Volume 3, Number 30                                11 August 1986
    +---------------------------------------------------------------+
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    |        - FidoNews -                           (_|  /_)        |
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    |        International                          |     | \   \\  |
    |     FidoNet Association                       | (*) |  \   )) |
    |         Newsletter               ______       |__U__| /  \//  |
    |                                 / FIDO \       _//|| _\   /   |
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    |                                                     (jm)      |
    +---------------------------------------------------------------+
    Editor in Chief:                                   Thom Henderson
    Chief Procrastinator Emeritus:                       Tom Jennings

    FidoNews is the official newsletter of the International  FidoNet
    Association,  and is published weekly by SEAdog Leader, node 1/1.
    You  are  encouraged  to  submit  articles  for  publication   in
    FidoNews.  Article submission standards are contained in the file
    FNEWSART.DOC,  available from  node  1/1.

    Copyright (C) 1986,  by the  International  FidoNet  Association.
    All  rights  reserved.  Duplication and/or distribution permitted
    for noncommercial purposes only.  For use in other circumstances,
    please contact IFNA.

    The   contents  of  the  articles  contained  here  are  not  our
    responsibility,   nor  do  we  necessarily   agree   with   them.
    Everything here is subject to debate.




                            Table of Contents

    1. EDITORIAL
       Witholding Information and Morality
    2. ARTICLES
       In Rememberence Of...
       New FidoBBS from Computertown UK!
       An IBM-PC Compatibility Testing Program
       Computerfest '86
       What is a Julian Date?
       New Outside Utility Available for Sysop's
       One Man's Opinion of PC-WRITE
       New Utility Reports Questionnaire Results
       New Fido BBS for Vietnam Veterans!
    3. COLUMNS
       Subscripts, WordStar and Epson
       Computer Industry Spotlight
    4. WANTED
       Wanted:  IBM PC programs for publication!
    5. FOR SALE
       Entertainment Software for your PC!
    Fidonews                     Page 2                   11 Aug 1986


       Public Domain Software Library Sale!!
    6. NOTICES
       FidoNews Bugs: The Missing Issue
       The Interrupt Stack
       CARTOON: Generic George, by Bruce White
       dBASE EchoMail Area




    Fidonews                     Page 3                   11 Aug 1986


    =================================================================
                                EDITORIAL
    =================================================================

    This  week's  guest  editorial  is  by  Ron Chapple of 17/36,  in
    Victoria, British Columbia.

                Have You the Right to Withold Information?


    Do we have the right to information?  Is someone immoral if  they
    withhold  information  from  me?   Peter  de  Jager  asked  these
    questions in FidoNews 3:22 and  concluded  that  even  death  can
    occur   as   the  result  of  withholding  information  with  the
    withholder  being  blameless!  I  would  be  interested  to  know
    whether  Mr.  de  Jager perceives criminal negligence in the same
    way as a court of law.  Mr.  de Jager has made some  far-reaching
    conclusions  based  primarily  on  the  cost  of  collecting  and
    processing data.

    He describes the cost of the processing of data into  information
    as  "energy".  The  logic  of  the  arguments  used to defend the
    conclusions is  clear  enough:  the  collector  and  supplier  of
    processed  data has expended energy and therefore the user of the
    processed data  must  pay  the  energy  cost  (no  doubt  plus  a
    reasonable profit) to access the information.

    Despite  his  initial  questions,  what  is  missing from Mr.  de
    Jager's discussion is,  in fact,  the whole question of morality.
    Furthermore,  the  estimation of energy costs is insufficient and
    misplaced.

    Let us deal with a few examples  of  energy  cost  and  morality.
    Consider  the  case of a child crossing a street in the path of a
    vehicle.  It no doubt would cost some energy to shout or to  dash
    out  to  save  the child,  but what is your moral position if you
    don't?  Collecting the data in this case would  not  seem  to  be
    costly,  but ask any parent of a small child,  whether it is your
    own child or another's,  where life is even possibly at risk  you
    SPEND  the  energy  regardless  and  frequently.   You  have  the
    information,  the fact that you are not likely to convert it into
    cash  isn't  the  point.  The point is that someone else needs it
    and you are wrong if you don't provide  it.  If,  on  an  evening
    stroll,  you see flames through a window you know what your moral
    obligations are; at the very least you must turn in an alarm.  If
    you demand a reward before doing so then you aren't a  member  of
    the human race.

    Lest  these  examples  be  accused  of the fallacy of the extreme
    case,  I would like to examine Mr.  de  Jager's  example  of  the
    "private weather bureau".  To briefly restate his arguments,  the
    operators of the weather bureau spend energy (money)  to  collect
    raw  data,  spend  energy (money) to process it into synopses and
    predictions and therefore have the right to sell the  information
    to  whomever can or wants to pay the price.  All this sounds good
    to me.  Even if I don't choose to buy the information  myself,  I
    Fidonews                     Page 4                   11 Aug 1986


    agree  that  my  life has been made richer by the presence of the
    option to buy the information.  That is as far as Mr.  de Jager's
    argument goes and it is just not far enough!  John Donne said "no
    man  is  an  island"  and  in this context let us see what energy
    costs the operators  of  the  "private  weather  bureau"  owe  by
    default  to  society.  Were  they  educated  in the public school
    system?  Did they attend a university funded  in  part  from  the
    public  purse?  Did  they  use government documents and guides in
    developing their collecting and  reporting  standards?  Did  they
    use  government-guaranteed  business  development  loans  to  get
    established?  The list of similar questions  is  almost  endless.
    The  answer of course is that before even the first prediction or
    weather report is issued the operators already owe every  citizen
    something.  How  much?  Well,  not  a  free prediction for Sunday
    afternoon's trip to the  beach,  but  in  the  case  of  a  major
    disaster a warning is due, FREE OF CHARGE.

    None  of  these  arguments  has  anything to do with "makers" and
    "takers",  nor anything to do with depriving people of what  they
    have earned; just an occasional show of humanity.

    Lastly,  information  and computer programs are not comparable in
    this  discussion.   Programs  are  tools;   to  use  them  in  an
    unauthorized way is the same as refusing to pay for the rental of
    a carpet cleaner from your local supermarket after you've used it
    to clean your rugs.  Stealing programs is something most of us do
    simply  because  we  can  get  away with it.  For that you cannot
    provide a moral defense,  but  to  claim  an  absolute  right  to
    withold information is no more defensible.

    -----------------------------------------------------------------

    Fidonews                     Page 5                   11 Aug 1986


    =================================================================
                                ARTICLES
    =================================================================

    Jerry Hindle, 123/6

                             In Rememberence


         I don't know if any of you out there in FREEWARE  land  ever
    go  thru back issues of FidoNews or not.  I do and in issue # 226
    there was a notice about the passing of a very special person.

