1148 lines
56 KiB
Plaintext
1148 lines
56 KiB
Plaintext
BTN: Birmingham Telecommunications News
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COPYRIGHT 1990
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November 1990 Volume 3, Issue 10
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Table Of Contents
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-----------------
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Article Title Author
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Policy Statement and Disclaimer................Staff
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Editorial Column...............................Mark Maisel
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Top Ten List...................................Tyros
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SLMR 1.0: A Review............................Steven Wheeler
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BTN/Matrix Halloween Party Wrap................Tricky Dick
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Birmingham On Less Than One Dollar Per Day.....Tyros
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ProFile: Edwin Million........................Chris Mohney
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? Why I Compute ?..............................Dean Costello
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Colby's Peer Music Survey......................Colby Gibson
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A Game Review..................................Karsten Propper
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Known BBS Numbers..............................Staff
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-----------------------------------------------------------------------
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Disclaimer and Statement of Policy for BTN
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We at BTN try our best to assure the accuracy of articles and
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information in our publication. We assume no responsibility for
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damage due to errors, omissions, etc. The liability,if any for BTN, its
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editors and writers, for damages relating to any errors or omissions,
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etc., shall be limited to the cost of a one year subscription to BTN,
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even if BTN, its editors or writers have been advised of the likelihood
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of such damages occurring.
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With the conclusion of that nasty business, we can get on with our
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policy for publication and reproduction of BTN articles. We publish
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monthly with a deadline of the fifteenth of the month prior to
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publication. If you wish to submit an article, you may do so at any
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time but bear in mind the deadline if you wish for your work to appear
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in a particular issue. It is not our purpose to slander or otherwise
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harm a person or reputation and we accept no responsibility for the
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content of the articles prepared by our writers. Our writers own their
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work and it is protected by copyright. We allow reprinting of articles
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from BTN with only a few restrictions. The author may object to a
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reprint, in which case he will specify in the content of his article.
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Otherwise, please feel free to reproduce any article from BTN as long as
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the source, BTN, is specified, and as long as the author's name and the
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article's original title are retained. If you use one of our articles,
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please forward a copy of your publication to:
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Mark Maisel
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Editor, BTN
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221 Chestnut St.
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BHM, AL 35210-3219
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We thank you for taking the time to read our offering and we hope that
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you like it. We also reserve the right to have a good time while doing
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all of this and not get too serious about it.
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-----------------------------------------------------------------------
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N E W S F L A S H
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If you have any news, especially you sysops, that you want to get out to
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the readership of this august publication, let me know and it will be
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placed in this space. MM
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-----------------------------------------------------------------------
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F R E E B I E : G E T I T W H I L E I T S H O T !
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The following boards allow BTN to be downloaded freely, that is with no
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charge to any existing upload/download ratios.
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The Connection LZ Birmingham Alter-Ego
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Channel 8250 Bus System Joker's Castle
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Crunchy Frog Myth Drannor Posys BBS
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If you are a sysop and you allow BTN to be downloaded freely, please let
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me know via EzNet so that I can post your board as a free BTN
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distributor. Thanks.
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MM
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-----------------------------------------------------------------------
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Editorial
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by Mark Maisel, sort of
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I hope that all of you who attended our most recent party have
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recuperated. Those of you who did not attend don't know what you
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missed. It was great fun. As always, it was nice to see old friends
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and make new ones as we do at every party.
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Other than the party, I really don't have a whole lot to say this
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time around so I will be brief.
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If you have something to say and would like to use this editorial
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column as a means of doing it, please let me know and perhaps we can
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accomodate you. Hell, we let Dean do it so you know it can't be that
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difficult.
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Next on the agenda is a letter from a columnist soon, we hope, to
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be a regular and long lasting feature writer for us here at BTN. Please
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address your mail to me on EZNet, MetroNet Netchat, or Crunchy Frog BBS.
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Hi, all you happy and unhappy people;
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I don't know if everyone is like me, but since I spend lots
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of time on my computer and in school I don't have time to
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read the papers. So I have decided to put a bit of the
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papers into BTN. I don't mean the news, as we all argue that
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in the conferences on the various networks, but to add a
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little lively question and answer column.
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Just say hello to Mary M., that's me, hopefully I'll become
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the "Dear Abby" of the computer set. I don't know everything
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and won't even try to pretend that I do. What I'd like is to
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answer questions on whatever subjects you all can come up
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with.
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You need help in your love life, out of your love life, with
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your computer, modem and just about anything. I will try to
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come up with answers. With some computer and BBS problems, I
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will find the people to give the answers. On your life (love)
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I will try to come up with answers.
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This will not be a completely serious column. You want to
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trip me up go ahead. I usually can come up with a joke for
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just about anything. I even have a better cure for a hangover
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than a "royal sieve". Be adventurous people, give me your
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questions. Let's get some interesting reading for light
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entertainment going.
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Keep in mind that everyone needs to have problems solved, and
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just to have fun. That's what this column is for me. I want
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to have fun, learn new things, and be able to entertain
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people.
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GIVE ME QUESTIONS, PLEASE !!!!
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Thanks and good computing;
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Mary M.
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-----------------------------------------------------------------------
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Top Ten Things Overheard At The BTN Halloween Party
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by Tyros
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10. "There it is again! Do you hear that thumping upstairs?"
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9. "Excuse me, sir - routine FBI neighborhood software piracy check.
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May we come in?"
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8. "Wait a minute - you're not my wife!"
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7. "Hey baby, let's blow this joint and hit an Omelette Shoppe."
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6. "Hi, I'm Satan!! Ha ha, just kidding."
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5. "Tell Mark that I'm not falling for it this time."
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4. "Say pal, where are all the chicks?"
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3. "Everyone, guess who I'm supposed to be! No, come on, guess!"
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2. "So which one's Dean Costello?"
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1. "GOOD EVENING, HUMANS. I AM *THE MATRIX* - AND YOU ARE ALL MY
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PRISONERS."
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-----------------------------------------------------------------------
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Review: Silly Little Mail Reader (SLMR 1.0), Offline Mail Reader
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by Steven Wheeler
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After subtle hints from my wife ("Are you gonna stay on that
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computer all night?") and good-natured ribbing from our illustrious (?)
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editor concerning the time I spent online, it seemed like a good time
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to try out one of the offline mail readers. At the time, the choices
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were EZReader and ..... well, EZReader. So of course I downloaded it
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from one of the local boards and muddled through the excruciating task
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of FINALLY configuring it to run, somewhat. Then one day along came a
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tagline that said "SLMR 1.0" and curiosity overcame me. After questioning
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the author of the message I was allowed a copy of SLMR, with the
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condition that I write this review. So here it is! Nothing's free
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anymore! Remember this for later reference.
