sections of the
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ship had caught fire when the volatile antimatter intermix
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chambers coolant containment vessels had ruptured, and the fire
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||
control chief was unable to contain the fires. In a desperate
|
||
measure to stop the fires, three entire decks had been
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vacuumed, killing the fire, and the majority of the crew.
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Some had to die.
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"Here's the casualty list, sir, and a list of religious
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affiliations. More than eighteen hundred missing."
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Captain Malcon took the list from the sick bay officer and shook
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his head, "More than half of the casualties want to be buried
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in the ships' antimatter compressors. 'Can't do that until we
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get them back on line, of course. Put them on ice and ask
|
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planetary command if we can bury the rest here."
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"Aye, sir". The sick bay officer turned on her heal and left,
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her feet crunching on carbonized plastics. It's hard to memorize
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all the names, Malcon thought. So many of them die so hard and
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so fast, I can't keep up with them.
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Captain Malcon stepped over his dead steward and nearly fell
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when his foot slipped out from under him. Grabbing onto the bent
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arm of his command chair, he looked down to see the blood that
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was still spreading, noting the contrast of the red against the
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black, and wondering at the perfect red foot print he had made.
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The intercom controls on the chair had been smashed. "Ensign,
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get someone up here to clear away the bodies. I want this bridge
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to be cleared as soon as Johnson finishes up with engineering.
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The ensign, who had been called to the bridge to take over for
|
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an injured pilot, strode down hill to the workman access hatch
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and slid down the ladder to the decks below to carry out his
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orders.
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Malcon sat down in his chair and pressed against the arm, trying
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to push it out to keep it from pressing against his side. The
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steward had been thrown into it early in the battle and had bent
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the arm badly. Finally giving up, Malcon looked around his
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bridge.
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FidoNews 6-18 Page 8 1 May 1989
|
||
|
||
|
||
The air was running out and with the antimatter engines still
|
||
out, would not be replaceable. All ships systems which were
|
||
absolutely required were operating in low-power modes which made
|
||
the ship uncomfortably cold. If many of the crew members had
|
||
survived, the accumulative body heat would have made the ship
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very hot. Captain Malcon wondered if his ship would survive
|
||
another two months to landfall.
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---
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The Vultures:
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|
||
Not far away, two battle ships lay, watching the bent and broken
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SCOR limp away. SANO and BONP sat outside of SCORs' remaining
|
||
sensor range and held a discussion:
|
||
|
||
BONP: "I tell you, we attack now! While they are at their
|
||
weakest! In a few more hours they may be able to regain some
|
||
of their armament capability!"
|
||
|
||
SANO: "Steve, wait a minute. Let's see if they are able to make
|
||
it to landfall first. If they don't, that fool ship TRIL will
|
||
have done our work for us."
|
||
|
||
BONP: "And if they do make landfall? What then? They will
|
||
rebuild and find the people who hired TRIL! Are you so sure
|
||
we won't be found out! Of course we will; I say attack now
|
||
and finish them!"
|
||
|
||
Captain Marker of the Republic battleship SANO sat back in his
|
||
command chair and looked at the image of Captain Steve Baltine.
|
||
Just for a moment, Marker had considered taking him out
|
||
permanently. Though he thought he could easily defeat the BONP,
|
||
it was entirely possible that Baltine had made alliances outside
|
||
of the Republic. Such things had been known to happen and if it
|
||
had happened once, it could easily happen again.
|
||
|
||
SANO: "We wait. We wait and see if they make it. If they are
|
||
still alive by the end of the solar month, we will move in
|
||
but not until then."
|
||
|
||
Marker hit the ship-to-ship on his command chair and noted the
|
||
look on Baltines' face as the screen darkened. It was clear that
|
||
Baltine had entertained similar thoughts he himself had been
|
||
considering.
|
||
|
||
"Lt. Maklin, bring our shields up to half power."
|
||
|
||
"But sir, the SCOR will be able to pick us up if we do so, even
|
||
with the shape their sensor array is in!"
|
||
|
||
"I know that, Lt., but I don't thrust that Baltine. Better
|
||
to have a crippled enemy know of our whereabouts than have a
|
||
friend turn unfriendly."
|
||
|
||
"Yes, sir. Defense screens at half power."
|
||
FidoNews 6-18 Page 9 1 May 1989
|
||
|
||
|
||
The SANOs' bridge lights flickered briefly as the power was
|
||
channeled from ships systems to the defense screens. Almost as
|
||
soon as the screen were up, Lt. Maklin reported, "Sir,
|
||
BONP has raised his shields to full power and is hailing us
|
||
on ship-to-ship. He demands an explanation and swears he will
|
||
destroy us. Shall I answer?"
