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Z*NET Online Magazine Issue 91-10

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Z NET Online Magazine
 · 22 Aug 2019

  


==(((((((((( == Z*NET INTERNATIONAL ATARI ONLINE MAGAZINE
=========(( === -----------------------------------------
=======(( ===== March 15, 1991 Issue #91-10
=====(( ======= -----------------------------------------
==(((((((((( == Copyright (c)1991, Rovac Industries, Inc.


EDITORIAL STAFF
Ron Kovacs...........................Publisher/Editor
John Nagy...............................Senior Editor
Terry Schreiber......................Assistant Editor
Jon Clarke........................Contributing Editor
Ron Berinstein....................Contributing Editor
Mike Schuetz......................Contributing Editor
Dr. Paul Keith..............Special Assignment Editor
Keith Macnutt...............................Columnist
Todd Johnson................................Columnist
Nor Scavok..................................Columnist
Mike Mezaros......................Contributing Editor



CONTENTS

EDITORS DESK......................................Terry Schreiber
Z*NET NEWSWIRE...................................................
CEBIT '91 NEWS.........................................Tom Harker
ATARIUSER MAGAZINE UPDATE...........................Press Release
Z*NET NEW ZEALAND FEATURE..............................Jon Clarke
Z*NET SOFTWARE SHELF...............................Ron Berinstein
DIAMOND BACK II UPDATE..............................Press Release
CHIC MOUSE ANNOUNCED................................Press Release
FOREM BBS UPDATE......................................Steve Rider
HOW TO PROTECT YOUR WATERBUFFALOS....................Todd Johnson
PACIFIC NORTHWEST ATARIFEST.........................Press Release
CALAMUS TUTORIAL - PART V...........................Geoff LaCasse
PUBLIC DOMAIN UPDATE................................Keith Macnutt



EDITORS DESK
============
by Terry Screiber


As of late we have been running reviews and listings of new Public
Domain and Shareware software available on GEnie. Many people have
responded with their gratitude in keeping them advised of just what is
available online. We try to keep most of this available for download on
the Z-Net BBS and Atari West in Canada for all to share for a short time
period as space permits.

Please remember that Shareware is exactly that "Share Ware" you share in
the development costs. Shareware authors are important to the Atari
community and should not be treated as second class citizens because
they do not have a commercial program on the market. You might find the
next program they write might indeed be commercial and carry a high
price in comparison with shareware pricing.

Z-Net is supporting these authors with free advertising and reviews and
we hope you - our loyal readers - will indeed support these developers
in return. If a program is worth having it is worth paying for.

GETTING SOME ZZZ'S

You may notice that we have again switched back to a Friday night
release. We polled the masses, pulled out the stops and grabbed the
whips to get you Z-Net back to a Friday night release. Z-Net is also
available hot off the keyboard through the Z-Net BBS (908) 968-8148 New
Jersey or Atari West BBS (604) 274-7944 British Columbia for those of
you who just can't wait.

Also available are Z-Net PC and Z-Mag (the Atari 8 bit resource) online
magazines. These are sent out regularly to Fnet members involved in the
crossnet. Sysops wishing to participate should note the following:

Base Lead Node Crossnet Code

Z-Net (Atari ST) 593 20448
Z-Mag (Atari 8 bit) 593 10593
Z-Net PC (PC Users) 593 30593




Z*NET NEWSWIRE
============== Latest Atari and Industry News Update
Compiled by the Z*Net Staff


ST "GEMULATOR" IN PROGRESS FOR IBM
Darek Mihocka of Branch Always Software (Quick ST) has confirmed rumors
that he has a functional 68000 emulator working on an IBM platform. He
calls it the GEMULATOR, and it requires a 386 or higher CPU. So far,
GEMULATOR does not include emulation of the Atari ST hardware or video,
so it is NOT yet an ST emulator. Darek says that further development of
the Gemulator will wait for this summer after he completes and ships
Quick ST version 3. Darek hints that the ST emulator, when completed,
will be intended to run under 32-bit Windows (from MicroSoft, Darek's
"real" employer), which is not yet even scheduled for release. Most
Atarians recall when Darek created the "ST Transformer", an emulator of
8-bit Atari computers for use on the then-new ST line. Atari was not
amused at Darek's intention to use the copyrighted Atari operating
system, in file form, which was required for use with the ST
Transformer. An agreement to allow Public Domain distribution was
worked out in that case, based in part on the free distribution of the
8-bit OS that Atari itself had promoted via its own "Translator" disk
for later modle 8-bit Ataris. Atari also permitted third party
companies to create and sell derivative "translators", weakening their
claim against use by Darek and his followers. However, this time
around, Atari has been much more careful in limiting non-ROM use of the
ST TOS operating system. Mihocka may be in for a legal battle of
serious proportions if he expects to distribute an emulator that relies
on what simply must be defined as a pirate file: TOS (1.0 or higher) on
a disk.


ATARIUSER MAGAZINE NEEDS A PORTFOLIO COLUMNIST!
AtariUser, the new FREE MONTHLY all-Atari product magazine, needs a
Portfolio expert and enthusiast to write and manage its continuing
Portfolio column. See the AtariUser Magazine Update in this edition
for contact information.


APPLE STRIKES BACK AT SCHOOLS AND ATARI NEW ZEALAND
Apples distributor in New Zealand CED, hit back this week at claims that
they are over charging the education sector for their products.
Responding to the criticism from Alex Davidson the Managing Director of
Software Supplies (the New Zealand Atari distributor) Mr Crowe of CED
said "At $NZ1895 the Macintosh Classic are as inexpensive as any machine
on the market".


IN SEARCH OF NEW MICROSOFT GM(CEO) FOR NEW ZEALAND
An interesting item in this weeks computer pages reveals that Microsoft
Australia has been in search of a General Manager for several months for
their impending New Zealand operation due to open on the 1st of July
1991.