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SLMR was astoundingly fast on the donor's system. But I kept in
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mind that he is running a 386 and I'm still using a prehistoric 10 mhz
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XT clone. So my hopes weren't exceptionally high. But it was new and I
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always like to at least try out new software. Upon returning home I
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plopped into my chair, unzipped SLMR to my machine and scrolled through
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the documentation. "Oh boy! Comical, lighthearted docs. This should be
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REAL GOOD," I thought sarcastically. Much to my chagrin, and delight,
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it took about five minutes to configure SLMR. It would have taken less
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if I had only remembered to include a complete path to my editor. So
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far, so good.
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Now for the good stuff. SLMR is for use with .QWK packets created
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by the Qmail and MarkMail doors for PCBoard and other .QWK compatible
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systems. Just a few of the features are:
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* THE fastest mail reader around! -- Much faster than EZReader.
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* Easy to install, configure and use. -- Take it from a numbskull.
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* Built-in mouse support. -- I don't have one so I'll take their
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word for this.
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* LAN compatible/DesqView aware. -- See above.
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* Auto-detects video mode, with mono, CGA, 43 line EGA and 50 line
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VGA support. -- Did notice a problem with snow on my CGA, but not
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enough to make me not want to use SLMR. The configuration program
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includes an option for suppressing snow, but I've had previous
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problems with my CGA and can't attribute it to SLMR.
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* Swaps to disk or EMS to save memory when running external
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programs. -- Again, I'll take their word for this.
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* Unlimited number of taglines, up to 57 characters each. --
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EZReader is limited to 50 taglines.
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* Add, edit, delete or steal taglines "on the fly". -- I love it.
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No tagline is safe. Plagiarism raise thy ugly head.
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* Automatic screen pauses for Welcome Files.
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* Scrollable Bulletins and New File lists.
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* "Animated" text displays for color ANSI messages and Welcome
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screens.
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* Prompts user to delete replies older than current .QWK packet.
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* Delete or rename packets from main menu. -- Great if you like to
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save your mail packets.
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* Configurable .QWK and .REP directories, or select any drive or
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subdirectory from main menu.
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* Access to unlimited number of mail packets.
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* Allows "Personal" directories for reply packets if more than one
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person uses SLMR on your computer. -- Now I've just got to teach
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my wife how to use the MarkMail door. SLMR will be a breeze!
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The hardest part will be creating new directories for our mail
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packets.
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* Pick Lists (Piglets) for text search strings, message subject,
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taglines, conference or file save/view. -- Use F2 key.
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* Context-sensitive help available at any point with F1 key.
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* Uses your own text editor or word processor (includes TED.COM if
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you don't already have a favorite).
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* Automatically loads text of message you're replying to into
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editor, with "quoting" -- simply delete unneeded text, add your
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reply and save the message.
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* Edit or kill replies easily. Deleted messages are NOT included
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in a reply packet. -- I had one heck of a time deleting replies
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with EZReader.
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* Automatically prompts for recovery of unarchived replies in case
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of a system crash.
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* User-definable "hot keys" to execute other programs from within
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SLMR.
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* Re-sorts messages by subject (default), number, sender and
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addressee.
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In short, SLMR is the fastest and easiest offline mail reader I've
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seen. All that is necessary to use SLMR is to make a subdirectory
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for SLMR, extract the files into it and type SLMR <CR>. Hit <ALT> C to
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configure, F1 for help screens and F10 to save the settings. SLMR is so
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simple that the documents that accompany it are really not necessary.
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But for those that just love to read documents and burn up printer
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ribbon and paper there are documents included. You really should read
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the docs, they're quite amusing.
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Just about everything is user configurable: editor, colors,
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directories, taglines, packers, macros (F3 thru F9) and picklists
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(or Piglets as they are affectionately referred to).
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Picklists are available in a number of places where choices are
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offered by pressing F2. Often SLMR automatically adds other items to
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the picklist, such as the original author of a message in the TOLIST or
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a newly created TAGLINE. SLMR is the first to offer Exploding Piglet
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Technology as a standard item. If "Stupid Windows" are enabled, via
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configuration, the Piglets will explode and create arcade type noises.
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Otherwise they're quiet and behave nicely. The following are some of
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SLMR's Exploding Piglets:
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Taglines -- list of taglines, no limit.
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Tolist -- list of people to whom you frequently send messages.
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This is like EZReader's address book, which is only available
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on registered versions.
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Subjlist -- list of favorite topics and "control message" topics
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for offline configuration of your mail door.
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Findlist -- list of 'FIND' keywords.
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Savelist -- save messages to a text file and view during mail
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reading session.
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A feature I especially like is that SLMR enables you to edit the
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FROM: field when entering messages or replies. This is useful if you
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use your real name on a board but also use the POOF door found on many
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boards to leave nasty messages under an alias. Most mail doors will
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NOT allow you to upload replies not from the person currently logged on
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unless you are the Sysop.
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In my opinion, the biggest improvement is that SLMR is not limited
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to 200 messages per conference. EZReader would go haywire if there was
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more than 200 messages in a conference. And this is not unusual for
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some of the national echoes. SLMR does not have this problem. So if
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you frequent some of the national echoed conferences, you definitely
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need SLMR.
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The only problem I have with SLMR is that my source gave me sole
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distribution rights locally. Now do I take his advice and withhold it
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until I get some good offers or do I go ahead and upload it to the local
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boards? Do I hear anyone out there begging and willing to barter?
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SLMR 1.0 is fully functional "Shareware" from Greg Hewgill and
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Technique Computer Systems. Registration is $20. Add $2 if you would
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like it on 3-1/2" diskette.
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The bottom line is that SLMR is the best thing since zippers or
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edible underwear, take your pick. If you're using any other offline
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mail reader (and I'm sure you are) you're in the Stone Age.
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Presently I only know of two people in the Birmingham area that
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have it and I'm one of them. (NYAH, NYAH, NYAH.) Anybody got a spare
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Mercedes they want to trade?
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Seriously though (?), watch for it on your favorite local board
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soon. But don't hold your breath. I think I feel a greedy streak
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coming.
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-----------------------------------------------------------------------
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BTN/Matrix Halloween Party Wrap
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by Tricky Dick
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"Hey Tricky, how was the party?"
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Well...............
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O.K. folks, the party's over (done, fin, history), the street
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sweepers and the riot police are gone. Birmingham is safe once again,
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well at least till the next party.
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If you missed the party, SHAME ON YOU. But in all fairness (and a
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little baiting to entice you to come to the NEXT one), I'll tell you a
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bit about it.
