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- ╔═══════════════════════════════╗
- ║ THE FREEWARE HALL OF FAME ║
- ╚═══════════════════════════════╝
-
- ┌─────────┐
- WHAT IS IT? We are a list of programs and databases which are
- └─────────┘ commonly found on public access Bulletin Boards.
- The programs on this list have been tested and found to work as
- described, and to be worth downloading. The list is limited to
- Freeware. These are programs and databases for which NO FEE is
- required for use by individuals. (The meaning of Freeware,
- Shareware and Public Domain are given below.)
-
- ┌────────┐
- WHAT'S NEW We've added three dozen or so new entries for June
- │FOR 6/92│ including more PCB utilities and some interesting
- └────────┘ OS/2 files. Among the authors to join the list is
- Mark Herring, known for his QMail Door and off-line reader.
- Sparky's done some freeware also.
-
- We're still looking for nominationa of OS/2 Freeware to be
- included here. The HOF believes OS/2 has a future and we would
- hate to see it wall-to-wall with annoyware and beg-screens.
-
- ┌───┐
- NAMES in the circle of Great Freeware Writers for their output
- └───┘ and quality are John McNamara, Raymond Kaya, Vern Buerg,
- Ward Christensen, Robert Vostreys, Frederick Volking, Michael
- Mefford, Keith Graham, Keith Ledbetter and the writer who gave
- us CED and so much more, Chris Dunford.
-
- ┌────┐
- IN ALL the HOF lists more than 370 entries by 270 authors
- └────┘ indexed 3 ways--by author, program name and use.
-
- ┌────┐
- LAYOUT The Freeware Hall of Fame comprises three sorted ASCII
- └────┘ indexes. Each index contains the same information:
- Author, Program Name, a brief Description of the program, and
- the Program Category. Index One is sorted by Author, Index Two
- by Program and Index Three by Description.
-
- ┌──────┐
- TO PRINT the indexes, set standard 80-col narrow-carriage
- └──────┘ printers for 12 chars per inch (Elite). The file
- prints very nicely with appropriate page breaks on 8½ by 11
- paper, and this edition runs 24 pages. QEDIT prints it
- perfectly. Otherwise you can type HALLFAME.TXT > PRN or PRINT
- HALLFAME.TXT or use any word processor. The file is prepared
- using QuattroPro 2.0 and appears here in standard ASCII.
-
- ┌─────┐
- UPDATES will always be named HOFmmyy.ZIP and there will never
- └─────┘ be two in one month. HOF packets should contain
- HALLFAME.TXT, README.HOF and a SYSOP.NOTe, and may or may not
- contain a FHOF Logo and description. These are commonly
- stripped off during uploads.
-
- ┌────────────┐
- WANT A HOF D/L We are now giving the ON-LINE Freeware Hall of
- │DIRECTORY ON│ Fame to any Sysop who wants it for his callers.
- │ YOUR BBS? │ The 3.6-megs of Freeware amount to 116 or so
- └────────────┘ programs and in index in PCBoard format.
- These are a choice selection of the programs themselves, not
- merely an index. With it comes a DIR created for PCBoard
- containing multi-line descriptions of the files. We estimate
- there are about 50 Boards in North America and Europe now
- carrying the ON-LINE FHOF. See SYSOP.NOT for more information.
-
- ┌───────┐
- JUST WANT We give files to others also. If you have a local
- │ FILES?│ or school computer club and would like 100+ Freeware
- └───────┘ programs, call us. We mail these out on 1.2 meg
- diskettes. These are self-extracting versions of the programs
- prepared with a Freeware archiver and no commercial programs
- are needed at any step in the process. There's no charge for
- the set of diskettes. We hope they'll be copied and circulated
- to other clubs and schools.
-
- ┌──────┐
- WHO'S IN Among the most prominent people in the computer
- THE HOF? world, past and present, are those programers who
- └──────┘ allow us to use their programs at no cost. Writing
- software and distributing it via Bulletin Boards with no
- request for payment, they enable everyone to share the fruit of
- their knowledge, the benefit of their discoveries, and the
- steady advances that have typified the computer industry from
- the beginning.
-
- ┌───────┐
- GRATITUDE This file is intended to honor those generous and
- └───────┘ wonderful people. The file is not finished and
- never will be. It's a list that will grow every few months as
- we attempt to catch up with the hundreds of fine people who
- represent the hobby side of the PC world, some from the era of
- CP/M (lest we forget), some writing for DOS, and now we're
- expanding to include OS/2.
-
- ┌────────┐
- AMONG THEM are some of the best programmers in the profession,
- └────────┘ software experts sought after and employed by the
- most advanced government and industry employers in the world.
- The Freeware they write on their own time (cough) commonly
- reflects the highest level of concept and execution.
-
- ┌──────┐
- BENEFITS This Freeware Hall of Fame is the only published
- └──────┘ guide to tested Freeware. All these programs work.
- All are free. Nearly all are commonly available on public
- access Bulletin Boards. We can recommend them as programs that
- will do the job they were intended for.