|
||
|
||
"No, Lt.", Marker switched visual tie-ins on the chairs'
|
||
console, bringing up a split-screen of the broken ship, with
|
||
its glittering trail of frozen air crystals, and the view of the
|
||
BONP, the corona discharge of full shields menacing. "Let him
|
||
listen to static for awhile."
|
||
|
||
---
|
||
|
||
"Captain! Two reading!" Malcons' eyes snapped open and sat bolt
|
||
upright in his chair. Engineering had come two hours ago and
|
||
replaced it for him, vowing that they would do there best with
|
||
the rest of the ship. "They're directly in our wake, sir, trying
|
||
to hide in our gamma trail! One's considerable brighter than the
|
||
other... Must be defense shielding!"
|
||
|
||
Private Johnson brought the aft view up on the highest
|
||
magnification possible. Captain Malcon jumped forward out of his
|
||
chair and strode left to the navigators console. "Something
|
||
shielded... I can compute the volume of the objects by the
|
||
envelope against distance, sir. Strange, they didn't come up
|
||
on us, just suddenly appeared."
|
||
|
||
"They are following us, I can see that much. Anything yet on the
|
||
identification, Johnson?"
|
||
|
||
"Just a moment, sir," Johnson brought up one ship identification
|
||
profile after another, using the computer to compare the distant
|
||
readings against those stored in his computer. "It looks like
|
||
both bogeys might be Republic battleships but I can't be sure
|
||
with the way you've reprogrammed our arrays." Malcon let the
|
||
comment pass. "Confirmed, sir, same class as us, no positive
|
||
identification on the ships transponders."
|
||
|
||
"Bring up hyperspace channels for ship-to-ship. Let's see what
|
||
they're up to. Perhaps they can offer assistance though I
|
||
wonder why they haven't done so so far. With both of them
|
||
towing, we could make port within a week."
|
||
|
||
Johnson reached under the console and pulled several levers
|
||
upwards, raising the communications dias from the floor next to
|
||
his console. Bending over it, he said, "The gigasponder it still
|
||
missaligned, sir, no communications is possible."
|
||
|
||
On the view screen, both objects hung in space, surrounded by a
|
||
faint and hazy glow. The tactical computers had arbitrarily
|
||
named the brighter of the objects as "Primary" and the dimmer as
|
||
"Secondary". To the left side of the view screen, on a much
|
||
smaller screen, was displayed the configuration of a Republic
|
||
Battleship, a configuration Captain Malcon knew all too well.
|
||
FidoNews 6-18 Page 10 1 May 1989
|
||
|
||
|
||
"How about sending protocol codes over ships running lights?"
|
||
|
||
"I'll have to write that in, sir." Malcon watched with some
|
||
amusement while Johnson quickly brought up the computers line
|
||
editor and wrote several filters, a sorter, and compression
|
||
algorithm, all within minutes. "Sending." Most navigators would
|
||
have talked the program in as a request these days. Some of the
|
||
academy graduates, though, were luck enough to be taught under
|
||
the guidance of professor Cadens, who also taught history and
|
||
stressed a little of the old ways. "No response, sir."
|
||
|
||
The Captain was about to issue an order to keep trying when
|
||
Johnson said, "Activity, sir!" Even as Captain Malcons' eyes
|
||
went to the view screen, the radar return of the navigational
|
||
fixes strengthened as the Primary ship moved towards them. The
|
||
second ship on the viewer brightened as its shields were
|
||
brought up to full power.
|
||
|
||
---
|
||
|
||
"What's that fool doing!" Captain Marker exclaimed as he watched
|
||
the BONP move towards the crippled SCOR. "Shields up! Full
|
||
power, Maklin! Position ourselves between SCOR and BONP, keep
|
||
our primary shields up at all cost! Brings us about at full
|
||
speed and stay ready on those phasers!"
|
||
|
||
As Maklin hammered out the commands on his navigation console,
|
||
Captain Johnson struck the ship-to-ship on his command chair.
|
||
Within seconds, Captain Baltine of the battleship BONP came on
|
||
the view screen, "Why Captain... You finally choose to return
|
||
my calls! What can I do for you?"
|
||
|
||
"I can not allow you to come within identification range of
|
||
SCOR! You idiot! There communications may be repaired soon and
|
||
we'll be hunted down like dogs! I'll stop your if I must!"
|
||
|
||
Captain Baltine simply smiled, "Captain, captain, captain... You
|
||
are in no condition to stop a Salinian show cat from biting,
|
||
much less stop me! Move aside or I shall split you in two!" With
|
||
a slap to his command chair arm, the channel was closed.
|
||
|
||
"Sir, we are directly between SCOR and BONP. BONP's speed and
|
||
course has not altered! Collision in sixteen seconds." Captain
|
||
Johnson considered. Should he allow the BONP to destroy SCOR and
|
||
make a run from this sector, disavowing his involvement in case
|
||
SCOR should somehow get a message off? His time was running out.