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Lessee now, when I arrived, I was greeted on the porch by a Teddy
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Kennedy with Mary Jo (Jeff Freeman and his wife) at his side, passing
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out money. Another Rev., Dean Costello (Cardinal, Pope, God, whatever)
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was passing out advice, which fortunately was ignored by all. On the
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porch swing was a two-headed pumpkin that had consumed Sid and Michelle
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Browning (wonder what the other two hands were doing inside the
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costume....). Somebody said it was a shame we couldn't see more of
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Michelles' legs? Is `dat true, Michelle?
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Scattered inside the house and out were the occasional "plain
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faces", those who did not wear a costume, a few of which were Kim,
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Julie, Rose, and others. Masks and noses were provided at the door for
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those who had forgotten their costume. Ooops! sorry, didn't notice the
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guys too much. Inside I was greeted by a walking Wall (really!! I'm not
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drunk) played by a very cool Marlin "Stoneface" Johnson; he even had
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paint cans so you could add your own graffiti! There sat the "Crunhcy
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Frog" herself! Kathy, you look mah-velous in green with big google eyes!
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Venturing toward the kitchen I met a Satyr (Steve Wheeler) a
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Leopard (Kathy Wheeler), a Priest (the immortal Rocky Rawlins himself!)
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and even Commander Riker with a lovely lady from the past (Lee and
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Maggie Harden). Maggie, dear, LOVED the scenery. Lee put that Phaser
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down!
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Uh-oh! Look! A belly dancer and her sheik (Lady Aurora and Mike
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Tyner), with a gen-u-ine jewel in her navel (just admiring the Jewel
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sir, please put that scimitar down!). And there's Cleopatra with a
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feather mask and a werewolf stalking her (Brenda and Randall Dickerson).
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Randall, is that werewolf makeup or have you been playing with
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radioactive recombinant DNA back at the lab?
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Among many others were Arthur Jarrett and Kelly Rosato; as what I'm
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not sure. But guys I loved your masks, they were REALLY gruesome
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<snark>. The control room of this party ship stayed quite crowded with
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young`uns and old`uns watching and playing computer games, and watching
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folks call in to the Matrix. If you called during that time, I hope you
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didn't have anything you wanted kept private, `cause it ain't private no
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more!! Some of these local lurkers included Colby Gibson (a walking
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bbs), and Matt Albritton (a mad, I'm sure, doctor).
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Oh, yes, around the refreshments (hic) was the Joker from Jokers'
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Castle and his LadyBird friend (Joe and Connie Kearley). A chimney sweep
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(Wayne Boshell) and Lisa Richards as Priestess of the Dark in a long red
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cloak. Jet Thomas was literally lit up for the party with his costume.
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It was a crown of lights in his hair. If we had experienced a power
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failure, he would have been very popular. Randy Hilliard showed up as
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our resident biker type. The refreshment table had a, well, um, let's
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just say it was a LARGE and UNUSUAL centerpiece (this is a PG
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newsletter). If you really want to know, ask somebody who was there.
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Also ask them how it got cleaned up when some dip splattered on it. Dr.
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EBCDIC graced our presence later on in the evening as a Horny Little
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Devil (we knew THAT!). Claimed he had stumbled into the wrong party by
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mistake and stayed for an hour, yea sure!
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Then the rest of the Georgia crew breezed in, KE-VIN Buchan (the
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neo-nazi ridgehead) with his party partner Neville (Dracula). Rev. Gary
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Hasty arrived as the painter Salvador Dali with his friend Lisa done up
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as his artistic canvas. The lithe and very lovely Lisa promptly found
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the couch and communed with the sandman while others communed with
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recently departed spirits (Jack Daniels among others, many many
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others!).
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Ty Ros (or was that Kelly) fired up a Barbecue grill in the front
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yard, causing some worry as to whether they were going to sacrifice a
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computer (not to mention questions of their sanity,it was cold out
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there!). But it was determined that they were all computer nuts, not
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computer wizards, so the sacrifice was off. They then opted to grill
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steaks.
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Even later (!) breezed in Richard Foshee as a security guard. He
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looked so authentic!! And a lovely Morticia arrived with her warlock
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(Lisa Patterson and Patrick McCain) who blessed us around 1 or 2 a.m.
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with fresh pizzas!
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Several others were there that I did not get the chance to chat
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with; *Kim (who was she with), the "bag lady" with the label "white
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trash" on her, a Chef, and many others. The most enigmatic costume of
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all was worn by a pygmy, he came dressed as a giant Holland lop-eared
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bunny, about 20 inches long and very furry. He sat in the cage all
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night long, even ate rabbit food (yeesh!), and had the act down pat! You
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can't fool me fella (hic), I'll find out who you are eventually!
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There were also alleged sightings of many outrageous costumes,
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giant pink bunnys, blue snakes, miniature elephants, etc. but only very
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late in the evening. Do we have any pictures of these???? We kept our
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eyes peeled for "Red Neckerson, software pirate" and Mark Maisel
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captured him when he tried to sneak into the sacred Matrix Room for some
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heavy duty file copying. After he was caught, he agreed to finally give
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up his evil ways and start anew. There was much rejoicing, among other
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things.
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And of course, the infamous "BTN .GIFs" were on constant display
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for everyones' amusement/embarrassment. Those who were unfortunate
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enough to be caught by Tom "Country Boy" Egan's' roving camera will be
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in the next set of GIFs. His faithful scout for these nefarious photos,
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I might add, was his lovely Indian guide, Gail "Pocahontas" Egan.
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To those I missed at the party, I apologize. To any I embarrassed
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by writing about you, if you want to get even write the next column
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about the Christmas party!
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Birmingham On Less Than One Dollar Per Day (Minus Gasoline)
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by Tyros
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Birmingham may not be the most interesting city to live in or even
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to visit, but in my opinion, one could still call it tolerable. This
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city exists just one shade safe of being completely mundane, on a thin
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line between the valleys of torpid and lively. However, like most
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aspects of life, living here requires money, a curious but vital part of
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the personal portfolio that few of us ever seem to have enough of,
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myself in particular. My own personal poverty has grown to be the stuff
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of near-legend, getting more proverbial with each passing day that I
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spend stomping the hot streets in search of a steady job. However,
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there are pearls to be gleaned from even the most homely looking oyster,
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and as such, my experience has provided me with certain tips and
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techniques that can be used to somewhat dull the painful money crunch,
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if not wipe out a decent-sized swath of it. And so, here are a few
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invaluable ideas, semi-precious nuggets of financial wisdom, that you,
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the hapless consumer, might find useful in simply living from day to day
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without dying of boredom or starvation.