PC DEALERS DROP AMSTRAD
Readers in the UK, Australia and New Zealand will be familiar with the
name Amstrad. This week saw Home and Business Computers and the
Personal Computing store drop this well known brand name from their
inventory quoting high prices, poor support, low profit margins. (SIC:
sounds familiar)


PC SOFTWARE SALES INCREASE
The SPA, (Software Publishers Association), announced this week that
North American software sales for fourth quarter 1990 increased to an
estimated $1.3 billion, measured at retail. This is an increase of 22
percent over fourth quarter 1989. International sales of U.S. software
firms grew 70 percent over the same period. The overall growth rate for
both domestic and international sales was 36 percent. Among the
findings submitted:

- MS-DOS sales increased 18.1 percent
- Macintosh sales were up 12.5 percent
- Windows applications sales increased 198.0 percent
- Desktop Publishing sales posted a 68.2 percent gain
- Database sales increased 65.8 percent
- MS-DOS Education software sales increased 33.3 percent
- MS-DOS Entertainment increased 30 percent
- Word Processors remain the largest ($248 million) software category
- Microsoft Windows sales increased 198 percent in the fourth quarter,
and 157 percent over the entire year.
- Microsoft is the second largest computer format


MOTOROLA INTRODUCES CACHE/MEMORY UNIT
Motorola introduced a 64 Kbyte cache/memory management unit (CMMU), the
88204, a pin-compatible upgrade for the 88200 CMMU, to support its 88100
RISC microprocessor. Motorola is the only company to have implemented
64 Kbytes of high-speed cache memory and memory management capabilities
on a single chip.

For more related PC industry news, read Z*Net PC Online Magazine
released every Saturday and available on the Z*Net PC Conference in
FNET and on the Z*Net Online BBS.




CEBIT '91 NEWSBREAK
=================== Captured from GEnie ST RT Library
Copyright (c)1991, Tom Harker of ICD, Inc.
Permission for this release to be distributed or reprinted is granted
but only in its entirety.


March 13, 1991

Things are really heating up here today in Hannover, Germany at the 1991
version of CeBIT which is the largest computer show in the world. Atari
surprised everyone with their announcement and demonstration of two
exciting new 68000 based computers. The following was described to me
by Atari engineers as the were demoing the equipment. I have written
this because I felt it newsworthy and an important boost to the moral of
Atari users everywhere. I make no guarantee for the accuracy of this
information but I have tried to get as much detail as possible. The
computer names used are only "internal" Atari names and may be changed
before release of the products.

ST Notebook

This is said to be the smallest 68000 based computer in the world. Its
size rivals any PC Notebook style computer that I have seen. It is
about 1/2 the size of my laptop computer and maybe 3/4 of an inch thick.
Features include:

o A built in mouse device that consists of three buttons. The large
center button is direction and possibly velocity sensitive to simulate
mouse movement in direction and speed.

o A laptop size keyboard, possibly a little smaller than standard. The
tactile feel was good.

o 512K ROM capability. It looked like TOS 2.05 was shown in the
prototype. This prototype did have a very professional and finished
look to it.

o 1 megabyte or 4 megabyte RAM versions available. Uses pseudo-static
RAM.

o 2 1/2 inch form factor internal hard drive. 20 megabytes was
installed. Presently up to 60 megabytes is possible. Probably an IDE
(AT) interface.

o External ports include midi in and out, 1 serial, 1 parallel, 1 combo
either floppy drive OR ACSI, 2 RAM card slots (128K cards shown, said
to support up to 4 megabytes), 128 pin computer direct port (all
address, data lines, CPU control,etc.), modem connector (for optional
internal voice/fax modem), keypad/mouse port. Of course to maintain
the small size, nearly all connectors were shrunk and non-standard
types.

o An excellent gray-tone LCD display. It did not appear to be backlit
which would make sense for the battery life. This was said to be
greater than 10 hours before recharging. With less hard drive use, it
would be longer.

o The replaceable battery pack shown was very small and contained about
eight AA alkaline batteries. If Ni- Cads were installed, the
universal power supply would also recharge them when connected. When
the battery pack goes down, the notebook is automatically put in a
halted state that is maintained for weeks until recharged. Internal
Ni-Cad batteries will maintain the halted state of the computer for
about 5 hours if the battery pack is removed from the computer.

o Atari has a few choices to transfer data to and from the computer.
Connect an external floppy drive. Transfer over the serial ports with
a modem or direct. Transfer over the parallel ports at around 20
Kbytes/sec. Connect an ACSI device such as a hard drive externally or
possibly ACSI to ACSI communications.

ST PAD

This is similar to ST Notebook and shares most of the features but has
a futuristic interface. A touch sensitive LCD display with a pointing
device was shown for mouse type functions and handwriting recognition
for input. Physically, ST Pad looked like the "Etch- a-Sketch" drawing
toys that we grew up with minus the X/Y knobs. No keyboard was attached
and there is not an internal hard drive. The OS software and large
amount of scratchpad RAM were said to have Artificial Intelligence
features to allow ST Pad to actually learn your handwriting style!
(Good luck with mine.)

ST Pad looked like it needed more time for completion but ST Notebook
looked like something we may actually see sometime this summer or fall.
With this exciting new innovative line of computers and Alwin Stumpf
(from Atari GmbH) heading up a new world-wide marketing campaign, it
appears that this time Atari really may be backing the promise with the
product.


MORE CEBIT RUMORS/ANNOUNCEMENTS/HOPES...

Although Z*NET has not received final reports from several
correspondents at the Hannover CEBIT computer show, early comments
include more hints and announcements of new hardware from Atari. Spied
or discussed were: CDAR-505, a new CD-ROM player to be released SOON;
"ATARIFILE 200", a Megafile with 200 meg hard disk (the clumsy name will
be changed, but the "Megafile" moniker will be abandoned soon as well);
TT030 machines with 28 meg of RAM and 1.2 GIGABYTE hard drives,
available this fall; UNIX for the TT030; IBM emulation for the TT; and
more. Stay tuned... next week we should have a much more complete look
at what might be the most encouraging show in Atari history.



ATARIUSER MAGAZINE UPDATE
========================= Press Release


FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE - USER GROUPS TAKE NOTICE! 3/14/91

ATARIUSER MAGAZINE INTRODUCTORY CLASSIFIED AD RATE, FREE DISTRIBUTION
AND USER GROUP OUTREACH


AtariUser, a new FREE all-Atari support magazine to debut in April 1991,
is offering an introductory CLASSIFIED AD special rate for the first
issue, and FREE bundles of the magazine for user-group distribution.

The standard classified ad rate is $25 for 25 words (about four lines),
and $1 a word thereafter, but for all ads mailed by APRIL 1, 1991,
ATARIUSER offers a special rate in the MAY issue of only $15 for 25
words (plus $1 a word thereafter) as space permits, first come, first
served. This is an excellent opportunity for advertising hardware for
sale, for small software developers, and for clubs or PD libraries.
PLUS, all classified advertisers will receive the first issue of
AtariUser magazine by mail.

