103 lines
5.9 KiB
Plaintext
103 lines
5.9 KiB
Plaintext
The Commodore 64 User
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- A Text File -
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by Frank LaRosa / Searchlight BBS
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There have been enough bad things said about the Commodore
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64 computer- what can you say about a machine that uses serial
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ports for disk I/O- but it is, after all, a computer, and I'll
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program just about anything I can get my hands on; in fact, I
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consider it an extra challenge to write meaningful programs on
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a sub-computer like the 64. But hardware differences aside,
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its not the C64 itself that bothers me... its the C64 user.
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The mass marketed Commode-Door has given us a new breed of
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computer user: He is no longer the inquizitive computer genius
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of the early years, and lacks even the cleverness of the
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systems "hacker". Instead he is discourteous, selfish, and
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often downright stupid- a computer "abuser".
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Now I'm not refering to all C64 users, of course. In fact
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I know several who are not like this at all, most of whom
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bought their 64's out of either financial distress or sheer
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ignorance. These are not true "64 users" but merely "64
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owners", decent people who just happen to have a C64.
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Anyway, as a Sysop I've had the opportunity to watch many
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C64 users log onto my system. Whenever I see a caller typing
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"NEW" at the login prompt I begin to fear the worst. The 64
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user always logs in as "BLACK MASTER" or "HULK HOGAN" or
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"RAMBO" (few girls, by the way, are hardcore "Commies"). He
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always has trouble with the phone number, and thinks he's
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gotten away with something when the computer accepts
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"XXX-XXX-XXXX" as his input. He thinks, of course, that he is
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connected to another C64- what ever happened to "Innocent
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until proven guilty"?
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Now my BBS is an "original" system and doesn't have the
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usual command structure, but this does not impress the C64
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user. For example, when he sees commads such as LIST, MAIL,
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and CHAT, he assumes you can just type L, M, C, etc.
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regardless of the fact that many commands begin with the same
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letter. One of the first things he notices is that the text is
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60 or so columns wide- it doesn't fit on his 40 column screen.
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I watch the bulletins zip by from my side and wonder how he
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can read it so quickly- never mind that it says "USE CTRL-S TO
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PAUSE" in several prominent places. Nobody uses pause. To this
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day there have only been 4 verified incidences of its use. Of
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course, most C64 boards, due to their swift disk drives, give
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you the benefit of "auto-pause" during most operations when
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the system has to stop for disk access. To this end the C64
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user is totally unfamilliar with any such operations. (Want to
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have fun? Try inviting a 64 user over to test out your new
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1200 baud modem...)
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So he logs on finds himself faced with an unusual prompt.
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Usually he's smart enough to enter '?' for the menu; he stares
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at the list of commands for a long time as I wonder what his
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first choice will be. Never mind that he's logged into a
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totally new system. Hes looking for "Download". The more
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determined will even type "D" several times before they give
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up, hit CHAT, and say "how do you get to the downloads?" But
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even the ones who are smart enough to get to the "FILES"
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section can't begin to comprehend that the files listed aren't
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for the C64- I can't help but wonder how many copies of my
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TRS-80 word processing utility, "SPACE", are sitting on
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Commodore disks. Of course there are also text files available
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for any computer, but these are of little interest given the
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fact that C64 users cannot, in fact, read.
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The heart of the bbs- the message boards and E-mail- are
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mostly ignored by the 64 user. By this time he's beginning to
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suspect that this is not a C64 bbs at all (although it doesnt
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look like RBBS either, which is the only non-64 system that
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C64 users have ever heard of). If I'm lucky he just logs off
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and I have the pleasure of never seeing him again. But maybe
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he'll CHAT and ask me about the bbs.
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"HELLO? DO YOU HAVE D/L ON THIS BOARD?"
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"No."
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(long pause) "OH. WELL YOU WANT TO TRADE?"
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"I dont know. (I decide to play along with him)
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Do you use LDOS?"
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"WHAT?? I GOT ALL THE LATEST GAMES!"
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"Yeah. Well I dont have a C64."
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(a long pause. Some will hastily log off at this point [I
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HAVE TO GO], while others will simply drop carrier. However a
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few of the more dazed will continue:)
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"OH. WELL PUT THE SYSOP ON MAYBE HE WANTS TO TRADE."
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Besides being a leech, the 64 user thinks that his
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computer is the best and only system worth having. Even when
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they discover my system isn't a 64, they ask me if its
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possible for me to support C64 downloads- if there is any way
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to convert any of my software to run on the C64- or whether I
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want to buy a 64 "real cheap". As if Toys-R-Us doesnt sell
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them cheaply enough.
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The C64 user is also painfully stupid. He extracts no
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meaning from such phrases as "Type ? for menu", "Press any key
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to continue", and (especially) "Enter your REAL name". The 64
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user can seem to read bulletins and other information so
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quickly because he does not, in fact, read such things, but
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has learned that they all say "Please donate money" or "Please
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upload as well as download files".
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Sevral companies see the 64 attitude as the next step in
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computer literacy, and are developing new "Moron Tolerant"
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software. An example is the "Simple 64" bbs. This unique
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system has no menus or prompts of any kind, but simply begins
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downloading video game software to the remote system
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immediately upon being connected.
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