|
||
He knew a collision with BONP would be equally as disastrous
|
||
to both ships.
|
||
|
||
"Stand here, Maklin, let's see if he's got the guts for it!"
|
||
Johnson considered counting the seconds but looked around the
|
||
bridge. Several engineers from the lower decks had stopped
|
||
their repairs and were watching the swelling ship coming at
|
||
them at near light speeds. A count down was pointless.
|
||
|
||
As BONP came close, it veered off under them, merging the
|
||
FidoNews 6-18 Page 11 1 May 1989
|
||
|
||
|
||
defense screens on the less shielded portions of SANO. On
|
||
BONP, the heavily shielded command sections brushed against
|
||
the SANO's shields. Aboard both ships death blossomed.
|
||
|
||
---
|
||
|
||
"What in Aernaths' name are they doing!" Captain Malcon watched
|
||
the near fatal collision of the two distant ships. "Get a man
|
||
top side on those gigasponders! I want to know what's
|
||
happening!"
|
||
|
||
Johnson called down to engineering, "Get me ensign Sanders!" A
|
||
few moments passed and "Sanders! Know how to align the
|
||
gigasponders on this ship?"
|
||
|
||
"Of course, sir!"
|
||
|
||
"Get on it, right away!"
|
||
|
||
"Now sir?" The fear was evident in the ensigns voice. He knew
|
||
that with a battle taking place in this sector, his chances of
|
||
survival were slim if he took a gamma bath.
|
||
|
||
"That's an order, ensign. Now!" And Johnson switched off.
|
||
|
||
Ensign Sanders ran to the environmental lockers and drew out a
|
||
full suit, taking time to check its functioning and still get
|
||
in as fast as possible. ''I must be nuts'', he thought to
|
||
himself. ''Climb outside with a battle taking place just meters
|
||
from our hull! I should hide, that's what I should do, hide in
|
||
the mess stores until planet fall. Then catch a shuttle to some
|
||
commerce planet!''
|
||
|
||
Sanders grabbed the optical alignment tools he needed for the
|
||
job, ''From there I could sign on as a food taster at some
|
||
palace... Safer than this idiot nonsense!''
|
||
|
||
Sanders stood in air lock 17 and cycled his air out. The deck
|
||
turned under him and the outer door opened, allowing him to face
|
||
the stars. His suit was tugged a little as the remaining air
|
||
shot into vacuum, At this speed, none could be seen to move.
|
||
"Awww, fuck it!", he said, and reached overhead and rolled out
|
||
of the lock until he was standing on the outer hull.
|
||
|
||
Looking over the command bubble extending a hundred meters
|
||
before him, he swore, "What a mess! What an Aernath mess!" The
|
||
bubble was bent and had melted along the entire length of the
|
||
command section. Out over the drive clusters, he could see the
|
||
thrust guides had been bent clear out of alignment. It was
|
||
clear to Sanders that this ship would never space again.
|
||
"If it gets us to dock", he said to himself.
|
||
|
||
Walking around jagged holes in the hull, he made his way forward
|
||
to the gigisponder network. Though badly bent, it could still
|
||
be made operational if he could align it. He checked his
|
||
intrasuit monitors and noticed the radiation count as he walked
|
||
FidoNews 6-18 Page 12 1 May 1989
|
||
|
||
|
||
forward. As he crested the bubble, the count rose to hazard
|
||
levels and Sanders cursed again. Looking up, he cursed again.
|
||
|
||
Screaming towards the SCOR, SANO and BONP's death embrace was
|
||
clearly visible and growing perceptible larger even as he
|
||
watched. High energy phasers shot out and cut through the two
|
||
ships, slicing off huge streamers of high energy particles
|
||
like curls of shaven wood. Immediately after the phaser strike,
|
||
the attacking ship would follow with damaging torpedoes which
|
||
dug deep into the enemy ships hull. Both ships were trailing
|
||
huge chunks of unidentifiable wreckage.
|
||
|
||
SANO turned over the BONP and raked the command sections with
|
||
a withering score of phasers, pressing in close to affect the
|
||
maximum damage possible. Quickly following with a barrage of
|
||
torpedoes, BONP had learned dearly of SANOs' tactics and used
|
||
its tractors to pivot, bringing its forward shields to meet the
|
||
torpedoes. As it did so, SANO loosed a torpedo which went
|
||
unnoticed into the void, directly heading towards SCOR.
|
||
|
||
---
|
||
|
||
Captain Johnson was slammed down against the deck, almost black-
|
||
ing out under the force of the other ships collision. Though it
|
||
lasted only seconds, Johnson saw it all in slow motion; the
|
||
liquid state components spraying down under the control
|
||
consoles; crewmem dropping as if there legs had been chopped
|
||
out from under them; and above all the noise, the quickly
|
||
silenced screams from several crushed crewmen who had been
|
||
unlucky enough to be caught in the path of the view screen.