AtariUser is a 40 to 50 page monthly magazine to be distributed without
charge in most Computer Stores and by Atari User Groups. Major
Bookstores and Newsstands will sell AtariUser for $1.00. The minimum
initial press run for the "MAY" issue, to begin distribution by April
20, is 30,000 copies. All Atari Computer Products will be supported in
AtariUser, including the Atari ST, STe, Mega/STe, TT030, Portfolio,
8-bit 800/XL/XE, and LYNX/2600/7800 Game Systems. AtariUser will
concentrate on useful and timely news and information, with heavy
emphasis on identification of available hardware, software, and
resources.

While the distribution plan is already comprehensive, ATARI USER GROUPS
are asked to help by IMMEDIATELY contacting Quill, the publisher of
AtariUser. Registered user groups can get AtariUser in quantity, mailed
FREE, directly to a club officer for free distribution to the membership
and community. Clubs could, for example, insert a sheet in each
AtariUser distributed from their local outlet to tell readers about
their local club as a membership outreach. Think about arranging
distribution at schools, libraries, etc. too! Clubs are also asked to
identify dealers and bookstores in their areas that the clubs believe
would distribute AtariUser Magazine.

AtariUser will publish a national User Group register and a Bulletin
Board System register in the coming months... be certain that your
groups or BBS's are represented by contacting QUILL PUBLISHING and by
registering your club with Atari Corporation.

Classified advertising requests MUST BE POSTMARKED by April 1, 1991, to
be eligible for the special rate in the May issue of AtariUser. Be
CERTAIN to include your check, payable to "Quill Publishing", and
include a return address.

User groups must request distribution copies by mail or by phone not
later than April 8th in order to receive quantities of this first issue
of AtariUser Magazine. Indicate how many 50-copy bundles are desired.
NOTE: We cannot ship to a Post Office Box!

Introductory single sample copies of AtariUser monthly are available by
mail for $1.00 each, and preferential home delivery by mail is available
for $12 a year (12 issues).

Contact:
AtariUser Magazine/Quill Publishing
113 W. College St., Covina, CA 91723
818-332-0372 - Editorial and business.
818-332-2869 - Fax.
818-332-5473 - Direct advertising line.

At Atari Corporation (for User Group Registration):
Atari USA
Bob Brodie, Manager of User Group Services
1196 Borregas Ave, P.O. Box 3427, Sunnyvale, CA 94088
408-745-2052



Z*NET NEW ZEALAND FEATURE
=========================
by Jon Clarke, Contributing Editor


LAPTOP PLUS AIR TRAVEL EQUALS BUY A FRIDGE OR GO GOAT FARMING IN INDIA


"I brought a laptop to work on the move " the add read. So well why not
I said. A few dollars later I had a Toshiba T1200 laptop and now there
was no reason for me not to have my notes up to date or be online to the
Bank from where ever I was in the country.

I wanted a STacy but like all good things you have to wait for, they
were not in the shops at the time. So armed with this little T1200 I
was ready to take on the world.

Well nearly UNTIL ........

I decided to venture to Australia with it. "Now what could be wrong
with that?" you say. I asked the same question myself. Armed with my
tickets and bags I ventured off to the airport at 6.30am still half
asleep and a sore head from the night before. Now that last thing I
needed was any hassles. I tend to get a little cranky when the
unexpected hits me at this time of the morning.

"Good Morning Sir" the ticket attendant said "do you have your passport
and tickets?"

"Yes" I replied "here they are."

"Any more baggage Sir?"

"No. I am taking this onboard" motioning at my laptop.

"Thank you Sir, seat 3J, have a good trip", came the reply.

Good I thought that is over now where is the cafe so I can have some
breakfast. Half an hour later, the inner man satisfied I went in search
of the Customs area so I can get a Customs Declaration on my laptop. (If
you do not do this the tax hungry guys make you pay duty on it on your
return to New Zealand) Having found that they were in the boarding area
and I still had 30 minutes before boarding. I thought I had better get
it done so I can get some duty free cigarettes for the next few days and
then hop on the plane and sleep.

This is what happened to me last time, with out a word of a lie.

(CO = Customs Officer , JC = ME)

JC: I would like a Customs Declaration for this please.
CO: What is that Sir?
JC: A Toshiba laptop, you know a "PAGE TEN" like in the TV adds.
CO: I do not watch TV Sir.
JC: It is a portable computer.
CO: May I have your passport and boarding tickets please.
JC: (for the 3rd time, I dig into my suit) Here you are.
CO: Going on holiday Sir?
JC: No, business.
CO: Place it in here please Sir. (pointing to a XRAY MACHINE)
JC: NO WAY.
CO: Please do as you are asked SIR.
JC: If I do that, the Xrays will wipe my hard disk and I will lose all
my data. Sorry I will not do that.
CO: Ah yes, I heard that. Can you please open the bag and run it for me.
JC: No problem. (ahh the batteries were flat) Do you have a power point
I can plug it into?
CO: No we do not, hang on Sir. (He return a few minutes later) There is
one in there (pointing to one of the holding rooms)
JC: Thanks. (Well we plug it in and the fire it up).
CO: It works.
JC: (With a look of disbelief and a tone to match) Of course.
CO: Thank you Sir here is your Declaration.
JC: Thanks..

Now it's time to enter the final departure area.

CO: What do you have there?
JC: (OH NO, not again) A laptop computer. I have just got a declaration
from that chap over there.
CO: OK, may I see it Sir.
JC: Here you are (and I feel like letting them EAT it).
CO: That is fine please put your briefcase in there Sir. (Another Xray
machine. Did I mention I a case full of floppy disks with the Banks
Cash Management software on?)
JC: (As I am about to answer the final boarding call is given) Sure! I
need another trip to Australia next week!

Well after a restless trip with no duty free cigarettes and wondering if
the floppy disks were dead or not we arrived in Sydney. After leaving
the plane and heading to the entry point marked "Flight crew and New
Zealanders" I was quizzed again on the floppy disks. At this point I am
considering raising goats in India rather than computing!

Now with all this in mind, guess where I am going this weekend? You
guessed it to Australia !! I must keep my cool
I must keep my cool
I must keep my cool
Now say this 200 times when waking up on Sunday morning and I must
remember to take some forms for a computer course to drop off to the
dedicated Customs Officers.




