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-
- D I S K O V E R Y : Journal of a Meandering Mind
-
- by Fender Tucker
-
-
- I received a healthy variety of programs this quarter and somehow
- managed to squeeze them all onto the disk. In fact, disk space was so tight
- that Side Two not only has no Presenter, it has no Copier. The programs on
- Side One can be copied using Copy It but those on Side Two must be copied
- with a file copier. DISKSERVANT (on LS 128 #21) will do the job nicely. Of
- course, those of you with 3.5 inch drives don't have to worry about this --
- all programs can be copied with Copy It.
-
- One of the programs on Side Two is MEGaBasic, e. g. bell's new
- programmer's aide for 80 columns. It's compatible with CONTROL80, our
- favorite BASIC 7.0 extension, and is recommended for all 128 programmers.
- It has around 170 blocks of documentation/information. The docs are split
- into files suitable for viewing on our Read It screens, but are also more or
- less formatted for indexing with ed bell's INDEXER on LS 128 #22. You
- should read the docs before using MEGaBasic but you may be able to get by
- without printing them out. MEGaBasic has the handy feature of showing you
- the syntax for a command when you simply type the command in the
- intermediate mode.
-
- Another program on Side Two is LONDONTOWN, a Public Domain program that
- has been translated from the 64, and before that, the Apple. We don't often
- publish PD programs but this one was especially good. My main complaint
- about PD programs is that they are usually "unfinished" by our standards. I
- just can't imagine that any PD company has the time and manpower to devote
- days (or even hours) to editing each program as we do. But there are always
- exceptions.
-
- I have a "catalog" of PD and shareware programs from Keystone Software,
- Dept. 393, PO Box 8369, Pittsburgh PA 15218, (412)-243-1049, and it lists
- dozens of disks filled with PD software of all kinds. Maybe some of you
- have dealt with Keystone? If so, and you've found a PD program that you
- feel is superior, why not send it to me?
-
- Someone anonymously sent me a copy of ELITE 128 by D. Bragen and I.
- Bell, a 3-D space-faring game that looks very professional. It must have
- been a popular program because Keystone sells a keyboard overlay for it. I
- realize it's difficult for an individual to know the copyright status of a
- program -- it's just as difficult for me -- but if I can be reasonably sure
- that we're not stepping on anyone's rights, I'll be happy to look at any PD
- programs you send and consider them for LS 128. We'll turn a PD program
- into a real program.
-
- We're in a murky world that's getting murkier. Few new programs are
- being created for the C-128 but there's a wealth of software that authors
- have abandoned. Are the best of this forgotten lore doomed to extinction or
- can they be resurrected? Is it the function of copyright law to give an
- author the right to sell a product one year, leave its users high and dry
- the next, then sue the pants off of anyone who, years later, tries to keep
- the program alive? In my opinion, because the computer field is so flighty,
- they should have had special copyrights that last for three or four years,
- rather than the standard 29 years plus 29 more if renewed.
-
- The C-128 is such a great computer that it's easy to be upbeat about it.
- But at the same time, the C-128 software industry is so negligible that it's
- easier to be downbeat about it. I guess I'm neither upbeat or downbeat.
- I'm just beat.
-
- But leave it to Ed Rainey to pull me through my morose mood. Ed is an
- 81-year-old newcomer to programming who took the time to convert VIDEO CRAPS
- (LS 128 #20) to 80-columns for LS 128 #22. Then he was inspired by
- CONTROL80-C (LS #22) to write his first program from scratch, BLACKJACK,
- which is on Side Two. This is what home computing is all about. Check out
- the best-selling book lists for computers. Everything is titled DOS FOR
- DUMMIES or WINDOWS FOR IDIOTS. Fine. The IBM world is a haven for know-
- nothings, especially those with $4000 in expendable cash on hand.
-
- The C-128 owner is more than just a user; he's a hobbyist. He's a
- retired person (in most cases) who is curious about computers and their role
- in today's world. He has a totally accessible, 100% malleable tool in his
- C-128 and would like to create something that will benefit himself and the
- rest of the C-128 world. That's where LOADSTAR 128 comes in. Let's work
- together and we'll all be big fish in a small, but classy, pond.
-
- And finally, a plug for our neverending COMPLEAT series. The first two
- installments, THE COMPLEAT WALT and THE COMPLEAT DAVE, are now available for
- $20 apiece, post paid. THE COMPLEAT WALT contains 24 slide shows of Walt
- Harned's impeccable art for the 40-column screen. That's over 250 pictures
- on three 3.5 inch disks or seven 5.25 inch disks! THE COMPLEAT DAVE has
- over 250 SID songs by the SID-master, Dave Marquis, playable with MUSIC
- STAR, a 64 mode program included with the package. It comes on two 3.5 inch
- disks or three 5.25 inch disks.
-
- We plan to have more compilations like these in the near future, all
- costing $20 apiece. If you're looking for a must-have package for your
- C-64/128 friends or relatives for Christmas, this is it.
-
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