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- What do you want?
-
- Simon Coward
-
- My first computer was a 1040STe, I bought it for word processing to help
- with my work. As it was a family curriculum pack it came with ST Calc, and
- so quickly took over the mission accounts and then launched me into the
- world of desktop publishing through the famous ST Review cover disk
- version of Timeworks. Incredibly my original setup was a black and white
- TV and a 9 pin printer but I had a system that could do what I wanted.
-
- As the years went on more RAM, high res monitor and finally a hard drive
- arrived on the desk and software to go with it. I multitasked under MagiC,
- and scaled my vector fonts in Papyrus, the ST did all I wanted and was
- only replaced by a Falcon to cope with image processing, but can it still
- do all I want?
-
- The answer to that is "yes" and "no". It's hardware can do what I want if
- the software was available to do it and this now is a problem for Atari
- owners. At the same time it's a problem for programmers, what do people
- want. Earlier this year I took up programming and wrote Rotator, a text
- rotation program similar to the power text feature in Pressworks on the
- PC. I was in the fortunate position of having the time to be able to write
- this, but what about the rest of you, what do you want?
-
- Among Atari owners we have some very talented programmers and it's time
- that they knew what you wanted, this year I wrote a photographers database
- because someone asked and have other plans for programs that people want.
- However, there are programs I would like that I cannot write myself, games
- for example, I would like a "Dune 2" clone or "Panzer General", I know a
- Falcon owner who wants a "video editing program" which I will look into
- when Rotator is upgraded. Send in your requests and maybe some programmer
- will respond, it is far more encouraging for a programmer to work on
- something when he knows someone wants it.
-
- At the same time programming takes time, a lot of time. I wondered if I
- would ever finish the first version of Rotator and almost gave up many a
- time. If people are willing to go through this torment, then we, the end
- user must be willing to pay our shareware fees to encourage further
- programs to be developed. I don't think anyone's going to get rich writing
- shareware for the Atari, but at least it helps to offset the cost of books
- and programming languages as well as being a real encouragement to the
- poor guy who's locked himself in his room for three months to write the
- code.
-
- What do you want? If we want new software we have to let programmers know
- what we want, and when they've finished, we need to let them know we
- appreciate their hard work.
-