|
||
|
||
As BONP passed underneath, Johnson propped himself up and
|
||
quickly fell on his face. He sat up and took his right hand
|
||
in his left and stuffed his crushed arm into his jumpers pocket.
|
||
"Maklin! Maklin! Drop shields and channel full power to the
|
||
tractor beam! Lock onto that ship and stop them cold!" Maklin
|
||
took a few swipes at the blood flowing from his nose and
|
||
colored his console as he punched up the commands. When the
|
||
computer had been programmed, Maklin got on an intraship
|
||
channel, "All hand, stand tight! Ready captain!"
|
||
|
||
"Do it!" As the captain held onto the arms of his chair,
|
||
Maklin slapped in a button and the lights brightened then
|
||
dimmed within a flicker of an eye lash. Immediately after that,
|
||
the SANO was again subjected to high gravities in a forward
|
||
direction. Before them, BONP snapped to a standstill and
|
||
swung back, almost without loosing speed. SANO snapped
|
||
forward and again they met.
|
||
|
||
---
|
||
|
||
On the outer hull of the SCOR, Sanders was running away from the
|
||
onrushing torpedo, trying in a vain attempt to get back into the
|
||
safety of the air lock. He didn't need to turn around to know
|
||
that he had lost his race as he felt the ship buckle under him
|
||
a whisper before he knew nothing but blackness.
|
||
FidoNews 6-18 Page 13 1 May 1989
|
||
|
||
|
||
Within SCOR, emergency bulkheads slammed down all over the ship,
|
||
causing it to ring unbearably throughout. In the forward armory,
|
||
the outer hull pealed away and a half a million tons of torpedoes
|
||
leaped towards space. They didn't go very far, however, before
|
||
the whole room exploded. SCOR was in its death throws now and
|
||
very few survived. On what was left of the bridge, Captain Malcon
|
||
was slowly waking up. Around him he could see no one but him
|
||
was alive. Lying on his side, he watched the shattered view
|
||
screen as one of the battling objects broke away from the
|
||
other and came towards him. ''It's BONP, by Aernath! BONP come
|
||
to save us!'' On the view screen, BONP came in, some sections of
|
||
it glowing red. Behind it, SANO pivoted on its side and came
|
||
up behind the BONP, again locking tractors with it.
|
||
|
||
Puzzlement was Malcons expression as he saw BONP fire the final
|
||
torpedo that would finish him. Realization slowly dawned as the
|
||
torpedo swelled in the view screen, quickly blotting out the
|
||
picture of SANO and BONP locked in death struggle.
|
||
|
||
Malcons arm buckled under him and he fell back onto his side.
|
||
The fires raging behind him and the blood pooling underneath
|
||
him went unnoticed as his eyes closed then slowly opened.
|
||
|
||
His lips opened, cracking through the dried blood and a small
|
||
river of blood poured down his cheek. "It's Mayhem", he
|
||
whispered, and the darkness took him.
|
||
|
||
- The abandoned Part 2:
|
||
|
||
It had long since stopped wondering where its companion had
|
||
gone. Out here in the wilderness of space, the remote robot
|
||
sensor could hardly remember the hyperspace radio link which
|
||
had vanished so long ago; it only knew that it longed for
|
||
something it had once had.
|
||
|
||
---
|
||
|
||
Universal Mayhem Version 1 will be released in a week or so. The
|
||
problems which have been reported have been fixed and many
|
||
updates have been made according to what has been suggested by
|
||
the beta test sites.
|
||
|
||
As usual, I will mail the program directly to your system when
|
||
the time comes. If you are not on my distribution list and would
|
||
like to receive Universal Mayhem, let me know.
|
||
|
||
I have mailed a package to Israel containing Beta Version 1. I
|
||
have also mailed two packages of 16 floppies to a couple of
|
||
nodes in Australia. All three of these nodes have sent me the
|
||
postage for the floppies and I must thank them. I don't know,
|
||
however, if they received them because I failed to attach any
|
||
kind of customs form to them. If you guys didn't receive them,
|
||
let me know and I will take them directly to the post office
|
||
in Los Angeles and get them properly conditioned for
|
||
intra-country transport.
|
||
|
||
FidoNews 6-18 Page 14 1 May 1989
|
||
|
||
|
||
Fredric L. Rice
|
||
674 East Bridwell
|
||
Glendora, California.
|
||
91740
|
||
|
||
By the way: If you are a ham radio operator and have the
|
||
capability of getting packet into LADPX, (Los Angeles Duplex),
|
||
try connecting to N6BGW-9 and leave me some mail! N6APD for
|
||
now but looking forward to an upgrade soon.