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LOW-BUDGET SOFT DRINKS
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Let's start off with a simple yet almost unknown idea to beat the
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rising cost of carbonated cola. Tired of paying fifty cents, sixty
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cents, or <gasp> MORE at the vending machine for something that really,
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honestly, cannot be called anything more charitable than "junk food"?
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Take a trip to your local supermarket. There's an entire aisle devoted
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to soft drinks of every color and persuasion, and we may delight in the
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secret knowledge that not ALL of them cost two bucks for a 3-liter
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plastic jug - in fact, here there is caffeinated and non-caffeinated
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consummation for almost any price range. The bottom of the ladder is
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Vess brand cola. Vess comes in nearly every flavor imaginable, and
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remarkably enough, you can find it for only 18 cents per twelve-ounce
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can, if you look. (That's one dollar for a six-pack, mohicans.) As you
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might expect, the taste of the drink is not the highlight of this
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thrifty venture, but you really can't tell the difference between low
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and high brow colas if you're thirsty enough, trust me. And, if your
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tastes lean towards root beer, virtually ALL root beers taste enough
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alike to make no nevermind. Vess drinks also profess to be sodium-free,
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unlike Pepsi and the rest. If you've got a few extra pennies jingling
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merrily in your pocket, you might want to splurge a little more and go
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for slightly costlier alternatives - Faygo and the ever venerable Shasta
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are swell options, and are not only noticeably tastier, but also line
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the shelves in a fantastic rainbow of flavors like Vess. Faygo also
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comes in snazzy-looking 16-ounce glass bottles, which, like their
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12-ounce aluminum brothers, are also wonderfully inexpensive, at about a
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quarter a pop.
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HIGH CULTURE, ABSOLUTELY FREE
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The thrifty entertainment seeker may not know much about art, but
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he always knows what he likes, and there's something for nearly everyone
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to like at the Birmingham Museum of Art. The best part about this
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particular bit of penny-pinching, friends, is that it takes no pennies
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at all, much less any pinching. The museum's doors do not discriminate
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on the rich, poor, smug, humble or even funny-looking - nor is there a
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time limit, and let's face it, the number of places in the city you can
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stand for hours at a time absolutely freely are getting fewer and fewer.
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Then there is the art. Of course, there are down sides to anything
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free; you may not find much to enrapture you at the museum if you don't
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like looking at interesting or pretty things, and there IS a closing
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time. But the place is big, it's air-conditioned, it's crammed full of
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neat stuff to look at, and it's absolutely positively free.
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AT-HOME EATING
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Normally, for the purposes of this article, I would frown on
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mentioning anything that you can do at home and is therefore probably
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already obvious. However, there is an exception that I still hold to be
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a classic in its own time: the homemade sandwich. When you go to the
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deli or sandwich shop, a sandwich can cost as much as three to four
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dollars - and imagine your chagrin when you receive your order sitting
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pertly on a small paper plate using the SAME kind of square boring white
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bread you can get at home, which is the case in many delis. The
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solution, then, is to hit your friendly grocery store again, and snap up
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a loaf of supermarket-brand bread. It's as good as any other kind, and
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they usually slap it with a 65-cent sticker, a factor which simply can't
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be beat upon. Add to that, small cheap containers of peanut butter,
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jelly, mayonnaise, mustard and/or a little lunch meat, if you're feeling
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extravagant - and you have the makings for over ten or eleven
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sandwiches, all for a few measley green slips. That translates to about
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thirty cents per sandwich, a price that you'll appreciate even more
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while you're wolfing these things down to the tasty trickle of
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neighborhood tap water - in itself, one of nature's truly miraculous
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bargains, if you have other family members to pay the bill.
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LIBRARY DAYS
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If you don't feel up to standing or walking around all day at the
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museum - which you may well not, having stomped the sidewalk beforehand
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- try the Birmingham Public Library. Like its canvass- chocked
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counterpart, the Library is completely free, and is located in the heart
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of downtown. Here too, you can while away hours and hours without being
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told to get lost, unless it's to be lost within the pages of an
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absorbing book or periodical. Yes, this is a treasure trove for people
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who like to read magazines but hate to buy them, subscribe to them, or
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hang around newsstands. Although the Library's organization is not the
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best, all the major magazines are here, and a darn sight many of the
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minor ones too - all sitting on the shelf waiting to be read and
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enjoyed. After you finish your magazines, look up books on the
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library's neat computerized catalog system - it's an easy and engrossing
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way to spend the afternoon. Special tip: no drinks are allowed in the
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library, but there IS free water to be found at fountains stationed on
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each floor. As an aside, if you're a news fiend and like to KEEP the
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paper you read, newspapers are still astoundingly cheap - a quarter for
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the local daily, fifty cents for USA Today - and you can help the
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environment by recycling the newspaper you buy. The Library also allows
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you to apply for a card, virtually free of charge last time I checked,
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which will allow you to check out items and hoot with enjoyment at them
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within the comfort of your own home, for an unprecedented interval of
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THREE weeks, as of October 1, 1989. And, there is one additional
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advantage that I am coming to:
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CITY PARKING
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It is hard to find parking spots downtown, especially around
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noontime when the average poor person is wont to wander listlessly -
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however, if you're accustomed to wandering listlessly, take heart:
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Library parking is completely and utterly free. No meters, no dollar
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fees, no surly checkbooth officials - just a friendly-looking man in a
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badge who smiles at you as you drive triumphantly through the parking
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lot perimeter. You can easily get away with parking here for nearly
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anything you need to do in the downtown area, and even if the man is
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still smiling at you - just walk into the library and directly back out
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the other side, then go about your own business. If it's a nice warm
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day, you can easily appreciate the splendor of Birmingham's downtown
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area as you traverse the blocks and sidewalks, beaming all the while in
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the satisfaction that no coin left your pocket when you left your
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vehicle. And you will ALWAYS remember where you parked.
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AGHAST AT GAS
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Once you learn to take in free entertainment from around the city,
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your main concern so far as money goes will shift from admission to
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transportation. We're all feeling the current pinch, but those of us
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with less money are being pinched a little closer to the bone, and it
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|
doesn't feel too pleasurable. Unfortunately, there are not any really
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nifty tricks you can use to save money on fuel, short of laying siege to
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the local mom-and-pop filling station after midnight and cutting the
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pump-chains with acetylene, but there are small things that you can do
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that help a lot more than they hurt. Of course, you should always be on
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the lookout for places that charge less by the gallon. Persuade your
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favorite radio station to freely advertise the most inexpensive place
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they know of - this is a tactic that has worked in the past. Careful
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with your own car - jackrabbit starts use more gas, and idling should be
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avoided too. If possible, use a relative or friend's car that gets
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better mileage - or best of all, pool it. The friendly man in the
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Texaco cap can give you more pointers on how to conserve that smelly
|
|
stuff once you get to the station. Beware, though - snacks and colas at
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service stations are notoriously more expensive than similar goods at
|
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regular stores. Shop around for such things - and in this hot weather,
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be on the lookout for stations whose banners advertise low prices for
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fountain drinks. If you simply can't live without your favorite name
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brand of soft drink, fountain drinks are a fantastic bargain, and taste
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for taste, ounce for ounce, beat even the low-level canned stuff at the
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store.
