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- .IF DSK1.C3
- .CE 2
- *IMPACT/99*
- by Jack Sughrue
-
- GOOD OLD DAYS
-
- PART II: MIDDLE AGES
- .IF DSK1.C2
-
-
- Last time we IMPACTed I took you
- on a personal tour of my early
- experiences with the 4/A, which were
- more typical than not.
- After I had amassed my 100-plus
- programs on tape (mostly typed in
- from "99er" Magazine and some early
- books), I, like so many others,
- wanted to expand my computer
- "mastery." My TI appetite was
- voracious.
- I bought every TI book available,
- which, in 1983, was a considerable
- number. These included such
- masterpieces as Loreto's THE TI-99/4A
- IN BITS && BITES, Datamost's
- ELEMENTARY TI-99/4A, Addison-Wesley's
- TERRIFIC GAMES FOR THE TI99/4A, Que's
- TI-99/4A FAVORITE PROGRAMS EXPLAINED,
- Davis's PROGRAMS FOR THE TI HOME
- COMPUTER, and the books being
- published by SAMS and COMPUTE! Of the
- latter, PROGRAMMER'S REFERENCE GUIDE
- TO THE TI-99/4A was always at my
- side. This was written by Regina
- (Cheryl Whitelaw) who wrote the best
- programs "99er" magazine published:
- HOMEWORK HELPER, NAME THAT BONE,
- TYPING FOR ACCURACY, CIVIL
- ENGINEERING FUNDAMENTALS, HARRIED
- HOUSEWIFE, DODGE 'EM, MAZE RACE, SAN
- FRANCISCO TOURIST and so many others.
- These were already classics. What
- astounded most of us Regena groupies
- was the depth of her knowledge. She
- seemed to know an incredible amount
- about computers, obviously (and a lot
- of different KINDS of computers), but
- she also knew so much about music and
- children and electrical engineering
- and geography and art and just about
- any topic a staff of college
- professors would know.
- That was in 1983. Regena was
- already in her third year of TI
- publishing when she moved to COMPUTE!
- under some mysterious circumstances.
- So I began a COMPUTE! subscription to
- continue getting her monthly column.
- I got lots more out of that magazine,
- too. Tutorials of all kinds.
- Programs galore. It was TI's Cloud
- Nine. In that same year, Regena
- began writing for ENTHUSIAST 99, too.
- Boy, what a year! Mark Leyton
- began his wonderful UNOFFICIAL
- 99/4[A] magazine. K-POWER and FAMILY
- COMPUTING (early supporters of the
- 4A) had also made their debut. I
- subscribed to them all: 6 TI
- magazines a month (7 if one includes
- the non-monthly SMART PROGRAMMER)!
- [SUPER 99 MONTHLY and MINIMAG 99
- wouldn't be out for another year.]
- I find it hard to believe in 1988
- that the final 4A classic book - -
- THE LAST WHOLE TI99/4A BOOK by Paul
- Garrison - was published within a
- year of this creative time.
- Published by Wiley Press in 1984,
- this still stands as one of the best
- books ever written for 4A owners. [Do
- not confuse it with Linda and Allen
- Schreiber's THE LAST WORD ON THE
- TI-99/4A, also published in 1984,
- which is one of the worst books in my
- TI library.
- It's even harder to believe that the
- magazines mentioned above no longer
- exist (or no longer carry any TI
- stuff).
- As magazines like COMPUTE! and
- FAMILY COMPUTING dropped TI (which
- still had the largest home computer
- ownership of all; more than the
- Apple, Commodore, and IBM Jr.
- combined) many of us wrote letters of
- protest. After all, we were still
- buying disks and drives and monitors
- and printers and lots of other
- advertised things. No good. Even
- though the ADAM and the PEANUT (Do
- you remember?) were still curried. I
- dropped all magazines that dropped
- the 4A. The only ones left are
- MICROpendium, the last monthly
- devoted solely to the TI, which began
- its life in February of 1984. In
- that issue (originally called HOME
- COMPUTER COMPENDIUM) Editor/Publisher
- John Koloen said this of his new
- magazine, "It is a conduit, a source
- of information and a vehicle for the
- dissemination of information." It has
- certainly lived up to those criteria.