|
||
|
||
-----------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
FidoNews 6-18 Page 15 1 May 1989
|
||
|
||
|
||
=================================================================
|
||
COLUMNS
|
||
=================================================================
|
||
|
||
The Veterinarian's Corner
|
||
Excerpts from the ANIMED GroupMail Conference
|
||
|
||
by Don Thomson, 1:102/1005
|
||
|
||
Fleas!
|
||
|
||
> Thought we had gotten rid of the problem, but are finding a few
|
||
> [fleas.] Wife says they are coming from the yard. Have used a
|
||
> flea spray from pet store, and diazanon, repeatedly, without
|
||
> lasting success. Do not find the fleas in the house, seems like
|
||
> they should be here?
|
||
> [Orig Msg from Charles Holland on 02 Jan 89 12:21]
|
||
|
||
That's one all too common problem, Charles. This year
|
||
especially, the flea season seem to have lasted longer than
|
||
usual, well into December. If you are having a flea infestation
|
||
problem, then I would recommend a couple of things:
|
||
|
||
1) For the back yard alternate between diazanon and malathion at
|
||
the dilutions stated on the back of the bottle. I generally
|
||
recommend a repeat application every 3 weeks, usually as early in
|
||
the morning as possible, while there is little wind and you can
|
||
keep the animals in away from the spray. As the problem is
|
||
controlled, and as the weather cools, you may increase the
|
||
interval between sprayings.
|
||
|
||
Do not let your pets into the yard until well after the spray is
|
||
dry. Some pets, especially cats are sensitive to the effects of
|
||
insecticide spays if absorbed through the skin or coat. Making
|
||
sure the ground is dry before letting them out will prevent this
|
||
type of problem.
|
||
|
||
2) If the problem is persistant in the winter months, I would
|
||
worry that the fleas may have colonized your carpets and those
|
||
favorite sleeping places of your pets. You will need to also have
|
||
your indoors sprayed. ' I personally prefer a hand-held pump
|
||
spray bottle that I can lightly ist 'high risk' areas like
|
||
carpets, certain chairs, under beds, etc. Indoor premise sprays
|
||
specially formulated to be safe in indoor areas such as homes,
|
||
even resteraunts....
|
||
|
||
"Bombs" can be effective too, but because you have to leave the
|
||
house for several hours, the spray is everywhere and the fact
|
||
that your can't be sure the spray penetrated all areas, makes me
|
||
prefer to use a hand held pump spray.
|
||
|
||
With the hand spray, you can just do one room at a time, close
|
||
the door to keep you pets out until dry. And dries completely in
|
||
20 minutes. Takes about 3 minutes to spritz the room. Just like
|
||
the yard spray, repeat every 3 weeks until the problem is
|
||
controlled and then you can increase the interval between
|
||
FidoNews 6-18 Page 16 1 May 1989
|
||
|
||
|
||
sprayings.
|
||
|
||
3) For your pet, I use either a powder or a spray meant for
|
||
pets. I feel that Pyrethrin based sprays are easy, effective, and
|
||
have a very rapid bio-degradability time period - about 6-8 hours
|
||
after application on your pet. Toxic reactions are extremely
|
||
rare.
|
||
|
||
DB Thomson, DVM
|
||
1:102/1005
|
||
9:871/16
|
||
|
||
-----------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
FidoNews 6-18 Page 17 1 May 1989
|
||
|
||
|
||
The following is the second in a series of four columns Fred Grosby
|
||
(a federal government employee, and a user on "The Falcon's Rock")
|
||
has written. He deserves all the credit for writing them. I
|
||
suggested that he upload them to my system, because I enjoyed
|
||
reading them in our local Mensa newsletter, Capital M. I hope you
|
||
enjoy reading them, too. The archive of all four is available for
|
||
file request from 1:109/501 as BSOUTH.ZIP.
|
||
|
||
Notes From Bureaucracy South (Part 2)
|
||
By Fred Grosby, a user on 1:109/501
|
||
|
||
It is the beginning of the month. Budget Briefing time. Panic
|
||
time.
|
||
|
||
Preparing the monthly Budget Briefing is one of the most important
|
||
things we do here at Bureaucracy South. Actually, I don't know why
|
||
They call it Budget Briefing, because it doesn't have anything to
|
||
do with the budget. It is really a program briefing. What happens
|
||
is that our Deputy Administrator briefs the Administrator on the
|
||
status of our Program Indicators. Now, you might think that the
|
||
Administrator, or at least our Deputy Administrator, would decide
|
||
what the Program Indicators are to be, right? Not quite. They are
|
||
politicos, which means that they don't really know what we do, so
|
||
we get to come up with our own Program Indicators. This sounds
|
||
like a pretty good deal, except that what we come up with never
|
||
seems to be quite what They want. We never know exactly what is
|
||
wrong with it, only that They don't like it and we will have to
|
||
come up with something else. It's sort of like being in the
|
||
organizational equivalent of a singles bar: the other person says
|
||
"Tell me about yourself," and you know that whatever you say is
|
||
going to be grounds for rejection. No matter how hard we try,
|
||
sooner or later we will get the dreaded word: They want more
|
||
charts.
