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-
- Z*NET: ONLINE MAGAZINE Copyright (c)1994, Syndicate Publishing
- Volume 9, Number 2 March 5, 1994
- Call the Z*Net News Service BBS (908) 968-8148
-
-
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------
- Publisher/Editor..........................................Ron Kovacs
- America Online Representative.........................Bruce Hansford
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- |#| The Editors Desk...............................Ron Kovacs
- |#| Z*Net Telecommunications News............................
- |#| Z*Net Newswire...........................................
- |#| Cleveland FreeNet...........................Press Release
- |#| Monochrome Monitor Fix.....Randy Constan, Elfin Magic Co.
- |#| DPA News - January 1994......................Ron Albright
- |#| Transcendence BBS Goes Freeware..............Announcement
- |#| Connect Magazine Offer......................Press Release
- |#| The Music Of The Bytes.........................Jeff White
- |#| Lexicor Update..............................Press Release
- |#| Jaguar Games...................................CompuServe
- |#| Hard Drive Tech Support.............................GEnie
- |#| Lynx FAQ.........................................Internet
- |#| Atari Vendors Listing...............................GEnie
-
-
- ###### THE EDITORS DESK
- ###### By Ron Kovacs
- ###### ---------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
- A little over three weeks ago, the first edition of the new year was
- released. Lots of comments have been read and the email has been very
- nice. I really didn't realize how much we were missed. I am looking
- for a few writers to assist with specific topics. If you are interested
- in assisting, please leave email on any of the areas listed in this
- edition.
-
- The 1993 Year In Review that was scheduled for a few issues has been
- cancelled as a few of you have asked me to put an end to it. Consider
- it done as I agree with your comments.
-
- Happy Birthday to my son Adam who turned six this week.
-
-
-
-
-
- ###### Z*NET TELECOM NEWS
- ###### Latest Telecommunications Update
- ###### ---------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
- MARVEL ONLINE SERVICE RUMORS
- Computer Reseller News reported last week that Microsoft would launch
- an online service by the end of the year. However, a spokesman at
- Microsoft had no knowledge of the "Marvel" service quoted in Computer
- Reseller. The weekly magazine says Marvel will be part of Chicago, the
- code name for Windows 4.0 scheduled to ship by the end of 1994.
- According to Reseller, Marvel will initially provide access to technical
- information such as technical notes, forums, and third-party vendor
- support.
-
-
- CABLE RATES FINALIZED
- The Federal Communications Commission has finalized its rules for re-
- regulating cable rates. Under the rules, local governments must file
- with the commission to regulate basic cable rates, but the FCC itself is
- regulating "expanded basic" rates, those most people pay. Charges for
- pay- per-view and premium channels like HBO remain unregulated.
- Technically, the action by the commission was a re-consideration of
- actions it took last year. There are also exceptions for operators who
- now charge abnormally-low prices, and for small systems. Local
- governments which want to learn more about how to get in step with the
- new regulations should call 202-416-0940.
-
-
- AMERICA ONLINE EXPANDS
- America Online has added more features to its already popular service.
- Reuters, Scientific American and the Interactive Services Association,
- and licensed new messaging software. Reuters will now offer
- continuously updated top news, sports, business and entertainment
- stories on AOL's "Top News" area, and soon add other forms of news as
- well. Scientific American signed a deal putting editorial content
- online and offering interactive discussions. The Interactive Services
- Association, which has 200 members, will have its own section on the
- service, with bulletin boards, e-mail, and other services -- AOL itself
- is a member of the group.
-
- PARAMOUNT GETS NEW OWNER
- Viacom has won Paramount Communications for roughly $10 billion. The
- company announced that 75 percent of Paramount's outstanding shares were
- tendered to it, beating a rival bid from QVC Network. Under the terms
- of the agreement, Viacom will pay about $104 in cash for 50.1 percent of
- Paramount, then pay stock for the rest. In addition to its movie
- studio, home of "Star Trek" and other films, Paramount also owns the
- Simon & Shuster book publishing company, which in turn owns both
- Prentice-Hall, a leading producer of computer books, and Macmillan,
- acquired in an auction during the takeover battle. Other holdings
- include Madison Square Garden and its tenants, the New York Knicks
- basketball club and New York Rangers hockey team.
-
-
- NBC ONLINE WITH GENIE
- NBC has signed a deal with GEnie to go along with agreements signed
- earlier with Prodigy and America OnLine.
-
-
- GO REPUBLICAN ON COMPUSERVE
- CompuServe has inaugurated the Republican Forum, which began February
- 9. The new forum is billed as a platform for the Republican National
- Committee and offers the headings of Library, General, GOP news, Rising
- Tide, X-ray, and Monday Morning Briefing. The new forum will have
- real-time conferences with various Republican leaders and the various
- forum sections will offer current GOP news, history, the latest press
- releases, transcripts of the latest speeches, new political strategies,
- reviews of legislative action, responses to public opinion polls and
- others. CompuServe also offers a Democratic Forum.
-
-
- CBS - NBC JOIN THE ONLINE COMMUNITY
- If you watched CBS late night during the Olympics, you might have had
- the chance to access CBS reporters online. The networks are now
- entering the online community and will be using the computer air-waves
- to promote their telecasts. NBC has already announced deals with both
- Prodigy, America Online and GEnie. NBC will offer a comprehensive
- service, including announcements, detailed information on hit shows, a
- bulletin board, a contest center, and an "NBC Store."
-
-
- DELPHI GETS NEWSPAPER DEAL
- Delphi has signed an agreement with the St. Louis Post-Dispatch and its
- PostLink service. This is the first agreement for Delphi which was
- purchased by Rupert Murdoch's NewsCorp. last year. Under the agreement,
- Pulitzer's PostLink will gain a direct link with Delphi and its
- connection to the Internet. The two companies will also work together
- on an upgraded graphical user interface for PostLink. In addition to
- carrying the full text of the Post-Dispatch, the service also offers
- local resources like calendars and listings for local sports and
- educational TV. This summer, the service will add an online discussion
- section so editors can communicate directly with readers.
-
-
- ATM ADAPTERS AVAILABLE
- Newbridge Microsystems has announced an asynchronous transfer mode (ATM)
- adapter for personal computers. The NM 121 ATM Adapter is meant for PCs
- running Novell NetWare, NetWare Lite, DOS, and Microsoft Windows.
- According to Newbridge, it is the first ATM network interface card that
- works with NetWare servers and PC clients. The adapter is also
- compatible with ATM hubs and switches from a variety of vendors,
- including Newbridge, Synoptics, and Fore Systems. The device supports
- throughput as high as 100 megabits per second (Mbps) over multi-mode
- fiber, as many as 4,000 permanent virtual circuits, comprehensive remote
- management using the Simple Network Management Protocol (SNMP), and such
- industry standard protocols as Transmission Control Protocol/Internet
- Protocol (TCP/IP) and Novell's Internetwork Packet Exchange (IPX). The
- NM 121 will be available in March.
-
-
- TELECOMMUNICATION BILLS IN CONGRESS
-
- Senators John C. Danforth (R-Mo.) and Daniel K. Inouye (D-Hi.)
- introduced the "Telecommunications Infrastructure Act of 1993" (S. 1086)
- last June. The so-called Danforth-Inouye bill contains many of the same
- provisions as the pair of bills (Brooks-Dingell and Markey-Fields)
- introduced in the House of Representatives during 1993.
-
- S. 1086 provides for: preemption of local and state laws which block
- cable companies' entry into local telephone service and telephone
- company entry into data communications; promulgation of FCC regulations
- that would enforce universal access to local communications networks;
- universal consumer access to service; local telephone companies to
- provide cable (video and data) services within their own service areas;
- local buy-outs of rural cable operators by telcos, but blocks such buy-
- outs in more populous areas (many rural cable operators provide very,
- very limited service); steps to ensure that rural areas also have access
- to high-quality telecommunications facilities and network connections;
- and guaranteed access for disabled individuals.
-
- The Brooks-Dingell telecom bill, designated H.R. 3626 and titled
- "Antitrust Reform Act of 1993" and "Communications Reform Act of 1993,"
- establishes conditions under which the regional Bell telephone companies
- can begin competing in the long distance service and equipment
- manufacturing areas. The second half of the bill sets up regulatory
- guidelines which would prevent unfair competition by the local telephone
- companies in equipment manufacturing and electronic publishing.
-
- Provisions of H.R. 3626 include: the requirement that the RBOCs
- (Regional Bell Operating Companies) apply for FCC approval and Justice
- Department wavers before entering the long distance or alarm services
- business; setting a timetable for RBOC entry into such services
- including the provision that an RBOC may not even apply to enter the
- alarm services business for more than five years; provision for judicial
- review of FCC and Justice Department rulings by the D.C. Circuit Court;
- and one-year delay before the local telephone companies can enter the
- manufacturing arena.
-
- Regulatory requirements imposed by the bill would include a provision
- that RBOCs set up separate divisions for the delivery of information
- over networks. Electronic publishing services covered by this provision
- include the delivery of news, sports, and columns, but excludes Caller
- ID, video programming, translation services, and electronic delivery of
- white pages-type telephone number listings. The RBOCs would be
- forbidden to discriminate against other information providers by
- preventing them from gaining access to the telephone company's wiring
- and switching infrastructure. Manufacturing must be done in the US and
- this also must be done by a separate affiliate. There would be a
- domestic content provision for all hardware made by the RBOCs.