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GUERILLA CINEMA
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One of the biggest economic contradictions in this town is the
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price of going to the movies. If you go at night, it's going to cost
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you $5.25, which, while being well below what most Americans pay for
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their moviegoing enjoyment, is still a darn sight expensive here.
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However, there exists at most theatres an AFTERNOON matinee, at which
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you can watch the same movies, in the same theatre, with even less of a
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crowd, for only three dollars. An incredible bargain, especially when
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one considers that all you have to do to save the money is get out of
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your house a couple hours earlier. If three lousy dollars is STILL out
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of bounds as far as your budget is concerned, take heart - if you're
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willing to brave the Friday night sociophiles and the lateness of the
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hour, your movie enjoyment may be afforded you as low a price as
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95-cents. This is due to one of the saving graces of a local radio
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station, which sponsers the cheapo cinema on Friday at midnight. This
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amazing deal is available at the Galleria 10 and at the Festival 12.
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There is one catch, however - at each theater, there is only one movie
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specified for the 95-cent deal, and it's usually one that's been in
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release for some time. The cunning consumer can circumvent this
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obstacle, however, by purchasing a 95-cent ticket for the sponsered
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movie - and walking, instead, into another movie of your choice. It's
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not entirely ethical, but then again, neither is poverty, and who says
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the despondent movie-lover has to suffer when he can see the feature
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film of his choice for only a little pocket change. Tip: Never never
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buy concession stand refreshments. The prices are so outrageously high
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that even the well-off theater patrons don't like it. Instead, eat
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before you go, or, as a last resort, smuggle food or drink inside a
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roomy jacket pocket.
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These are just a few of the ways that I save money keeping myself
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entertained on the streets of Birmingham; anyone that possesses the
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merest iota of creativity, inventiveness or just plain adaptability will
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surely be able to come up with many more, until that glorious day when
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we are once again on our financial feet again. Until that triumphant
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moment arrives, Be Thrifty.
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-----------------------------------------------------------------------
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ProFile
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by Chris Mohney
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The ProFile is a short, half-serious biographical sketch given to
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various computer telecommunications personalities around Birmingham.
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Victims are selected randomly from a group of names put into the
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notorious Hat. Anyone who thinks himself brave or witty enough may
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petition for admittance to the Hat by leaving E-Mail to me (Chris
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Mohney, most boards around town) to that effect. Anyone who wishes to
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suggest more questions or sneakily nominate someone without their
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knowledge may take the same route....
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(Yet another one of our Metronet brothers from Georgia comes in from
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the cold this month ... )
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---------
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Pro File on EDWIN MILLON
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---------
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Age: 17
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Birthplace: Dalton, GA
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Occupation: Student
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My hobbies include: (Edwin left this blank. Draw your own conclusions.)
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Years telecomputing: 4 months
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Sysop, past/present/future of: Co-Sysop of Carpet Capital BBS
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My oddest habit is: Banging my head on the wall
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My greatest unfulfilled ambition is: To play Varsity Basketball
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The single accomplishment of which I am most proud is: Learning to
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use computers (especially modems)
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My favorite performers are: Slaughter, Nelson, Giant, Faith No More
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The last good movie I saw was: Young Guns II
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The last good book I read was: Clear and Present Danger
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If they were making a movie of my life, I'd like to see my part played
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by: Corey Feldman
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My pet peeves are: People who think anyone with a 4.0 are nerds!!!
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When nobody's looking, I like to: (Not answer questions, apparently.
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Edwin left this one blank as well. One must assume that whatever Edwin
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does when nobody's looking is so hideous that it defies translation
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into ASCII.)
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-----------------------------------------------------------------------
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Why I Compute
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By Dean Costello Exclusive to BTN
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As many of you probably know, I am fairly active on a couple of the
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local boards here in Birmingham. I know more than a couple people have
|
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come up to me and ask me why I fool with it. My brother, for instance,
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has more than once asked me to 'get a life', since if I spend this much
|
|
time with my computer, something must be fundamentally wrong.
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As of the present, I have been able to dodge the slings and arrows
|
|
of bastard siblings, uncomprehending parents, unimpressed friends and
|
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associates, etc. So, a good question here is that being that I have
|
|
become quite the pariah over my use of the modem and such, why do I
|
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continue to fool with it?
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Well, there are several reasons. Briefly listed, they are
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|
enjoyment, curiosity, and it beats boredom. There are probably a number
|
|
of other reasons why I fool with it, but I think the above couple are
|
|
primary reasons.
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In person, I am usually a fairly quiet person by nature. But one
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of the things that I like about BBSs in particular is that you don't
|
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have the shield of body language, or sloppy speaking ability, or
|
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whatever. What you type is what the other person sees, and you cannot
|
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put a spin on what they are seeing. This was very liberating for me,
|
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since that was one of the big problems I have in associating with 'real'
|
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people; that I need to take so much time deciphering what they really
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mean when they say something.
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And there is no way around it. I have enjoyed this national
|
|
reputation that I have generated in the last year or so. I called into
|
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a board in Washington, D.C. last weekend (the cosysop there gave me an
|
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account, and so I figured I should at least log on). Imagine my surprise
|
|
to find that one of the message threads had my name as the subject.
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That is one of those things that you just don't see very much. I get a
|
|
visceral thrill out of seeing things like that. Like when I was reading
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the stuff in the sysop's conference right here in Birmingham, I was
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surprised to find out that I was mentioned at a fairly regular interval.
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Just things like that, I suppose. Since my stay in Birmingham is
|
|
probably going to be temporary, it kind of makes me feel happy inside to
|
|
know that I probably won't be referred to in 1992 as, "Let me think for
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a sec...Dean COSTELLO? Hmm, didn't he run one of those WWIV boards a
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couple of years back?" I think it was Oscar Wilde that said, "The only
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thing worse than being talked about is not being talked about."