         Although I never met him, or for that matter,  ever heard of
    him, he affected my life in a way that has really been of immense
    value  to  me.  The person of whom I speak is none other then Mr.
    Andrew Fluegelman.

         If you ,like myself, never heard of him before I suggest you
    stop to think about what life would be like if  you  had  to  BUY
    every one of the FREEWARE, SHAREWARE, etc.  type of programs that
    you now enjoy at little or no cost to you.  I suspect  you  would
    have  a  very limited library of software for your system.  After
    pondering this for a few minutes, stop and think about how all of
    this FREEWARE stuff got started in the first place.

         AHA, I see the little bulbs lighting up now.....

         Mr Fluegelman was indeed the first person to release a major
    piece of software under the FREEWARE concept. To quote the writer
    of the obituary posted in issue 226 of FidoNews,"He  is  probably
    best known as the author of PC-TALK".

         His contribution to the computer world will probably outlast
    all  of  us  and rightly so.  He believed in the addage "The best
    judge of the worth of a piece of software is the USER on his  own
    system".

         As I said before, I have never met him;  and until the other
    night  I never really knew of him.  But after reading that notice
    and looking through my library,  it really hit  home  as  to  the
    impact he had on me.  In his own way he introduced me to software
    I would never have been able to afford otherwise.  He gave me the
    opportunity to try new things without having to own a mint.  He I
    suppose made it possible Tom Jennings to be  gracious  enough  to
    release Fido to the public for public use. HE STARTED A TREND !

         Freeware  has become a MAJOR source of software for millions
    of computer owners with a multitude of  different  machines,  and
    yet most of us (myself included) never make his concept come true
    for  the  authors  out  there who labor over programs for months,
    even years,  simply to give it away on the premise that basically
    humans  are  honest enough to be fair about donating something to
    the author for his troubles.

         As I sit here pounding on  my  keyboard,  I  make  a  mental
    Fidonews                     Page 6                   11 Aug 1986


    promise  to  myself  to PAY for all the FREEWARE and other freely
    distributed software that I use and whenever  I  find  the  extra
    cash I do indeed make every effort to send a donation of at least
    the  WORTH  of  the program to the author.  I value freeware as a
    concept and will continue to support it in every way  I  possibly
    can.

    AND I REMEMBER.........                Thank you, Mr. Fluegelman.

    -----------------------------------------------------------------

    Fidonews                     Page 7                   11 Aug 1986


    John Bone, 503/17

           NEW FIDO_BBS from COMPUTERTOWN UK! - LOG-on-the-TYNE

    Hi,  My name is JOHN BONE,  and I have been using BBS since 1980,
    here in the United Kingdom of GREAT BRITAIN,  I now (FOOL!)  have
    set up the FIRST FIDO_BBS, in the north-east coast of England.

    ComputerTown  UK!,  is alive and kicking,  based to a small exent
    upon  the  CTUSA!,   newsletters   of   yester-year!   My   group
    ComputerTown  North  east  covers  the  TYNESIDE conurbanation of
    NEWCASTLE upon TYNE , and GATESHEAD.

    We have several needs....  international contacts,  and help with
    some  of your FIDO users micros....  any ST freaks out there?  we
    would like any info on PUBLIC  DOMAIN  software,  and  hints/help
    etc...

    We  also  have  several TANDY (TRS-80 model I/II/III IV(P) users)
    who would like to swop FIDO NET MAIL and puiblic domain software,
    hints etc.

    -----------------------------------------------------------------

    Fidonews                     Page 8                   11 Aug 1986


    Mark Welch, 161/459 <private>

                 An IBM-PC Compatibility Testing Program


    NOTICE:  A programming project  is  being  started  on  the  BYTE
    Information Exchange (BIX), to write an IBM-PC-compatibility test
    program.  The  activity  is  centered in the software engineering
    (soft.eng) conference on BIX,  but input and assistance from  all
    computer users is desired.

    The following are the opening messages in the conference.  If you
    have any suggestions or comments,  please send them to me at Fido
    161/459, or via BIX.

                            -- Mark Welch



    ==========
    soft.eng/compat #4, from mwelch, Sat Jul 12 23:26:50 1986
    ----------
    TITLE: A Compatibility Testing Program: Overview

    I wrote a long essay about compatibility, but who needs it? To
    sum up: none of the available IBM-compatible computers run
    every software title. Before buying a computer, most folks
    would like to be forwarned of what incompatibilities that
    machine might have when compared to the IBM PC.

    The goal, then, is to write a program that tests a machine for
    each of the "known" incompatibilities, and warns the potential
    buyer.


    ==========
    soft.eng/compat #5, from mwelch, Sat Jul 12 23:28:34 1986
    ----------
    TITLE: A Compatibility Testing Program: Rough design:

    All output of compatibility test results should be sent to the
    screen, to a file, and to a printer (if selected). Status
    should always be stored to disk before any action that could
    potentially crash the computer, so the program, when re-
    started after re-boot, will be able to figure out where it
    left off, note the meaning of the crash if possible, and then
    continue testing. A particularly incompatible machine may
    crash a dozen or more times during testing, but the persistent
    user deserves a complete report.

    The testing should have several levels: one that doesn't
    require activity by the user; one that requires keyboard
    activity only by the user; and one which requires the user to
    open the machine and play with DIP switches and reboot the
    machine several times. (Rebooting may be required in any
    level, if an impolite incompatibility is found.)
    Fidonews                     Page 9                   11 Aug 1986


    1) Test to see if this is an IBM PC. Look for the IBM
       copyright in the ROM (are there other ways? compare certain
       byte locations?). If it is an IBM PC ROM, say so, and then
       continue the tests anyway.

    2) Measure the system's speed. If it's not 4.77 MHz, warn the
       user about programs (list, please?) that are time-
       dependent. Let him/her know that this problem applies to
       the AT and PCjr as well. Test RAM speed, CPU speed, overall
       speed, and if possible (how?) bus speed.

    3) (a) Write characters to the screen using DOS, and then do a
       direct screen read. Report if you can't find the screen in
       the usual locations. (b) Write characters directly to the
       screen, and ask the user if it says what it's supposed to.
       (c) Do whatever it is that generates "snow" on some
       machines but not others, and ask the user if he sees snow.
       If so, it's probably more IBM-compatible, but if not, it's
       better. (d) What other tests for direct-screen-access
       compatibility might there be?

    4) (a) Systematically test each documented BIOS function call,
       using the "accepted" entry points. Report results of each.
       (b) Do the same for undocumented function calls and any
       known entry points used by ill-behaved programs.

