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-
- D I S K O V E R Y : Where Do We Go From Here?
-
- by Fender Tucker
-
-
- Let me start with the bottom line. I love programming the C-128 in 80
- columns. I didn't at first -- the commands didn't work right, none of the
- ML routines I had collected worked, the BASIC is slow, and on top of that,
- the tiny letters were blurry -- but I soon came around. Here, in order of
- importance, are the things that changed my mind about the C-128.
-
- (1) CONTROL80 by Jon Mattson. This incredibly handy BASIC extension allows
- me to PEEK and POKE the VDC chip, save screens, do easy block cursors, dump
- screens to the printer, and many other tasks that I needed to do, but had no
- idea how to on the C-128. Published on LOADSTAR 128 #10, it's used by 80%
- of the programs published on LS 128, and 100% of my programs.
-
- (2) The 1084 monitor. The 640x200 mode requires a good monitor (as well as
- a good video chip). Once I saw how crisp and legible the 80-column mode
- could be I knew I wanted to program for it.
-
- (3) The 80-column screen itself. A constant hassle when programming for
- the C-64 is how to get all of the information to fit on the screen. 80
- columns is a natural for databases and puzzle programs that need style AND
- space.
-
- (4) JiffyDOS. Even with a 1571 drive the stock C-128 is pretty slow.
- WarpSpeed sped things up but was too incompatible with certain necessary
- software. JiffyDOS is the way to go for bringing the C-128 into the 90s. I
- recommend it for anyone who is serious about his C-128.
-
- That's why I like the C-128. I'm sure all of you who are users, not
- programmers, have your own reasons for preferring the C-128 mode over the
- C-64. It's a great machine that deserves a lot better treatment than it got
- from Commodore.
-
- But what is going to happen to the C-128? Refurbished units are still
- available from Software Hut and other places but mainly the only way to get
- one is to buy one at a garage sale or from someone who's moving into the
- murky IBM world. Luckily, they're not too hard to find -- at this time.
- Still, we have to look forward to days when hardware and replacement parts
- aren't available.
-
- The good news is that day is still a long ways off, relatively
- speaking. I have no doubt that the C-128 (and for that matter, the C-64)
- has a good five to ten more years of life in it. Strangely enough, that's
- about how long I give the 486s that everyone with $3000 is buying today.
- Judging by the pace that the DOS field is keeping, the software that's big
- today for the IBMs will be worthless in five years. IBMs are like the
- gas-guzzling chrome behemoths of the 50s; changing every year just for the
- hell of it. C-64/128s are more like Volkswagon Bugs -- always staying
- compatible, forewards and backwards.
-
- Our little 8-bit computers don't change -- the peripherals do.
- Creative Micro Designs comes out with new chips or new drives, not new
- computers. Antigrav Toolkit doesn't make a new computer; they just make a
- new chip that makes your C-128 seem like a new computer, yet is still
- compatible with old software.
-
- Speaking of software, what is happening in the C-128 world? I'm sorry
- to report, not much. The market just isn't large enough for the big
- software companies to produce C-128 specific programs. But I never cared
- too much for the big companies' products anyway. The best stuff for the
- C-128 comes from small companies like Eric Lee's Busy Bee Software,
- producers of THE WRITE STUFF, or BASIC 8 by David Darus, or IPAINT by Rick
- Kane. Need I mention LOADSTAR 128 by the mom and pop company, Softdisk?
-
- I just received a program from Alf Jonassen of Norway called THE
- SERVANT. It's a shareware program that adds quite a few useful features to
- your C-128, including a great file copier, C-128 to C-64 capabilities,
- un-NEW, Datamaker, Quick Brown Box utilities and more. The program
- demonstrates its features very well but its best functions are limited
- because it takes up so much RAM. But that's not what Alf is really selling.
- The program is a working demo of what you'll be able to do if you get his
- chip that has THE SERVANT in it. With the chip, very little RAM is used and
- the full capabilities of this utility can be appreciated and used.