-
-
- 5 FORUMS DEBUT ON COMPUSERVE
- Five new hardware and software forums have been added to CompuServe.
- The new Epson America Forum provides support directly from Epson for the
- its full range of computers, scanners, modems, printers and other
- products, GO EPSON to access. SunSoft, the Sun Microsystems subsidiary
- responsible for Solaris SPARC, Solaris X86 and Interactive Unix, has
- joined the SunSelect Forum, renamed the SunSoft & SunSelect Forum, GO
- SUNSOFT or GO SUNSELECT to access. The Intuit Forum, which provides
- online support for Quicken, Quick Books, and Intuit's other personal
- finance and small business management software products, GO INTUIT to
- access this area. The Sybase OpenLine Forum, which offers online
- support for a full range of Sybase products, including the SYBASE SQL
- Server, system administration tools, Sybase education, PC products,
- connectivity products and more, to access the forum, type GO SYBASE.
- The fifth new forum supports products from DiagSoft, maker of the QAPlus
- and other PC quality assurance and diagnostic software products, type GO
- DIAGSOFT to access. Forums on CompuServe are available for $4.80/hour
- when accessing with a 1200 or 2400 bits per second modem and $9.60/hour
- at 9.6 or 14.4 kilobits per second. In addition, CompuServe members pay
- $8.95 per month for unlimited connect time access to more than 60 basic
- services. For CompuServe membership information call 800-848-8199.
-
-
- COMPUSERVE OFFERS VISA GOLD AND VISA CLASSIC CARDS ONLINE
- CompuServe announced this week, the availability of special-benefit
- CompuServe VISA Gold and VISA Classic credit cards for members of the
- CompuServe Information Service. The cards, available to CompuServe
- members in the U.S., are being offered in conjunction with H&R Block,
- and Columbus Bank & Trust of Columbus, Ga. Benefits include no annual
- fee for either card if used at least six times each year, a 12.9%
- variable APR interest rate for VISA Gold, and a 14.9% variable APR
- interest rate for VISA Classic. For more information or applications
- for enrollment online (GO CARD), or by calling CompuServe Cardholder
- Services at 1-800-487-5391.
-
-
- ################### Z*NET NEWSWIRE
- #####(((((((((( ### --------------
- ############(( #### Compiled and Edited by Ron Kovacs
- #########(( #######
- ######(( ########## Additional material supplied by Bruce Hansford
- #####(((((((((( ###
- ###################
-
- SUPREME COURT HEARS ARGUMENT
- Supreme Court justices heard debate last week in a case that may prove
- vital to how future appeals are handled. Digital Equipment Corp. is
- asking the court to overturn a ruling by the 10th U.S. Circuit Court of
- Appeals in Denver, which said a company could sue Digital, even after a
- pre-trial settlement, when it discovered alleged fraud in the
- settlement. According to court documents, Desktop Direct Inc. developed
- and marketed software in computer magazines. Later, Digital allegedly
- developed a new product in 1991 and marketed it under the name of
- "Desktop Direct." In February, Desktop filed a complaint against
- Digital in federal court in Utah, saying the computer giant was
- infringing its trademark. Digital told Desktop that the confusion was
- an honest mistake, and settled with the smaller company by paying an
- unknown cash amount in 1992. However, Desktop later allegedly learned
- through an inside source that Digital had known all along about the
- smaller company's use of the trademark, but had used it anyway against
- the advice of its lawyers. Desktop went back to federal court and sued.
- Digital lost bids to have the suit dismissed at both the trial and
- appeals court level and asked the Supreme Court to review. A decision
- by the court is expected before next fall.
-
-
- SEMICONDUCTOR INDUSTRY SUPPORTS CLINTON
- The Semiconductor Industry Association (SIA), announced today that "SIA
- strongly supports President Clinton's decision to reinstate the 'Super
- 301' provisions of the Omnibus Trade and Competitiveness Act of 1988.
- SIA believes that the identification of priority practices and priority
- countries under Super 301 was effective in reducing foreign barriers to
- U.S. exports in 1989 and 1990 and believes that the reinstatement of
- Super 301 is entirely merited given the wide array of restrictions to
- U.S. exports in countries around the globe." The U.S. semiconductor
- industry long has faced barriers to entry in the $24 billion Japanese
- semiconductor market. Although the 1986 and 1991 U.S.-Japan
- Semiconductor Agreements have led to some improvement in foreign access
- in Japan, the foreign share of the Japanese semiconductor market dropped
- for three consecutive quarters in 1993 and now is about two percentage
- points lower than the minimum 20 percent level called for in the 1991
- agreement.
-
-
- APPLE MAKES SIX ANNOUNCEMENTS
- Apple Computer made six announcements this week regarding new products,
- computer connectivity and developer tools. The announcements include
- the following: The Newton MessagePad 110 which incorporates new
- improvements, features, and design modifications which are based upon
- suggestions from customers and licensees. The Newton Messagepad 100
- will give customers a choice between the original Newton MessagePad form
- factor and that of the new MessagePad 110. Also announced was an
- Upgrade Program For Original MessagePad Owners To enable Newton
- customers to benefit from the rapid evolution of Newton technology,
- Apple will offer existing owners of the Newton MessagePad an attractive
- upgrade program. The upgrade will be available in the United States
- starting April 1994 by calling 800-SOS-APPL, in the United Kingdom in
- April 1994, and in some other international markets later in 1994.
- Newton Connection v 2.0 enables users to exchange and share their
- MessagePad information -- notes, letters, name-cards, to-do lists,
- appointments, and even information created with many third party
- applications -- with common desktop personal information management
- (PIM), word-processing, spreadsheet and database applications, running
- on the Macintosh platform. A new Version of the Newton Toolkit will
- also be shipping soon. The Newton Toolkit is a powerful, sophisticated,
- yet easy to learn development environment designed to reduce
- significantly the time taken to develop creative Newton applications.
-
-
- INTERNATIONAL STANDARD TO BE USED
- Seventeen American and European computer software vendors told business
- leaders of their plans to incorporate STEP, the international Standard
- for the Exchange of Product Model Data, in their products. Details of
- plans to produce STEP-compliant computer software came at a joint
- meeting of the executive boards of PDES, Inc. and the National
- Initiative for Product Data Exchange. As a neutral standard to which
- all software can adhere, STEP will enable users to digitally represent
- and exchange product information, via computer, both between corporation
- departments and with manufacturing partners and suppliers. The removal
- of barriers with STEP- based software is expected to facilitate multi-
- enterprise, multi-vendor, multi-supplier manufacturing efforts. The
- following companies presented STEP plans: CADDETC, CIMIO,
- Computervision, Dassault Systemes, Digital Equipment Corporation, EDS
- Unigraphics, Grumman Data Systems, Hewlett-Packard, IBM, Intergraph,
- International TechneGroup Incorporated, Mentor Graphics, PDA
- Engineering, ProSTEP, SDRC, Sherpa, and STEP Tools, Inc.
-
- NEWS SHORTS
-
- CONNER announced this week that it plans to raise certain prices by 4-5
- percent effectively immediately for its 170MB and 340MB 3.5-inch hard
- disk drives.
-
- HEWLETT-PACKARD has introduced the HP Vectra VL2 PC series with entry-
- level pricing starting at under $900. The five new HP VL2 models
- include accelerated local bus video, power management and plug-and-play
- features unavailable on similarly priced brand-name PC models.
-
- CEBIT'94 takes place later this month in Hanover Germany. The show
- begins March 16 and runs through March 23, 1994.
-
- SOFTWARE PUBLISHING has announced Professional Write 3.0 for DOS, a new
- version of its popular managerial word processor. Professional Write
- 3.0 will be available this month for a suggested retail price of $249,
- and a special upgrade price of $65.
-
-
-
-
-
- ###### CLEVELAND FREE-NET ATARI SIG
- ###### Press Release
- ###### ---------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
- Cleveland, OH--February 25, 1994-- In an effort to bring professional
- support to Atari users at absolutely no cost, the Cleveland Free-Net
- Atari SIG has released a new version of its SIG. The main goal of the
- Cleveland Free-Net Atari SIG is to offer the most support possible to
- Atari users. The Cleveland Free-Net Atari SIGOps feel that this new
- version is comparable to that of Atari SIGs on pay systems.
-
- The additions to the Atari SIG include:
-
- o Direct access to Atari related International Usenet newsgroups.
-
- o An enhancement of the already popular "8-Bit Computers Support Area"
- which now includes ALL the issues published of Z*Magazine and a new
- and improved Technical Forum for 8-bit programmers and hardware
- hackers. While other online systems are decreasing support for the
- 8-Bit Atari, the Cleveland Free-Net is increasing its support!
-
- o A restructured "16/32-Bit Computers Support Area" which now includes
- more information text files than ever before. The support area
- includes a large list of files that can be received from popular FTP
- sites like atari.archives.umich.edu. Over 400 online magazines are
- included online with every issue of Z*Net & ST Report from 1989. All
- issues of Atari Explorer Online are also available.
-
- o An improved "Lynx Support Area" which includes invaluable information
- text files that are maintained by the readers of Usenet's
- rec.games.video.atari. These text files include the Lynx FAQ, cheats,
- record high scores, comlynx users list, reviews, and more! The
- support area also includes a unique game card rating system where Lynx
- players vote their opinion of each game.