|
||
|
||
Ah yes, the charts. Preparing material for the Budget Briefing
|
||
involves taking raw data and portraying it in chart form. They
|
||
call this Analysis. No, I am not kidding. Those charts are taken
|
||
very seriously around here. Screw one up and you will hear about
|
||
it. You have to follow the rules, of which there are several:
|
||
|
||
Make sure your charts have lots of colors, the more the better.
|
||
They are impressed by colors. Remember, the goal is to achieve a
|
||
victory of style over substance.
|
||
|
||
Some types of charts are better than other types. Pie charts are
|
||
the best; exploded pie charts, with pieces pulled out from the
|
||
rest of the pie, are extra good. Bar charts are good, because They
|
||
are used to bar charts. Line graphs are not good. I don't know
|
||
why, but They don't like line graphs. I suspect that They are
|
||
confused by all those squiggly lines. Don't even think about those
|
||
fancy scatter plots or stuff like that. One of my coworkers did a
|
||
regression one time and they recoiled in fear.
|
||
|
||
Don't call the regions, even if they have data that you need. They
|
||
might think that we are spying on them. They might object to our
|
||
Program Indicators. They might actually have a good idea.
|
||
FidoNews 6-18 Page 18 1 May 1989
|
||
|
||
|
||
Whatever you do, DON'T CALL THE REGIONS!!!
|
||
|
||
Always get your data from the computer. It is a basic tenet of
|
||
life here at Bureaucracy South that computers are perfect. They
|
||
never make mistakes. Therefore, if you can say that you got your
|
||
data from the computer, it will never be questioned.
|
||
|
||
Before we can do the Program Indicator charts, we have to do The
|
||
Download, were we transmit our very raw data from the minicomputer
|
||
in the computer room to the microcomputer in my office. Once we
|
||
have it on the micro, the data is appended, replaced, sorted, and
|
||
otherwise masticated into output suitable for being turned into
|
||
charts. This is where the panic comes in. Remember, our computers
|
||
are perfect. They never make mistakes. The fact that the mini is
|
||
an obsolete clunker with a mind of it's own does not matter. The
|
||
fact that our phone connections go through the GSA centrex (!)
|
||
doesn't matter. The fact that nobody has checked to see whether
|
||
the old update program will work on our brand-new micro doesn't
|
||
matter. Our computers are perfect. They never make mistakes.
|
||
That's why we don't have to worry about doing The Download until a
|
||
couple of days before the charts are due.
|
||
|
||
Well guess what. Every month The Download bombs out. The reasons
|
||
are several. Lately, the mini has developed the nasty habit of
|
||
refusing to download almost exactly half the data. Anyway, THe
|
||
Download fails and the whole place goes into a blind panic. The
|
||
clerks who do The Download panic because they fully expect
|
||
everything to go perfectly and have no idea what to do when
|
||
something goes wrong. One of my co-workers, an otherwise lovely
|
||
woman who I call The Ultimate Bureaucrat, gets mad because without
|
||
that raw data she will miss her deadline for preparing the charts.
|
||
The supervisors run around with harried looks on their faces. The
|
||
two people who are supposed to know everything about how The
|
||
Download works run for cover, because they actually don't know
|
||
anything. But for real world-class panic you would have to see
|
||
Fluffy. Fluffy is our Deputy Director, and it is she who has
|
||
overall responsibility for the Program Indicator charts. Fluffy
|
||
does not handle adversity well. The least little setback sends her
|
||
into a fit. When the Program Indicator charts are late, which is
|
||
usually, she absolutely goes into orbit.
|
||
|
||
Eventually, we always manage to persuade the computers to yield up
|
||
their data and the charts are prepared and submitted, which leaves
|
||
just one final task before the monthly Budget Briefing cycle is
|
||
complete: assessment of blame. By definition, the failure of The
|
||
Download cannot be blamed on the computers. Remember, the
|
||
computers are perfect. They never make mistakes. The problem must
|
||
have been caused by some dumb human. Fingers must be pointed at
|
||
the person who caused the failure of The Download. Names must be
|
||
called. Bucks must be passed. Only then can calm return to
|
||
Bureaucracy South. Until next month.
