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- SID v2.00
- Trial Version
-
- The Ultimate Amiga Power Tool
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- 3/28/92
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- © Copyright 1988-92 by Timm Martin
- All Rights Reserved Worldwide
-
-
- Distribution Rules
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
- The Trial Version of SID2 may be freely distributed with the following
- restrictions:
-
- 1) SID2 may not be distributed by PD libraries, bulletin board systems, or
- any other means within Europe until Amiga Computing has released SID2 on
- its magazine coverdisk.
-
- 2) All of the files must be included in their original form without
- additions, deletions, or modifications of any kind.
-
- 3) All copyright notices must remain intact.
-
- 4) SID2 may not be sold commercially alone or as a component in
- another product. This includes magazine coverdisks.
-
- 5) SID2 may not appear on shareware or public domain disks for which
- the consumers are charged more than a nominal disk copying fee of
- seven dollars (US $7) per disk.
-
- 6) SID2 may not appear on any electronic service which charges more
- than the basic access fee to download SID.
-
- 7) SID2 may not appear on any electronic service that claims copyrights
- to uploaded programs, either alone or as part of a collection.
-
- For variances to the above terms and conditions, please contact the author.
- Please report violations of these rules to the author.
-
-
- Legal Stuff
- ~~~~~~~~~~~
-
- THE PROGRAM SID2, ALL SUPPORTING PROGRAMS, ON-LINE HELP FILES, AND RELATED
- DOCUMENTATION ARE COPYRIGHTED © 1988-92 BY TIMM MARTIN. ALL RIGHTS ARE
- RESERVED WORLDWIDE. NO PART OF THE SOFTWARE OR DOCUMENTATION MAY BE
- REPRODUCED, TRANSMITTED, TRANSLATED INTO OTHER LANGUAGES, POSTED TO A
- NETWORK, OR DISTRIBUTED IN ANY OTHER WAY WITHOUT THE PRIOR WRITTEN CONSENT OF
- TIMM MARTIN, P.O. BOX 3205, CINCINNATI, OH 45201-3205, U.S.A.
-
- THE SID2 SOFTWARE AND DOCUMENTATION IS PROVIDED "AS IS" WITHOUT WARRANTY OF
- ANY KIND, EITHER EXPRESSED OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE
- IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
- YOU ARE ADVISED TO TEST THE SOFTWARE THOROUGHLY BEFORE RELYING ON IT. YOU
- AGREE TO ACCEPT THE ENTIRE RISK AS TO THE QUALITY AND PERFORMANCE OF THE
- SOFTWARE AND DOCUMENTATION. IN NO EVENT WILL TIMM MARTIN BE LIABLE FOR
- DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES RESULTING FROM ANY
- DEFECT IN THE PROGRAM.
-
- Timm Martin reserves the right to make improvements to the product and
- documentation at any time and without notice.
-
-
- Companies
- ~~~~~~~~~
-
- Companies which wish to use SID2 for more than one employee should purchase a
- separate license for each employee. Enterprise licenses are available for
- large companies. Please contact the author for details.
-
-
- User Groups
- ~~~~~~~~~~~
-
- Because SID2 is now registered to each individual, User Group discounts are
- no longer feasible.
-
-
- A Programmer's Plea -- if you haven't registered
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
- SID is shareware. If you find this program useful, please send $25 to:
-
- Timm Martin
- P.O. Box 3205
- Cincinnati, OH 45201-3205
- U.S.A.
-
- Please send payment in one of the following forms:
-
- U.S. cash (be careful!)
- U.S. check in U.S. dollars
- U.S. money order in U.S. dollars
- U.S. Postal money order
- Canadian Postal money order in U.S. dollars
-
- In return for your contribution of $25 or more, you will receive a diskette
- containing the most recent version of SID, its support programs, on-line help
- files and complete documentation. You will also gain free access to the SID
- Electronic Bulletin Board where you may ask questions, leave comments and
- download minor upgrades for free. A separate registration form is included
- with this file, or you can print a registration form from within SID.
-
- Please promote the shareware system by making a contribution to the authors
- of the shareware products you commonly use. There are many advantages to
- the shareware system:
-
- You can receive quality programs at a decent price. Had this been a
- commercial program, you could expect to pay at least $49.95.
-
- You can thoroughly examine a shareware program before reimbursing the
- author. Once you've purchased a commercial program, however, you're
- stuck with it.
-
- You promote the creation of a number of exciting and diverse programs
- that would otherwise not reach the public if commercial marketing was the
- only alternative.
-
- To encourage shareware contributions (rumor has it that only one in every two
- hundred SID v1.06 users sent in a contribution), I've released a Trial
- version which is fully functional and doesn't have any annoying "guilt"
- screens, but will not save user preferences. Thus, people can enjoy all of
- SID's features, but if they want to use it on a long-term basis, they're more
- likely to become a registered user.
-
- To discourage software piracy, the full name and address of each registered
- user will be encoded in their own personalized version of SID2-Professional.