-
- o A new "Jaguar Support Area" which was created to be the best online
- information source available for Jaguar players. The support area
- includes: news, summaries, reviews, information text files, game
- ratings, press releases and articles, and online publications. Many
- of the Jaguar information text files are also maintained by readers of
- Usenet's rec.games.video.atari.
-
- o An "Atari Library" that is truly a library for Atari users. The Atari
- Library includes: many information text files and documents, a "Time
- Capsule" for old, but important information, online publications,
- Usenet newsgroups, CAIN Newsletters, and Atari SIG logs. The Atari
- Library also includes the Atari SIG's "Who's Who in the Atari
- Community" e-mail address directory.
-
- o An area for the construction of the Cleveland Free-Net Atari SIG's
- monthly CAIN Newsletter. "CAIN Online Newsroom" is where editors,
- staff, and contributors meet to share information that goes into each
- newsletter. Anyone interested in helping to put together CAIN
- Newsletter should visit CAIN Online Newsroom.
-
- The Cleveland Free-Net Community Computer System is a multi-user system
- that supports hundreds of users online simultaneously. Internet users
- may access the Cleveland Free-Net at the following telnet addresses:
-
- freenet-in-a.cwru.edu, 129.22.8.32, kanga.ins.cwru.edu
- freenet-in-b.cwru.edu, 129.22.8.32, kanga.ins.cwru.edu
- freenet-in-c.cwru.edu, 129.22.8.51, nextsun.ins.cwru.edu
-
- The Cleveland Free-Net is accessible via modem by the phone number:
- 216/368-3888.
-
- If there is a Free-Net in your city, the Cleveland Free-Net is
- accessible through the "Teleport" option.
-
- The Cleveland Free-Net is not just a local community computer system.
- Atari users from all over the world access the Atari SIG on the
- Cleveland Free-Net daily to participate in bulletin board conversations
- and to contribute news and information.
-
- Atari conferences are usually held once a month on the IRC (go irc). If
- interested in participating in these conferences, check the Cleveland
- Free-Net Atari SIG's General Bulletin Board for time and date
- information.
-
- If you would like to be a guest speaker at one of these conferences or
- have any questions or comments about the Cleveland Free-Net Atari SIG,
- please write: xx004@cleveland.freenet.edu.
-
- Cleveland Free-Net Atari SIG
- est: 1986
-
-
-
-
- ###### MONOCHROME MONITOR FIX
- ###### Randy Constan, Elfin Magic Co.
- ###### ---------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
- If you have an ATARI SM124 Mono monitor that has recently gone belly up,
- read on. In particular, this pertains to those of you who have tweaked
- the coils and trim pots in your monitor to get a full raster display,
- although it's quite possible that unmodified monitors have been affected
- as well. Also, if do have a modified monitor that's behaving fine, you
- still may want to consider the suggestions described in this article, as
- it could save you a surprise monitor failure that (you _KNOW_ ) will
- definitely happen at the worst possible time.
-
- Finally, this text describes a problem particular to the monitor
- manufactured by "Gold Star Co", which has the Brightness, Contrast, and
- Off/On Volume controls recessed on the right side-panel. There may have
- been other manufacturers of SM-124's with completely different
- electronics, so if ANY of the physical component layout descriptions
- written here do not seem to jive, then all bets are off and the
- information given here may or may not have any practical value. In
- addition, the monitor 'fix' I'm going to describe should only be done by
- a trained electronic technician, or at the very least a knowledgable
- electronics hacker with good soldering AND de-soldering skills!
-
- Disclaimer: You can easily get knocked squarely on your butt by the
- voltages present in your monitor. Weather or not it kills you probably
- depends on just what you fall on, your present health, and where the
- resulting flying monitor lands.
-
- In any case, your decision to implement the changes described herein is
- completely your own. I disclaim all responsibility for your health,
- safety, or any damage to equipment or property caused by fires,
- implosions or explosions, earthquakes, global flooding, or galactic
- imbalance resulting from your use of any information in this writing. I
- think that about covers it ;)
-
- So... once upon a time, we all got our nifty HI-RES mono monitors,
- powered them up, and the very first thing we all said was, "Ah..
- MAN!!... This monitor is screwed up". Perhaps stronger language was
- used, but the fact was that we all thought something had to be wrong.
- Alas though, the tiny picture on that screen was exactly what the ATARI
- mystics had intended! Of course, it wasn't long before many daring
- hackers boldly removed the monitor's covers, cast their warrantees
- aside, and discovered a way to expand the tiny picture to full size.
- The information spread quickly through the worldwide internets, spider-
- nets, and fish nets, and soon all mere mortals had full screen displays
- and could actually read that 6 X 6 font! And so, the all lived happily
- ever after. But then one day years later, a curse fell upon the land,
- and darkness fell upon the faces of many of these monitors.
-
- Ok, enough with the story narrative. By now, you're beginning to get
- the picture (no pun intended). The modification to fill the screen does
- indeed place an additional stress on a portion of the monitors
- circuitry, which coupled with a design error quite common to many types
- of computer monitors, ultimately caused the failure. The good news is
- that I've now seen quite a few monitors with this identical failure
- which is 100% repairable, and should leave you with 'good as new'
- results. The bad news is that you do need some technical skills, but
- even if you don't, finding a techie friend to help will be abundantly
- easier having a possible procedure for repair.
-
- Brief technical summary. Right near the coil you adjusted to spread the
- horizontal width of your display, there's a 2.2 uF capacitor. More
- specifically, it is a non-polarized electrolytic capacitor, which is
- actually 2 polarized capacitors wired 'back to back' in a single
- enclosure. As the screen is widened, the peak voltage level across this
- part increases, thereby causing more internal stress. This situation is
- further aggravated by the type of part as well. All capacitor types
- have certain advantages and disadvantages and when it comes to
- electrolytic types, the advantage is smaller size. It's disadvantage
- however is that at higher frequencies, it has high 'leakage' current and
- acts more like a resistor. The Horizontal frequency passing through
- this capacitor is in fact quite high, and the resistive qualities at
- these frequencies cause the capacitors to generate significant heat.
- Over time, that heat will cause the part to fail even in un-modified
- monitors, but the modification certainly speeds up the process.
-
- If your monitor has fallen victim to this failure, in a way your lucky.
- There's a fair chance that the problem (as said earlier) would happen
- one way or another anyway, and at least now you have a possible fix.
- First, you need to disconnect the monitor and open it up. If you have
- the chassis I'm describing there will be two screws on the upper sides,
- visable from the back; two more screws on the bottom; and a single screw
- on the back above the power plug, which is a removable 'spade' type AC
- connector. After removing the screws, you can remove the back cover,
- but be sure to be careful of the speaker connections. The speaker is
- mounted to the inside of the cover, and connects to the monitor's main
- PC board via a small removable plug. It's a bit tough to get to, but
- trust me, it IS removable.
-
- Once the cover is free, there are 2 fuses to check first. From now on,
- all references to right and left will assume you are behind the monitor,
- with the screen pointing away from you. There is a small PC board
- mounted vertically on the right side of the chassis which contains a
- 0.75 amp fuse. There's also a 2 amp fuse immediately to the right of
- the speaker plug you removed on the main board. Check both fuses with a
- DVM or other suitable instrument. Most likely, you'll find that it's
- the 2 amp on that is gone, but either one blown is possible. You can
- buy these tiny fuses at Radio Shack, and while your there, you can pick
- up a much more modern replacement for the capacitor we mentioned
- earlier. There's also a resistor that often cooks when this failure
- occurs, so you might as well get all this stuff at once. If the problem
- turns out to be something else, at least you'll be prepared for the
- eventuality. In any case, read on to do a 'walk through' before buying,
- to make absolutely sure your chassis physically matches the one we're
- discussing.
-
- At your local Radio Shack, pick up the following items:
-
- fuse (pkg of 4) 3/4 amp 270-1048
- fuse (pkg of 4) 2.0 amp 270-1052
- fuse (pkg of 4) 5.0 amp* 270-1056
- capacitor buy 2! 1 uF, 200v metal 272-1055
- resistor (pkg of 2) 680 ohm, 1/2 watt 271-021
-
- * optional purchase, see text.
-
- Since we have plenty of extra fuses now, start by just changing them,
- and setting up the monitor (still uncovered) with your ST. If the
- display comes up normally, leave everything powered up and wait a few
- hours. If all goes well, you can either make the fix were going to
- describe anyway to save future grief, or put the other parts away, along
- with this text, in case the problem returns.
-
- Assuming the problem did not go away (no display and/or fuse blown
- again), there are two paths you can take from here. You _can_ just go
- ahead and change the suspected components without really knowing if they
- are at fault, since they'll probably need replacement eventually anyhow.
- The other possibility is that you don't want to to this until you're a
- bit more sure it's necessary. If that's the case, read the next few
- paragraphs. Otherwise, just skip over to "Making the Repair".
-
- If you do want to do some checking, here is a possible (but not
- foolproof) procedure to see if the suspected capacitor is indeed the
- culprit. If the 0.75 amp fuse on the vertical board was blown,
- temporarily replace it with a 2 amp. If the 2 amp fuse on the main
- board has blown, temporarily replace it with one of the 5 amp fuses.
- Set up the monitor, still open, near your ATARI, and connect the monitor
- cable to your machine. Boot the ATARI with the monitor still off. We
- want to keep our 'powered up' time with the larger (wrong) fuses to a
- minimum. Now, hook up the power cord and turn on the monitor, being
- ready to instantly kill power at the first sign of any unsafe condition
- such as smoke or electrical arcing.
