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- .IF DSK1.C3
- .CE
- JUST SURVIVAL?
- DON'T YOU BELIEVE IT!
- .IF DSK1.C2
-
-
- It takes quite a bit for any
- organization to survive. It takes
- quite a bit more for an organization
- whose base has disappeared to
- survive.
- And yet we 99ers have done it and
- done it well.
- It's impossible to imagine all
- the efforts of all the people (many
- no longer with us) who brought us to
- where we are today, YEARS AFTER THE
- ORPHANING! And our computer is
- better than ever because there are
- more pieces of hardware and software
- and firmware and, through user
- groups, textware, than ever before.
- We have become a world community. In
- the process our machine has become a
- POWERFUL tool in the home and
- business and education worlds.
- Could you have imagined a few
- years ago that, with your $49.50
- little "toy" computer, you could go
- beyond a MEGABYTE of memory and
- operate up to 5 QUADdenisty drives!
- Could you have imagined an
- environment so tight that you could
- have an advanced Wordprocessor and
- advanced Editor/Assembler and
- advanced Disk Manager all operating
- as an environment off ONE DISK! (not
- to mention a FORTHLOAD, a disk
- editor, a c LOAD, a pair of master
- menus, and piles of other things
- thrown in - like auto cataloging, 10
- screen color choices, printing or
- reading any 80 file, and on and on -
- STILL ON THAT ONE DISK!)
- Not to mention the extraordinary
- software: TOTAL FILER, FONTWRITER, TI
- ARTIST (and all the zillion files and
- companions and converters that can be
- used with it - including the
- remarkable RLE), CREATIVE FILING
- SYSTEM, SCHEDULE MANAGER, AND!!!!
- [I'm looking through my disk file and
- am astonished. I have more things
- than I know what to do with. I have
- a columnizer and sideways printer and
- text/graphic creator (all wonderful
- FAIRWARE items), a WHEEL OF FORTUNE
- game with a robotic Vanna, a program
- that lets the TI sing!, one that
- writes in GOTHIC, one that creates
- newsletters with many fonts and
- graphics, one that tells fortunes
- with speech, Corey Cheng's remarkable
- cribbage game, and Nutmeg 99ers
- superb group disks.]
- I sit here and wonder when I'm
- going to use it all. As a writer, I
- am primarily interested in ALL
- aspects of word processing. Having
- used very many processors for very
- many computers, I can honestly say
- the flexibility of FUNNELWEB is hard
- to beat. I love the large type of 40
- columns and the easy FORMATting to 80
- or 136 or whatever. As a teacher I
- am interested in the educational
- (though all programs are educational)
- aspects of computing in the class. I
- use many computers but mostly TI
- because it is easily the best for the
- stuff I do in my class (though the
- Apple and Commodore have more of the
- user-friendly printer materials like
- NEWSROOM and PRINTSHOP which has
- nothing comparable on the TI). As a
- game-player, I am about 20 years
- behind on playing all the wonderful
- games I own: all the INFOCOM games,
- all the ADVENTURE games, all the
- games that I haven't even created
- through my TUNNEL OF DOOM and
- ADVENTURE editing programs. (Not to
- mention the constructions of SPACE
- STATION PHETA, GRAVITY MASTER, and
- the intricate tutorial/play/change of
- NIGHT MISSION.)
- HOME APPLICATIONS! I haven't yet
- put my checkbook files onto any of
- the wonderful checkbook filers I
- own. I haven't even put all my
- P.G. Wodehouse books onto my PR BASE
- or CFS for easy access. Nor my video
- collection onto VIDEOS. I've yet to
- wire my house through the TI for
- alarm systems, light switches, auto
- radio/TV programs, coffeemaking.
- (Yet all possible with my computer.)
- UTILITIES! I have utilities I
- can't even begin to use, many I don't
- even understand. Why do I keep
- buying this stuff?
- Because I want to make my
- computer be as potent as a home
- computer can be. And it is. And I
- say that someday I'll learn how to
- use such and such. Maybe I will.
- And that, my friends, is REALLY
- why I own and love my 99. I am
- learning. I am learning every day.
- I am learning every time I sit at
- that machine. Learning - let's face
- it - is great fun! The TI sits there
- encouraging me to LEARN.
- All that stuff I said above is
- true. So's the fact that I've made
- almost 200 friends worldwide with
- whom I correspond regularly. So's
- the fact that the faires I attend are
- a source of immense delight to me.
- So's the fact that getting my monthly
- newsletters and magazines (like
- MICROpendium and COMPUTER SHOPPER) is
- like a continual Christmas and
- last-day-of-school rolled into one.
- But it's the learning and sharing
- that really keeps me hugging my TI.
- And the learning that made me
- evaluate my computer future.
- As a teacher with a wife and four
- kids (all four kids were in college
- at the same time a couple years ago
- and now only two kids and one wife
- are still going), I have found
- upgrading a bit costly. I took a
- couple extra jobs to buy my computer
- in 1981 ($499.99) and held onto the
- jobs to get Extended BASIC ($119) and
- TI WRITER ($99) and LOGO ($119) and a
- tape recorder ($89.95) and my
- Expansion Package (Box, 32K, RS card,
- Controller, one drive) ($900). By
- the time the console came down to
- $49, I owned five (for my own kids
- and for my classroom use), and I had
- invested over $2500 in hardware,
- software, and textware.
- My wife was threatening homicide.
- Justifiably.
- I was (am?) a computer addict.
- And Elaine became (is?) a
- computer widow.
- Though I had fun and used the
- beast all the time, I was (am?)
- probably a very dumb Jim Peterson. I
- learned more about the TI from Jim
- than from the library of over 100 TI
- books I own. (You probably didn't
- know there were that many.)