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Another factor of the enjoyment (other than reading messages about
|
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me) is to exchange messages with other people. For example, I have been
|
|
involved in a number of gun control debates. About the only thing that
|
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they have done is to sharpen my debating abilities. I always get a kick
|
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out of people that ask me how many debate classes I have taken (none, so
|
|
there). But there is still that enjoyment about strapping on the
|
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metaphorical armour, breaking out the rhetorical Blade of Slashing Logic
|
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(Randy Hilliard's creation, I believe; that and the Chainsaw of
|
|
Illogical Argument Crushing, but that is another story, or at least
|
|
would take another couple of paragraphs). When I was at my peak of
|
|
debating, I always had at hand on my desk a Bible, an Almanac, a Guiness
|
|
Book of World Records, the complete scripts to all of the Monty Python
|
|
shows, a Toxicology book, a Merck Index (a book that has most of the
|
|
more common chemicals that one would run into, and what they can do to
|
|
you), a vertebrate anatomy book, a parasitology book, and The Modern
|
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Man's Guide To Life (A book of all the stuff that an uncle should have
|
|
taught you, but didn't quite get).
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The other extreme is probably what is seen on Crunchy Frog, the
|
|
Anarchist's Board. A nice place to drop your logical debating
|
|
abilities, and just say (relatively) clever things, insult the piss out
|
|
of people, or whatever. I was feeling particularly abrasive one fine
|
|
day (right after the BBS article came out, BHM News), and a new person
|
|
was on. An exchange between he and Arthur Jarrett commenced, something
|
|
about the newboy saying something stupid, Arthur replying that he
|
|
doesn't fool with virgins, and to take your sexual inadequacies
|
|
elsewhere. Newboy replied with something snotty to Arthur, and I
|
|
replied to Newboy, "I'd take care of your virginity. I will gouge out
|
|
your eyes and skull (euphemism for mate) you." Ahh, one of my better
|
|
repartier shots, I feel.
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On to curiosity. I have always had a desire to know things.
|
|
Everything. Just about anything. So, one of the things that I have
|
|
gotten out of the BBSs is a lot of neat arcane data. Especially from
|
|
some of the echoes on Randy's board. I learn a fair amount out of those
|
|
things. Of course, you have to seperate the wheat from the completely
|
|
wrong, but no problem. I just subject the new datum to my Graduate
|
|
Student Qualitative/ Quantitative Suspicious New Fact Checker, and away
|
|
we go. And if you factor in the OLS (On-Line Services, like CompuServe,
|
|
Delphi, GEnie), there is access to all kinds of things. Especially
|
|
something called Dialog, which gives me access to hundreds of databases
|
|
that are mostly science-related. Unfortunately, it costs a fair amount,
|
|
like $400/hour, depending on the database being accessed and the time.
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We now come to the last subject, boredom. I have not had anything
|
|
substantial to do in more than a year. Without these BBSs to call, I
|
|
would have slit a wrist by this stage. Cinemax can only do so much, you
|
|
know. I have actually been involved in the BBS scene in Birmingham for
|
|
about 2 years. When I first arrived down here, I had a list of
|
|
Birmingham boards to call, so I tried them out. I remember having an
|
|
account on Point of No Return, Michele Cahoon's board, to give you an
|
|
idea of my time here. I think it was on Bill Freeman's board that I
|
|
started to experiment. That is where I discovered Doors (well, only
|
|
ProDoor at the time, and that didn't really help me much at the time),
|
|
but I hadn't discovered the beauty of messages at the time. I also
|
|
discovered conferences on Bill's board.
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|
Well then, with my new-found power, I started calling other boards,
|
|
including Ziggy's (where I first read BTN, I remember reading a column
|
|
by Ron Albright, and then I decided it was too cerebral for me at the
|
|
time), from which I got Channel 8250 and Bus Station. When I discovered
|
|
that BBSs had other BBSs...ahh, life was full. So anyway, I called 8250
|
|
and J(oin)-ed a conference. And what conferences they had. The first
|
|
one that I delved into was the religion conference. I read about 100
|
|
messages to get the feel for the place. And then it happened. I left
|
|
my first message. It was to All, I believe, asking about
|
|
predestination. Imagine my surprise when I got back a message! Yes,
|
|
somebody replied to me! This is great! So I read the message. It was
|
|
from someone named Sysop (well, I knew that Sysop was a system operator,
|
|
since I was one of those on my college Vax 11/780). And he addressed my
|
|
subject, also.
|
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|
|
I was blown out of the water.
|
|
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|
I couldn't believe this...this...this TREATISE that someone left
|
|
me. It was about 4 screen-fulls, and it hit everything. He talked
|
|
about the different ideologies and philosophies, he compared and
|
|
contrasted different belief systems, he even quoted Thomas Aquinas.
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|
Needless to say, I thought that this was not good, being that I was
|
|
definitely overclassed, undereducated, and outgunned there. And that was
|
|
the last message I ever left for about 6 months, I would say. By this
|
|
time, I needed something, though. It was summer '89, and I was bored
|
|
out of my skull. So I started up again. Started reading some messages
|
|
on Tim S.'s board. A bunch of people were talking about how wonderful
|
|
it was to be packing heat, bopping down the street "8-feet tall and
|
|
covered with hair" (Randy Hilliard). This just would not do, so I
|
|
injected my opinion in and waited...
|
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|
|
Well, I found out that 8250 was apparently the anomaly, since I was
|
|
cursed at, abused, insulted, etc. for those views. And then things have
|
|
kind of gotten carried away from there. One last reminiscence, and I
|
|
will leave you. One night I was on Crunchy Frog deep in the middle of
|
|
the abortion debate, when all of the sudden the screen freezes for a
|
|
moment, and a message snapped up saying something like, 'Break out the
|
|
beer, here's Monty!'. Hello, what's this? Come to find out, Mark
|
|
Maisel, whom I was trading comments about Bang & Oluffsen equipment in
|
|
the Listener's Conference was asking for me to drop by the house. Well,
|
|
I thought, why not. So, after getting directions, I made it there,
|
|
where I found out who Monty was, and other arcane factoids.