-
- With the higher current fuses installed, the display will probably still
- be out, but the green pilot light on the front panel _should_ light. If
- it doesn't, then either the new fuses have blown, or a problem exists
- somewhere else in the circuit. Of course, the pilot light could just be
- shot, but if the higher current fuses do actually blow, then forget
- about the remainder of this discussion and just try implementing the
- suggested repair. Also, if the screen display _does_ appear with the
- larger fuses, don't be to happy yet! Twice now I've seen the 'crippled'
- capacitor seem to work fine for awhile before the final breakdown. So
- weather the screen display comes up or not, proceed to the next step as
- long as the fuses are not blowing.
-
- Locate Capacitor C714. It will be the round cylinder on the left side
- of the main board (from the back), in-between the coil you adjusted when
- you increased the width and the flyback transformer. The coil is the
- only adjustable coil on the board, so you can't miss it, and hopefully
- you know that the flyback transformer is the thing-y with the wire that
- goes into the top of the picture tube! Locate the capacitor... but
- don't touch it yet! The flyback puts out thousands of volts, and if
- there is a flaw in it's insulation, it could arc right into you hand.
- Just leave the unit powered up for a few minutes, and then turn it off.
- Now, with your finger, move close to, and finally touch the capacitor
- from the top. What you're looking for is a _HOT_ part, so be careful!
- If in fact the part is really hot, it probably has shorted and needs to
- be replaced.
-
- Also, immediately to the right of the coil, also on the main board is a
- diode (D-709) and a resistor (R-221). Take a good look at the resistor
- to see if it looks stressed or burnt. If you want, you can do an in-
- circuit check with a DVM to see if it has opened. You can make this
- measurement from the bottom of the board if you want since it's pretty
- cramped on top. Even if it has not died, you should consider
- replacement if it appears stressed, or the underside of the board
- appears burned and discolored at the location of the resistor.
-
- Making the Repair
-
- Making the repair is simply a matter of changing the parts, BUT...
- there's some special considerations here. You may or may not be aware
- that radio shack does have 2.2uF, 50 volt non-polarized electrolytic
- capacitor in stock! But using that part would be dumb since the
- conditions that caused it to die in the first place have not changed
- AND, the part was a poor design choice to begin with! We're going to
- use the two 1.0 uF metalized film capacitors which are NOT electrolytic,
- AND have a working voltage 4 times that of the original part! We will
- have to parallel both capacitors to get 2.0uF, which is reasonably close
- to 2.2 and in fact works just fine. First though, you'll have to de-
- solder the existing C-714, which will probably be a bit of a chore. Do
- that, and also get rid of the existing R-221 if it shows the signs of
- heat stress (or is open) as we discussed earlier. You can just cut it
- out if you want, since we'll be soldering the new parts to the underside
- of the board.
-
- Now, take the two 1.0uF capacitors, and solder them together in a neat
- parallel arrangement, that has a pair of leads bent to accommodate the
- spacing of the leads on the original capacitor. Look at the underside
- of the board and observe the original C-714 solder pads, as well as the
- clearance to the bottom when the cover is replaced. Give it a little
- thought and come up with a mechanically sound and visually sensible
- combination. The capacitors again, are not polarized so direction does
- not matter. And remember... parallel, NOT series!!! Solder the
- parallel combination to the C-714 pads under the board. Try to push the
- leads right into the holes left by the removal of the old capacitor.
-
- R-221 should also be replaced from the bottom side of the board unless
- you're really patient, and have some small tools. It's much easier to
- just trim the leads and tack solder it in place under the board. If the
- board looks a bit burned in this area, you may want to clean it up a bit
- prior to installing the new resistor.
-
- Finally, don't forget to put the proper fuse values back into BOTH
- locations. The original fuse values are important protection and do not
- normally blow unless there is a real problem. I definitely do not
- recommend leaving the larger fuses values in place. Do a bench check on
- the ST again, still with the cover off. You may need to re-adjust the
- horizontal width, or the position tabs on the neck of the picture tube
- to center and set up the display. Once this is done, you can put the
- cover back on, and you're back in business. If the fix does NOT help,
- just double check your soldering and connections to make sure you didn't
- wire something wrong.
-
- Hope this fix was helpful. If so, I'd like you to drop me an EMAIL,
- since I'm curious as to just how many fried monitors out there had this
- problem. Also, if you're not able to make the repairs yourself and live
- anywhere in Islip, Long Island, NY area, send me E.Mail and maybe I can
- help you out. My GE mail address is R.CONSTAN, or Internet:
- rconstan@maestro.com.
-
-
-
-
- ###### DIGITAL PUBLISHING ASSOCIATION NEWS
- ###### Volume 3, Number 1, January, 1994
- ###### Copyright (C) 1993/1994 Ron Albright
- ###### ---------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
- If you have an IBM or compatible computer be sure to obtain the
- electronic edition of this newsletter. Look for DPA-22.EXE and
- DPAC-22.EXE
-
- On to a NEW YEAR!.......
-
- Now that the Quill Awards are behind us, it is time to start thinking
- about the new year and what our activities should be for the coming
- twelve months. We would like to be the first to formally declare 1994
- as "The Year of the Electronic Publisher." It should be an exciting 12
- months as we all concentrate on bringing the wonderful world of
- electronic publishing to not just the computer world, but the reading
- world at large. Certainly, enough has been done to set the stage for
- the "big push" and now is the time. We ask each and every member of the
- DPA to give a great deal of thought to what they can do, individually,
- and the DPA can do as whole to make this public education blitz a
- successful one.
-
- We are asking for feedback from everyone. Members and non-members,
- alike, all interested in the electronic publishing industry. It is time
- we took the next step in putting our industry in front of the public.
-
- We need your help. It cannot be done in a vacuum. What do we do next?
- How best do we proceed? Where should we concentrate our efforts? The
- public libraries? The universities? The bookstores? The computer
- users? Book buyers? We really need your input.
-
- It is also time to hold our annual meeting. How best to do this is also
- open to suggestions. We hope we can do it electronically, either on
- GEnie and/or the DPA BBS (205-854-1660). Over the next few weeks we are
- hoping for some input from you as to (a) how best to pull it off and (b)
- what the agenda should include. Clearly, it is time to elect new
- officers. If you haven't gotten the point as yet, let usclarify: We
- NEED YOUR HELP! Write us, call us, send us electronic mail. Anything.
- Just let us know where we go from here and what we should do to make the
- next year a pivotal one for the DPA and the digital publishing industry
- as a whole. We await your input. We know you will come through.
-
- CD-ROM "How To" from John Galuszka....
-
- John Galuszka (Serendipity Systems, P.O. Box 140, San Simeon, CA 93452;
- publisher of numerous on-disk books and the popular "Electronic
- Publishing Forum" newsletter) has taken the time to put together a
- superb resource guide on how to self-publish on CD-ROM ("compact disk -
- read-only memory"). It is included in a special supplement at the end
- of this newsletter issue and can also be found on the DPA BBS and
- GEnie's "Digital Publishing" RoundTable. John, a "founding member" of
- the DPA and long-time digital publishing advocate and practitioner, has
- gone to great length and effort to produce the definitive short guide to
- producing your own CD-ROM publication. If you have any interest in
- expanding your computer-readable publishing efforts to CD-ROM, this is
- must reading. We thank John for taking the time to research and write
- this wonderful resource guide. Included in the guide is a proposal for
- several digital publishers to cooperatively produce a CD-ROM disk. We
- suggest all read this and see if your publishing efforts would fit into
- a cooperative publishing effort as John proposes.
-
- The Annenberg Grant . . . A boon for Digital Publishers?
-
- On December 17, billionaire publisher Walter Annenberg announced a $500
- million donation to foster school reform and inspire action and
- philanthropy in public education. Annenberg's was the largest single
- gift ever made to public education. The $500 million donation will be
- awarded over five years, and Annenberg said he hoped it would inspire
- others to take action and support public education.
-
- Educators on the federal and state levels and at private educational
- institutions plan to use the money to take advantage of the achievements
- in model schools and spread those successes to districts around the
- country. They also hope to use some of the money for retraining
- teachers.
-
- Annenberg, the only son of a Jewish immigrant, made his fortune selling
- horse racing results to bookies and mobsters and went to prison in
- disgrace. He accumulated most of his fortune from TV Guide as well as
- other magazines and newspapers.
-
- The most exciting thing about the Annenberg grant is his vision of
- establishing a network of computer capabilities for all schools - rural,
- inner-city, poor, etc. - to somehow be linked together by computer so
- that all schools have equal access to literature and books. It seems to
- imply, at least to us, that electronic publishing will play a major role
- in getting education materials of all types into computer-readable
- format.
-
- We should all give some thought to what Annenberg's money should mean to
- us, as digital publishers, and how we can best present our cause to
- those in charge of establishing the access to publications for the
- schools involved. Digital publishing is the key to getting school
- systems, regardless of budget, on equal footing when it comes to access
- to books and literature. Somehow, We firmly believe we can play a part
- in Annenberg's vision of cheap, easy access to books for all schools.
- Think long and hard, dear reader, and let us know where you think we
- might fit in.
-
- The Health Act on CD-ROM
-
- According to Jacqueline Emigh writing for "Newsbytes," the widely-read
- daily computer industry electronic newsletter, Allegro New Media has
- published Bill Clinton's "Health Security Act" on a fully searchable
- multimedia CD-ROM title for Windows priced at $14.95.