    5) Hardware: (a) disk drive compatibility (for copy-protected
       programs using bizarre techniques. How can you test this?)
       (What do programs do to floppy controllers that might bring
       out incompatibilities?) Also check speed and compare to IBM
       PC.  (b) Hard disk compatibility. Also report speed (report
       it, if present, and compare it to the IBM spec of 85 ms).
       (c) Serial port: if present, check if it's in the right
       location. Check if there's an 8259 there. (other test for
       serial port compatibility?)  (c) Ditto for parallel port:
       how do you test it?  (d) Keyboard: Ask the user to type
       certain keys, and see what scan codes you get. Figure out
       which keyboard it is, if known, and report any possible
       problems.

    6) Kludge time. Now begin executing individual tests. This is
       where we tag on new tests.


    ==========
    soft.eng/compat #6, from mwelch, Sat Jul 12 23:30:04 1986
    ----------
    TITLE: A Compatibility Testing Program:
    Distinct areas to test separately:

    MAIN SYSTEM:
       a) IBM PC motherboard features (ROM BIOS, DIP switches,
          what else?)
       b) PC-1 (64K) motherboard unique features
       c) PC-2 (256K) motherboard unique features
       d) IBM PC XT unique features
    Fidonews                     Page 10                  11 Aug 1986


       e) XT 640K motherboard unique features?
       f) IBM PC AT unique features
       g) New AT motherboard unique features
       h) 6 vs. 8 MHz (vs. higher) clocks on AT
       i) IBM Portable PC unique features (are there any vs. XT?)
       j) IBM PCjr unique features
       k) IBM PC Convertible unique features
       i) other motherboard versions?
       j) Test for Compaq, Leading Edge, Epson, and other "known"
          machines? (And list known problems? Or refer to text
          file?)
       k) Test for Phoenix, Award, other known BIOSes and version
          numbers?

    DISPLAY ADAPTERS:
       a) IBM Color Graphics Adapter (test all modes, all
          registers, etc.)
       b) IBM Mono Graphics Adapter (ditto)
       c) IBM Enhanced Graphics Adapter (also test CGA emulation
          of it)
       d) Hercules Graphics Card
       e) Multi-mode cards (how to check without blowing up
          monitors?)
       f) other?

    I/O:
       a) Check serial port, if present
       b) parallel port
       c) game adapter?
       d) mouse port?
       e) light pen?
       f) cassette port? (snicker)
       g) Clock/calendar: check for compatibility with IBM AT, AST
          6Pak, Quadram Quadboard, other common clocks
       h) other?

    Keyboard:
       a) IBM standard keyboard, enhanced keyboard, AT keyboard,
          PCjr, Converible. Others?
       b) test how easily the CapsLock and NumLock lights can be
          confused, if present. (Does this vary among machines?)
       c) check buffer, see if we can play with it cruelly.


    ==========
    soft.eng/compat #7, from mwelch, Sat Jul 12 23:31:02 1986
    ----------
    TITLE: A Compatibility Testing Program: Output:

    The output of the program might look like this:

       > This machine's video memory is not located in the same
         place as the IBM PC. Therefore, the following programs
         may not run:  Fribozz ABC, version 4.565 and earlier; etc
         etc.

    Fidonews                     Page 11                  11 Aug 1986


       > This machine's ROM BIOS does not support the undocumented
         call to FFE2 which waits for a keypress, and thus may not
         run the following programs: Friboxx 4.5, XXXY X4.52. etc.

       > This machine's keyboard seems to emulate the IBM Enhanced
         keyboard. Therefore, older versions of many programs that
         directly accessthe keyboard buffer will not work
         properly; for example, versions of Desqview before 1.21
         (except that 1.11 will work); versions of SuperKey before
         x.xx. etc.

       > This machine's floppy disk drives don't seem to be
         compatible with IBM's full-height drives, and thus may
         have difficulty with copy-protected programs using
         (scheme), such as (list).

       > etc.


    ==========
    soft.eng/compat #8, from mwelch, Sat Jul 12 23:32:29 1986
    ----------
    TITLE: Specific Instances of Incompatibility:
    ----------------------------------------------
    On the Tandy 2000 and Sanyo MBC 555-type machines, the second
    call to the "BEEP" routine will turn off the RAM-refresh.
    Makes machines go bye-bye. (BIX, btonkin)

    Compatibility of the video card. For example, the EGA card and
    compatibles don't have the 6845 and so some software doesn't
    run properly or not at all. (BIX, kfw)

    Incompatibiliy between the Princeton Graphics Max 12 monitor
    and the Everex Edge display card. (BIX, feenberg)

    Borland's SideKick program had many incompatibilities with a
    number of compatibles, but version 1.56A fixed many of those.
    (Can we get a list of those "incompatibilities?")

    Flight Simulator (Direct Screen write; AT speed problem on
    early versions; what else?) (Latest version works on the AT
    but not the Corona/Cordata ATP-8-Q20, according to an
    InfoWorld review 1/27/86 p.50)

    Lotus 1-2-3 (Direct screen write; what else?) (Won't work in
    Hercules or CGA mode on a Corona ATP-8-Q20, according to an
    InfoWorld review 1/27/86, p.50)

    Crosstalk XVI (speed problem; direct access to serial port)

    Managing Your Money (won't run on many machines)

    V20 incompatibilities? What programs use the undocumented 8088
    instruction that the V20 uses as its reserved instruction to
    enable its new instructions?

    Fidonews                     Page 12                  11 Aug 1986


    Alloy's DOS-73 board (marketed by AT&T) doesn't emulate DOS
    properly, as far as the COPY command is concerned on a one-
    drive system (on an IBM PC, "COPY A:GLEEP B:GLORP" reads a
    file, prompts for a disk swap, and then writes to the disk; on
    the DOS-73 board, it just reads and writes the same disk,
    without prompting for a swap.)(IW rvw., 6/23/86, p.42)

    Symphony 1.1, Framework II, Microsoft Word, Microsoft Chart,
    and Dbase III won't run on Alloy's DOS-73 board. (IW rvw.,
    6/23/86, p.42)

    Symphony 1.1

    Framework II

    Microsoft Word

    Microsoft Chart

    Dbase III

    BASIC ROM (Since no compatible can legally steal IBM's BASIC
    ROM, none do. Thus, any program that attempts to access fixed
    addresses within the BASIC ROM will crash.

