1126 lines
53 KiB
Plaintext
1126 lines
53 KiB
Plaintext
Volume 3, Number 15 14 April 1986
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+---------------------------------------------------------------+
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| _ |
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| / \ |
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| - FidoNews - /|oo \ |
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| (_| /_) |
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| Fido and FidoNet _`@/_ \ _ |
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| Users Group | | \ \\ |
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| Newsletter | (*) | \ )) |
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| ______ |__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: Thom Henderson
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Chief Procrastinator Emeritus: Tom Jennings
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FidoNews is the official newsletter of the International FidoNet
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Association, and is published weekly by SEAdog Leader, node 1/1.
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You are encouraged to submit articles for publication in
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FidoNews. Article submission standards are contained in the file
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FNEWSART.DOC, available from node 1/1.
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The contents of the articles contained here are not our
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responsibility, nor do we necessarily agree with them.
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Everything here is subject to debate.
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Table of Contents
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1. EDITORIAL
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How to Avoid Sysop Burnout
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2. ARTICLES
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ANSI on FIDO, Part II of III (Yes!! we do windows!!!)
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Fido Utility Catalog -- Help!
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Modifying Fido; Another Wish List
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Fidograms - your link to everyone!
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One of those Crazy Nuts
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Pay BBS's - another point of view
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Creating the political WILL to end hunger.
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3. COLUMNS
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Notes from Abroad
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The Great Brown Bag Word Processor Hoax
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4. FOR SALE
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PC Hardware for Sale
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Entertainment Software for your PC!
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Public Domain Software Library Sale!!
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Special Offer to FidoNet Sysops
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5. NOTICES
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The Interrupt Stack
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Cartoon: Gruesome George
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European time by Henk Wevers
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Fido 17/0 (aka 138/3) uses DOUBLEDOS (1 year)
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New Rainbow Fido in New England
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Fidonews Page 2 14 Apr 1986
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=================================================================
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EDITORIAL
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=================================================================
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HOW TO AVOID SYSOP BURNOUT
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By John Olson, SYSOP Third Coast Software Exchange
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713-523-5000
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In conversations recently, I have heard at least two other sysops
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make statements to the effect that they were "burning out" on
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being in charge of a bulletin board. I too, in the past, have
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had similar feelings, and I began to wonder how I could help
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others suffering from this affliction.
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In my case, the feeling has typically accompanied problems with
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the system. For instance: you sit in front of your machine,
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which you purchased with hard earned dollars (and/or for which
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you spent countless hours developing and maintaining software),
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and listen to the squeaking bearings as one of your floppies (or
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even worse, your hard disk!) gasps its last breath. You read
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comments to the SYSOP where someone is complaining about getting
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"read errors" on that drive. Then the final crushing blow; you
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watch as a "Twit" tries to crash your security. Its sort of like
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a half dead beetle being dragged away by ants.
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The systems I run are typically for file exchange, with little or
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no BBS facilities. Once in a while, someone will call up over a
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period of several days, and download files for hours at a time.
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They obviously are simply going down the directory, and have no
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purpose in mind other than to fill up disks (or to keep others
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from getting in). They never upload anything, and are usually
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never heard from again. Hey! I accept uploads too!
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What's the solution? In my case, I can trace my longevity (over
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5 years as SYSOP of 5 computers) to the caring actions of maybe 3
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or 4 people. These are the people who use my system and then
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reciprocate in some way. Some of these people are responsible
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for the vast majority of my uploads. One gentlemen ALWAYS leaves
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a short message to say "Thanks" when he downloads a file. (Try
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THAT sometime; you'll be amazed at the impression it makes on the
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SYSOP!) Having an assistant SYSOP and donations of equipment are
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more direct ways to relieve the grief.
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The point is, if only a few people would express a little
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compassion for the guy that runs their favorite board, it could
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insure that it will be there a while longer. The acts of one
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person (YOU!) might make the difference. Don't assume someone
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else will do it. There have been some very fine boards that are
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no longer around simply because of thoughtless users.
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-----------------------------------------------------------------
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Fidonews Page 3 14 Apr 1986
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=================================================================
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ARTICLES
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=================================================================
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Jim Lynn, 129/384
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ANSI ART
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When last we left our faithful Fido, we had the basis for simple
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ANSI cursor control and color changes....now, let's do a simple
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trick that will leave 'em with their mouths open and their chins
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in their laps...
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Imagine a plain ol' text file, scrolling up off the screen, when
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all of a sudden, a window appears in the middle of the screen and
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"really important" information pops up. Not too impressed, you
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say? Qmodem does it all the time.. but what if the caller's
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software doesn't support windows, and what if you are tired of
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people "missing" something really important in the bulletin or
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welcome messages... well read on..
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Once you think about it, there is nothing really difficult about
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faking a window on the screen of the caller. (Please refer to the
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previous article for explanations and examples of the ANSI
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codes). All we have to do is:
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1) Issue a SCP (Save Cursor Position) so that we can restore the
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cursor to where it belongs.
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2) Send the cursor to the location where we want the window to
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display.
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3) Send the contents of the window (complete with border
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characters)
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and last:
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4) Restore the cursor by sending the RCP sequence.
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You can also set the colors, so that the window will REALLY be
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noticeable, but then you are faced with a decision... Either
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reset the colors to the defaults (which might not be the colors
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that the caller or his/her software chose.... or just leave the
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colors alone, which might be preferable if the caller's default
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colors happen to be White on Black! If you do change the colors,
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it is worth it to make the border appear in a different color.
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Last item for the week, if you work it just right, you can pace
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the text so that immediately after the window appears, the MORE?
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prompt kicks in giving you a pause. Building on that thought...
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why not do a Clear Screen, send out the "normal" text and build
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the window, and after the MORE? prompt (since you have a fairly
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good guess where everything is on the caller's screen) proceed to
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'erase' the window by writing a copy of what was under the
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window. This will make it appear that the window vanished, like
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Fidonews Page 4 14 Apr 1986
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good windows should...