Z*NET SOFTWARE SHELF
====================
by Ron Berinstein


CodeHead Quarters BBS
1610 Vine Street
Hollywood, CA 90028


"XXXXXXX is Moving!" The post card read.. "Due to current economic
conditions and the need to compete with large discount computer
stores.." What it actually said was that one of the two stores in the
company was "Moving" to the address of the other store.

Then, there was this paragraph in a recently uploaded shareware file's
"Read_Me" section, "Note: This may sound a bit desperate, but after 250+
downloads on GEnie alone, and only TWO registrations, I am at wits end.
I am ready to hang it up and convert it to the IBM and MAC. (I am not
kidding either!)"

As I see it, as Atari users we have to take a stand. This column will
do it's part in posting news and tips about current software releases,
but, we as Atari supporters must due our part to help support the
authors of the programs that we use. We must be the ones held
responsible if folks decide to,"hang it up" because nobody will step
forward with a $10.00 shareware fee. There still exists a good group of
developers willing to create software for us, but, if the retail market
will not support them, and the shareware market will not support them,
why shouldn't they move on to a computer that they don't like as much,
but, will help to put food on their tables?

Take a moment now to review your auto folder, your root directory and
your program files.. Take out your checkbook, and send in the shareware
fees for the programs that you've been using. You'll sleep better, and
so will those that receive the checks! Certainly a small price to pay,
for the great rewards that our ours because of the work done by these
developers.

Under the heading: "What you see is what you get, or, is it?"

GEMINI12.LZH (shareware DM50-) version 1.2 of GEMINI the popular German
desktop replacement system was uploaded by the authors this week. The
file (twice the size of the last version) provides VERY well documented
directions in English. Small or large Icons can be yours at a click of
a button, sorting, viewing, selecting, etc. can all be yours. This
program is not a program launcher though, and the authors state that it
is still in development. It is, however, in it's present state very
complete, and well thought out.

STTOOLS.ARC (Shareware $10) ST Tools v.1 is similar to PC Tools for MS-
DOS machines. An analysis of the Fat tables and disk structure yields a
window filled with a disk tree and another with the root directory
contents. A hex dump, editing, sorting, and more are possible choices.

DISKFIX2.LZH provides hope for those that encounter the old, "Data on
the disk in Drive A: may be damaged" alert box, and for those that find
garbage in their file selector. This program might well work for your
floppies, and, although not fully tested yet on hard drives, might help
those with problems.

VIEW.LZH (shareware $5) VIEW picture viewer doesn't provide color
cycling yet, nor will it work with monochrome monitor emulators, but, if
you install it in your desktop.inf file with the install program
provided it will allow you to view many ST picture formats including,
Neo, Degas, Art Director, Spectrum, Tiny, and Doodle.

Under the heading: "What's the Big Deal?"

STEBIG.ARC is Working in Low Res. it will provide a virtual 1280x960x16
color STE driver. Uses the STE's hardware for fast scrolling. An auto
folder program that must run after GDOS if GDOS is installed.

Under the Heading: "Draw your own Conclusions."

TT_M_PEN.ARC is the German TT Plot program called Magic Pen. Still
being developed, but, it works in all ST/TT resolutions and in TT low
you can use 256 colors. TTMP_IMG.LZH provides a sample that can be
viewed on a TT.

F16.ARC and ACURA_NX.ARC are both very well executed drawings using
Outline Art. One of a F16 jet, the other of the new sports car. Both
require Calamus.

VEKTOR.PRG is a self extracting file that runs a very nice 3D graphics
demo from Europe. Requires a 60hz to 50hz converter though so that your
monitor screen doesn't continue to scroll.

ANCOOL.ARC is a very well received 4096 color STE demo. Low Res.

MICRON.LZH (shareware $15) provides four very complete fonts. The
Micron font family provides a headline font similar to Eurostyle
Extended or Microgamma. Converted using the Calamus Font Editor.
Outline Art Compatible.

Under the heading: "Mr. ST goes to Wall Street"

BIGBUX13.ARC (shareware $1-20) will help you manage your money. Unlike
any other ST program. Over twenty different areas are explored, and
this version proves better than the past one by providing better mouse
control, choosing to redraw the original screen colors, and it has an
enhanced the Earned Interest Table.

FCALC25.LZH contains the new version of FINCALC. It fixes lots of bugs
in the prior version's print routines. This program is designed to
calculate for you, monthly loan payments, and 2.5 gives one the added
ability to determine what the figures will be if you make extra monthly
payments. (Btw, for those who wish to make extra payments, you can come
by my place! <smile>) UNLZH should be used to uncompress this file..

Under the Heading: "What the **** is this?"

WHATIS.ARC File Identifier v.4.5 will inform you about the file types
of those that have any of the 80 different file extensions covered. An
easy to use ".ACC." (That means accessory.) <smile>

RESIST.ARC is perfect for the home electronic hobbyist. It will ID the
color codes on resistors.

BATTERY.ARC provides an easy to use information program with several
Degas diagrams that will tell you everything you might want to know, and
more, about batteries.

ARC_LIST.ARC (Shareware $5) will tell you exactly what is in an .ARC or
.LZH file. The archive lister will handle Arc'd subdirectories, and,
will list comments in .LZH files.

Under the heading: "Well who could figure that?"

APROCALC.ARC lets anyone figure anything that they want to figure! A
full functioned desktop calculator that provides an online information
screen, will let you calculate scientific and trigonometric functions,
and also will allow you to use it as a full math calculator in binary,
octal, decimal, or hex. Ten memories, 50-level parenthesis, 10 digit
floating point display with two digit exponent, 16 digit decimal
display. ACC or PRG. My only adverse comment: it sure is small, and it
is a bit hard to read the display boxes and the information screens.

READ_ICD.ARC was inadvertently left out of last week's ICD booter update
file. It is now available. And, HDUTIL.ARC corrects some problems with
v.4.01. This is version 4.02 and must be used with v.5.1.0 of the ICD
boot software.

>> Warning: FRMDIT11.ARC apparently will not work with MaxiFile, and,
FEMFLEX.LZH promises to show three female body builders, but only one
"developed" due to an apparently bad file. I personally am looking
forward to perhaps seeing a corrected upload next week!

And Now for My Favorite Program of the Week.. One filled with lots of
Individual Personality..