-
- According to Emigh, the CD-ROM presents a multi-faceted view of the
- issues involved, including White House commentary, along with
- interpretations of the act by a variety of outside organizations, in
- text and in over two hours of video. Also incorporated are dozens of
- pictures, tables and charts, aimed at illustrating the Health Security
- Act and its implications to consumers and businesses.
-
- The textual materials include all 1342 pages of the Health Security Act,
- plus the President's Report to the American People, the President's
- Transmittal Letter to Congress, and analysis of the proposed legislation
- by the American Bar Association, the US Chamber of Congress, the US
- House of Representatives Republican Conference, Benefit Solutions, the
- Health Insurance Association of America, and more.
-
- The 60 interactive video clips range from President Clinton's Address to
- Congress and Hilary Clinton's Address on Health Care to interviews with
- external industry experts.
-
- Officials noted that the White House was quite cooperative with the
- CD-ROM project, providing extensive materials.
-
- For more information, you can contact Barry Cinnamon, Allegro New
- Media, at 800-424-1992.
-
- Winding Down ...
-
- That's it for this month. Now that the holidays are over, it's time to
- get back to business of making digital publishing a household word.
- Just as we are ready to proclaim 1994 "The Year of the Digital
- Publication," We also ask for your help in guiding the DPA during this
- coming year. We will go nowhere without your input, ideas, and support.
- We really need your help now, friends. Let's make it happen. It's up
- to you.
-
- Use either of the following three electronic addresses to correspond
- with us at the Digital Publishing Association. You may contact us with
- questions, suggestions, or to obtain information on becoming a member.
-
- CompuServe: 75166,2473
- GEnie: RALBRIGHT
- MCI Mail: 370-7474 (RALBRIGHT)
-
- For you old fashioned types, here's a traditional "paper" mailing
- address:
-
- Digital Publishing Association
- 1160 Huffman Road
- Birmingham, AL 35215
-
- DPA News is sponsored by the Digital Publishing Association. It
- features news, product developments, and information of interest to
- authors, distributors, and readers of electronic publications. Items
- presented here serve to inform the public of the electronic publishing
- industry which covers authorship and publication of reading materials in
- electronic format. Find back issues on DPA BBS at 205-854-1660.
-
- +--------------+
- | Keep Current |
- | |
- | With DPA! |
- +--------------+
-
-
-
-
-
- ###### TRANSCENDENCE BBS GOES FREEWARE
- ###### Announcement
- ###### ---------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
- I have decided to release Transcendence BBS Version 2 as Freeware.
- There are quite a few reasons as to why I made this decision.
-
- 1) My job.
- 2) The amount of my free time that is being taken up in porting the
- BBS to a new language.
- 3) The amount of work I am putting into overhauling the BBS and so on.
-
- I will no longer be adding new features to version 2 but, will be taking
- suggestions for version 3. Bug fixes will still occur if it is
- something major. I will still be giving support to the current owners
- with answers to questions, helping out with problems, etc. on my BBS and
- on GEnie in the BBS RT. Once version 3 is released, version 2 will no
- longer be supported.
-
- A KEYCODE.DAT file will no longer be required in order to have the FULL
- working version.
-
- Due to version 2 becoming Freeware and the amount of changes that will
- take place in version 3, there will be no manual released for version 2.
-
- All currently regestered owners of version 2 will be able to upgrade to
- version 3 for a small fee. The upgrade fee and release date for version
- 3 has not been decided at this moment.
-
- If you have purchased the BBS since Jan. 1, 1994 and you would like to
- have your money back, then please send email to Sysop on my BBS. My BBS
- number is located on the WaitCall screen.
-
- Transcendence may be distributed FREELY. A small fee for materials
- (shareware/PD disk) may be charged.
-
- The new version may be downloaded from my BBS after 11:00pm on Feb. 20,
- 1994. This version will have the code removed that checks for the
- KEYCODE.DAT file. A new version will be uploaded to GEnie in the BBS RT
- Libraries soon.
-
-
-
-
- ###### CONNECT MAGAZINE OFFER
- ###### Press Release
- ###### ---------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
- OK. You've heard about CONNECT, possibly even picked up copies of the
- magazine at your local newsstand, bookstore or computer dealer. Maybe
- you've seen our advertising in books such as the "Whole Earth Online
- Almanac," or you saw the mention of CONNECT in the December 6, 1993
- issue of U.S. News & World Report. Or maybe you've just heard about the
- magazine from talk on the commercial online services, or seen the
- CONNECT Online BBS Edition door on a local BBS.
-
- But, you still haven't subscribed. As a BBS sysop, perhaps you've just
- been too busy keeping your system in peak shape to send in that $18.
- And maybe you've also been thinking about advertising your BBS via
- CONNECT's International BBS Listing (at $12/year) or Service Ads (at
- $25 per ad).
-
- Well, we're making you an offer that'll save you money *AND* give your
- BBS some added international exposure.
-
- Under this special introductory CONNECT subscription offer, you get,
- absolutely FREE, a one-year listing in the International BBS Listing!
- We're also throwing in a two-issue run of a Service Ad...again,
- absolutely FREE. At the normal individual Service Ad and BBS Listing
- rates, that's a total value of $62!
-
- About now, you're probably thinking we're totally crazy. In a second,
- you're going to be sure we are...because we're also discounting the
- normal subscription rate for CONNECT! Instead of the normal $18
- subscription rate for U.S. addressees, you'll pay just $15. That's a
- savings of almost 20 percent off the normal rate, and a savings of over
- 40 percent off the newsstand price!
-
- Each issue sent to you will contain the in-depth, unbiased coverage of
- the commercial online services, Internet and bulletin board systems and
- networks you've come to expect from CONNECT. Your BBS will appear in
- CONNECT's International BBS Listing for a year, *AND* your system will
- be highlighted in a Service Ad for two consecutive issues...all for *NO
- ADDITIONAL CHARGE.*
-
- If you're not in the U.S., don't worry. We're offering the same kind of
- deal for Canadian and foreign sysop subscribers, too!
-
- Here's all it takes to qualify for this special introductory offer:
-
- 1) You must be a sysop of a currently up-and-running BBS, with plans to
- continue running the BBS for the next year.
-
- 2) You must be a new CONNECT subscriber. This offer is not available to
- current subscribers and, therefore, cannot be used to "renew" a
- CONNECT subscription.
-
- That's all! Just fill out the form and e-mail, fax or snail mail it
- back to us with payment. (Checks must be sent via normal mail,
- obviously. Checks also must be made out in U.S. funds and must be drawn
- on a U.S. bank.)
-
- Send your orders to:
-
- Pegasus Press
- CONNECT Subscription Dept.
- 3487 Braeburn Circle
- Ann Arbor, MI 48108-2619
- (313) 973-8825 Info
- (313) 973-0411 Fax
- (313) 973-9137 BBS (v.32bis, 14.4K bps)
-
- If you wish to help us save some trees, please fill out the form below
- in your favorite text editor and e-mail it back to us at one of these
- online addresses:
-
- America Online CONNECT
- CompuServe 70007,4640
- GEnie CONNECT.MAG
- Delphi CONNECTNM9
- Internet pegasus@cyberspace.org
-
- CONNECT Sysop Special Subscription Form
- ---------------------------------------
-
- [ ] Yes, sign me up for a year of CONNECT (6 issues) at $15. Send my
- issues to the U.S. address listed below. I'm a sysop of a currently
- available BBS and plan to continue running the system for the
- next year.
-
- [ ] I don't have a U.S. address, but I am a sysop of a currently up-and
- running BBS and plan to keep the system running for the next year.
- Sign me up for CONNECT at the rate below:
-
- [ ] $27 Canada/Mexico (surface)
- [ ] $33 Foreign (surface)
- [ ] $51 Foreign (air mail)
-
- Name: _____________________________________________
-
- Address: __________________________________________
-
- City/State: _______________________________________
-
- ZIP: ________ - _____ Country: ___________________
-
- Voice Phone #: (______) ________ - ____________
-
- [ ] Please charge my credit card
-
- [ ] VISA [ ] MasterCard [ ] American Express
-
- Card #: _______________________________ Exp. Date: ___________
-
- Signature: _____________________________________________________
-
-
- =======================
- BBS Listing Information
- =======================
-
- Sysop Name/Handle: ____________________________________________________
-
- BBS Name: |________________________| Phone #: 1: |___-___-____|
- (24 chars) (12 chars) or
- 2: |____________|
- System
- Description: |_______________________________________________________|
- (55 chars)
-
- Max. Baud: |____________| Systems Supported: |__________________|
- (12 chars) (18 chars)
-
- Software In Use: |__________________|
- (18 chars)
-
-
- ======================
- Service Ad Information
- ======================
-
- Type in up to 280 characters describing your BBS. Be sure to include
- the BBS name and phone number at the start of the Ad text.
-
- |______________________________________________________________________|
- 70
-
- |______________________________________________________________________|
- 140
-
- |______________________________________________________________________|
- 210
-
- |______________________________________________________________________|
- 280
-
-
-
-
- ###### THE MUSIC OF THE BYTES
- ###### By Jeff White
- ###### Reprint by Permission
- ###### ---------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
- The Following Article is Reprinted by Permission of ATARIUSER MAGAZINE.