-
- You can either burn the chip yourself (not for beginners) or send him a
- chip and let him burn it for a very reasonable $10 or so. I plan on having
- a lot more information (and more) on LOADSTAR 128 #19.
-
- So now we know that there is an empty socket in your C-128 just waiting
- for you to fill with a chip. What's on this chip is the future of the
- C-128. I anticipate that the next year or so will bring numerous chips that
- will do all sorts of things. Who knows? We may all be cutting holes in the
- tops of our C-128s so we can pop chips in and out of this socket at a
- moment's whim.
-
- Randy Winchester's KeyDOS ROM V2 uses this socket. It has more serious
- programming tools than THE SERVANT does. It also comes with an excellent
- manual that doubles as a tutorial on programming. I plan to give you a more
- complete review of it next issue.
-
- John Brown, of Parsec and Twin Cities, is emerging as the #1 guru of
- the C-128. His Twin Cities bi-monthly magazine is already bigger than
- Gazette and RUN (R.I.P) put together. I don't see how anyone who has a
- C-128 (or C-64 for that matter) can do without it. We plan to start
- allowing advertisement on LOADSTAR 64 and 128 soon but until then Twin
- Cities is the place to look for companies that support our machines.
-
- GEOS fans the world over are happy to see Grady Brown (editor of
- geo-JOURNAL when it was good) editing his own GEOS-oriented magazine,
- geoVISION. GEOS is a subset of the C-128/64 world and has fanatical
- followers. I expect to see more GEOS support on LOADSTAR, maybe even on
- LOADSTAR 128.
-
- Speaking of LOADSTAR, where do we fit in? We have traditionally been
- the purveyors of the best homegrown software for the C-128/64. Every month
- you get new, original software that's better than what's in the public
- domain. Our mission is to entertain you, and at the same time, provide you
- with programs that are useful and educational. Because Jeff and I both
- prefer programming over using, we have a definite bent towards programming.
- In the past we left the game and productivity reviews to those who actually
- play games and use applications. That may change. We will start handling
- anything that Twin Cities can't do better.
-
- We're still a small group. If it weren't for the great programmers
- like Barbara Schulak, Dick Heckert, Robert Cook and Jon Mattson, LOADSTAR
- 128 would be a non-entity. I spend about two weeks every three months
- frantically editing submissions and writing text, leaving LOADSTAR 64 in the
- capable hands of Jeff Jones. Sure, LOADSTAR 128 could be better if we threw
- more resources at it, but we, like everyone else in the U.S., are still
- trying to recover from 12 years of trickle-down economy that never made it
- down to the lower-middle class. Hiring people and spending big bucks on a
- magazine with less than 1000 subscribers is not good business sense.
-
- So all we can offer you is our loyalty and dedication -- and a promise
- that we will not abandon you. We will not RUN away. The programs are
- getting more sophisticated. The ideas are as original as ever. The quality
- of programming is getting better. The usefulness of the C-128 has not
- diminished an iota.
-
- Check out the programs on this disk and ask yourself: Is it worth $40 a
- year to get 25 or 30 programs like MAGIC 128 or LUNACY? If I were a cynical
- sort I'd add: Can I get anything comparable elsewhere? But I'm not cynical.
- I'm proud to be the editor of the programs that C-128 lovers write and look
- forward to sending you all of the LOADSTAR 128s you have coming. If you
- want to keep getting LOADSTAR 128 every three months, all you have to do is
- renew your subscription. If you know someone with a C-128 who doesn't know
- about us, lend him a copy. We're all in this together. There's no
- competition and that suits me just fine.
-
- FT
-
- Addresses of companies who support the C-128
-
- Creative Micro Designs
- 15 Benton Drive, P.O. Box 646
- East Longmeadow MA 01028
- 1-800-638-3263
-
- Antigrav Toolkit
- P.O. Box 1074
- Cambridge MA 02142
-
- Busy Bee Software
- P.O. Box 2959
- Lompoc CA 93438
-
- Twin Cities
- P.O. Box 111
- Salem MA 01970-0111
-
- geoVISION International
- 816 S. E.Polk Street
- Camas WA 98607-2240
-
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