* Drum Roll Please *

ETASTRO.ARC will fill you in on every bit of your own character, or,
that of anothers. That's right, input your Zodiac sign and read on!
Your life story flashes before your eyes! At least it is interesting
reading, but beware, there are some typographical errors. I assume the
rest of the content of course to be 100% accurate though! <smile>

The above was compiled by Ron Berinstein co-sysop CodeHead Quarters BBS
(213) 461-2095 from files that were either directly submitted to
CodeHead Quarters BBS, or obtained form the download libraries of GEnie,
Compuserve, and Delphi online services.





DIAMOND BACK II UPDATE
====================== Press Release


Oregon Research Associates is pleased to announce that it will assume
the distribution and support of Diamond Back II effective immediately.
The change in distribution reflects our continuing commitment to the
Atari ST and Diamond Back II owners. "By having direct control over the
marketing, distribution, and support functions, I can personnally
guarantee the continuation of the high level of product support that
Diamond Back II owners deserve", says Bob Luneski the President of
Oregon Research Associates and author of Diamond Back II.

To celebrate this occasion, Oregon Research Associates will release a
major new version of Diamond Back II. The new version includes
significant speed optimizations, many new backup and restore options,
and added support for backup/restore of Spectre 3.0 partitions. Oregon
Research Associates also plans the release of a comprehensive disk
optimization and repair program in Q2-Q3 1991.

Current owners of Diamond Back I or Diamond Back II may obtain the
upgrade to Diamond Back II V2.20 by sending your original disk and $7.50
to:

Oregon Research Associates
16200 S.W. Pacific Hwy., Suite 162
Tigard, OR 97224
Phone: (503) 620-4919
FAX: (503) 639-6182

Additional Information:

For undisclosed reasons, I have canceled Data Innovations license to
distribute Diamond Back II. The effective date of cancellation is March
8, 1991. On this date, North American distribution and support of
Diamond Back II will be made by my company, Oregon Research Associates,
and overseas distribution will be made by SofTrek (distributors of
TurboST).

There will be no patch program available for this upgrade, you must send
in your original disk to Oregon Research to receive the upgrade and
obtain a Diamond Back II owners registration number. Upgrade orders
will be shipped on March 16, 1991.

What you get for your upgrade fee:

1) V2.20 of Diamond Back II including many new features and updates to
the utility programs and the addition of several new utility
programs.

2) A User Registration number

3) A completely new Oregon Research Diamond Back Manual (done the way I
wanted it in the first place) and Oregon Research license agreement.

4) Product support from Oregon Research Associates.

I have been advised to and am requiring that original disks be returned
to obtain the upgrade for the following reasons:

1) From a legal standpoint, your current user license is from Data
Innovations and is slightly different from the standard recommended
user license. The only way for me to ensure that you have agreed to
Oregon Research's license agreement (and therefore eligible for
support) is to distribute upgrades complete with new manuals and
disks enclosed in sealed envelopes with opening the envelope
generating implied consent to the agreement. A lawyer made me do it.

2) Having a tightly controlled distribution of the first version of
Diamond Back II distributed by my company (V2.20) is the only way for
me to accurately develop a registered user data base. Data
Innovations has refused to provide me with a registered user list and
I therefore have NO idea who are legal owners of the program.

3) I am implementing a registered user/disk serialization program and
will be implementing new program support proceedures. Your owner
registration number will be required to obtain user support, no
exceptions. I am very sorry that it has come to this and I know it
doesn't relate to anyone participating in this forum, but I receive
many more support requests than can be accounted for by program
sales. If I am to continue to provide the level of program support
that I pride myself on giving (and that you have come to expect),
then I must restrict that support to those who deserve to receive it.

A complete description of the new support proceedure will be included
with the upgrade, however I will present a brief summary here.

1) Oregon Research Associates will only provide product support for
Diamond Back II versions 2.20 and above and you must provide your
user registration number to obtain said support. This implies that
you must upgrade to V2.20 and receive a registration number to
receive support. No exceptions.

I am very sorry, but from a liability standpoint I must have legal
proof that you have agreed to the Oregon Research license agreement.
In addition, the situation created by an unknown user base leaves me
no alternative other than this to develop a registered user base and
to ensure the continuation of the high level of service you deserve.

2) The excellent product support that I have always given will be
provided via phone, FAX, US Mail, or E-MAIL directly to me at
B.LUNESKI1 on Genie or boblu@tekgen.BV.TEK.COM on Usenet and your
name and user registration number will be required to receive said
support. Diamond Back II product support will no longer be provided
in an open forum.

I will no longer answer specific usage questions or provide direct
product support in the open forum (Cat 2 Topic 42). Instead, I would
like this forum to become a place where users can discuss Diamond
Back II and the different applications of the program and assist each
other with minor issues. I will continue to closely monitor this
forum and post comments when I feel clarification is required, or
general capability information is requested.

3) All general product questions will be answered directly via one of
the mechanisms in 2) However, if you have a more serious problem or
believe that you have found a bug, there is a new troubleshooting
procedure form that will walk you through a series of steps that will
resolve 99% of the problems and provide the necessary diagnostic
information for me to solve the rest.

I continue my 100% commitment to providing the highest quality product
and product support available. I hope that the last two years of
support and product evolution (10 upgrades with all but the move from
V1.04 to V2.00 free) demonstrate my commitment. These measures are
required because I have no other choice. The combination of no
verifiable list of legal owners and the necessity to protect against
legal exposure make these policy decisions an absolute business
neccesity. I am attempting to make the transition from Data Innovations
to Oregon Research Associates as painless as possible and am very sorry
for any temporary inconvienince that this may cause.

On behalf of myself and Oregon Research Associates, I thank you for your
patience and continued support,

Bob Luneski



THE CHIC ULTIMATE MOUSE
======================= Press Release


The Atari mouse was good in it's day. But there comes a time when every
Atari owner lusts for a sleeker, faster, more powerful rodent. How
about one that tracks faster, rolls smoother, has more responsive
buttons and costs less than most game software? Well, we found it, and
you can order one for yourself too! But lets just go over a few more
features:

Resolution: 290 DPI (This means it moves the cursor farther across the
screen with a smaller travel across the desk than the Atari mouse)

Tracking Speed: 500mm/sec.
Size: 108x60x30 mm (4-3/8 x 2-1/2 x 1-1/4")
Cable: 3 feet
Weight: 164g (5.7 oz.)
Ball: Anti-Static Silicone Rubber Coated
Life: 1,000,000 Cycles
Encoding System: Opto-Mechanical
Other: DB9 Female, 2 button (Atari ST)
Guarantee: One year

Sound good? We are positive that you'll be pleased with the Chic
Ultimate Mouse and this unbeleivable price! Ready?