- It is an original article first printed in the October 1993 issue,
- Copyright Jeff White and AtariUser. Further reprinting is PROHIBITED
- except by specific permission of AtariUser, 249 North Brand Boulevard,
- Glendale CA 91203, phone 818-249-6277. A Special Mini-Subscription to
- AtariUser is available for a limited time for just $5 for 3 issues.
- Contact AtariUser for Details.
-
-
- --------
-
- Atari has long touted the multimedia potential of their newest computer
- - the Falcon030. Now that it's here, just how well does it live up to
- the expectations created by many months of marketing hype? Let's
- explore the AUDIO promise and yield of...
-
- The Music of the Bytes
- The Atari Falcon030 and the future of Audio
- by Jeff White
-
-
- Given that computers have been beeping and blurping in one form or
- another for about as long as they have been around, one wouldn't think
- that producing sound from within the computer should be that big a deal.
- Indeed, in the last several years it has become chic to do quite
- exceptional audio manipulation with a variety of add-on products that
- fit into other popular platforms, of course at some additional expense.
-
- However, the Atari Falcon030 is the first computer on the market to not
- only incorporate all the standard "extras" we have come to expect on
- Atari computers, but to also include 16-bit digital audio input and
- output capability as well. But wait, that's not all. Not content with
- just offering stereo input and out- put of digital audio, Atari elected
- to be generous in their development process and make provision for
- handling up to eight digital audio channels, (yes, all stereo at 16-bit
- CD-quality resolution). Now how much would you pay? Well, don't answer
- yet.... They even include a special signal processor that's dedicated
- to doing, well, nothing at all! Enough dramatics - let's get on with
- it.
-
- Enter the Falcon
-
- Atari thought it would be nice if, besides handling up to eight channels
- of audio, we were able to treat that audio with some additional
- processing, courtesy of that undedicated processor - the Motorola DSP
- 56001. A common myth that has been circulating about this system is
- that this processor is the main engine behind doing digital audio on the
- Falcon. This is understandable, since the majority of add-on boards on
- other machines do it that way.
-
- One factor in propagating this misunderstanding is the fact that other
- platforms, by and large, employ a SCSI controller that impedes the flow
- of data. That, in turn, requires the use of faster peripherals to
- compensate. In other words, you pay for faster peripherals to run on a
- slower computer.
-
- Such is not the case with the Falcon030. Audio data is handled on the
- SCSI/DMA bus. It's permitted to enter and leave the system in analog
- form via the stereo mini-jacks conveniently located between the SCSI
- port and, interestingly enough, the DSP port. Think about it; the hard
- drive is where digital audio information is stored to and retrieved
- from, and the DSP port does not have to be connected in any way to this
- data path. This frees up many speed issues that cramp other computers.
- The Falcon's internal hard drive is quite slow by most standards,
- benchmarking in at 63 milliseconds access time. A removable 44 meg hard
- drive tests out at around 57 milliseconds. That's way too slow for most
- systems on the market, with a typical recommendation lying somewhere
- under 28 milliseconds access time. But on the Falcon, it's plenty fast.
- And we still haven't used the DSP...
-
- Now if some clever developers choose to avail themselves of the DSP's
- existence, they can allow us to enhance the audio signal already passing
- through those mini-jacks with, what else, a digital signal. This can
- take the form of an effect such as delay, chorus, flange, reverb,
- harmonization, even MIXING!
-
- Software Meets Hardware
-
- The most practical way to discuss the characteristics and possibilities
- of audio work on the Falcon is to examine one of the first serious
- multitrack applications to reach the market - D2D Systems 4T/FX. While
- this may read like a review for D2D (and that's OK!), consider it to
- also be a primer of what one developer has done in software using just
- what comes in every stock Falcon030.
-
- As the name (cryptically) implies, D2D 4T/FX it is a four track system
- with effects. You can use it to record audio into the Falcon one or two
- tracks, (channels) at a time and playback up to four at one time -
- without any additional hardware! And just like some of its mechanical
- analog counterparts (tape decks and mix consoles), it includes a
- utilitarian mixer as its main control device.
-
- Each of the four channels is supported with:
-
- * Stereo "effects send";
- * Master output level controls;
- * Channel mute and solo buttons;
- * Record "arm" and playback select buttons.
- * Stereo effects return, with level controls.
-
- Use It!
-
- So where do you send those signals to and return them from - your
- (stock) Falcon hardware has only got two discreet channels in and out!
- Use the built in effects processor, of course, that's why they call it
- "/FX." Included are an array of useful effects like the aforementioned
- delay, flange, chorus, and a bunch of reverbs. Except for the reverbs,
- all of the effects have adjustable parameters to allow you to tailor the
- sound to your personal taste. In the case of the reverbs, D2D gives you
- a variety of preset room sizes with a variable gain control to allow you
- to determine how "wet" or processed the signal(s) will be.
-
- Where this really starts getting interesting is when you realize that
- the effects are all "real-time." It's possible to record a track with
- the effects processor engaged (for your monitoring pleasure or preview)
- and not alter the recording audio with that effect. That's very useful
- if the "take" was right, but the effect needs adjustment - just do it
- afterward. Any of the parameters can be changed, and you can even
- change a delay into a reverb or a flange, or back again. Using multiple
- effects simultaneously is simply a matter of "bouncing" a track with the
- effect set the way you like, then changing the effect on playback. This
- way, you can have a chorused vocal take, a flanged acoustic guitar, a
- delayed flute, and a ring-modulated saxophone all playing back through a
- large room size reverb. Since the bouncing is taking place in the
- digital domain, there is no signal degradation due to tape generation
- loss. Like most digital audio recorder systems coming to market today,
- there's a striking resemblance of the D2D 4T/FX screen to an analog
- four-track tape deck for an easy learning curve.
-
- The latest release of D2D (1.9) includes individual time code displays
- for each track as well as the main display to allow for independent
- track offset or delays. But wait, there's STILL more! Synchronization
- to external sources can be performed several ways, making this package
- extremely flexible.
-
- Make Mine MIDI
-
- Incoming MIDI Time Code (MTC) from an external source can be connected
- to the Falcon's MIDI in port. MTC can also be recognized from a
- sequencer program, running on the Falcon AT THE SAME TIME! In this
- situation, one merely loads 4T/FX as a desk accessory rather than a
- program, and enables MTC output from the sequencer. While this method
- works very well, the best way to have the audio record and playback in
- time with your MIDI music is to use a note-on event as a trigger.
- Simply by placing a note-on on an unused track and MIDI channel, it's
- possible to automatically punch in and out for record. Then when you
- play back your sequence, the exact same note-on in the exact same place
- plays back your digitally recorded audio. Need to nudge that audio
- forward or back - just ed- it/move that trigger note one way or another.
- Given that time code offers a maximum of 30 frames per second
- resolution, it's clear that a sequencer's ability to sub-divide time
- events far more precisely would make it a better choice for placing
- events accurately.
-
- Deepest Cuts
-
- Recording, playing, mixing, effecting, bouncing, slipping, synching -
- not much else left, other than...editing. This is the part that all the
- audio production fanatics with razor blades and golden ears have been
- waiting for. Digital editing is cleaner, clearer, quieter, stronger,
- and best of all, doesn't alter the original recording at all.
-
- The main premise to remember in digital audio is that the vast majority
- of the functions are non-destructive. Your edits are recorded as tasks
- to be done in real-time to the untouched source audio when you want your
- composition played back. They don't consume unnecessary hard disk
- space in the process.
-
- While our example program, 4T/FX, provides absolutely no way to edit the
- recordings that you have created with it, you can perform some rather
- extensive editing in another D2D Systems creation called D2D Edit. It's
- a complete stereo record/playback/edit environment that provides
- waveform display editing and cue sheet playback.
-
- Files can either be recorded directly into D2D Edit via the analog
- inputs on the Falcon030, or transferred from already recorded takes in
- 4T/FX. Once a file is loaded into D2D Edit, it's displayed in a window
- as the complete waveform associated with that file. The GEM window can
- be resized and you can open several files at once.
-
- 4T/FX and D2D Edit are some of the first programs to take advantage of
- the Atari Falcon030's DSP audio capabilities. As such, they represent
- a significant advance to the home project studio process by making
- functions that were previously the domain only of high-end studios
- available on an affordable platform.
-
- D2D Edit is available for $299.00 and 4T/FX for $599.00. For a limited
- time, D2D Systems are bundling D2D Edit with 4T/FX at no additional
- charge as an introductory incentive. The potential here is staggering -
- a complete audio studio system with the Falcon computer, software, and
- peripherals costs less than either the "other" computer itself or the
- soft/hardware add-ons required for that other platform.
-
- WOW!
-
- Again, while we've concentrated here on D2D products, they're just part
- of the vanguard of audio software and hardware that make the most of the
- remarkable Falcon030. And audio is just one part of the multimedia
- potential of the new Atari.
-
- It's going to get REAL INTERESTING around here.
-
- -Jeff White
-
- Jeff White is a manufacturer's representative of professional audio
- equipment in the Southern California area. He currently consults
- privately on MIDI and digital audio systems. His credentials include
- store management as well as a degree in quality assurance.
-
-
-
-
- ###### LEXICOR UPDATE
- ###### Press Release
- ###### ---------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
- *%*%*%*%*%*%*%*%*%*%*%*%*%*%*%*%*%*%*%*%*%*%*%*%*%*
- * PHOENIX U.S.A. - XENOMORPH Update (Version 2.0) *
- *%*%*%*%*%*%*%*%*%*%*%*%*%*%*%*%*%*%*%*%*%*%*%*%*%*
-
- LEXICOR SOFTWARE is proud to announce the release of PHOENIX 2.0 in the
- U.S.A. The following pricing structure is U.S.A. only, European Prices
- and Distribution at your closest Lexicor Dealer.