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The following should serve as an example. Explanations follow...
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|+|+|
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^[2JThis is a demonstration of a faked window. The only
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dead giveaway is that the "window" is destructive and can
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not restore what was underneath.... but we can fake that
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also!!!!
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This is just text to fill the screen. This is just text to
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fill the screen. This is just text to fill the screen.
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This is just text to fill the screen. This is just text to
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fill the screen. This is just text to fill the screen.
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This is just text to fill the screen. This is just text to
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fill the screen. This is just text to fill the screen.
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This is just text to fill the screen. This is just text to
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fill the screen. This is just text to fill the screen.
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This is just text to fill the screen. This is just text to
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fill the screen. This is just text to fill the screen.
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This is just text to fill the screen. This is just text to
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fill the screen. This is just text to fill the screen.
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^[s
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^[4;35H/-------------------\
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^[5;35H| |
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^[6;35H| |
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^[7;35H| |
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^[8;35H\-------------------/
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^[5;36HThis is line one.
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^[6;36HThis is line two.
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^[7;36HThis is line three.
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^[23;0H %
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^[23;0H %
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^[23;0H %
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^[5;36HThis is line two.
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^[6;36HThis is line three.
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^[7;36HWe fake a scroll!!!
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^[23;0H %
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^[23;0H %
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^[23;0H %
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^[30m
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^[4;35Hzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz^[0m
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^[5;35Hen. This is just text
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^[6;35Ht to fill the screen.
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^[7;35Hen. This is just tex
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^[8;35Ht to fill the screen.
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^[uThis is just text to fill the screen. This is just text to
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fill the screen. This is just text to fill the screen.
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This is just text to fill the screen. This is just text to
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fill the screen. This is just text to fill the screen.
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This is just text to fill the screen. This is just text to
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||
fill the screen. This is just text to fill the screen.
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||
This is just text to fill the screen. This is just text to
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fill the screen. This is just text to fill the screen.
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This is just text to fill the screen. This is just text to
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fill the screen. This is just text to fill the screen.
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This is just text to fill the screen. This is just text to
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Fidonews Page 5 14 Apr 1986
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fill the screen. This is just text to fill the screen.
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|+|+|
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First, save everything between (but not including) the |+|+|'s in
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a file.
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Secondly, replace the ^ symbols with ASCII 27's (ESCape sequence)
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Third replace the % symbols with non-printing characters (I use
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an ASCII 8 which is a backspace.) Fourth, type it from DOS.
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The lines with the %'s at the end are simply to eat up time. If
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it wasn't for them and the time that they take to print, then the
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window would appear, scroll, and disappear before you have a good
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chance to see them.
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In a nut-shell, what we do is clear the screen so that we know
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where we are on the user's screen, print some of the text on the
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screen, save our position, fake the window, make it go away by
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printing over it with a copy of what was under it, and lastly we
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restore the cursor position and continue to print...
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If you notice, I used "plain normal" characters for the border
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characters, instead of IBM graphics.... This allows us to show a
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border to all the machines that do allow ANSI's but do not have
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the same high-ASCII characters as IBM.
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Next article, we will do some things with animation that will
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make Disney turn in his grave!
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-----------------------------------------------------------------
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Fidonews Page 6 14 Apr 1986
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Richard Polunsky
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Fido 106/2
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FIDO CATALOG AUTHOR SEEKS HELP
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I am compiling a Fido Utility Catalog for reference by all
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current and new sysops. Henk Wevers submitted a similar project
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to FidoNews several issues back; his was directed more at
|
||
recommendations, while mine is intended as pure reference.
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The Utility Catalog is the first part of a planned Fido Files
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Reference which will include Documentation Files, Utility Files,
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Communications Packages and possibly a selection of miscellaneous
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programs which would make up a downloadable base for new boards.
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At this time I am asking the help of Fido utility authors and
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sysops in verifying the version, date, author and home Fido of
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the utilities in my listing. In addition, I would appreciate it
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if authors and/or sysops would forward to me a description in
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their own words of what the utility does. If you have Fido
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utilities not on this list, please let me know.
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Thanks for your help. If all goes well, I will complete the
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Utility Catalog in mid-April and submit it to FidoNews. In the
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meantime, a reasonably current draft will be maintained on my
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board (106/2, I.T.C. BBS) in the FIDO file area.
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I must acknowledge the following people for their help: Henk
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Wevers, whose catalog format I found much clearer than my own
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original draft; Allen Miller and David Reinsel, whose utility
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libraries provided me with much of my starting base, and Kurt
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Reisler at Wash-A-RUG who sent me the utilities I needed back
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when I was still getting this board on its feet.
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UTILITIES CURRENTLY LISTED
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ADDQUOTE Bob Hartman 132/101
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BBSSORT 85/11/22 Micro-Help Inc. $20.00 Unknown
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BETWEEN Unknown 122/2+4
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CDMON 1.1 85/12/31 Mathew Zilmer 102/1101
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CHG2DATE Unknown Unknown
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COPYX_D 1.2A Robert Grahm 130/439
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CRUSH 3.0 85/07/08 Harold Barker 11/493 ??