Only $34.88!

This mouse easily compares to others costing twice as much. We have
limited quantities so don't wait, order today!

Computer Safari
606 W. Cross St
Woodland, CA 95696
(916) 666-1813 Tue - Sat 10 - 5 PST, CLosed Sun. Mon.
Phone orders accepted Visa, Mastercard
Shipping & Handling add $4.
California Residents add 6% Tax
EMAIL orders may be sent to J.PIERSTORFF, Be sure to include credit card
number, expiration date and name and address.

Limited quantities available, offer may be withdrawn at any time without
further notice.



FOREM BBS UPDATE
================
Provided by Steve Rider - Forem Support


FoReM Update Form

Use this form to get access to the latest versions of FoReM ST
as compiled by Bill Turner at Billboard BBS FNET node 185
The charge is $40 for one year of access to updated
versions of FoReM ST


Real Name ________________________________

Handle ________________________________

Address ________________________________

City ________________________ State/Province ______

Country ________________________

BBS Name ________________________ BBS Phone # ______________________

FNET Node # ____________________ Voice Phone # ____________________

Do you have an account on Full Moon Y N

Do you have an account on Billboard Y N

If yes to either above, handle used _________________________________

You may download updates from special file areas on Full Moon or
Billboard once your payment of $40 is received. You will be reminded
when your one year of access to updates is about to expire.

Full Moon: FoReM Support BBS (508) 752-1348 9600 HST Fnet node # 204
Billboard (203) 274-7803 V.32 (not HST) node # 185

Full Moon is operated by STeve Rider
Billboard is operated by Bill Turner

Current owners of FoReM, send completed form and $40 payment to:

Bill Turner
PO Box 32
Watertown CT 06795


FoReM is sold to new customers by STeve Rider at Full Moon BBS. New
customers who buy FoReM from STeve Rider also receive one year of access
to new versions of FoReM as if they had also paid the $40 update fee to
Bill Turner. FoReM is sold for $79.95 including shipping anywhere. To
purchase FoReM complete this form and mail it to:

STeve Rider
20 Cargill Ave
Worcester MA 01610



HOW TO PROTECT YOUR WATERBUFFALOS
=================================
Copyright (c)1991 by Todd Johnson
All Rights Reserved
Permission granted to reprint this article in its entirety only.


With the advent of new font conversion and manipulation utilities comes
the need for an added awareness of how copyright laws apply to software
and in particular, the very fonts that you convert. For example,
MegaType's FontVerter program gives you the ability to convert Calamus
format fonts to PageStream format and vice versa, and while this ability
is a benefit to the desktop publisher it can certainly be a headache for
font publishing companies. This isn't to say that font publishers
disapprove of FontVerter. Not by a long shot! It effectly increases
the market potential of their products. But the abuse and infringements
of proprietary copyrights becomes more prominent and more often than
not, these abuses have not been intentional. The abusers probably
didn't realise they were doing anything wrong. This article explores
the various situations and circumstances and explains the rights of all
involved. It is not specifically aimed at owners of FontVerter, it
applies to all font manipulation utilities including full scale font
editors.

The part of the copyright law that pertains most to converted fonts is
called "the derivitive works clause". In layman terms it says that
whoever owns the original font has the right to control the destiny of
anything derived from it. A common myth is that the newly converted
font is a new product created by the person who converted the old one.
This just ain't so. If you've converted one of my Cherry Fonts for
Calamus into a Pagestream font, I still own all rights to the new
Pagestream version and it is subject to all the terms and conditions of
my copyright and license agreement. The same applies to all other font
publishers. Some font publishers amend the usual copyright with a
license agreement that binds the purchaser to additional regulations.
It's important to read these to make sure you are even permitted to
convert the font. My license states that you have my blessing to
convert the Cherry fonts that you've purchased to run on whatever
platform you need but they are still Cherry Fonts and you may not sell
or give away the new models.

How does this apply to public domain (PD) fonts? The term "public
domain" means that there is no pending copyright. We all own the
software. The author's name may be stamped on the file but that author
has reserved no rights whatsoever. We may do whatever we want to that
font. And if you want to convert it and call it your own product,
that's your problem. No harm has been done other than your own little
white lie. Lying in this manner is not illegal, it just upsets those
who deserve the proper authoring credit. I've seen this happen
countless times to the dozen or so PD fonts that I released years ago
for Publishing Partner.

A closely related brother of PD is Freeware. The difference is that
Freeware fonts have a valid copyright pending. Somewhere in that
software is the legal phrase "Copyright 1990 by Joe Flintstone. All
rights reserved." Yet this software is given away free of charge thanks
to the unbelievable generosity of Joe Flintstone. Exactly the same
conditions apply to his fonts as they do to commercial fonts.

Shareware fonts are similar to Freeware fonts except that their license
agreement states that you may (or must) freely distribute the fonts but
you must buy them if you actually use them. Again these fonts must be
treated with the same regard as commercial ones.

There are other problems that have to do specifically with the nature of
fonts. Copyright law (presently) doesn't protect the actual design of
the font. We are all free to draw our own versions of Helvetica with
complete disregard for paying its designer any royalties. The name
HELVETICA though, is a "trademark" which belongs to the Linotype
Corporation so if we want to offer our own version we had better name it
something else or we will have to answer to Linotype's lawyers. If you
want to call your font Helvetica, simply call Linotype and ask how much
they charge to license the name. I recommend sitting down in a
comfortable chair before placing the call.

Here's another scenario. Say you bought "WaterBuffalo Bold" from Mr.
Flintstone's font company and you didn't like the way the uppercase "W"
looked like a set of horns, so you tweaked it up a little. As far as
the law is concerned, that new less-horny version of WaterBuffalo Bold
is still Mr. Flintstone's and you may not call it your own. What about
if you tweak most, or even ALL of the font!? NOPE. Plain and simply,
you've created a "derivitive work". My advice is to start your font
editor with a clean slate and start drawing if you want to create a font
you can call your very own.

There you have it. Everything you ever wanted to know about the mating
habits of Water Buffalos. I've probably forgotten about some important
circumstances, and for that I can only apologise. If you need serious
legal advice, talk to a lawyer (I recommend sitting down for that too),
not me.