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|
|
|
And the Birmingham Telecommunication Scene (and me) have never been
|
|
the same.
|
|
|
|
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
Colby's Peer Music Survey
|
|
by Colby Gibson
|
|
|
|
Recently, at my school, the President and the Principal decided
|
|
that they would run a little survey to see what the teens there listened
|
|
to and what groups thereof.
|
|
|
|
Surprisingly, the survey also included several questions about how
|
|
many R rated movies you had see in the past month, past 2 months, etc.
|
|
|
|
There were various and sundry replies, and one of the most popular
|
|
Rap bands was, of course, the 2 Live Crew.
|
|
|
|
|
|
I decided to run a little survey around myself about what music the
|
|
student body liked and what bands thereof. By far, they were more open
|
|
with me than they were with the school survey. Listed below are the
|
|
results of the poll. I interviewed 15-20 people and classified the music
|
|
type liked and bands in that category.
|
|
|
|
Metal (All sorts)
|
|
------------------------------------
|
|
There were 5 people in this category.
|
|
|
|
Bands listed with number of votes.
|
|
|
|
Metallica 2 Death Angel 1
|
|
Anthrax 2 Bon Jovi 1
|
|
Iron Maiden 2 Motley Crue 1
|
|
Megadeth 1 Poison 1
|
|
Testament 1 Warrant 1
|
|
The Cult 1 Skid Row 1
|
|
Slaughter 1
|
|
|
|
I am quite sure that some of these people are unaware of what Heavy
|
|
Metal actually is, for Poison isn't. But, this is right from the poll
|
|
sheet.
|
|
|
|
Hard Rock
|
|
------------------------------------
|
|
There were 3 people in this category.
|
|
|
|
Bon Jovi 2 Motley Crue 2
|
|
Slaughter 2 Skid Row 2
|
|
INXS 1
|
|
|
|
The results are better, but I hardly think INXS is hard rock.
|
|
|
|
Rap
|
|
------------------------------------
|
|
There were 6 people in this category.
|
|
|
|
The 2 Live Crew 4 Eazy E 3
|
|
Public Enemy 3 N.W.A. 4
|
|
Vanilla Ice 4 Bell Biv Devoe 1
|
|
Kyper 1 M.C. Ric 1
|
|
Eric B. & Rakin 1
|
|
|
|
The one entitled "M.C. Ric" was one of the people themselves. This
|
|
guy is a part time rapper that performs with his friends for nobody but
|
|
themselves. He sits in class and writes raps.
|
|
|
|
Old Rock
|
|
------------------------------------
|
|
There were 2 people in this category.
|
|
|
|
The Beatles 3 Rolling Stones 2
|
|
Dire Straits 1 Pixies 1
|
|
Steve Miller Band 1
|
|
|
|
Pop/Dance
|
|
------------------------------------
|
|
There were 3 people in this category.
|
|
|
|
Information Society 2 Janet Jackson 3
|
|
Paula Abdul 1
|
|
New Kids on the Block 1
|
|
Bobby Brown 1 Bell Biv Devoe 1
|
|
|
|
I should have erased the New Kids from the page.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Overall, there are MANY different tastes in the music world. I was
|
|
disturbed by the fact that Aerosmith and Madonna weren't even mentioned.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Hopefully in the next issue of BTN, I'll be able to review
|
|
serparate albums of popular bands and tell background information about
|
|
them.
|
|
|
|
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
A Game Review by
|
|
Karsten Propper
|
|
|
|
The Kingdom of Kroz II, sequel to the well-known Kingdom of Kroz,
|
|
is your typical ANSI graphic game. It takes after the old Rogue game, or
|
|
the newer version, Moria. In this game, you are a smiley face who moves
|
|
around various level of a dungeon. Sound easy? Well, the geniuses who
|
|
made the game have put a variety of monsters to block your path and stop
|
|
all the fun that you seem to be having.
|
|
|
|
The monsters come in three different formats. Monsters which steal
|
|
only one gem, monsters which steal two, or monsters that steal three.
|
|
When you have no more gems to be stolen, the monsters will then take
|
|
your life. Gems may be collected in various parts of a screen.
|
|
|
|
When you have finished collecting the many things that are in the
|
|
dungeon, you find the stairs and take them. They will take you to a new
|
|
level in the dungeon. Things which may be collected include whips, gems,
|
|
spells, chests, keys, rings, tablets, etc.
|
|
|
|
The game, being in ANSI graphics, needs only a a color monitor.
|
|
When you boot up the game, it will ask to select a Color or Monochrome
|
|
format. Then, it asks you whether your computer is slow or fast. It will
|
|
then take that information to adjust the speed of the game.
|
|
|
|
After you have completed all levels, you may ask if there are any
|
|
more great games such as this one. Well, yes, there are. Sequels are
|
|
Kingdom of Kroz I, Caverns of Kroz, Dungeons of Kroz, Return to Kroz,
|
|
Temple of Kroz, and the Final Crusade (Thank God) of Kroz.
|
|
|
|
The author asks that you send him $7.50 for this wonderful find, or
|
|
all six of the games may be purchased for $35.00. The game may be found
|
|
on the Matrix under #1KROZ2.ZIP.
|
|
|
|
I actually found myself enjoying this game after a few days of
|
|
serious playing. The style and graphics tend to annoy me after that
|
|
period of time. However, if you are looking for something to pass the
|
|
time for a few days, I would suggest this game. If you are looking for a
|
|
game that will satisfy you for a few months, I'd suggest something else.
|
|
As for the sequels, I think that I would get sick of hearing Kroz, much
|
|
less anything close to the same spelling, such as Boz, Froz, Sloz, etc.
|
|
|
|
Finally, the author describes the sequels to you so that you may
|
|
choose which Kroz is the best for you. Here are his descriptions.
|
|
|
|
- Caverns of Kroz - The first discovery of Kroz.
|
|
- Dungeons of Kroz - The dark side of Kroz. Fast paced action.
|
|
- Kingdom of Kroz I - National best game contest winner in 1988.
|
|
- Return to Kroz - Discovery of all new underground chambers.
|
|
- Temple of Kroz - Bizarre side of Kroz. Nothing is what it seems.
|
|
- Final Crusade of Kroz - The surprising finish?