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DATEFILE 85/10/08 Wes Cowley 137/19
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DAYLIGHT 0.0 85/11/13 Randy Bush 122/4
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DAYNBR 1.0 85/10/26 Ben Baker 100/76
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DIST-KIT Unknown Unknown
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DIST-MIS Unknown Unknown
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DISTRIB Unknown Unknown
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ECHOMAIL 1.10 86/03/05 Jeffrey Rush 25.00 124/15
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EDIFIDO 1.12 85/11/05 Bob Klahn 107/50
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EDITNL 86/03/14 Ben Baker Unknown
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ERRORSET Unknown Unknown
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EVENT 2.0 85/12/02 Ben Baker $ 25 100/76
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EXTRACT 2.00 Don Daniels 107/211
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Fidonews Page 7 14 Apr 1986
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FASDOC01 Unknown 106/102
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FASTV01A 1.0 Unknown 106/102
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FFM_V4 4.0 86/01/14 Butch Walker 10/620
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FIDODISP 1.1 Robert Briggs 15/464
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FIDOLIST 2.00 84/12/01 Alexander Morris 107/22 (Down)
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FIDOMLNK Allen Miller 108/10
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FIDOMSG Don Daniels 107/211
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FIDOQUES 2.5 Unknown Unknown
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FIDOREAD 1.25 85/12/16 Richard Polunsky 106/2
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FIDOUSER 1.0 84/12/21 Allen Miller 108/10
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FIDOUT01 Unknown Unknown
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FIDOUTIL 1.1 85/06/17 Robert Briggs 15/464
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FIDOUTIL 1.0 85/11/06 David Strickler 101/45
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FIDOUTIL 2.0 Michael Wyrick Unknown
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FIDOXREF 1.0 85/10/13 Bill Becker 16/209
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FILEDATE 1.1 85/12/31 Bob Hartman 132/101
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FILELIST 1.4 85/11/30 John Wulff Unknown
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FILER 2.1 85/10/29 Vincent E. Perriello 141/491
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FILESBBS 3.4 85/06/30 David Strickler 101/45
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FILEXREF Unknown 16/209
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FIXDNLD Unknown Unknown
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FIXUSER Jim Ryan Unknown
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FSTAT 1.1 Alfred Anderson 14/61
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INDX_BBS 1.21 86/01/28 Rob Barker 138/3
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KILLROBT 2.0 86/02/15 Stephen Butler Unknown
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LISTGEN 1.05.86 86/01/05 John Warren $ 20 102/401
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LOGFIX Unknown Unknown
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LOGSPLIT Don Daniels 107/211
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MAIL Jeff Rush 108/10
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MAILCALL 1.00 Don Daniels 107/211
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MEF 1.0 Wes Cowley 137/19
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MSGMOD 1.03 Mike Elkins 102/201
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MYBBSLBL Unknown Unknown
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NEWTWIX Unknown 106/101
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OUTSIDE 1.27 86/02/08 Don Daniels 107/211
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PHILTER Unknown 107/16
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PRGUSERS 1.1 85/08/05 David Horowitz 107/2
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QSCAN 1A Unknown 110/74
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READ Unknown Unknown
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READMSG 4.1 86/01/17 Kurt Reisler 109/483
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READQUES 1.1f Robert Lederman 16/42
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RENSYS 85/12/18 Doug Perkinson 106/102
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RENUM 1.5 85/08/28 Bob Hartman 132/101
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RESEND 1.1 85/07/25 Ben Taylor 102/411
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ROBOFIXD Unknown 106/48
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ROBOMAIL Unknown Unknown
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ROBOT 3.30 85/09/27 Systems Enhance. $ 20 107/8
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ROVERMSG 2.16 86/01/30 Bob Hartman $ 15 132/101
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ROVERTWX 1.00 85/08/13 Oscar Barlow 104/56
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SCHED 2.0 Wes Cowley 137/19
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SENDLIST 1.0 Ben Baker 100/76
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SERVER 1.2 Unknown 122/2+4
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SETUSER 1.0 Unknown 16/209
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SHIPUSER 2.2 85/05/21 David Horowitz 107/2
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SHUFFLE 2.00 85/11/17 Robert Lederman 16/42
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SQLOG 1.0 Jack Liebsch 109/468
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Fidonews Page 8 14 Apr 1986
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STALLBAT 85/12/07 Doug Perkinson 106/102
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||
SYSEDIT 1.0 Eric Ewanco 130/3
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||
SYSLOG 5.2 86/03/15 David Strickler 101/45
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||
SYSOP207 2.07 Mark. W. Buse $ 5 206-634-0122
|
||
SYSOP 1.62 David Purks 109/603
|
||
SYSREPT 1.43 Alfred Anderson 14/61
|
||
SYS_XXX 85/01/26 Tom Jennings 125/1
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||
TESTLIST 1.2 85/10/23 Ben Baker 100/76
|
||
TIMECHNG 85/10/14 Dave Reinsel 106/343
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||
TIMELOG 8d Tom Jennings 125/1
|
||
TIMEMAP Thom Henderson (SEA) 107/7
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||
TWIX 85/09/08 Tom Jennings 125/1
|
||
TWIX35 3.0 86/02/15 Ben Baker 100/76
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||
UP-DOWN Robert Briggs 15/464
|
||
UPLOG 1.1 Robert Briggs 15/464
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||
USERFILE 1.0 Allen Miller 108/10
|
||
USERLIST 85/12/13 Allen Miller 108/10
|
||
USERLIST 1.0 85/07/08 Ben Baker 100/76
|
||
USERLIST 1.0 Jim Ryan Unknown
|
||
USERLOG Unknown Unknown
|
||
USERS 1.27 85/06/12 Thom Henderson 107/7
|
||
USERSORT 1.22 85/12/02 Lennart Svensson 501/4602
|
||
USERSORT 2.01 Unknown Unknown
|
||
WAIT 85/10/13 Unknown Unknown
|
||
WATCHDOG 1.1 84/08/15 James R. Reinders Unknown
|
||
WEEKDAY 1.0 85/11/13 Ben Baker 100/76
|
||
WHATSNEW 1.1 85/11/28 David Strickler 101/45
|
||
WRITEMSG 1.3 Net Systems $ 10 115/396
|
||
XLATRGEN 1.4 85/12/09 Systems Enhancement 107/8
|
||
|
||
COMMUNICATIONS PROGRAMS
|
||
|
||
PROCOMM 2.1 PIL Software 14/619
|
||
MINITEL Tom Jennings 125/1
|
||
QMODEM 2.0C The Forbin Project Unknown
|
||
TERMULTR Unknown Unknown
|
||
PC-TALK Unknown Unknown
|
||
|
||
-----------------------------------------------------------------
|
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|
||
Fidonews Page 9 14 Apr 1986
|
||
|
||
|
||
Mark Grennan, 147/0
|
||
|
||
MODIFYING FIDO
|
||
or
|
||
Some times the only way to get it done
|
||
is to do it yourself.