THE PACIFIC NORTHWEST ATARIFEST
=============================== Press Release


Vancouver, Canada is hosting the first ever Pacific Northwest Atari
Festival over the weekend of June 15th. and 16th. 1991, to be held at
the Steveston Senior Secondary School, in the beautiful suburb of
Richmond, B.C. (where Vancouver International Airport is located.) The
proximity of at least three other major cities within a comfortable
driving distance ensures that a sizable collage of Atari enthusiasts
will be in attendance. It will be a show you won't want to miss.

This colossal event will sport dozens of notable Atari luminaries such
as Bob Brodie from Atari USA, and the famous Atari Canada Booth. It
will bring notable developers such as Nathan Potechin from ISD Marketing
Darek Mihocka from Branch Always Software, and many many others.

Guest lectures and seminars are being held on both days, and a handful
of events, contests and draws are being offered. Atari Canada will be
setting up a Lynx network to keep the kids among us entertained and they
will also be offering mini-concerts spotlighting their Digital Music
Consultant, Tim Brecht.

The festival site will be the Steveston High School where the gymnasium
and 3 additional large rooms, including two tiered-seating lecture
theatres, will accommodate the show activities. Admission to the Fest
is $5. (Canadian) per day and includes your entry for the many door
prizes.

Vendors interested in booth information are invited to contact Terry
Schreiber by VOICE at (604)275-7944 or by FAX at (604)872-7061 or by
GEnie e-mail: T.SCHREIBER1. Advertising space in the show program may be
purchased by anyone. Press passes are being offered by pre-arrangement
only.


Information for Americans, about Canada
Copyright (C)1991 Todd Johnson

THE METRIC SYSTEM
Yes, coming to Vancouver will force you to have to deal with the metric
system. It's really not that big of a deal but there are some crucial
items you should be aware of: The speed limits here are posted in
kilometers per hour. Kilometers are 6/10 of a mile. Our highway limits
are usually 90K or 100K. That translates to 55 MPH and 60MPH. In the
city, our speed limits are generally 50K (30 MPH), The cops don't buy it
when you plead ignorance.

Our temperatures are measured in degrees Celsius. Zero is freezing, 100
is boiling, 20 is room temperature. You can expect the Vancouver
climate in June to be approximately 15 to 25 degrees (60-75 degrees
Fahrenheit.)

You'll see other differences if you go to buy a few litres of gas or a
300 gram package of coffee, but we're sure you won't have any problems
dealing with that. If you need additional information, please don't
hesitate to call.

DOLLARS VS. DOLLARS
Since show goers will be approximately an even mixture of Americans and
Canadians, you can expect to see both American and Canadian dollars
being used at the festival. A word of warning; Canadian attendees won't
be carrying American dollars, and American attendees may not be carrying
Canadian dollars. We recommend that you be prepared to accept both
Canadian funds as well as American funds for purchases of your products.
Call us for current exchange rates, or any other information you feel
you'll need to make this show your success. At publication time, the
Canadian dollar is worth 86.7 US cents.

GAS
If you're driving into Canada, make sure you fill up with gas before you
enter Canada. Our gas prices are much higher than you might expect.

CIGARETTES
If you smoke, make sure you bring enough of your own brand of cigarettes
with you. Canadian cigarettes don't taste anything like American
cigarettes and again, local prices are likely higher than you are used
to.




CALAMUS TUTORIAL PART V
======================= HLP file, Clipboards, and Printing
Copyright(c)1991 by Geoff LaCasse
GXR Systems, Vancouver, B.C.


Last session I explained the rudiments of text Cut and Paste. This
session, I would like to provide a more complete break-down of the
available commands, where they can be used, and what are the
possibilities.

Although Calamus text should be written and proofed in your favourite
word processor, occasionally, changes need to be made to a file after it
has been imported. In its present form, however, Calamus's Text Editor
offers few commands similar to those in Word Perfect, Word Plus, etc.
The Text Editor was designed for quick data entry and simple text and
text style replacement (the latter will be explored in a later session).
The Text Editor does include the Cut and Paste function for more radical
surgery on text.

Load your file from last session. But instead of selecting LOAD
DOCUMENT from the FILE menu, hold down the ALTERNATE (ALT) key and press
l. Calamus's file selector will appear. Load your file from the last
session. Calamus includes keyboard equivalents (shortcuts) for some of
its icons and commands, indicated by a small button shaped icon on the
top icon line to the right of the SIZE icons and below the number 1. If
you move the cursor to FRAME, f2 will appear. Other shortcuts include
f3 for TEXT, and ALT-e for OPEN TEXT EDITOR. f1-f10 represent the
function keys along the top of the keyboard. F1-F10 are SHIFT plus the
function keys. Alt-e opens the Text Editor even if you are in FRAMES
mode. This saves editing time because you no longer have to move from
FRAMES to TEXT to use the Text Editor.

These keyboard shortcuts are embedded in the Calamus.hlp (help) file in
the SYS folder. (The .HLP file also provides the useful icon
descriptions in the upper right corner of the screen.) Print out
Calamus.hlp from the desktop (when you have the chance). The file
consists of numbered lines, each equivalent to one icon or command. On
their far right are keyboard letters, which provide the keyboard
shortcut when used in combination with ALT. Function keys are prefaced
by f or F followed by a number from 1 to 10. Session 10 will discuss
ways to customize the keyboard shortcuts. For the time being we will
use the default settings which came with the program.

With your document on screen, let's practice cutting and pasting text.
Select TEXT, then TEXT CLIPBOARDS, click on the first (left) frame, and
place the text cursor at some point in the text. Drag (hold down the
left mouse button and move the mouse to the right and down) the cursor
until you have highlighted several lines of text (you may want to do
this in a closer view: use Size icons). Calamus has 5 Text Clipboards
designed to capture text, and distinct from Frame Clipboards (which
capture frames and their contents). Text clipboard size is limited only
by system memory, although only the first few characters will be shown.
The Cut and Paste commands are the 5 icons located below the Text
clipboards. We used the top 2 icons--CUT TEXT FROM FRAME (scissors
shape) and PASTE TEXT FROM CLIPBOARD (to its right) to cut highlighted
text from and to a frame (review).