-
- ┌───────┐
- WHERE YOU The file is indexed to make these programs easier to
- FIND THEM find, but locating them on a Bulletin Board can
- └───────┘ require a search. The Board's ZIP, ARC or LZE
- packets commonly are named with an abbreviation of a program's
- full name, often adding a version number to that. You might
- have to hunt and peek unless the Sysop has set up a Freeware
- Hall of Fame Directory all to itself.
-
- ┌─────┐
- PCBOARD Some of the programs for running a BBS such as PCBoard
- └─────┘ make the search easier. On a PCBoard, entering
- Z filename A
- should reveal every version of <filename> the BBS has available
- for download. For example, you will not find DIRX, a file
- management program for compressed files, listed in a BBS file
- index. The index name for the program is DXRxxx where xxx is
- the version number, and that changes every few months. The Z
- command in PCBoard is a -text search- command and it will find
- the word DIRX in the file -description- since it can't be found
- in the file index.
-
- ┌──────┐
- FREEWARE Freeware refers to programs or databases that an
- DEFINED│ individual may use without payment of money to the
- └──────┘ author. Commonly the author will copyright his work
- as a way of legally insisting that no one re-write it prior to
- getting his approval. The copyright has nothing to do with a
- user fee, aside from giving the author a legal right to require
- one. Freeware authors don't exercise that right, though in some
- cases a program will be Freeware for an individual but require
- a site license if used by a business. The HOF includes these.
-
- ┌────┐
- PUBLIC Other Freeware is in the Public Domain, which means the
- DOMAIN author donated his work to the public and retains no
- └────┘ ownership rights. No fee can be required for the use of
- these programs, though a polite and sometimes humorous request
- for author support might drift into the Docs.
-
- ┌────────┐
- WHAT'S NOT Shareware is not here. Shareware refers to a way
- │ HERE? │ of marketing programs on the "try before you buy"
- └────────┘ plan. Because you must buy it, it isn't Freeware.
- As Shareware, many superb programs are made available at
- reasonable cost and on a far fairer plan than purchasing
- "commercial" software where you must buy before knowing if a
- program will do what you need. Most Shareware is a delight to
- use. Some is not.
-
- ┌───────┐
- SHAREWARE always asks for a fee for continued use of the
- └───────┘ program and the author says so, usually in a
- professional way. A few authors aren't professional in the
- least when discussing payment. They presume you're not going to
- pay and in their Docs they insult you.
-
- ┌──────┐
- CRIPPLED Some Shareware comes crippled. You get only a
- └──────┘ limited version of the program until you buy it.
- Shareware might have annoying delays and payment dunnings built
- into the program which only go away when you purchase a
- registration number. Some Shareware quits working if you don't
- buy a code nunber within a few weeks.
-
- ┌──────┐
- FREEWARE does none of these things. The author might
- └──────┘ ask as one did that you take him to dinner (he called
- his method Dinnerware), and another suggests you take your
- spouse out to atone for the time you spend at the computer.
- Freeware authors often show a sense of humor. They also
- frequently provide the source code.
-
- ┌───────────┐
- WHO GOT HERE? To gain entry to the Freeware Hall of Fame,
- └───────────┘ a program can be discovered by the FHOF compiler
- or nominated by someone. Anyone may nominate a program and we
- encourage Freeware authors to nominate their own programs. The
- only requirement is that the file nominated be a PC program or
- database available for use at no cost. Every program gets a
- 1-line listing. Ward Christensen gets one line for his CP/M
- communications programs--perhaps the most influential Freeware
- of all time--and you'll get a one-line entry for your program.
-
- ┌─────────┐
- NOMINATIONS are made to the compiler of this list and we need
- └─────────┘ to know 4 things:
- (1) Author name
- (2) Software name
- (3) Brief description of what the program does
- (4) Your certainty the program is Freeware.
-
- ┌───────────┐
- CALL THE HALL We can be contacted three ways: via the ILink
- └───────────┘ computer network anywhere, on Usenet as
- "rbarry@turing.org", and through our FHOF BBS.
-
- ┌───┐
- ILINK Hundreds of BBS's around the world are members of the
- └───┘ ILink network and many North American cities have an
- Ilink affiliate or two. The network is a collection of 270 or
- so topic conferences which are provided to member Bulletin
- Boards for the use of their callers. The HOF monitors the
- Shareware conference for mail addressed to Rey Barry. The
- monitoring is autonated so watch the spelling. All Ilink
- messages are public.
-
- ┌────┐
- │FHOF│ Our BBS operates 24 hrs a day, 7 days, using PCBoard
- │ BBS│ software and a USRobotics Dual Standard modem. The
- └────┘ FHOF conference is #3. Enter J 3 at the main menu.
- 804-293-4710. Both public and private messages can be left in
- the Conference. We invite nominations for the freeware index.
-
- ┌───────┐
- COPYRIGHT This file, the accompanying files HALLFAME.TXT and
- └───────┘ SYSOP.NOT, and the name "Freeware Hall of Fame" are
- Copyright 1989-92 by Rey Barry. HALLFAME.TXT is a Freeware
- database offered for the use of all to accord Freeware authors
- the recognition their monumental contributions have made to the
- PC hobby.
- Charlottesville, VA, USA 6/92
- FHOF BBS -- 804-293-4710
-