|
||
|
||
|
||
I have seen more than a few "wish lists" in FidoNews,
|
||
directed to Saint TJ, asking for changes to Fido. I, too, have
|
||
written that mystical person, requesting some simple mods.
|
||
|
||
Don't get me wrong! I do understand that TJ is not only tied
|
||
up with a full time job, but he is also busy with some of the
|
||
more important Fido jobs, like making POLLing work. He probably
|
||
just doesn't have time to tweak and tune Fido to suit the rest of
|
||
us.
|
||
|
||
Like most sysops, I get tired of asking callers to conform
|
||
to the arrangement of my board. As a friend who is the president
|
||
of software publishing firm once said, "people want well-written
|
||
documentation, but no one wants to read it!" Analogously, on a
|
||
bulletin board, people want multiple message areas, but no one
|
||
wants to leave his messages in the appropriate message bases. My
|
||
wish list to TJ included adding the facility to Fido such that
|
||
some message areas could be configured to be private-only, some
|
||
mixed, and some to be public-only.
|
||
|
||
As the title suggests, I did it myself. With a little
|
||
effort, using Phoenix Software's Pfix-Plus (hooray for TJ - at
|
||
least he gives us the tools!), I traced down the section of code
|
||
that asks the user whether a message is to be private. With some
|
||
minor patching, I was able to make message areas zero and one
|
||
always private.
|
||
|
||
Here is the code for these changes in Fido Ver. 11q.
|
||
|
||
===( PRIVAREA.BAT )==============================================
|
||
|
||
ren fido_ibm.exe f.x
|
||
debug f.x < privarea.pat
|
||
ren f.x fido_ibm.exe
|
||
|
||
===( PRIVAREA.PAT )==============================================
|
||
|
||
ea2ce
|
||
83 3E 1B 51 01 7e 1c
|
||
w
|
||
q
|
||
|
||
=================================================================
|
||
|
||
As new versions of Fido reach me, I will update these
|
||
patches, and make them available on Remark - Fido 147/0.
|
||
|
||
-----------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
Fidonews Page 10 14 Apr 1986
|
||
|
||
|
||
Luck Hurder
|
||
Cape Cod Fido 101/105
|
||
|
||
FIDOGRAMS - YOUR LINK TO EVERYONE!
|
||
|
||
It's been several months since an article about the FidoGram free
|
||
telegram service has appeared in FidoNews. That, coupled with
|
||
the fact that the telegram rush of the holiday season has long
|
||
since gone by, makes me feel that it's time to review some of the
|
||
pertinent features of the service, and how you can make it work
|
||
best for you.
|
||
|
||
First, for those of you new to FidoNet, the FidoGram service is
|
||
brought to you as a free public service by the thousands of
|
||
Amateur Radio operators across the country who participate in a
|
||
network called the National Traffic System. The purpose of NTS
|
||
is to provide the public with a free communications service which
|
||
also serves to exercise our skills and equipment on a daily
|
||
basis. This exercising is necessary to insure our readiness for
|
||
times of emergency when normal communications lines are either
|
||
severely loaded or non-existant, such as during the Mexico City
|
||
disaster. To put it in perspective - we NEED your FidoGrams...
|
||
|
||
What type of messages can you reasonably expect to send via
|
||
FidoGram? Any non-business, personal message that does not
|
||
result in a profit for any party, and which is not contrary to
|
||
the laws of decency. You should be aware that youngsters and
|
||
little ole ladies are equally likely to be responsible for get-
|
||
ting your FidoGrams to their ultimate destinations.
|
||
|
||
FidoGrams should be kept short. That's simple enough to do -just
|
||
pretend that you were asking my employer (RCA) to send your
|
||
FidoGram to a ship at sea at the standard $.67 per word! If your
|
||
FidoGrams get lengthy, we will just break them up into multiple
|
||
messages, but 15 words seems about right. Stay clear of numeric
|
||
data such as "call me at 300/1200/2400 baud using X.25 protocol
|
||
at 9:30 PM" or messages of this nature - it is often confusing to
|
||
the relay stations (usually human) and may get garbled along the
|
||
way.
|
||
|
||
Finally, how do you actually send free FidoGrams? That, too, is
|
||
simple. Just send the following info to Luck Hurder at Fido
|
||
101/105, either direct at (617) 255-9465, or by FidoMail. Unlike
|
||
MANY nodes we've run across at much expense, Cape Cod Fido IS
|
||
available at the proper national mail time slot:
|
||
|
||
1. The SENDER'S complete name, address and telephone number.
|
||
(The Fido net and node is NOT sufficient. If we need to get
|
||
back to you with a response or a question, we don't wish to
|
||
spend money on FidoMail, when we can send it for free by
|
||
Amateur Radio!)
|
||
|
||
2. The complete name, address and telephone number of the
|
||
recipients of your FidoGrams.
|
||
|
||
3. The text of your messages.
|
||
Fidonews Page 11 14 Apr 1986
|
||
|
||
|
||
4. A signature.
|
||
|
||
You can send 20 FidoGrams in one piece of FidoMail if you like;
|
||
there's no limit to the number that you can send at once or as a
|
||
total.
|
||
|
||
If you need further information on FidoGrams, I recommend that
|
||
you scan your local node for the FIDOGRAM.ARC file, which, among
|
||
other things, gives you the list of countries that allow free
|
||
FidoGrams across their borders. If FIDOGRAM.ARC is not available
|
||
locally, don't hesitate to call Cape Cod Fido and download it
|
||
from the 4th file area - Fidfile.