    Displaywrite 3 won't run on the Zenith Z-171 (IW, 3/3/86,p.46)


    ==========
    soft.eng/compat #9, from mwelch, Sat Jul 12 23:35:30 1986
    ----------
    TITLE: Implementation Options

    Given the large number of excellent programmers on BIX, with
    experience in almost every tongue, it could be argued forever.
    My proposal is that the compatibility-test program be written
    in Turbo Pascal, because that seems to be the most commonly-
    owned compiler on BIX (and because I have more experience with
    it than any other compiler). I'm sure that many of the tests
    will need to be coded in assembler; is CHASM (the CHeap
    ASseMbler, shareware and already on BIX) acceptable?
       Any comments? Suggestions?


    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+


    [Replies sent to Mark Welch at Fido 161/459 will be posted on
     BIX only if requested. Because of copyright concerns, I
     cannot distribute messages from BIX without the explicit
     permission of the messages' authors. I wrote all of the above
     messages.  - mwelch]

    [Please note that WelchNet has moved from Net 125 to Net 161,
     and is now a private node available only through FidoMail. (I
     have moved to Berkeley and will start Law School in August.)
    Fidonews                     Page 13                  11 Aug 1986


     The new BBS phone number is unpublished, but you can reach me
     by VOICE at 415-845-2430, or write to Mark Welch, P.O. Box
     2409, San Francisco, CA 94126.]

    -----------------------------------------------------------------

    Fidonews                     Page 14                  11 Aug 1986


    Doug Mohney, 109/74

                             Computerfest '86


        Computerfest '86 is designed to be a gathering of local  area
    user  groups  and vendors in the Washington D.C.  area,  an event
    where everyone can benefit from attending,  from the  person  who
    knows very little about micros to the hard-core "Give me assembly
    or give me death" hacking types.

        It  will be on Saturday,  October 25,  1986,  from 9:30 AM to
    5:00 PM at  the  Adele  H.  Stamp  Union  at  the  University  of
    Maryland, College Park.

        There will be representatives from the various user groups in
    the  area,  including  the  Capitol  PC User Group and Washington
    Apple Pi (we're still talking to the Atari & Commodore  folks  as
    of this date <7/22/86>). They'll have public domain software, and
    people to answer questions.

        Seminars:  We  currently  are  in  the  process  of arranging
    seminars on  the  following  topics:  Small  Business  Computing,
    BBSing,  Desktop  publishing,  Computers and the Disabled,  MIDI,
    (and lots more if I can dig up the speakers).

        Apple Computer,  Inc.  has stated it will send out a  speaker
    for our event.  We also are working on getting someone from Atari
    and we're talking to Bruce Webster to see  if  he  can  come  and
    speak  (Bruce  is  the  author  of  "Sundog"  and has a column in
    "Byte").  By the time you read this,  I'm hoping  we  can  get  a
    handle on someone else of note.

        In  addition,  we'll  have  a  number  of  local area vendors
    displaying their equipment and peripherials in the Grand Ballroom
    of the Student Union,  for the whole range of personal  computers
    currently available today,  PLUS a "Swapfest" where users can get
    rid of their surplus hardware and legally acquired software.

        Why should you come?  Basically,  this event is designed  for
    you  to  have fun and learn more about computers.  It is a single
    day event,  so I'd feel kinda guilty if you came all the way from
    New York or Florida just to say "hi". However, if you live within
    an  hour or two of College Park,  Maryland (this means Baltimore,
    large parts of Maryland,  Northern Virginia),  it should be worth
    your time.

        Admission  is $6.00/general and $4.00/discount.  Print a copy
    of this from your printer and you qualify for a  discount.  Xerox
    it,  give  it  to  your  friend  Fred,  and  he  can get in for a
    discount.  Very easy to get a discount.

        For  more  information,   contact   me   (Doug   Mohney)   at
    (301) 350-1437 (U.S. phone) or send Fidomail to me on 109/74.

    -----------------------------------------------------------------
    Fidonews                     Page 15                  11 Aug 1986


    Karl Andrews, 138/24

                          What is a Julian Date?


    The numeric extension on the NODEDIFF files is probably the  most
    common example of a Julian Date, at least for Fido Sysops.  It is
    the  number  of days since the beginning of the current year.  So
    why is it called a Julian Date?  Here is the story...

    Calendars evolved from  the  observation  that  approximately  12
    cycles  of  the  moon corresponded with one cycle of the seasons.
    The key word is approximately -- there are about 12.368267  lunar
    months in a solar year of 365.242199 days, for an excess of about
    97  days  every  400  years.  Since  civil calendars must have an
    exact number of days each year (imagine the confusion if 1987 was
    to start at  09:24.7  rather  than  00:00),  various  schemes  of
    inserting  extra  days  or  months  were  used  to keep the dates
    synchronized with the seasons,  although  some  societies  didn't
    seem  to  care.  For  instance,  the  ancient  Egyptians  let the
    seasons cycle through their calendar,  so the date of the  annual
    flooding  of  the  Nile (caused by melting snow in the mountains)
    gradually shifted until after 1460 years it had  gone  completely
    through  the  year.  In  22  BC,  Augustus forced them to adopt a
    variant of the new Julian Calendar, but the two calendars existed
    side by side for another 250 years.

    The Roman calendar was originally a lunar calendar,  with  rather
    arbitrary  insertions  of  extra  days.  These  adjustments  were
    frequently neglected,  with the  result  that  by  46  BC,  their
    calendar  was  about  two  months  out  of sync with the seasons.
    Julius Caesar established a new calendar,  with a year of  365.25
    days  by adding a leap day every fourth year,  to become official
    in 45 BC.  He also added extra days to resynchronize the seasons,
    making 46 BC some 445 days long.  Because of civil disorders  and
    communication  problems,  the  leap  year  adjustments  were made
    incorrectly for a while,  and Augustus readjusted the calendar in
    the period 8 BC to 8 AD, but the Julian Calendar survived without
    further change for almost 1600 years.

    Unfortunately,  the  mean  Julian  Calendar  Year  (365.25  days)
    exceeded the length of the tropical  year  (365.242199  days)  by
    about 11 minutes, 14 seconds.  The continued accumulation of this
    excess  adds  up  to  about 3 days every 400 years,  and causes a
    gradual slippage of the  seasons.  By  the  middle  of  the  16th
    century,  this  had produced a very noticeable effect on the date
    of Easter,  which is based on an actual astronomical observation,
    so  in  1582 Pope Gregory modified the calendar by NOT adding the
    leap day on century years not divisible by  400,  such  as  1800,
    1900, and 2100, making the length of the mean year 365.2425 days.
    He  also  dropped 10 days out of October (the day after 4 October
    was 15 October) to resynchronize Easter,  but these changes  were
    not  immediately adopted in non-Catholic countries -- England and
    the colonies adopted the new calendar in 1752, Japan in 1873, and
    Turkey in 1927.