|
||
|
||
-----------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
FidoNews 6-18 Page 19 1 May 1989
|
||
|
||
|
||
A Public Service Announcement
|
||
Proper and Conscientious Use of ARCmail
|
||
|
||
Although my system is ARCmail capable, I receive an amazing
|
||
amount of mail from systems with whom I have never made
|
||
contact that arrives in ARCmail form. Sure, my system can
|
||
handle it. So why am I complaining?
|
||
|
||
1) ARCmail capability is NOT a requirement to have a
|
||
node address.
|
||
|
||
2) Many systems in the network are not currently ARCmail
|
||
capable. Generally, these are mailers that work on
|
||
platforms other than the IBM PC and compatibles.
|
||
|
||
When sending NetMail to another system in the network with
|
||
whom you have NOT previously had contact, DO NOT SEND ARCMAIL.
|
||
If that mail happens to be sent to a system that is not
|
||
ARCmail capable, the system will not be able to unpack your
|
||
mail.
|
||
|
||
ARCmail should only be used on links with whom you have
|
||
established ARCmail capability. In other words, unless you
|
||
have verified in advance that a particular system is ARCmail
|
||
capable, then you should NEVER send ARCmail to that system.
|
||
|
||
|
||
In summary, the sending of ARCmail should NEVER be considered
|
||
the default. Send ARCmail only to systems that you have
|
||
verified as ARCmail capable.
|
||
|
||
NOTE: This warning should apply equally to other archived
|
||
mail forms that are making their way into common use:
|
||
ZOOmail, ZIPmail, PAKmail, LHARCmail, and whatever other type
|
||
of archived mail might be released tomorrow.
|
||
|
||
A message brought to you by your local FidoNet watchdog.
|
||
|
||
-----------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
FidoNews 6-18 Page 20 1 May 1989
|
||
|
||
|
||
=================================================================
|
||
LATEST VERSIONS
|
||
=================================================================
|
||
|
||
Latest Software Versions
|
||
|
||
Bulletin Board Software
|
||
Name Version Name Version Name Version
|
||
|
||
Fido 12k Opus 1.03b TBBS 2.1
|
||
QuickBBS 2.03 TPBoard 5.0 TComm/TCommNet 3.4
|
||
Lynx 1.30* Phoenix 1.3 RBBS 17.1D
|
||
|
||
|
||
Network Node List Other
|
||
Mailers Version Utilities Version Utilities Version
|
||
|
||
Dutchie 2.90C* EditNL 4.00 ARC 6.01
|
||
SEAdog 4.50 MakeNL 2.12 ARCmail 2.0
|
||
BinkleyTerm 2.20* Prune 1.40 ConfMail 4.00
|
||
D'Bridge 1.18* XlatList 2.90 TPB Editor 1.21
|
||
FrontDoor 2.0 XlaxNode 2.32 TCOMMail 2.2*
|
||
PRENM 1.40 XlaxDiff 2.32 TMail 8901
|
||
ParseList 1.30 UFGATE 1.03
|
||
GROUP 2.07*
|
||
EMM 1.40
|
||
MSGED 1.99
|
||
XRS 2.0*
|
||
|
||
* Recently changed
|
||
|
||
Utility authors: Please help keep this list up to date by
|
||
reporting new versions to 1:1/1. It is not our intent to list
|
||
all utilities here, only those which verge on necessity.
|
||
|
||
-----------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
FidoNews 6-18 Page 21 1 May 1989
|
||
|
||
|
||
=================================================================
|
||
NOTICES
|
||
=================================================================
|
||
|
||
The Interrupt Stack
|
||
|
||
|
||
8 May 1989
|
||
Digital Equipment Corporations User Society (DECUS) will be
|
||
holding its semi-annual symposium in Atlanta, GA. Runs
|
||
through May 12. As usual sysop's will get together and chat.
|
||
|
||
15 May 1989
|
||
Denmark changes telephone numbers from 7 to 8 digits.
|
||
|
||
19 May 1989
|
||
Start of EuroCon III at Eindhoven, The Netherlands. Contact
|
||
Hans Ligthelm of 2:500/3 for details.
|
||
|
||
5 Jun 1989
|
||
David Dodell's 32nd Birthday
|
||
|
||
24 Aug 1989
|
||
Voyager 2 passes Neptune.
|
||
|
||
24 Aug 1989
|
||
FidoCon '89 starts at the Holiday Inn in San Jose,
|
||
California. Trade show, seminars, etc. Contact 1/89
|
||
for info.
|
||
|
||
5 Oct 1989
|
||
20th Anniversary of "Monty Python's Flying Circus"
|
||
|
||
11 Nov 1989
|
||
A new area code forms in northern Illinois at 12:01 am.
|
||
Chicago proper will remain area code 312; suburban areas
|
||
formerly served with that code will become area code 708.
|
||
|
||
If you have something which you would like to see on this
|
||
calendar, please send a message to FidoNet node 1:1/1.