|
||
|
||
Feel free to use and enjoy FidoGrams as often as you like.
|
||
Input, both good and bad, regarding the service is always most
|
||
welcome.
|
||
|
||
-----------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
||
Fidonews Page 12 14 Apr 1986
|
||
|
||
|
||
Mike Ringer, 117/1262
|
||
|
||
One of those Crazy Nuts
|
||
|
||
|
||
I would like to compliment the fellow that wrote the first
|
||
article in FidoNews 312. It just happened to follow the exact
|
||
problems I'm having at Elite Software. It seems that some bozo
|
||
has been hacking at the sysop password and messed with my system.
|
||
Oh well I guess immature people will be that way. Another one of
|
||
my problems is with 11 year old users. One of them has been
|
||
talked to by his father and the other? Well there isn't much I
|
||
can do about him.
|
||
|
||
For those of you who have been wondering, I have finally bought
|
||
my own computer! I got a Panasonic Exec. Partner a couple weeks
|
||
ago, its a great machine, even the built in printer is nice. It
|
||
uses both regular bond and thermal paper. I can switch between
|
||
4.77 MHz clock freq and a 7.16 MHz freq clock. The machine also
|
||
lets me switch to an external printer. My only gripe is I can't
|
||
find a way to turn off the stupid speaker.
|
||
|
||
Ok I know I've seen it somewhere in FidoNews but I'm not sure
|
||
where. Is PANGO.EXE pirated or not? I won't put it out till
|
||
somebody tells me it is or isn't.
|
||
|
||
Is there anybody out there that is interested in starting up
|
||
another one of the disk swaps? I'd like to do one before I leave
|
||
College Station. I'm interested mainly in one in Texas, but If I
|
||
have to go out side of Texas it's ok.
|
||
|
||
Once again things have seemed to come back to the pay/no pay
|
||
situation. I'm not really sure where I stand on the problem. I
|
||
barely have enough time to run Fido, and if it wasn't for Elite
|
||
Software giving me the machine, modem and 30 meg hd I don't think
|
||
it would be possible to run the system. My system used to be a
|
||
situation where you had to be validated, but I'm just plain tired
|
||
of having to go through and validate everyone so I opened it up.
|
||
Well this caused problems,(no doubt), every hacker and there
|
||
mother's dog felt they had to call the system so since I opened
|
||
the system I've had 5 break-ins and two of them where in the same
|
||
week. I ignored the first three and filed reports about the last
|
||
two. And one of the local newspapers picked up on the report
|
||
before the police talked to me, and that was about a week ago and
|
||
I still haven't talked to the Bryan Pd about it yet! Oh well I
|
||
guess there to busy trying to catch all of the locals speeding
|
||
through school zones or something. Someday I'll get there
|
||
attention but I'm not sure how.
|
||
|
||
-----------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
||
Fidonews Page 13 14 Apr 1986
|
||
|
||
|
||
Stu Turk, 129/17
|
||
|
||
Should BBS's be Free?
|
||
|
||
|
||
This is in reply to Fred Berger's Editorial in FidoNews v.312
|
||
about the growing number of BB's that are starting to charge
|
||
either a membership or a registration fee, sometimes a "one time"
|
||
charge, other times a "per year" fee. The fees do bring in some
|
||
extra money to cover operating expense and also help maintain the
|
||
system by cutting down on the number of Users -and that's the bad
|
||
part.
|
||
|
||
Berger pointed out that he got quick answers to questions on
|
||
the pay board he subscribes to, and almost no response on the
|
||
free board. My experience is a little different; I've always
|
||
received responses to questions I've posted on local free boards.
|
||
But the reason Berger is more likely to receive a reply on the
|
||
pay boards is because that board's Users are more likely to be
|
||
dedicated computerists while the freebee's user list may be made
|
||
up of a larger number of hobbyists with minimal experience, and
|
||
young people. They may not know enough to reply to anything, but
|
||
they are lurking there reading replies to other people's
|
||
questions and learning. And they are the people who might
|
||
benefit most from the information being exchanged on the pay
|
||
boards; boards that they will not subscribe to because they do
|
||
not know what they are missing.
|
||
|
||
The small subscription/registration fee itself isn't the
|
||
problem. But consider this: how many boards do you use regularly?
|
||
If each charged only $5 or $10 how much would the total be if you
|
||
kept using all of them? How about the boards you call long
|
||
distance once a month or so, just to see what's new. Would you
|
||
keep calling all of them if you had to pay each one? Do you
|
||
think all users can afford to subscribe to all boards? I don't
|
||
think so. You may remember TJ said "..not all users have
|
||
IBM's.." I'll add to that: Not all users are rich! Some are just
|
||
people who like to read messages.
|
||
|
||
And there are the young users. Kids who may not have the
|
||
money or any way to send it in if they had it or any knowledge of
|
||
why they should send it. Yes, kids are a problem; they often
|
||
don't know what they are doing and they leave silly messages. A
|
||
sysop in my net remarked recently "...I see no reason I should be
|
||
a nursemaid to other people's children who haven't been raised
|
||
properly." I can't disagree with him. But those kids will learn,
|
||
will grow up, and will buy "real" computers. And in time, they
|
||
will be the ones answering the questions.
|
||
|
||
When my bulletin board goes up a month or so from now, it
|
||
will be free. Yes, I will ask for donations. And, no, I won't
|
||
get any. My board will be aimed at the handicapped user who, as
|
||
a group, is more likely to be underemployed and I don't want to
|
||
do anything that might discourage them from using it. If you
|
||
feel you must charge a fee, so be it. But part of your out of
|
||
pocket operating expense is the telephone expense you incurred
|
||
Fidonews Page 14 14 Apr 1986
|
||
|
||
|
||
while getting files for your users to download. Your message
|
||
area cost you nothing. Instead of a subscription or registration
|
||
fee, how about just charging for downloading privileges AND LEAVE
|
||
THE MESSAGE AREA OPEN TO EVERYONE. So information can be
|
||
exchanged and others can learn.