- I would find it difficult to be a 4A
- owner without MICROpendium and user
- groups. The only other magazines
- still supporting our community with a
- very informative monthly column is
- COMPUTER SHOPPER and a new one I just
- received this morning called TId
- BITS and looks pretty good.
- But it's sad to look through that
- first COMPENDIUM. All the
- advertisers except one are gone:
- Gadget Software (Megaworld), TJ
- Software (Kandy Kong), THinc
- (Colors), C.A.Root (On Gaming), Maple
- Leaf (Sky Diver), Silicon Valley
- Software (S.A.T. Verbal Section),
- Machine Shoppe Software (Cassette
- Indexer), Larry Vision (Quackers),
- Programs Software (Personal
- Enrichment), Microworld (Snac Man),
- Soft Relations (Super Speller), DCH
- Software (Home Budget), CALLCAR
- (Emotional Health), Software Programs
- (Starship Concord), TI Books and
- Software.
- The one advertiser in that issue who
- is still with us is TIGERCUB
- SOFTWARE, owned and operated as a
- completly one-man venture by Jim
- Peterson (Mr.^T.I.).
- And that brings me back to 1983
- (before the orphaning) when we were
- still high on TI and user-group
- business was booming. For all the
- other things that were going on for
- us (and they were numerous: every big
- department store and book store and
- software store carried 4A items on
- their front shelves, for example) -
- for all those other things, the year
- will still be known to me as the year
- of the TIGERCUB.
- User-group newsletters articles,
- for the most part, were not as
- sophisticated as they are today. The
- big exception was the "TIPS from the
- TIGERCUB" monthly columns by Jim.
- Nobody did what he did. His articles
- (many old ones as well as new ones
- are still being published worldwide
- today) initiated me into the grown-up
- world of the TI. One was either a
- techie or a dummy, it seemed. But
- Jim made us all feel intelligent. He
- pulled us up. He treated us with
- dignity. His explanations and his
- "experiments" and his enthusiasm came
- out in every article. He always
- stayed far enough ahead of us to
- challenge us completely, yet he never
- talked down to us slow learners.
- From his very first article: "Are
- you tired of that blankety blinking
- black cursor? This won't work in
- BASIC but if you're in XB try 1 CALL
- COLOR(0,ll,1)."
- I did it. Then I tried it in
- BASIC (just in case mine worked,
- which it didn't). Then I fiddled
- with the numbers until I finally
- understood what happened.
- This is the way Jim taught, for
- teaching is what he certainly did
- (and does). His classroom, though,
- included thousands and thousands of
- pupils.
- He taught me to use Line # and
- FCTN/X [or E] instead of EDIT and how
- to use REDO for expanding program
- lines and how to slash my zero and
- how to highlight operators. He
- let me in on lots of secrets: You can
- type RUN"DSK1.FILE" without any
- spaces and it'll work; that typing
- the double colons in XB lines without
- spaces before or after won't matter,
- either. Do these sound mundane? Not
- if you didn't know any of that stuff,
- and none of us did.
- His teachings were so natural, so
- filled with personal experience, that
- you couldn't wait to try the thing
- Jim had just found out. Here's
- another from that first TIPS: "Have
- you ever been typing in a program,
- and the computer suddenly jumped back
- to the title screen, and you were
- sure that you didn't have a finger
- anywhere near that infernal QUIT key?
- But maybe you were drinking coffee
- with one hand and trying to press
- FCTN and 1 simultaneously with the
- other? So, if you don't have
- anything valuable in the computer
- right now, try pressing FCTN, Space
- Bar, H and N all at the same time.
- Oops! Another useless bit of info -
- try FCTN, 5, 6 and 7 all together.