- To see this, select "Registration" from the "Program" menu.
-
-
- Special Thanks
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
- There are a number of people I would like to thank for helping me make SID2 a
- reality:
-
- Vicki Wilson
- ...for catching me up on all my administrative duties, for sifting
- through the piles of mail, and for filtering me from some of my more
- abusive "fans." Thanks for having the patience and faith in me that
- others seemed to lose.
-
- Jeff Hoag
- ...for helping me through the "Dark Ages," for reminding me that bad
- news is better than no news at all, and for sharing the fun trips to
- Australia.
-
- Mary Beth Benkin
- ...for nursing me through my last illness. I would have never made
- it through October without you.
-
- Tim Perez
- ...for getting me addicted to "The Simpsons," for teaching me the
- finer points of racquetball, and for being the primary reason that
- SID is so late! ;)
-
- ~~~~~~~~~~~
-
- Queensrÿche
- ...for keeping the metal sharp enough to carry me through those long
- programming sessions.
-
- The Procter & Gamble Company
- ...for actually paying me to play with technology. Man, what a job!
-
- ~~~~~~~~~~~
-
- ...and my beta testers; Richard Stanton for the wonderful submarine ride;
- Ray Lambert Jr. for some expert programming advice; Mike Monaco for the
- pattern-matching routines and assembler assistance; Ron Sudweeks, Gustav
- Mussmann, Wolfgang Strobl, and Ray Burt-Frost for contributions over and
- above the call of duty; Scott Fry, Vernon Marcum, and Dick Raymond for
- not losing the faith; and all of you who bothered to send me a shareware
- contribution and have been defending me on the electronic boards.
-
- Thank you!
-
-
- A (Somewhat) Brief History
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
- SID began in October 1988 when a friend of mine wanted me to collect some
- public domain software for a friend of his who just purchased an Amiga.
- Specifically, he wanted some type of program that would make file
- manipulation easier. As a die-hard hacker, I had always used the CLI and had
- never even seen a directory utility before, but in my search for this
- collection of PD software, I came across DirUtilIII. Now this was a very
- ambitious program for the Amiga in its infancy, but after using it for five
- minutes, the arrogant programmer in me told me that I could do better.
-
- My best friend Jeff Hoag was also using this program to maintain files on his
- BBS, so when he heard of my interest in writing a new DU, he immediately
- handed me a wish list. The most important things were an improved user
- interface and no limits (he had thousands of files in each directory, but
- DUIII could only handle 300 at a time).
-
- I released SID v0.49 in early 1989 to Jeff and some friends in the local user
- group. The general consensus was that SID had great potential but could
- use some improvement. So I gathered suggestions and rewrote SID from
- scratch. It took me hundreds of hours, but I released SID v1.03 locally
- as shareware in the summer of '89 and used it for my senior project in
- college. After a few more revisions, I released SID v1.06 to the world in
- December 1989.
-
- What was the beginning of a wonderful period in my programming life was also
- the beginning of a disastrous part of my personal life, affectionately known
- as "The Dark Ages." I moved in early 1990, and in the hustle and bustle lost
- most of the source code to SID v1.06. (This is when I began a system of
- seven rotating backups including two offsite).
-
- Unfortunately, as certain deficiencies were uncovered in 1.06, I was helpless
- to fix them. These included the "SeparateDirs" bug that blackened screens, a
- cryptic config file, problems with Kickstart v2.0, and only a single
- configurable button. In the spring of 1990 I decided to write a completely
- configurable SID with interactive editing--the way it was meant to be on the
- Amiga. After three months of design, I started writing SID that summer.
-
- For the next year I spent over a thousand hours writing SID before compiling
- a single byte of code! I was receiving enough shareware fees to keep up my
- interest in SID2, but unfortunately not enough to forsake my day job and
- program full-time for the Amiga--a dream I've always had. Thus, while
- spending nights on SID, I spent days working and finishing my last year in
- college.
-
- Spring 1991 was a particularily enjoyable time in my life. I graduated from
- the "seven-year plan" with honors, I accepted a job at Procter & Gamble in
- Cincinnati, and I released a beta version of SID2. I fully expected to have
- SID ready for general release in the summer, but look out! My new job and
- life consumed most of my free time, and suddenly SID fell behind.
-
- Then in October I contracted a mysterious virus (my second in three months)
- that landed me in the hospital. I spent the entire month of October in bed,
- then the entire month of November in bed as soon as I got home from work. I
- became especially frustrated when a commercial developer released a directory
- utility that looked strikingly similar to SID2-beta, so much so that some
- people wondered if this was the commercial version of SID2. (I guess that's
- the ultimate form of flattery).
-
- History, cont'd
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
- I began to doubt if there was still a future and interest in SID2. But
- having invested so much time and effort, I decided to keep on plugging. From
- December through February I averaged just over five hours programming seven
- days a week--on top of the 9-11 hours per day at P&G. The result, after 2300
- hours