|
||
|
||
-----------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
||
FidoNews 6-18 Page 22 1 May 1989
|
||
|
||
|
||
OFFICERS OF THE INTERNATIONAL FIDONET ASSOCIATION
|
||
|
||
Mort Sternheim 1:321/109 Chairman of the Board
|
||
Bob Rudolph 1:261/628 President
|
||
Matt Whelan 3:3/1 Vice President
|
||
Bill Bolton 3:711/403 Vice President-Technical Coordinator
|
||
Linda Grennan 1:147/1 Secretary
|
||
Kris Veitch 1:147/30 Treasurer
|
||
|
||
|
||
IFNA COMMITTEE AND BOARD CHAIRS
|
||
|
||
Administration and Finance Mark Grennan 1:147/1
|
||
Board of Directors Mort Sternheim 1:321/109
|
||
Bylaws Don Daniels 1:107/210
|
||
Ethics Vic Hill 1:147/4
|
||
Executive Committee Bob Rudolph 1:261/628
|
||
International Affairs Rob Gonsalves 2:500/1
|
||
Membership Services David Drexler 1:147/1
|
||
Nominations & Elections David Melnick 1:107/233
|
||
Public Affairs David Drexler 1:147/1
|
||
Publications Rick Siegel 1:107/27
|
||
Security & Individual Rights Jim Cannell 1:143/21
|
||
Technical Standards Rick Moore 1:115/333
|
||
|
||
|
||
IFNA BOARD OF DIRECTORS
|
||
|
||
DIVISION AT-LARGE
|
||
|
||
10 Courtney Harris 1:102/732 Don Daniels 1:107/210
|
||
11 Bill Allbritten 1:11/301 Mort Sternheim 1:321/109
|
||
12 Bill Bolton 3:711/403 Mark Grennan 1:147/1
|
||
13 Irene Henderson 1:107/9 (vacant)
|
||
14 Ken Kaplan 1:100/22 Ted Polczyinski 1:154/5
|
||
15 Scott Miller 1:128/12 Matt Whelan 3:3/1
|
||
16 Ivan Schaffel 1:141/390 Robert Rudolph 1:261/628
|
||
17 Neal Curtin 1:343/1 Steve Jordan 1:206/2871
|
||
18 Andrew Adler 1:135/47 Kris Veitch 1:147/30
|
||
19 David Drexler 1:147/1 (vacant)
|
||
2 Henk Wevers 2:500/1 David Melnik 1:107/233
|
||
|
||
-----------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
FidoNews 6-18 Page 23 1 May 1989
|
||
|
||
|
||
__
|
||
The World's First / \
|
||
BBS Network /|oo \
|
||
* FidoNet * (_| /_)
|
||
_`@/_ \ _
|
||
| | \ \\
|
||
| (*) | \ ))
|
||
______ |__U__| / \//
|
||
/ Fido \ _//|| _\ /
|
||
(________) (_/(_|(____/ (tm)
|
||
|
||
Membership for the International FidoNet Association
|
||
|
||
Membership in IFNA is open to any individual or organization that
|
||
pays a specified annual membership fee. IFNA serves the
|
||
international FidoNet-compatible electronic mail community to
|
||
increase worldwide communications.
|
||
|
||
Member Name _______________________________ Date _______________
|
||
Address _________________________________________________________
|
||
City ____________________________________________________________
|
||
State ________________________________ Zip _____________________
|
||
Country _________________________________________________________
|
||
Home Phone (Voice) ______________________________________________
|
||
Work Phone (Voice) ______________________________________________
|
||
|
||
Zone:Net/Node Number ____________________________________________
|
||
BBS Name ________________________________________________________
|
||
BBS Phone Number ________________________________________________
|
||
Baud Rates Supported ____________________________________________
|
||
Board Restrictions ______________________________________________
|
||
|
||
Your Special Interests __________________________________________
|
||
_________________________________________________________________
|
||
_________________________________________________________________
|
||
In what areas would you be willing to help in FidoNet? __________
|
||
_________________________________________________________________
|
||
_________________________________________________________________
|
||
Send this membership form and a check or money order for $25 in
|
||
US Funds to:
|
||
International FidoNet Association
|
||
PO Box 41143
|
||
St Louis, Missouri 63141
|
||
USA
|
||
|
||
Thank you for your membership! Your participation will help to
|
||
insure the future of FidoNet.
|
||
|
||
Please NOTE that IFNA is a general not-for-profit organization
|
||
and Articles of Association and By-Laws were adopted by the
|
||
membership in January 1987. The second elected Board of Directors
|
||
was filled in August 1988. The IFNA Echomail Conference has been
|
||
established on FidoNet to assist the Board. We welcome your
|
||
input to this Conference.
|
||
|
||
-----------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|