|
||
|
||
-----------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
||
Fidonews Page 15 14 Apr 1986
|
||
|
||
|
||
Chris Irwin, 108/68
|
||
|
||
Creating the political WILL to end hunger.
|
||
|
||
|
||
RESULTS FidoNet is an experiment in public communication by the
|
||
Cincinnati RESULTS group. We hope that it will become a national
|
||
center for collecting and distributing hunger-related articles.
|
||
We HAVE the technology and resources to end starvation by the end
|
||
of the century. We MUST create and sustain the political will to
|
||
accomplish this goal.
|
||
|
||
RESULTS is a grass-roots citizen's lobby dedicated to the
|
||
knowledge that EACH ONE of us can make a difference. Against a
|
||
background of silent indifference, those of us who speak out can
|
||
make a profound impact. If we look around, we see that very few
|
||
of the people we know spend any time communicating with their
|
||
representatives about their concerns. RESULTS members educate
|
||
themselves so that they can write to Senators, Congressmen and
|
||
editorial writers about key issues. RESULTS is a national
|
||
organization with 57 groups in 33 states.
|
||
|
||
The purpose of RESULTS FidoNet is twofold:
|
||
|
||
1) To allow the efforts of different hunger groups and
|
||
organizations to be combined in a public forum of articles,
|
||
information and conferencing.
|
||
|
||
2) To educate the members of the electronic community about the
|
||
problems facing developing countries and what we as citizens
|
||
can and must do about it.
|
||
|
||
The system has only been up since 3/12, so we haven't collected
|
||
many articles yet. We would like to encourage other sysops to
|
||
redistribute any articles that are of interest so that more users
|
||
will be informed. Uploads would be greatly appreciated so that
|
||
we may expand our libraries.
|
||
|
||
"Each of the great social achievements
|
||
--------------- of recent decades has come about not
|
||
RESULTS FidoNet because of government proclamations
|
||
--------------- but because people organized, made
|
||
demands and made it good politics for
|
||
(513) 531-4654 governments to respond. It is the
|
||
300/1200/2400 Baud political will of the people that
|
||
makes and sustains the political will
|
||
"Creating the of governments."
|
||
political WILL
|
||
to end hunger." James Grant, Executive Director UNICEF
|
||
|
||
-----------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
||
Fidonews Page 16 14 Apr 1986
|
||
|
||
|
||
=================================================================
|
||
COLUMNS
|
||
=================================================================
|
||
|
||
Notes from Abroad
|
||
|
||
|
||
I feel like I'm shouting at a brick wall! I wonder can you tell
|
||
why? I have heard rumors that the Fido software contains a
|
||
network system. This network system is for sending messages
|
||
remotely from one FidoNode to another. I have been online for
|
||
about nine months now, I run 24 hours a day, seven days a week.
|
||
I am also the only Fido node in Europe that is running two Fido's
|
||
concurrently. Do you know how many FidoNet messages I have
|
||
received in the last 9 months? 200? 100? 50? No! At last count
|
||
I have received the staggering total of FIVE !!!!!!!
|
||
|
||
Admittedly this is more than I have sent out, but it's still a
|
||
pretty bad figure.
|
||
|
||
As far as I can tell I am the record holder for FidoNet messages
|
||
in the UK. Why does no one send mail to the UK? Does anyone
|
||
send mail at all? We have had problems with mail in the UK but
|
||
we can all receive mail. There are more Fido's in the UK than in
|
||
any other country in Europe.
|
||
|
||
I would dearly love to know if I can contact anyone else in
|
||
Europe with my USR modem, particularly the other country
|
||
coordinators. I hear that some of you have "Bell Annexes".
|
||
Could I have the details of these please?
|
||
|
||
|
||
OK that's about it, I hope that we get some response in the UK
|
||
from this. I will be polling the UK nodes for mail from now on
|
||
so I hope to get the mail moving internally.
|
||
|
||
-----------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
||
Fidonews Page 17 14 Apr 1986
|
||
|
||
|
||
Mike Miller, Orlando Florida
|
||
|
||
The Great Brown Bag Word Processor Hoax
|
||
|
||
|
||
The April 15 issue of PC Magazine has a free disk enclosed - a
|
||
full working copy of the Brown Bag Word Processing program with
|
||
Mail Merge. Wow! What a great idea and what a great magazine!
|
||
|
||
But what's this - there's something about "Unlocking" the copy
|
||
protected disk for $85 - If I don't, it's going to suddenly stop
|
||
working after a while. I couldn't resist the temptation to test
|
||
their copy protection - sure enough, even the latest versions of
|
||
COPYIIPC and COPYWRIT admit defeat in trying to make a copy.
|
||
|
||
By this time I'm thinking that this program must really be
|
||
something special - mass marketing it to everyone in the world
|
||
who buys PC Magazine and incorporating the very latest copy
|
||
protection methods. I'd better try this program out - maybe it's
|
||
really worth it to unlock it for $85.
|
||
|
||
I do a disk directory and recognize some familiar looking files -
|
||
ED.EXE, HELPE.DEF, RULER.DEF, etc. I think, "this must be the
|
||
wrong disk in the drive, because those are PC-WRITE files." Nope
|
||
- it's the Brown Bag Word Processor alright. This can't be! I
|
||
crank the program up and with the exception of an introduction
|
||
screen identifying it as the Brown Bag Word Processor - it is PC-
|
||
WRITE v2.55 - licensed by the author, Bob Wallace, to Brown Disk
|
||
Manufacturing, Inc. What will they think of next?