- I stayed involved with user
- groups and the writing of articles
- and the editing of newsletters and
- the constant using and modifying of
- programs at home and at work.
- Long after TI left us.
- Long after the first big exodus.
- Long after the diminishing user
- groups.
- Long after the drying up of most
- sources (book stores, department
- stores, computer stores, magazines
- [like COMPUTE, HCM/99er, FAMILY
- COMPUTING]).
- Even long after people stopped
- laughing at me for suggesting that
- the 99 was in the same class as Apple
- or Commodore or Atari. It isn't.
- It's better!
-
- Then I thought "upgrade". Should
- I get an IBM clone? Or an Apple? or
- what?
- All the computers that I use at
- work and elsewhere came under
- exacting scrutiny. Will I buy this
- one? Or that one?
- I began, also, to try out other
- computers in computer stores and
- visit friends who let me test out
- their equipment. I borrowed books
- and magazines about other computers.
- Then Triton came out with the IBM
- compatible converter for the TI. It
- was a clone that used the awful TI
- keyboard.
- I had saved up steadily, penny by
- penny, since my blasts in 1981 and
- 1982. And now I could upgrade to a
- better computer. IBM/TI was one
- option. Now that the choice was a
- reality, I had to reconsider.
- Back I went to my TI. To
- MICROpendium. To COMPUTER SHOPPER.
- To FUNNELWEB and SCREEN DUMP and
- PRINT IT and CFS and CHINESE CHESS
- and HITCHHIKERS GUIDE TO THE GALAXY
- and GRAPHX and CSGDIII and PRINTER'S
- APPRENTICE. And to all the programs
- I'd written and all the programs
- given to me as gifts by other TI
- authors and all the PD stuff. And
- all the great stuff from Asgard.
- And, most of all, all the stuff from
- Tigercub Software that doesn't even
- BEGIN to exist for other computers.
- There are not TIPS or NUTS && BOLTS
- for Apples or IBMs or whatevers.
- But my SSSD drive with 32K
- expansion was becoming limiting.
- So I went with the best upgrading
- I could possibly go: with the TI.
- First, I bought the MYARC 512 for
- a bunch of reasons. I had borrowed a
- Horizon 192 for a few weeks and
- enjoyed the speed of my autoload
- FUNNELWEB. I thought 512 would be of
- more use to me (particularly as I
- could use as much spooler space as I
- wanted to print out my files while I
- continued merrily on with my
- computing) because of the immense
- amount it would hold. Such things as
- CSGD or FUNNELWEB (with my FUNLPLUS!
- included) could leap back and forth
- from file to file and spool out any
- text files at the same time. The
- RAMdisk (of the 512 card) is the
- greatest leap forward I could have
- dreamed of. It is easy and
- wonderful.
- Next I looked through COMPUTER
- SHOPPER and bought (for only $75) two
- new, highly-recommended Tandon
- full-height DSDD drives. I plugged
- them in and used the double-sided
- abilities with my TI Controller.
- Then my MYARC Controller came in
- with that superb DMIII and the inside
- ability to catalog from anywhere
- (though I wish it could Print with
- that built-in cataloguer the way it
- does with its DM). Now I can go into
- Myarc DM from FUNNELWEB, though DM
- 1000 works equally as well from that
- environment. Now I can configure any
- sided/density combinations I want
- (including the 512 as drive). It's
- so great to watch disk verification
- when initializing as it whips up to
- 1440 unflipped, instead of the old
- 360. No more flippies. Speed.
- Speed. Speed! It's even very fast
- to be in RAMmed FUNNELWEB with a pile
- of text sitting in EDITor, realize
- there is no initialized disk, SF to
- RAM, leap into DM1000, initialize a
- disk, leap back into EDITor, LF from
- RAM, and complete the task at hand
- without having enough time in between
- to get another frosty Foster's from
- the fridge.
- I suddenly entered the new world
- of computing very much on my own
- terms. I quadrupled my disk
- capacity, tripled my drives,
- increased my memory twelvefold, added
- a much desired buffer of incredible
- size, and created a speed operational
- zone beyond my wildest dreams.
- All this while sitting on a
- collection of software and textware
- that I haven't even begun to tap.
- Let's say not another bit of
- textware, firmware, hardware, or
- software will ever be created for the
- TI. This won't happen (as there are
- presently over 700 companies -
- mostly Mom && Pop - making stuff for
- the TI) but let's pretend.
- Where does that leave me?
- With one hell of a great machine
- and lots of stuff for it! That's
- where. This machine will last me for
- the rest of my life just with what I
- have and what is available right
- now.
-
- Then I ordered a Geneve.
- Frosting on the cake.
- I had seen it and used it
- about seven times and had talked and
- read about it incessantly for months.
- I wanted that enhanced keyboard, for
- one. I wanted to increase my memory
- beyond a MEGABYTE, for two. I wanted
- all the things that have been and are
- being written for it, for three.
- I wanted to truly upgrade my
- system. Beyond the power and the
- speed and the graphic resolution of
- the IBM and Amiga and Atari and Apple
- and Commodore and ALL the other
- lesser machines while still keeping
- the incredible built-ins I came to
- accept as intelligently designed
- computerisms: RES, NUM, CALL, etc.
-
- So here I am, a TI 99/4A addict
- and loving it; a man who has come to
- realize that what I have now is
- already beyond what I presently need
- and beyond what I can continually
- strive for - but never beyond what I
- can imagine.
- [Jack Sughrue, Box 459, E.Douglas
- MA 01516]
-
- If any newsletter editor prints
- these IMPACT/99 articles, please put
- me on your mailing list. Thanks - JS
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