    Fidonews                     Page 16                  11 Aug 1986


    The error in the Gregorian Calendar amounts to about one  day  in
    3300  years,  and is about the same magnitude as the variation in
    the rotation rate of the Earth.  This,  plus the fact that we now
    adjust  the  length  of  the year by using leap seconds (the last
    minute of June and/or December has either 61 or  59  seconds,  as
    needed),  means  that there is no astronomical reason to make any
    further changes in the calendar.

    The current system of counting the years from the birth of  Jesus
    was  established in 525 by Dionysius Exiquus,  but the records he
    had access to were not complete,  and he missed the correct  date
    by  about  5  years  (there  is  even  now a 1 year uncertainty).
    Unfortunately, this creates a problem in dating events before the
    Christian Era in that not only do the years BC  have  a  negative
    sign,  but  there  is no Year Zero.  The math for date arithmetic
    gets rather complicated,  and there was always  the  question  of
    which  calendar  to  use  to  date  any given event;  and we have
    already seen how flaky some of those calendars were.  This is why
    astronomers and other scientists who need accurate ancient  dates
    use Julian Days.

    The  Julian Day system was introduced in 1583 by Joseph Scaliger,
    a French/Dutch historian who was an expert on calendars, and is a
    continuous count of the days since noon (GMT) on 1  January  4713
    BC.  He  picked  this  date because it was when the 28-year solar
    cycle, the 19-year lunar cycle,  and an ancient civil cycle of 15
    years  all coincided (this will not happen again for another 1281
    years).  This had the advantage of  perfectly  unambiguous  dates
    and no negative numbers;  for instance, 1 June 1986 is Julian Day
    2,446,582 and 1 June 584 BC is JD 1,507,900.  The  irony  of  the
    whole  thing  is  that Julian Days have nothing at all to do with
    the Julian Calendar;  Scaliger named his system after his father,
    Julius Scaligeri.

    Calling  the  annual  day  count  a  Julian  Date is not strictly
    correct,  but is typical of what happens to technical terms  that
    pass  into  the  vernacular.  After  all,  look  at  the  current
    practice of using baud to mean bits per  second  --  a  1200  bps
    modem  is actually running at 600 baud,  but is using each change
    of the signal level to pass two bits of data,  something that was
    not imagined when the term "baud" was coined.

    -----------------------------------------------------------------

    Fidonews                     Page 17                  11 Aug 1986


    Jim Fullton, 158/104

            NEWFILES - A New FIDO Outside Utility for Sysop's

    NEWFILES is a program designed to run "outside"  of  Fido,  using
    Don Daniels' (Fido 107/211) Outside utility.  NEWFILES allows the
    individual Fido user to enter a period in days,  with the program
    listing  any  new  files  posted to the board during that period.
    The user will only see files present in areas  which  he/she  has
    the  proper  privilege  level  to  access.  The  program displays
    information straight from the FILES.BBS file  in  the  particular
    area.

    Example:

    A user has access to area 1 only,  called MISC.  The DIR.BBS file
    contains "Misc. Files".  The FILES.BBS file contains:

        EXAMPLE.ARC 06-02-86 An example file
        LK100.ARC 06-31-86 Data Encryption Utility

    The files in area 1 are:

        example.arc  19400 bytes 6-2-86
        lk100.arc  38512 bytes 6-30-86

    If today's date is 7-25-86, and the user enters 60 days, NEWFILES
    will generate the following listing on the users screen:

        Misc. Files

        EXAMPLE.ARC  19400   06-02-86 An example file
        LK100.ARC    38512   06-30-86 Data Encryption Utility

    The users privilege level is read from LASTUSER.BBS.  Sysops  may
    use  the  program  by  running  it  locally using the "S" (Sysop)
    command switch,  to avoid having to log on to  the  system.  This
    will  allow  access  to  all areas.  The sysop may also specify a
    number of days to allow in the listing, like this:

        NEWFILES S 20

    This will display all files in all areas entered within the  last
    20 days.

    NEWFILES,  and  it's  C  source  code,  along  with  Outside  and
    SPLTNEWS,  the FidoNews Splitter,  are available from  Nibbles  &
    Bytes Fido 158/104, (919) 942-9267.

    -----------------------------------------------------------------

    Fidonews                     Page 18                  11 Aug 1986


                     One Man's Opinion of PC-WRITE

        by John J. Herro, 1456 Miner Circle, Endicott, NY  13760


    The author is a Senior Software Engineer for the General Electric
    Company.  He has no connection with Quicksoft,  Inc.,  except for
    being  a  registered user of PC-WRITE.  Since he knows of no Fido
    nodes near him, he is probably best reached by the U.  S.  Snail,
    otherwise known as the U. S. Mule or the Phony Express.


    PC-WRITE  is an excellent word processor / text editor written by
    Quicksoft,  Inc.,  and marketed under  the  "Shareware"  concept.
    This  means  that  you  can download the latest version from your
    favorite bulletin board  and  try  PC-WRITE  for  free.  You  can
    optionally  "register"  with Quicksoft for a reasonable fee,  but
    even if you choose not to register,  you are still encouraged  to
    distribute  copies of the program.  This is such a welcome relief
    from copy-protected word processors that sell for several hundred
    dollars!

    PC-WRITE runs on any size PC, including a PC Junior.  The program
    includes a brief tutorial manual and  a  quick  reference  guide,
    both  of which can be printed out.  Thus,  when you copy PC-WRITE
    you are also making copies of the two manuals,  without the  need
    of an office copying machine!

    Quicksoft  provides  several incentives for you to register.  One
    is telephone support. (More about that later.) Users who register
    also receive a more detailed printed manual (which would not  fit
    on   the  PC-WRITE  diskette),   a  one-year  subscription  to  a
    newsletter,  and two free updates (or one update and  the  source
    code).  Finally,  when  you register,  Quicksoft assigns a unique
    number for you to embed into the program  before  you  give  away
    copies.  If  anyone registers from one of your copies,  Quicksoft
    will send you a modest sum, hence the name "Shareware."

    PC-WRITE contains two major programs, ED to edit a file and PR to
    print it.  You simply type ED <filename> or  PR  <filename>;  the
    on-line help is excellent.  When you first get PC-WRITE,  you run
    a special program to customize it for your particular printer.  A
    large menu of printer manufacturers is  presented;  when  one  is
    selected,  a  menu  of  printer  models made by that manufacturer
    appears.  Subscripts, superscripts,  boldfacing,  underlining,  a
    variety  of fonts,  etc.,  are then all available if your printer
    supports them.

    If your printer is not  on  the  menu,  PC-WRITE  can  treat  the
    printer  as "dumb" (having no special features).  Underlining and
    bold-facing  are  still  available  if  your  printer  recognizes
    backspaces.   Alternately,  Quicksoft  will  help  you  customize
    PC-WRITE.