-
- *****************************************************************************
- For European Sales you may contact: * For North American Sales contact:
- =================================== * =================================
- email: europasales@lexicor.com * email: usasales@lexicor.com
- *
- LEXICOR EUROPE * LEXICOR SOFTWARE CORPORATION
- 36 Queensberry Street, Suite 6 * 1726 Francisco Street
- Boston, MA 02215 * Berkeley, CA 94703
- Tel: (617) 437 0414 Fax: (617 437 9413 * Tel: (510) 848 72 -21 / Fax: -13
- ******************************************************************************
-
- Pricing Structure is as follows (these Prices are valid for North
- America, European prices vary from Country to Country!)
-
- PHOENIX 1.0 Upgrade Policy, return the original disk and payment of
- 49.95 U$D and you will receive your PHOENIX 2.0, PHOENIX 1.0 will be
- known as entry level PHOENIX and be still available for 69.95.
-
- PHOENIX 2.0 Standard Price will be only 89.95! All Prices do not
- include, tax, shipping and handling costs.
-
- =================================================
- = Now to some inside information on Phoenix 2.0 =
- =================================================
-
- NEW GEM BASED INTERFACE and MULTITOS Support
- ============================================
-
- Runs Completely under MultiTOS (tm) and supports it completely i.e. you
- can Render your images in the background! so now rendering your images
- will not tie up your computer completely.
-
- NEW TOOLBOX INTERFACE
- =====================
-
- Options to render in
- Polygon
- Gouraud
- Phong
- Phong/Shadows
-
- You can now also preview in the resolution of your choice, when
- Rendering Phoenix will open up a window of the rendered image and a
- status bar.
-
- New Palette options, next to best and fixed, you can now render with the
- Palette of your choice in the option custom designed palette! This is a
- very important new feature that is extremely useful for 8bit animations
- and fast playback!
-
- NEW ENHANCED OBJECT WINDOW
- ==========================
-
- Shadows, No Shadows, Caustic Shadows
-
- This New set of features will allow you to turn off the Shadows for
- individual objects, this would decrease rendering times for objects that
- may never need to cast shadows. Caustic Shadows will simulate the
- caustic focusing of lights due to refraction, works best with partially
- transparent objects.
-
- As well as.....
-
- the usual powerful functions such as specular refraction, break points,
- individual glow factors for objects and object transparency and a new
- Surface Texture and enhanced Color Texture Menu!
-
- New improved Textures
- =====================
-
- Alongside the old wood grain, marble and image mapping many new texture
- as well as bump mappings have been now included!
-
- Surface Textures
- ================
-
- - Ripples creates a rippled water appearance with small somewhat random
- ripples
- - Waves creates ocean type waves
- - Bump Mapping produces a bumpy surface
- - Eroded very similar to bumps, a small variation of it
- - Image Mapping will allow you to use an image (SPC, GIF, TGA) to
- pertubate the surface.
-
- Additionally you can control the animation factor to every respective
- Surface Texture for example in Waves or Ripple produce an animation
- cycle of any frames per cycle of your choice! Create realistic moving
- waves and ripples!
-
- Color Spline Textures
- =====================
-
- This is the new texture mapping in Xenomorph that allows you to have a
- lot more control over the individual texture rather than the old
- textures. You can specify the texturing method, describe the color
- spline, sequence of colors thus adding various texture layers over each
- other. It is nearly like a user defined texture mapper with Bozo,
- Gradient, Agate, Granite, Marble, Wood type layers per texture layer.
-
- Color Spline has to many features to go in detail about them, check out
- our 24bit Color Texture Images (TEXTURES.TGA) to see just some of the
- power of this new option. On the disk there are over 100 new textures
- and texture layers available to the user. A Texture list at the end of
- this message.
-
- NEW RENDERING OPTIONS
- =====================
-
- - Fog Create your own fog effects of your rendered images.
- - Background Color, select the color to render in the background of your
- choice
- - Background Image, select the image of your choice to render in the
- background
-
- COLORED LIGHTS
- ==============
-
- Now Xenomorph can light an image with a user-specific light so you can
- produce a red-light spotlight, mix it with other lights of different
- colors to produce some amazing and interesting effects.
-
- TEXTURE MOTION CONTROL and MORPHING LOCK
- ========================================
-
- Control your textures in animation so your texture will flow with your
- animation as if it is a real part to a moving object! With the new
- morphin lock function this can be now be done with morphing animations
- done with Chronos and combined with ANM-Link the missing link to render
- CHRONOS animations with the power of the Phoenix Rendering Engine!
-
- Standard Features of Phoenix
- ============================
-
- o Render Objects with smooth shading, no more polygon edges!
- o Objects will render with highlights
- o Objects may be textured with wood grain, marble, or wrap and image
- around the object
- o Each Object may have it's own color palette
- o Number of Objects is limited only by memory
- o 4 different light source type, up to 21 lights in a scene.
- o 3 different camera types. Maneuver the camera anywhere in a scene.
- o Graphical object, light and camera positioning editor.
- o View and save rendered images as 512 color Spectrum SPC files, 2 to
- 256 color GIF files, or true color (24bit) Targa files at any
- resolution.
- o Simple animation capabilities, or render CTL script animations (Cyber
- Control v.1.1 required for CTL animations) or use the new ANM-LINK
- (relativity) to render Chronos Key-frame animations with morphs and
- cycles.
- o Several tutorial and sample objects included
- o Runs in any 80 column color or monochrome resolution
- o Full math co-processor support
- o Plus much much more!
-
- There is a lot more to the new Phoenix, especially the new powerful
- Color Spline to give you close to absolute texture control. Lexicor
- Software will soon come with a special disk of over hundreds of new
- textures for use in Phoenix, but here a small list of the Textures
- available straight away in the Phoenix 2.0 disk.
-
- - Wood
- User definable with grain color and width, Object Texture Ratio, view
-
- - Marble
- User definable with color bands, turbulence, base color, grain, view,
- Object Texture Ratio and more
-
- - Image Mapping
- Load SPC, TGA or GIF to map in S map (Plane, Cube, Cylinder or Sphere),
- O Map (Reflection, Obj Normal, Obj Center, S Map Norm), Tiling (single
- or tiled, morph lock, view control, turbulence and Mask (no mask,
- foreground or opaque mask) on the object of your choice with your own
- created image.
-
- Brand new Textures that come with Phoenix 2.0 (and only useable in
- Phoenix 2.0) can be altered in the Color Spline Texture Control, also
- only individual layers of that Texture can be saved, loaded and/or
- manipulated.
-
- WOOD Types: STONE Types: SKY Types: MISC Types:
- =========== ============ ========== ===========
- Cherry Wood Agate Blue Apocalypse Brass
- Dark Wood Agate Brown Clouds Candy
- Pine Wood Agate Sapphire Sky Blue1 Cork
- Rose Wood Gradient Pink Sky Blue2 Fire/Flame
- Sandy Wood Jade Sky Blue3 Peel
- Tanned Wood Marble Blood Sky Bright Rust
- Toned Wood Marble Red Sky Blood Iron Rust
- White Wood Marble White
- Yellow Wood Pink Lab
- and 7 more and 24 more Stone
- Wood types types! that have each their own indiv. characteristic!
-
- * Texture Layers not included on the list, only complete named Textures
- * All in all 125 Textures are included on the Phoenix 2.0 disk for the
- User
-
- And LEXICOR will be releasing texture disks loaded only with brand new
- textures such as Popcorn that will look like real popcorn when rendered!
- Absolutely amazing!
-
- The true strength of Phoenix lies in its ease of use, and this ease of
- use has been thankfully preserved in Phoenix 2.0, don't be baffled by
- the wealth of new Textures and the incredible new functions, it will
- only take a very short while to master it.
-
-
-
-
-
- ###### CONTACTING Z*NET
- ###### Responses and Inquiry!
- ###### ---------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
- You can reach us any number of ways!
-
-
- GEnie
- Z-NET
- M475;1 CAT 15 TOPIC 3
-
-
- COMPUSERVE EMAIL
- 75300,1642
-
-
- Z*NET NEWS SERVICE BBS
- (908) 968-8148
- 1200/2400/14.4
-
-
- POSTAL MAIL
- Z*Net
- PO Box 59
- Middlesex, NJ 08846
-
-
- VOICE MAIL
- (908) 968-2024
-
-
- AMERICA ONLINE
- ZNET1991
-
-
- DELPHI
- ZNET
-
-
-
- ###### JAGUAR GAMES AND MORE
- ###### From CompuServe ORIGINALLY POSTED 7th Feb, 1994. CIS MSG# 34370
- ###### ---------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
- This post sounded interesting so I brought it here. What I like about
- this list is the fact that it puts the games in monthly slots. *EVEN*
- though it lists AvP for February, which has been reported here to be in
- April. (lots of circumstances could've attributed to this) At least I
- can get excited again, and anticipate the forthcoming games.
-
- Now, don't everybody jump up and down at Atari when end of Feb comes
- along and the listed games are not available... There is only 24 hours
- a day still <g>. Can you imagine if Atari announced the Jaguar in
- Christmas '92? Everyone would then be beating down Atari's door and
- critcize Atari if the deadlines are not met. What I'm trying to say is,
- all these dates are *BONUS*s. Lets get excited when they are sitting
- comfortably in our Jags!!!