The other icons are (right to left, bottom row): COPY TEXT TO FRAME,
COPY TEXT TO CLIPBOARD, and DELETE TEXT IN CLIPBOARD OR FRAME. The 2
icons on the right on the bottom row work similarly to those immediately
above but leave the original text untouched (whether in frame or
clipboard) by making a copy. Highlight one of the clipboards (they do
not have to be selected in any order), highlight text in one of the
frames, and click on COPY TEXT TO CLIPBOARD. The original text will be
left untouched and an exact copy will be placed in the clipboard. Place
a new insertion point elsewhere in the text, and select COPY TEXT TO
FRAME. Text will be copied into the frame, and the clipboard original
left untouched. Place text in another clipboard and paste it back to
the same position. To DELETE TEXT, highlight a clipboard containing
text and select this icon. Alternately, highlight text in a frame, de-
select any clipboards, and click on DELETE TEXT. Deleted text can't be
recovered. Cut and Paste is a simple procedure but should be practised
(differentiating between the copy and cut icons can be a problem
initially). Save constantly when Cutting and Pasting. Calamus has been
known to crash at this point (my Mega 4 STE does so repeatedly). Saving
a document, however, does not save text in the clipboards (next
version).

Printing a Calamus file is a simple procedure. Press ALT-p or select
PRINT from the FILE menu. PRINT brings up a dialogue box: Print
Document/Printer Settings. Select your print options (or leave at the
default settings) and print the document. Calamus .CDK files can only
be printed from within Calamus.

The dialogue box is divided into 2 halves. The top half will be blank
if you haven't previously selected a default printer driver. Click on
LOAD DRIVERS. If your Calamus.set file was correctly set up, a list of
printer drivers will appear (if not, reinstall your Calamus.set file:
see session 1). If your printer is not on the list, select the closest
match. I used a HP LaserJet II driver until a DeskJet driver became
available. If no close match exists, check your local bulletin boards
or phone ISD. Your selection will become the default driver for this
and future sessions (until changed).

Once a driver has been selected, printer options will appear. These
include Resolution, Page format, Paper feed (not available for some
printers), and Output. Default values include the highest resolution of
the printer (300 x 300 dots per inch in the DeskJet; 240 x 216 dpi in an
Epson), Letter, and Parallel.

The bottom half of the dialogue box includes information on pages to be
printed (From/To: default is page currently on screen), # of Copies (1),
Scaling (100%), and Orientation (Automatic). Ignore the others for this
session. Don't change # of Copies, it doesn't work correctly. Click on
PRINT at bottom-left of dialogue box. Print times will vary. My
DeskJet prints a full page in approximately 5 minutes, the Atari SLM804
Laser in 10 seconds. Change Resolution to lower output (i.e. 150 x 150
for the DeskJet) by clicking on its right side button. Change Scaling
to 50% by selecting and erasing the old, and typing in 50. If you press
RETURN printing will begin (bypassing PRINT button). Printing should be
much faster for dot matrix printers, in particular (although Atari laser
users may not notice much difference). Document files are not printer
specific, and printer drivers can be changed at will by clicking on LOAD
DRIVERS. Once printing is finished click on OK in bottom right. This
returns you to your on-screen document.

Quit Calamus (use ALT-q). Save Document if you want to save what you
have done, Abandon if not.

Next session will be a question and answer period for those with
problems arising from the first 5 sessions. Questions should cover
material in the past 5 sessions. Questions can be sent to T.SCHREIBER1
or Z-NET on GEnie or to Sysop Node #505 on FNET.



PUBLIC DOMAIN UPDATE
====================
by Keith MacNutt

Rate Hard Drive
ICD, INC
1220 Rock Street
Rockford, IL 61101-1437

Ever wonder just how fast your hard drives are? You read the spec sheet
when you bought your drive and it gave an expected rating expressed in
ms( milli seconds - thousandths of a second). From that rating you
either bragged to friends or stated with conviction, that as soon as you
could afford a faster one, you would be up there with the big boys.
With the release of hard drive rate program your dream drive may just be
in your case at this very moment. Up until now, most people had no
choice but to believe what the manufacture stated in their brochures and
ads. Rate hard drive gives you, the ST user, the chance to test your
hard drives and come up with a bench mark rating. This rating is not
the be all, end all test that everyone should count on to state with
conviction just who they think makes the fastest drives.

HOW IT WORKS

Rate hard drive when run, starts all scsi ID 0 logical unit and proceeds
to check all the hard drives it can find connected on all the SCSI and
lun connections except ID's 6 (reserved for real time clock) and 7 where
it reads lun 0 only. As the program finds and tests the hard drives, it
prints out the manufacturers identification under the device name and a
rating in ms for the speed.

THE TESTS

The data rate test takes one megabyte of data, and in 100 sector
continuous calculates the number of K/s that can be read in one second.

The average access test tells the drive to read the innermost sector and
then the outermost one. This is repeated 50 times, but each time the
head is stepped out one from the centre and in one from the outside.
This action cause the head to travel a shorter and shorter distance
until it meets in the centre. From this data the program removes the
time it needs to read the sectors and calculates the average time for
head travel.

CONCLUSIONS

There are a few other test programs that will also do tests like RATEHD,
but from reading the doc file that comes with this program, the people
at ICD are sincerely trying to give the ST community a way to evaluate
one hard drive against another. As I stated at the beginning of this
review, this is only a general test and does not give 100% accurate
ratings, but comes very close. If you haven't installed TOS 1.4 in your
machine, it may not be the hard drive's fault for being slow, but
instead your machine's Operating System.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Z*NET International Atari Online Magazine is a weekly publication
covering the Atari and related computer community. Material contained
in this edition may be reprinted without permission except where
noted, unedited and containing the issue number, name and author
included at the top of each article reprinted. Opinions presented
are those of the individual author and does not necessarily reflect
the opinions of the staff of Z*Net Online. This publication is
not affiliated with Atari Corporation. Z*Net, Z*Net Atari Online,
Z*Net Newswire, and Z*Net News Service are copyright (c)1991, Rovac
Industries Incorporated, Post Office Box 59, Middlesex, New Jersey
08846-0059. Voice (908) 968-2024, BBS (908) 968-8148 at 1200/2400 Baud
24 hours a day. We can be reached on Compuserve at PPN 71777,2140 and
on GEnie at address: Z-Net. FNET NODE 593
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Z*Net International Atari Online Magazine
Copyright (c)1991, Rovac Industries, Inc..
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


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