- Break!"
- My vision of him was a young kid
- (maybe as old as a college student)
- doing improvisational computing, the
- way Art Tatum played the piano;
- somebody with great knowledge and
- understanding exploring human/machine
- potential.
- I didn't find out until a very
- long time after that Jim is a
- grandfather and that he bought the 4A
- because helikedthe keyboard!
- It didn't matter. Genius is
- genius no matter what age.
- He used to close off those early
- columns with Happy Hackin' until
- hackers got a bad reputation by a few
- pirates and vandals, then he closed
- it with Memory Almost Full. Too bad,
- in a way. I think of Jim as the
- Ultimte Hacker, in the real,
- "discovery" sense of that word. I
- don't know anyone who knows more
- about BASIC (and XB) than Jim.
- Way back in 1983 he did a lot
- more than give us little "useless"
- tips. Most of the tips are the most
- "useful" things I ever learned for
- any computer. (There is no Jim
- Peterson for Apple, Commodore, Tandy,
- or IBM.)
- Each article contained at least
- one original type-in program.
- While other programmers and
- writers were making bundles selling
- their stuff to commercial magazines
- and software houses, Jim GAVE his
- monthly column away in exchange for
- the user-group newsletters. (He
- probably has the largest library of
- TI written material in existence.)
- Whenever any item in his column,
- large or small, came from any other
- source, Jim always credited the
- originator.
- His generosity is known
- throughout the entire TI World.
- His programs for which he
- charged $3 apiece (along with a
- discount for future purchases) was
- during a time when programmers were
- charging $20 and $30 for programs
- nowhere nearly as professional. Jim
- never sold hoopla. He just sold
- quality. Now his programs are $2 or
- much less in disked batches.
- The first batch of four programs
- I ordered came back with seven
- programs in the package. Jim always
- puts "a little extra" in each order.
- He still does. He has over 3000
- Public Domain (not Fairware) programs
- which he shares by putting them as
- bonuses on any disk orders. These
- programs, too, are well done and
- credited and worth owning.
- I was surprised by the bonus, as
- no clue was given by him that I was
- going to get more than my money's
- worth. There was not a single
- program that I ever got from Tigercub
- (and that is many) that did not
- exceed my expectations. Many I
- ordered for my 5th-grade class and
- are still popular (like BAZOO and
- MECHANICAL APTITUDE TEST). It would
- be hard for me to pick a favorite
- because there are so many varieties
- of programs: educational, music,
- utilities, games, and so on.
- About three hours ago I saved
- this textfile and loaded up some of
- Jim's disks. I played the fiendish
- SQUINCH and the diabolical SCRUM and
- went through his HANDY DANDYS and
- SPEEDER READER and - and I noticed it
- somehow got to be 2:10 AM. I have to
- go teach tomorrow and Jim Peterson,
- the fiend, did it to me again!
-
- Next day!
- When I reread the above, I got to
- thinking about all the other TIGERCUB
- programs I didn't mention. The most
- important, for me, are the three
- "NUTS && BOLTS" disks containing over
- 300 files. When these started coming
- out a few years ago, it was a "TIPS"
- maniac's delight. Here was a
- discovery collection that every TI
- learner dreams of. These files can
- be merged into any XB program
- (including a file that converts BASIC
- to XB) to produce remarkable results.
- Because of incremental line
- numeration, multiple subs can be
- called into single programs. They are
- efficient, neat, incredibly easy, and
- remarkably creative. And lots more.
- Send Jim $1 for catalog (worth every
- penny; refundable with first order):
- TIGERCUB Software, 156 Collingwood
- Ave., Columbus, OH, 43213.
- [This is the 2nd of 3 articles in
- which the author travels down 4A's
- Memory Lane.]
- [Jack Sughrue, Box 459, E.Douglas
- MA 01516]
-
-
- If any newsletter editors print
- these textfiles, please put me on
- your mailing list. Thanks. JS
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