|
|
|
|
If there is any Sysop that has any of the above games on his BBS,
|
|
please leave me, Karsten Propper, mail on The Matrix or Crunchy Frog. I
|
|
have a vague interest in reviewing those games.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
Known BBS Numbers For The Birmingham Area
|
|
|
|
NAME NUMBER BAUD RATES MODEM BBS SOFTWARE
|
|
SUPPORTED TYPE
|
|
|
|
* Alter-Ego BBS 925-0707 300-2400 ProBBS/ProDoor
|
|
* American BBS 674-1851 300-2400 PC Board 14.5
|
|
* Bus System BBS 595-1627 300-2400 PC Board 14.2
|
|
* Byte Me! 979-BYTE! 9600 HST/V.42 WWIV 4.07
|
|
Camelot BBS 856-0679 300-2400 Teleguard 2.5
|
|
-* Channel 8250 Node 1 744-8546 300-9600 HST/V.32 PC Board 14.5
|
|
-* Channel 8250 Node 2 744-5166 300-9600 HST PC Board 14.5
|
|
* Crunchy Frog 956-1755 300-2400 PC Board 14.0
|
|
D3 Systems BBS 663-2759 300-9600 HST/V.32 Quick BBS 2.04
|
|
+ Duck Pond BBS 822-0956 300-9600 HST/V.32 Opus-CBCS 1.03c
|
|
EzNet Central 785-7417 1200-9600 HST PC Board 14.2
|
|
Graphics Zone Node 1 870-5306 300-9600 V.42 TBBS 2.1(16)
|
|
Graphics Zone Node 2 870-5329 300-9600 V.42 TBBS 2.1(16)
|
|
+ I.S.A. BBS 995-6590 300-9600 HST TCOMM
|
|
* Joker's Castle 744-6120 300-2400 PC Board 14.0
|
|
K-9 Corner 424-8202 300-2400 Image 1.2
|
|
* Little Kingdom Node 1 969-0007 300-9600 HST/V.42 PC Board 14.5
|
|
* Little Kingdom Node 2 969-0008 300-2400 MNP4 PC Board 14.5
|
|
LZ Birmingham 870-7770 300-2400 PC Board 14.5
|
|
* Magnolia BBS 854-6407 300-9600 HST PC Board 14.2
|
|
@ Missing Link 853-1257 300-2400 Image 1.2
|
|
^ Myth Drannor 699-5811 1200-2400 MNP4 WWIV 4.11
|
|
Outside It's America 951-2473 300-2400 MNP4 WWIV 4.11
|
|
Owl's Nest 680-0851 300-2400 PC Board 14.2
|
|
@ Pirate's Cove 942-7429 300-1200 Image 1.2
|
|
Posys BBS 854-5131 1200-2400 RBBS CPC17.3
|
|
* Radio Free Troad 979-6183 300-9600 HST/V.42 PC Board 14.2
|
|
Safe Harbor 665-4355 300-2400 GT Power 15.00
|
|
Shadetree BBS 787-6723 300-2400 Phoenix 1.36
|
|
Sperry BBS 853-6144 300-9600 Hayes PC Board 14.5
|
|
* ST BBS 836-9311 300-2400 PC Board 14.2
|
|
@ The Commodore Zone 856-3783 300-2400 Image 1.2
|
|
The Connection 854-9074 1200-2400 PC Board 14.1
|
|
The Dog House 425-9255 300-1200 Image 1.2
|
|
The Dragon's Hoard 833-3790 300-2400 WWIV 4.12
|
|
The Hanging Tree 938-2145 300-2400 WWIV 4.11
|
|
- The Matrix Nodes 1-4 323-2016 300-2400 PC Board 14.5
|
|
- The Matrix Node 5 251-2344 300-9600 HST PC Board 14.5
|
|
The Outer Limits 985-1725 1200-2400 Teleguard 2.5i
|
|
VCM(ee) BBS Node 1 655-4059 300-2400 Oracomm Plus
|
|
VCM(ee) BBS Node 2 655-4065 300-1200 Oracomm Plus
|
|
Victory Express 425-0821 300-1200 Image 1.2
|
|
Willie's DYM Node 1 979-1629 300-2400 Oracomm Plus
|
|
Willie's DYM Node 2 979-7739 300-2400 Oracomm Plus
|
|
Willie's DYM Node 3 979-7743 300-1200 Oracomm Plus
|
|
Willie's DYM Node 4 979-8156 300-1200 Oracomm Plus
|
|
Ziggy Unaxess 991-5696 300-1200 Unaxess
|
|
|
|
Boards with a "*" before their name are members of our local network,
|
|
EzNet, and public messages left in the EzNet Conferences of any of these
|
|
boards will be echoed to all members.
|
|
|
|
Boards with a "@" before their name are members of our local Commodore
|
|
network, Image Network, and e-mail left on any member board may be
|
|
directed to any other member board.
|
|
|
|
Boards with a "+" before their name are members of FidoNet, an
|
|
international network that provides a variety of public forums as well
|
|
as private mail services all over the world.
|
|
|
|
Boards with a "-" before their name are members of MetroNet, an
|
|
international network that provides a variety of public forums as well
|
|
as private mail services all over the world.
|
|
|
|
Boards with a "^" before their name are members of WWIV-Net, an
|
|
international network that provides a variety of public forums as well
|
|
as private mail services all over the world.
|
|
|
|
If you have any corrections, additions, deletions, etc., please let us
|
|
know via EzNet.
|
|
|
|
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
EzNet Multiple Echo List
|
|
|
|
EzNet now supports multiple conference echoing but there are a few
|
|
things you should be aware of regarding private mail.
|
|
|
|
A. You have one 'address' for private mail. If you are registered for
|
|
private mail on Channel 8250 and someone sends you a private
|
|
message in the MS-DOS conference from Crunchy Frog it will wind
|
|
up in the Hardware conference on Channel 8250 as it should.
|
|
|
|
However, if you were registered for private mail on Magnolia and
|
|
someone sends you a private message in a conference that Magnolia
|
|
does not support (echo) then the message will wind up in the
|
|
twilight zone.
|
|
|
|
B. If you go by a handle on one BBS and your real name on another even
|
|
if the private message goes where it is supposed to, you will not
|
|
be able to read it because it is addressed to someone else as far
|
|
as PC Board is concerned. PC Board has no way of knowing that Red
|
|
Foxx and John Doe are the same person. No tickee, no washee.
|
|
|
|
Advice on sending private mail: If you don't know if the person you
|
|
are sending private mail to is registered for private mail then keep a
|
|
copy of the message in case you have to find an alternate route. EzNet
|
|
Central will delete your private, undelivered message and inform you
|
|
that the user you attempted to reach is not registered for private mail
|
|
on any EzNet Node.
|
|
|
|
This is a list of the current echoes that I am aware of. More are
|
|
in the making and will be posted in future issues. If you are a sysop
|
|
and are running an echo not listed for your board, please make us aware
|
|
of it so we may correct it next issue.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Eznet Program IBM Adult Scitech BTNWA
|
|
|
|
Alter-Ego ........... * ..... ..... ..... ..... ..... ..
|
|
American BBS ........ * ..... ..... ..... ..... ..... ..
|
|
Bus System BBS ...... * ..... * ..... * ..... ..... * ..... * ..
|
|
Byte Me! ............ * ..... * ..... * ..... * ..... ..... ..
|
|
Channel 8250 ........ * ..... * ..... * ..... ..... * ..... * ..
|
|
Crunchy Frog ........ * ..... ..... * ..... * ..... ..... * ..
|
|
Joker's Castle ...... * ..... ..... * ..... ..... ..... ..
|
|
Little Kingdom ...... * ..... * ..... * ..... * ..... * ..... ..
|
|
Magnolia BBS ........ * ..... ..... ..... ..... ..... ..
|
|
Radio Free Troad .... * ..... ..... ..... ..... ..... ..
|
|
ST BBS .............. * ..... ..... ..... ..... ..... ..
|