|
||
|
||
So - you get to try out this Brown Bag "mystery" program for an
|
||
unspecified length of time, and just as you're starting to like
|
||
it, it dies. You send off your $85 to get it fixed and you're
|
||
happy again. But of course, you have to put up with the copy
|
||
protection nonsense in the meantime.
|
||
|
||
Wait! I have a great idea! Why not get a legal SHAREWARE copy of
|
||
PC-WRITE v2.55 (if you are one of the .0001 % of the PC
|
||
population that doesn't already have a copy), try it out for as
|
||
long as you wish, and then register if you choose to do so. No
|
||
copy protection, no "rigged" program that dies just as you are
|
||
getting used to it, but the same program with the same
|
||
capabilities.
|
||
|
||
What do I think of this particular offer? (I'll bet you can't
|
||
guess). Well, I think PC Magazine is an excellent magazine, the
|
||
idea of putting a trial or demo disk in the magazine is a good
|
||
one, and PC-WRITE is a very good editor (I am a registered
|
||
owner). BUT - putting a copy protected, boobytrapped, identical
|
||
clone of a readily available SHAREWARE program in a magazine with
|
||
no reference to the fact that it really is just another program
|
||
in disguise - well, that stinks! They'll probably make a ton of
|
||
money from all of the people who don't know any better - and that
|
||
makes it smell even worse!
|
||
|
||
-----------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
Fidonews Page 18 14 Apr 1986
|
||
|
||
|
||
=================================================================
|
||
FOR SALE
|
||
=================================================================
|
||
|
||
Marv Shelton
|
||
Fido 107/311
|
||
|
||
ITT XTRA PC HARDWARE FOR SALE
|
||
|
||
I have the following pieces of hardware for sale for a
|
||
reasonable price. Make me your best offer and the highest
|
||
bidder will win the piece of hardware. All of it is in
|
||
excellent working order and I will supply all original
|
||
documentation and packaging. Shipping charges out of my
|
||
immediate area ARE NOT included. The boards listed will work in
|
||
any PC or PC compatible and are equivalen to their IBM
|
||
counterparts. A message direct to the XTRA BBS or via FIDO-MAIL
|
||
is preferred. Check the latest nodelist for phone numbers.
|
||
|
||
1. Princeton Graphics HX-12 Color Monitor
|
||
2. ITT Xtra Color Graphics Board with composite and RF
|
||
modulator outputs, and a light pen interface.
|
||
(equal to IBM Color Graphics Adpt)
|
||
3. ITT Xtra COMBO Board, a multifunction board with 384K of
|
||
memory installed, clock/calendar, and parallel port.
|
||
|
||
|
||
-----------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
||
Fidonews Page 19 14 Apr 1986
|
||
|
||
|
||
ENTERTAINMENT SOFTWARE FOR YOUR PC!
|
||
|
||
SUPERDOTS! KALAH!
|
||
|
||
Professional quality games include PASCAL source! From the
|
||
author of KALAH Version 1.6, SuperDots, a variation of the
|
||
popular pencil/paper DOTS game, has MAGIC and HIDDEN DOT
|
||
options. KALAH 1.7 is an African strategy game requiring
|
||
skill to manipulate pegs around a playing board. Both games
|
||
use the ANSI Escape sequences provided with the ANSI.SYS
|
||
device driver for the IBM-PC, or built into the firmware on
|
||
the DEC Rainbow. Only $19.95 each or $39.95 for both
|
||
exciting games! Please specify version and disk format.
|
||
These games have been written in standard TURBO-PASCAL and
|
||
run on the IBM-PC, DEC Rainbow 100 (MSDOS and CPM), CPM/80,
|
||
CPM/86, and PDP-11. Other disk formats are available, but
|
||
minor customization may be required.
|
||
|
||
BSS Software
|
||
P.O. Box 3827
|
||
Cherry Hill, NJ 08034
|
||
|
||
|
||
For every order placed, a donation will be made to the Fido
|
||
coordinators! Also, if you have a previous version of KALAH
|
||
and send me a donation, a portion of that donation will also
|
||
be sent to the coordinators. When you place an order, BE
|
||
CERTAIN TO MENTION WHERE YOU SAW THE AD since it also
|
||
appears in PC Magazine and Digital Review.
|
||
|
||
Questions and comments can be sent to:
|
||
|
||
Brian Sietz at Fido 107/17
|
||
(609) 429-6630 300/1200/2400 baud
|
||
|
||
-----------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
||
Fidonews Page 20 14 Apr 1986
|
||
|
||
|
||
Now available from Micro Consulting Associates!!
|
||
|
||
Public Domain collection - 300+ "ARC" archives - 10 megs of
|
||
software and other goodies, and that's "archived" size! When
|
||
unpacked, you get approximately 17 megabytes worth of all kinds
|
||
of software, from text editors to games to unprotection schemes
|
||
to communications programs, compilers, interpreters, etc...
|
||
|
||
This collection is the result of more than 10 months of intensive
|
||
downloads from just about 100 or more BBS's and other sources,
|
||
all of which have been examined, indexed and archived for your
|
||
convenience. Starting a Bulletin Board System? Want to add on
|
||
to your software base without spending thousands of dollars? This
|
||
is the answer!!!
|
||
|
||
To order the library, send $100 (personal or company check,
|
||
postal money order or company purchase order) to:
|
||
|
||
Micro Consulting Associates, Fido 103/511
|
||
Post Office Box 4296
|
||
200-1/2 E. Balboa Boulevard
|
||
Balboa, Ca. 92661-4296
|
||
|
||
Please allow 3 weeks for delivery of your order.
|
||
|
||
Note: No profit is made from the sale of the Public Domain
|
||
software in this collection. The price is applied entirely to
|
||
the cost of downloading the software over the phone lines,
|
||
running a BBS to receive file submissions, and inspecting,
|
||
cataloguing, archiving and maintaining the files. Obtaining this
|
||
software yourself through the use of a computer with a modem
|
||
using commercial phone access would cost you much more than what
|
||
we charge for the service...