    I've  found  the  telephone support to be excellent,  and I never
    received a busy signal.  Even before I registered,  Quicksoft was
    Fidonews                     Page 19                  11 Aug 1986


    nice  enough  to help me with a printer problem.  I have a Smith-
    Corona Deville 3 Messenger typewriter with  a  parallel  computer
    interface; it isn't on the PC-WRITE menu.  It amounts to a daisy-
    wheel  printer  with  a very small buffer.  The DOS PRINT command
    was working correctly, but when I ran PR, I would get the message
    "Printer not ready, Abort,  Retry,  or Ignore?" Responding with R
    caused  errors  on  the printed page.  My MS-DOS manual explained
    how to do "infinite retry" with a SERIAL interface,  but not with
    a  PARALLEL  interface.  Since  my version of MS-DOS came with 90
    days of telephone support,  and the 90 days had  not  expired,  I
    first called the MS-DOS support telephone number.  When they were
    not able to help,  I called Quicksoft.  When Quicksoft asked if I
    had registered, I said, "No.  I'm willing to register, but I want
    be certain that PC-WRITE will work with my printer  first."  They
    were very courteous about giving me help,  and advised me to type
    MODE LPT1:,,P.  That fixed the problem,  and of  course  I  added
    that  command  to  my  AUTOEXEC.BAT file.  Quicksoft also told me
    that if I had registered first and later became  dissatisfied,  I
    would have no trouble getting my money back.

    ED,  the screen editor, has a few features not found even on some
    expensive word processors.  For example,  you can optionally make
    the  program  continuously  keep  a paragraph within the margins,
    even while adding words to the middle of the  paragraph!  I  find
    this feature very useful.  Also,  PC-WRITE works with ASCII files
    - a MUST for programmers.  I've even edited .EXE  files,  because
    there's  no  limit to the line length.  (The screen automatically
    scrolls horizontally when long lines are edited.) There are a few
    "font  characters,"  for  example,  alternate-B  for  Boldfacing.
    These  characters  can  optionally  be made visible or invisible.
    When they are invisible, boldfacing appears on the screen as high
    intensity, etc.

    PR interprets the special characters for your particular printer,
    and also optionally pauses at the end of each page,  in case  you
    don't  have  continuous  paper.  It  also  has a nice feature for
    recovering from a paper jam in a  long  document.  If  the  paper
    jams,  you  can  interrupt PR and resume printing from the top of
    the current page or any other page.

    Other features include definable keys, mail-merge,  footnotes and
    headers, table of contents and index, automatic page breaks, file
    includes,  keyboard  input  during printing,  etc.  The method of
    writing to the screen can be changed  to  avoid  "snow"  on  some
    systems,  and  the  screen  can  be  divided  into two windows of
    unequal size.  Text can be "cut" from one file and "pasted"  into
    another.

    Much  thought  has  been  given  to  assigning functions to keys,
    although the assignments can be changed if  desired.  To  COPY  a
    block of text, you use F3 three times: at the start of the block,
    at the end of the block,  and at the new location.  Similarly, to
    MOVE a block of text,  you use F6 three times,  and to  DELETE  a
    block,  you  use  F4  twice.  (You  can  undelete  the block with
    control-F4.) For the masochists among you,  most of  the  control
    codes of Wordstar (tm of MicroPro) are duplicated.  Control-D can
    Fidonews                     Page 20                  11 Aug 1986


    be  used  instead  of  the  ->  key  to move the cursor right one
    character, control-F will move right one word, etc.

    PC-WRITE lacks two features that are found on some expensive word
    processors.  At present,  ED cannot handle files that are too big
    to fit in memory, and there is no spelling checker.  Rumor has it
    that both of these  deficiencies  will  be  removed  in  a  later
    version.  In  the  meantime,  PC-WRITE  will  at  least  help you
    segment large files,  and  spelling  checkers  like  EZSPELL  and
    PC-SPELL can be found on many bulletin boards.

    PC-WRITE.ARC  is  available  on the IFNA board,  314-576-2743.  I
    hope that PC-WRITE will become the de facto standard for PCs  and
    compatibles,  and that the "Shareware" concept will put an end to
    copy protection forever!

    -----------------------------------------------------------------

    Fidonews                     Page 21                  11 Aug 1986


    Daniel Tobias, 19/216

                New Utility Reports Questionnaire Results


    A useful feature of FIDO is its online questionnaire.  It  allows
    the  sysop  to  survey  the  users of his system for a variety of
    purposes,  such as to find  out  the  demographics  of  the  user
    population, or to do surveys of popular opinion.

    However, until now, there was no easy way to find out the results
    of  such  surveys.  You could print out the answer files in their
    raw format,  but they  just  show  answers  by  question  number,
    without  giving  the  question  text;  you  have  to  look in the
    question file to see what question is being answered.

    Also,  there is no way to see at a glance how the  answers  to  a
    given question break down;  the answers are shown grouped by user
    without any tabulation.

    A utility I have written,  and am  distributing  as  "shareware",
    will  solve  this problem.  QUESREPT (QUEStionnaire REPorT) takes
    the FIDO question and answer files and automatically generates  a
    report of the results.  Multiple choice answers are tabulated and
    the  number  and  percentage for each choice is given.  Free-text
    answers are listed with all answers to a given question together.
    The text of your question is given immediately above  the  report
    of its answers.

    QUESREPT   can  get  its  input  from  the  standard  FIDO  files
    QUESTION.BBS and ANSWERS.BBS,  or  any  other  questionnaire  and
    answer files in standard format which you may define.  The output
    can go to the printer,  the console, or any other file or device;
    the page  length  to  format  the  report  may  be  redefined  to
    customize  it for your system.  All such parameters may be placed
    in a control file  so  that  QUESREPT  can  run  unattended  (for
    example, as a regular weekly event) with no user input required.

    QUESREPT can be downloaded from SOFT FIDO at (318) 636-4402.  (It
    can  be  found in a file QUESREPT.ARC in file area 6.) Direct all
    questions to Daniel Tobias on FIDO 19/216.

    -----------------------------------------------------------------

    Fidonews                     Page 22                  11 Aug 1986


    Todd C. Looney, 143/27

                     VIETNAM VETERANS BULLETIN BOARD


         In political terms,  the "war" in Vietnam divided the United
    States  in a manner unseen since the time of the Civil War.  Like
    that war, the wounds of divisiveness have been slow to heal,  and
    in fact still very much a part of our society.