|
||
|
||
Please specify what type of format you would like the disks to be
|
||
prepared on. The following choices are available:
|
||
|
||
IBM PC-DOS Backup utility
|
||
Zenith MS-DOS 2.11 Backup Utility
|
||
DSBackup
|
||
Fastback
|
||
Plain ol' files (add $50, though, it's a lot of
|
||
work and takes more diskettes...)
|
||
|
||
Add $30 if you want the library on 1.2 meg AT disks (more
|
||
expensive disks). There are no shipping or handling charges.
|
||
California residents add 6% tax.
|
||
|
||
For each sale, $10 will go to the FidoNet Administrators.
|
||
|
||
-----------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
||
Fidonews Page 21 14 Apr 1986
|
||
|
||
|
||
SEAdog Electronic Mail System
|
||
Special Offer for FidoNet Sysops
|
||
|
||
|
||
System Enhancement Associates, the makers of the popular ARC file
|
||
archive utility, are proud to announce the release of the SEAdog
|
||
electronic mail system.
|
||
|
||
SEAdog is a PC-based electronic mail system which is fully
|
||
FidoNet compatible. In addition to all the functionality of
|
||
FidoNet mail, SEAdog adds the following:
|
||
|
||
o User directory support, for automatic lookup of node numbers
|
||
|
||
o Return receipts
|
||
|
||
o Audit trails
|
||
|
||
o Message forwarding, with or without a retained copy
|
||
|
||
o Twenty four hour mail reception
|
||
|
||
o High priority mail for immediate delivery
|
||
|
||
o The ability to request files and updates of files from other
|
||
SEAdog systems.
|
||
|
||
o No route files needed!
|
||
|
||
o A full screen user interface that our beta test sites fell in
|
||
love with!
|
||
|
||
SEAdog is NOT a bulletin board system, but it can be used as a
|
||
"front end" for Fido (version 11q or later), allowing you to add
|
||
the full functionality of SEAdog to your existing system.
|
||
|
||
SEAdog normally sells for $100/node, but for a limited time only
|
||
we are offering SEAdog to registered FidoNet sysops for only $50!
|
||
Orders may be placed by sending a check or money order to:
|
||
|
||
System Enhancement Associates
|
||
21 New Street, Wayne NJ 07470
|
||
|
||
Or by calling (201) 473-5153 (VISA and MasterCard accepted).
|
||
|
||
-----------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
||
Fidonews Page 22 14 Apr 1986
|
||
|
||
|
||
=================================================================
|
||
NOTICES
|
||
=================================================================
|
||
|
||
The Interrupt Stack
|
||
|
||
|
||
19 May 1986
|
||
Steve Lemke's next birthday.
|
||
|
||
24 Aug 1989
|
||
Voyager 2 passes Neptune.
|
||
|
||
|
||
If you have something which you would like to see on this
|
||
calendar, please send a message to FidoNet node 1/1.
|
||
|
||
-----------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
||
Bruce White, 109/612
|
||
|
||
+-------------------------------------------------+
|
||
|No I'm NOT! IF you're bored THEN GOTO the store,|
|
||
|ELSE READ WHILE I'm USING the computer. AND NEXT|
|
||
|TIME CLOSE the door WHILE you FIX dinner. |
|
||
| \ |
|
||
|George, you're addicted \ |
|
||
|to BASIC! You spend more time \ ____\__ |
|
||
|with that machine than with me! \ |_| \ |
|
||
| / _____ |\ |
|
||
| __/ | _ | | |
|
||
| ______ | |_| | | |
|
||
| __(______)_|_____|___ | |
|
||
| || || | |
|
||
| ______ || || | |
|
||
| \ / || || | |
|
||
|(c) 1986 bawhite \__/ ||_________________||__|__|
|
||
+-------------------------------------------------+
|
||
|
||
-----------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
||
European Time
|
||
|
||
It's all very simple, really. The clock moves one hour further.
|
||
So it looks like it's an hour later. But it is one hour earlier.
|
||
Because we subtract one hour in the evening and so it's longer
|
||
light. But then again, we add that in the morning so it will be
|
||
dark longer. But not in the UK, they keep their own time. Ah,
|
||
well, what is time anyway. I hope all of you in europe made the
|
||
time change in the right direction. Fido sysops measure time by
|
||
the mailslot, don't they?
|
||
|
||
Henk Wevers
|
||
|
||
-----------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
||
Fidonews Page 23 14 Apr 1986
|
||
|
||
|
||
FIDO 17/0 (PROBUS INTERNATIONAL, INC.) has been using
|
||
DOUBLEDOS for a year now. To those who wish to know such
|
||
things, be aware that there are several FIDO nodes in the
|
||
Seattle, Tacoma (Washington State) area that are using DDOS.
|
||
|
||
--Steve Butler, Region 17 Coordinator.
|
||
|
||
|
||
-----------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
||
Bill Thomas
|
||
Fido 132/225
|
||
|
||
======================
|
||
* SeaCoast Fido *
|
||
* 132/225 *
|
||
======================
|
||
* (207) 439-9367 *
|
||
======================
|
||
|
||
There is a new Rainbow-based FIDO Board in New England.
|
||
|
||
SeaCoast Fido welcomes all new callers. Right now the
|
||
board provides special interest areas and files for:
|
||
|
||
o Digital Rainbow Software
|
||
|
||
o MSDOS Turbo Pascal for Rainbow & IBM
|
||
|
||
o Open to Adding Special File Areas to Support
|
||
Frequent Callers' Special Interests.
|
||
|
||
HOURS OF OPERATION
|
||
|
||
Weekdays - 24 Hours
|
||
Weekends - Midnight to 10am
|
||
|
||
Currently at 1200 baud (soon be 2400).
|
||
|
||
CALL SEACOAST FIDO TODAY AT (207) 439-9367.
|
||
|
||
-----------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
||
|