         Since the founding of our great Republic,  the traditions of
    American military  history  has  been  one  of  citizen  soldiers
    answering  the  call  to  arms when needed.  Even with a standing
    military force,  this continued to be necessary at  the  time  of
    Vietnam  and  hopefully  will always be so.  It was not our fault
    that this,  of all wars,  was given so much "visual" publicity in
    America  resulting  in it's being the first military action to be
    so overwhelmingly unpopular in the eyes  of  our  peers.  We,  as
    patriotic Americans, did what we thought was best for our country
    and  fellow Americans by sacrificing our own personal freedom for
    a few years so that others might hold  on  to  theirs  throughout
    their lives.  I don't think very many of us wanted, or expected a
    "hero's welcome" when we returned home from that other world, but
    we  sure  didn't  expect  the  treatment  we  got  either - to be
    ostracized and degraded by those very people we had just finished
    risking our lives for in the steamy jungles of Southeast Asia.

         But, as is usually the case, time heals all wounds,  and our
    time for recognition is finally coming about.  Slowly but surely,
    our  peers,  the American Citizen,  is coming to realize that the
    vast majority of Vietnam Veterans had nothing to do with how  the
    war in Vietnam was waged,  that we were but pawns of a a group of
    confused politicians and bureaucrats.  America  is  realizing  at
    long  last  that  we did not deserve the unfair treatment most of
    received when we came home, and most Vietnam Veterans are finally
    beginning  to  feel  proud  of  what they did for this country as
    opposed to the shame they endured for so many years.

         And now our time has come for a bulletin board of  our  very
    own, a bulletin board dedicated the the American Vietnam Veteran!
    It  is  a  place  where  we  can  express  our feelings in a non-
    threatening forum atmosphere as well  as  solicit  the  views  of
    those  Americans  who  played  no active military role during the
    Vietnam "War".  It is a place where we can  meet  each  other  on
    common turf to openly discuss our lives,  both the ups and downs,
    achievements and failures, happiness and pain.

         All those who wish to participate in our forum  are  welcome
    to call;  this is not a restricted BBS.  We invite anyone who was
    affected by the political upheaval  present  during  the  Vietnam
    era.  We  have  had  some very intelligent contributions from not
    only those who served in the armed forces  during  the  War,  but
    from  ex-protesters,   students,   draft-dodgers,  and  even  ex-
    Vietnamese citizens,  some of whom had served as Viet Cong  prior
    to their surrender to U.S. military forces.

    Fidonews                     Page 23                  11 Aug 1986


         Other  related  forums  on  the  LooneyBin include a section
    devoted to the Wives, Lovers, and Friends of Vietnam Veterans,  a
    Soapbox Forum,  and a Genealogy Forum called the ROOT CELLAR.  We
    also have plenty of public domain software available.

         We feel that the gap we fill in today's society  by  hosting
    such  a forum as this is an extremely important and valuable one.
    We solicit any sysops from other areas of the country  to  follow
    our lead,  and join us if they will by forming a Vietnam Veterans
    Conference Network of FIDO BBS's.  We solicit any  sysop  who  is
    interested in participating in such an effort, or just simply has
    a suggestion or twelve to contact us at:

           ----------=====**[ THE LooneyBin ]**=====----------
                               408-293-7894
                            300/1200/2400 Baud
                             24 Hours a Day!
        (except during FidoNet Mail and normal system maintenance)

            -----=====**[ Todd and Nancy Looney ]**=====-----
                                  SYSOPS

    -----------------------------------------------------------------

    Fidonews                     Page 24                  11 Aug 1986


    =================================================================
                                 COLUMNS
    =================================================================

                      SUBSCRIPTS, WORDSTAR AND EPSON

                              by Tom Ingram

    The purpose of this article is to explain how I was able  to  get
    WordStar  to print technical manuscripts on my Epson printer with
    TRUE  subscripts  and  superscripts  (not  the  compressed  Epson
    characters  on  the same line with the rest of the text).  I find
    the  Epson  subscripts  and  superscripts  difficult   to   read,
    especially after reproduction of the text.

    First,  I  patched  WordStar using the WINSTALL program.  At ^R I
    patched the following code:  03 1B 41 06.  The 03 tells  WordStar
    how  many bytes of code are coming.  The 1B is the ASCII code for
    escape,  the 41 is ASCII for "A".  ESC A 6 causes  the  Epson  to
    space  down  only  a  half  line each time it is sent a linefeed.
    Once this patch is in place, I set up a document as follows:

    1) On the first line of the document  I  issue  the  dot  command
       PL132.  This  sets  up  normal length pages for the ^R command
       which is issued next.

    2) Issue the ^R command on the next line of the document.

    3) Now,  issue the command ^O S 4.  This sets the line spacing to
       4  so that the document will appear double spaced.  For single
       spaced documents (with crowded  subscripts  and  superscripts)
       use ^O S 2 or ^O S 3 instead.

    Now,  in typing a document, use the subscript and superscript, ^V
    and ^T, indicators as required by WordStar.  The printed document
    will have true half-line roll subscripts and superscripts.

    That is all there is to it.  It is quick and easy and it works.

    One final comment:  this does not  allow  double  subscripts  and
    superscripts.  For example,  so far as I know,  it will not print
    out subscripted subscripts by issuing any  sequence  of  commands
    from the keyboard.

    I  wrote  this  before  my  latest  issue of "Portable Companion"
    arrived.  One statement concerning patching of WordStar 3.30 from
    the WINSTALL program allowed me to obtain a  second  solution  to
    the   problem  I  have  been  discussing.   This  method  is  not
    necessarily better  than  the  one  I  described  above.  On  the
    surface  it  appears  to be better but it has the disadvantage of
    being somewhat slower in printing regular documents which do  not
    need  subscripting  or  superscripting.   I  now  have  one  disk
    containing  WordStar  configured  as  below  for  subscripts  and
    superscripts and one configured as above for regular files.  This
    way  I  do  not  have  to  reformat  all my old files for the new
    procedure.  Here is the second method:
    Fidonews                     Page 25                  11 Aug 1986


    While in the WINSTALL program provided with WordStar  3.30,  when
    you  get  to  the point where you can type X to exit to CP/M,  an
    undocumented command available is to type +.  At this  point  you
    can  patch  WordStar  by  entering the label at which you wish to
    make a patch.  The program is well prompted here and I  was  able
    to  patch in the following changes which I obtained nearly a year
    ago from MicroPro:

        1) PSCRLF  03 0D 0A 0A                NORMAL LINEFEED
        2) PSHALF  02 0D 0A                   HALF LINEDOWN
        3) PSINIT  06 1B 40 1B 41 06 0D       PRINTER RESET
        4) PSFINI  02 1B 40                   EOP RESET

    I made the patches listed above and they work to produce properly
    printed documents with subscripts and  superscripts.  The  reason
    printing  is  somewhat slower is that each page requires twice as
    many linefeeds to print the page.  Of  course  the  other  method
    works  the  same  way,  but  it  has  the  advantage that regular
    documents will print with 66 linefeeds per page.

    For a continuous underling at ^PS and something like an alternate
    pitch the following patches could be used:

        5) PALT    03 1B 46 0F                 CONDENSED SET ON
        6) PSTD    01 12                       CONDENS. SET OFF
        7) RIBBON  03 1B 2D 01                 UNDERLINE ON
        8) RIBOFF  03 1B 2D 00                 UNDERLINE OFF

    -----------------------------------------------------------------

    Fidonews                     Page 26                  11 Aug 1986


    William/Eunhee Hunter
    Fido 109/626

                     Computer Industry Spotlight on:

    ELECTRONIC MEMORIES AND MAGNETICS CORP.  --  Electronic  Memories
    and  Magnetics  Corp.  is  a  manufacturing  firm involved in the
    production of computer  memories,  peripherals,  and  militarized
    microcomputers.  Positions generally available within the company
    are in the engineering and data processing areas.  On-the job and
    formal   classroom   training  are  provided  for  all  technical
    personnel.

         Contact:   Paul  Rosee,   Director,   Industrial  Relations,
    Electronic  Memories  and Magnetics Corp.,  20630 Plumber Street,
    Chatsworth, CA 91311.

    -----------------------------------------------------------------

    Fidonews                     Page 27                  11 Aug 1986


    =================================================================
                                 WANTED
    =================================================================

    Daniel Tobias, Soft Fido, 19/216: (318) 636-4402

                WANTED:  IBM PC PROGRAMS FOR PUBLICATION!

    SOFTDISK, INC., the already-successful publisher of magazines on
    diskette for Apple II and Commodore 64 computers, will produce a
    monthly disk-based publication for the IBM PC.
    The first issue of this publication, to be named BIG*BLUE DISK,
    and which will be contained entirely on a floppy disk, will be
    shipped to thousands of retail outlets in October, including B.
    Dalton Booksellers and Waldenbooks.

                           - - OFF-BROADWAY - -
    If you have written a program for the IBM PC, please consider
    publishing it on BIG*BLUE DISK; it's your chance to make some
    money, and get your name in print.  Programs of all categories
    are being accepted.

                           - - YOUR REWARD - -
    We will select the best programs submitted, and publish them on
    issues of BIG*BLUE DISK.  If we choose to publish your program,
    we will pay you a minimum of $50, and possibly more-- as much as
    $500, depending on the nature and quality of the program.  This
    money is for the privilege of publishing your program.  You
    retain full rights to it.

                         - - HOW TO SUBMIT IT - -
    Submissions can be sent by FIDONET to node 19/216, or uploaded
    directly to our BBS at (318) 636-4402.
    Alternatively, you can send them on a floppy disk to:
    BIG*BLUE DISK, PO BOX 30008, SHREVEPORT, LA 71130-0008.

    BIG*BLUE DISK is a widely-distributed, carefully-prepared
    publication, so make sure your programs are well-tested and
    debugged, and include adequate instructions within the program.
    Include a note (on paper, in a text file, or in a message to the
    sysop of our BBS) describing what your program does, what files
    are necessary to run it, and what system configuration (hardware
    and software) is required.  Please include the source code to
    all compiled or assembled programs so we can make revisions if
    necessary.  If you have marketed your software as "shareware",
    please remove all requests for money or other advertisements
    from the version you submit for publication; alternatively you
    can contact us for information on other terms for such programs.

                          - - NOTE TO SYSOPS - -
    There is a finder's fee of 10% for you if you submit a program on
    behalf of one of your users and it is published.  Thus, you may
    wish to publicize BIG*BLUE DISK and our search for programs.

    -----------------------------------------------------------------

    Fidonews                     Page 28                  11 Aug 1986


    =================================================================
                                FOR SALE
    =================================================================

                 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 29                  11 Aug 1986


             Now available from Micro Consulting Associates!!

    Public Domain collection - 550+ "ARC"  archives  -  20+  megs  of
    software  and  other  goodies,  and that's "archived" size!  When
    unpacked,  you get approximately 28 megabytes worth of all  kinds
    of  software,  from text editors to games to unprotection schemes
    to communications programs, compilers, interpreters, etc...  Over
    55 DS/DD diskettes!!

    This collection is the result of more than 15 months of intensive
    downloads  from  just  about 150 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
          - ACS INTRCPT 720k format
          - Plain  ol' files (add $50)

    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 30                  11 Aug 1986


    =================================================================
                                 NOTICES
    =================================================================

                              FidoNews Bugs

    FidoNews did not get published last week (4 August 1986) due to a
    system  failure  over  the  weekend.   We   apologize   for   the
    inconvenience.

    -----------------------------------------------------------------

                         The Interrupt Stack


    14 Aug 1986
       Start of the International FidoNet Conference, Colorado
       Springs, Colorado.  Contact George Wing at node 1/10 for
       details.  Get your reservations in NOW!  We'll see you there!

    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.

    -----------------------------------------------------------------

    Generic George              by Bruce White, 109/612
    +-------------------------------------------------+
    |    Yes, your favorite toy does online banking,  |
    |  / produces recipes, and keeps the household    |
    | /  budget, but it still can't do windows.       |
    |/                                                |
    |             Oh yeah?  Come look at this--       |
    |             right now it's doing FOUR   ____\__ |
    |             windows!           \        |_|  \  |
    |                                 \ _____      |\ |
    |                                  |  _  |     |  |
    |                          ______  | |_| |     |  |
    |                       __(______)_|_____|___  |  |
    |                       ||-----------------||  |  |
    |                ______ ||                 ||  |  |
    |                \ {} / ||                 ||  |  |
    |(c) 1986 bw      \__/  ||-----------------||__|__|
    +-------------------------------------------------+

    -----------------------------------------------------------------

                       NOTICE OF NEW ECHOMAIL AREA

    For dBASE users and Programmers,  Nationwide net already started.
    To join contact 103/508.

    -----------------------------------------------------------------
    Fidonews                     Page 31                  11 Aug 1986


    Geoff Arthur, 155/212

    This is now the second  system  operating  in  Australia  NET:155
    NODE:212  saying  hello  and  asking  that  you  make  it  public
    knowledge that Australia is here.  We are currently setting up  a
    network  of  our  own and expect that within 3-4 months we should
    have at least 30 NODES.  Would be nice to here from you and  some
    of your users so please spread the word.

    My phone number is Australia 02-457-8281 for THE OMEGA-LINE.

    -----------------------------------------------------------------