-
- thznx
-
-
- Path:
- wabbit.cc.uow.edu.au!metro!munnari.oz.au!hpg30a.csc.cuhk.hk!saimiri.
- primate.wisc.edu!sdd.hp.com!cs.utexas.edu!howland.reston.ans.net!pipex!
- uknet!ukc!merlin.ukc.ac.uk!nj1
-
- From: nj1@ukc.ac.uk (N.Jones-Rodway)
- Newsgroups: rec.games.video.atari
-
- Subject: Jaguar Games List.......
- Date: Thu, 03 Feb 94 19:17:15 GMT
- Organization: University of Kent at Canterbury, UK.
-
- I got a copy of ST Format through the door this morning (UK Mag) and it
- has a list of Jaguar games in the works.....
-
- Quite a lot of 'em.......
-
- Thought you all may be interested. The list is as follows:
-
- Available Now
- Cybermorph ATD
- Crescent Galaxy Atari
- Evolution Dino Dudes Imagitec (Atari)
- Raiden Imagitec (Atari)
-
- February '94
- ------------
- Alien vs Predator Rebellion (Atari)
- Chequered Flag 2 Rebellion (Atari)
- Club Drive Atari
- Tempest 2000 Jeff Minter (Atari)
- Tiny Toon Adventures Atari
-
- March '94
- ---------
- Kasumi Ninja Handmade Software
-
- April '94
- ---------
- Battle Wheels Beyond Games
- Casino Royale Telegames
- Jukebox All Systems Go
- Kick Off 2/World Cup Anco
- Zozziorx Retour 2048
-
- May '94
- -------
- Double Dragon Tradewest
- Mechtiles Beyond Games
-
- June '94
- --------
- Battle Chess Interplay
- Brutal Football Millenium/Telegames
- Indiana Jags Retour 2048
- Mortal Kombat Iguana
-
- July '94
- --------
- Doom ID Software
- Flashback US Gold
-
- August '94
- ----------
- Another World Interplay
- Soccer Kid Krisalis
-
- September '94
- -------------
- Arena Football V-Real
- Navy Commando Microids
- Pinball Fantasies 21st Century
-
- October '94
- -----------
- Horrorscope V-Real
- Jimmy Connors' Pro Tennis UBI Soft
- Power Slide Elite
- Zool 2 Gremlin Graphics
-
- December '94
- ------------
- Gunship 2000 Microprose
-
- Sometime.... (No Release Dates For These Title)
-
- Aero The Acrobat Sunsoft
- Al Michaels' Hard Ball Accolade
- Alone In The Dark (CD) Infogrames
- Batman (The Comic) Atari
- Battlemorph (Cybermorph 2) ATD
- Battlewheels
- Battlezone 2000 Atari
- Blue Lightning ATD
- Brett Hull Hockey Accolade
- Bubsy Accolade
- Car Wars Midnite Software (sic)
- Charles Barkley Baseball Accolade
- Commando Microids
- Dracula The Undead (CD)
- Dungeon Rebellion
- Dungeon Depths Midnite Software
- European Soccer Challenge Telegames
- Evidence (CD) Microids
- Hosenose and Booger All Systems Go
- Jack Nicklaus Golf Accolade
- Return to Zork Activision
- Robinson's Requiem Simarils
- Space Pirates (CD) Atari
- Star Trek: The Next Generation Spectrum Holobyte
- Ultimate Brain Games Telegames
- Ultra Vortex
-
- There was also a list of 13 new develpors for the Jag (although these
- are ONLY rumoured to have signed up).....
-
- 3D Games Epic Megagames Origin
- All Systems Go Handmade Software Phalanx Software
- Domark ICD Inc. Photosurrealism
- DTMC Infogrames V-Real Productions
- LucasArts
-
- Although some of these appear in the Release Date List.......
-
- Just thought you may like to know, anyhow.... and please, don't quote
- me on this - I just read it in ST Format - God knows if it's correct!!!
-
- All the Best,
- Rodders.
-
-
-
-
- ###### HARD DRIVE TECH SUPPORT
- ###### Captured from GEnie ST RT
- ###### ---------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
- HARD DRIVES TECH Support
-
- Conner 408 433-3340
- 800 4-CONNER
-
- DEC 508 493-5111
- Fujitsu 800 826-6112
- Hewlett-Packard 800 752-0900
- Hitachi 408 773-8833
-
- Maxtor 800 262-9867
- 408 432-5333
-
- Micropolis 800 709-3325
-
- Quantum 408 894-4000
- 900 740-4433
-
- Seagate 800 468-3472
- 408 438-8222
-
- Toshiba 800 334-3445
- Western Digital 800 832-4778
-
- REMOVABLES
-
- Syquest 510 226-4000
-
-
-
- ###### LYNX FAQ
- ###### Created by Darius Vaskelis
- ###### File Maintained by Robert Jung
- ###### From the Internet
- ###### ---------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
- This file is not maintained by, overseen by, endorsed, or otherwise
- associated with Atari Corp. or any of its subsidiaries. It's just a
- collection of questions and answers, with a few news tidbits thrown in.
-
- This file is posted on a monthly basis, usually around the first of the
- month. It is maintained by Robert Jung at rjung@netcom.com on the
- Internet. Send corrections, news, updates, comments, questions, or
- other stuff to that address. All mail is welcome!
-
- Updates since the last publically posted FAQ have a vertical bar in the
- first column.
-
-
- Q. What is the Atari Lynx?
-
- A. The world's first hand-held color video game system. Sold by Atari,
- the Lynx offers true multi-player competition, built-in 3D and
- distortion graphic effects, reversible controls, and fast arcade action
- for under $100.
-
-
- Q. What's the relationship between the Atari Lynx and Epyx?
-
- A. The Lynx was originally conceived by Epyx in 1987. It was called the
- "Handy" at that time. Two creators of the system, Dave Needle and R.J.
- Mical, were also members of the Amiga design team. Atari bought the
- rights, and the rest is history.
-
- Due to a recent lawsuit settlement between Epyx and Atari, Epyx no
- longer has any connection whatsoever with the Lynx. Atari was required
- to pay a lump sum to offset back royalties owed, cover damages from
- breach of contract, and an additional amount to buy off Epyx royalty
- rights.
-
-
- Q. What are the specifications of the Lynx?
-
- A. Physical dimensions:
-
- Size: 9.25" x 4.25" x 2" (10.75" x 4.25" x 1.5" for original Lynx)
- Screen: 3.5" diagonal (3.25" x 1.88" approx.)
- Speaker: 2" diameter
- Buttons: Two sets of fire buttons (A and B)
- Two option buttons (OPTION 1 and OPTION 2)
- Pause button
- (OPTION 1 + Pause = Restarts the game
- OPTION 2 + Pause = Flips the screen, which allows the Lynx
- controls to be reversed)
- Power on light (Not on original Lynx; indicates unit is on)
- Power on button
- Power off button
- Backlight button (Not on original Lynx; turns off the screen, but does
- not turn off the game. This saves electricity use when a game is
- paused)
- Joypad: Eight directional
- Controls: Volume
- Brightness
- Ports: Headphones (mini-DIN 3.5mm stereo; wired for mono on the original
- Lynx)
- ComLynx (multiple unit communications)
- Power (9V DC, 1 A)
- Game card slot
- Battery holder (six AA)
-
- For the technically minded, the Lynx has two basic chips that form a
- cooperative set of co-processing subsystems that maximize the Lynx's
- performance by sharing the work of executing a game program. These
- chips are called Mikey and Suzy.
-
- Mikey (16-bit custom CMOS chip running at 16MHz)
- - MOS 65C02 processor running at up to 4MHz (~3.6MHz average) 8-bit CPU,
- 16-bit address space
- - Sound engine
- 4 channel sound, 8-bit DAC for each channel
- (4 channels x 8-bits/channel = 32 bits commonly quoted)
- Atari reports the range is "100Hz to above the range of human hearing"
- spectrum analysis shows the range may go as low as 32Hz.
- Stereo with panning (mono for original Lynx)
- - Video DMA driver for LCD display
- - System timers
- - Interrupt controller
- - UART (for ComLynx)
- - 512 bytes of bootstrap and game-card loading ROM
-
- Suzy (16-bit custom CMOS chip running at 16MHz)
- - Blitter (bit-map block transfer) unit
- - Graphics engine
- Hardware drawing support
- Unlimited number of high-speed sprites with collision detection
- Hardware high-speed sprite scaling, distortion, and tilting effects
- Hardware decoding of compressed sprite data
- Hardware clipping and multi-directional scrolling
- Variable frame rate (up to 75 frames/second)
- 4096 color (12-bit) palette
- 16 simultaneous colors (4 bits) from palette at one time
- 160 x 102 "triad" standard resolution (16,320 addressable pixels)
- (A triad is three LCD elements: red, green, and blue)
- Capability of 480 x 102 artificially high resolution
- - Math co-processor
- Hardware 16-bit multiply and divide (32-bit answer)
- Parallel processing of single multiply or divide instruction
-
- The Lynx contains 64K (half a megabit) of 120ns DRAM. Game-cards
- currently hold 128K (1 megabit) or 256K (2 megabits) of ROM, but there
- is a capability of up to 1 megabyte (8 megabits) on one game-card. In
- theory, this limit can be exceeded with extra bank-switching hardware in
- the card. The first few hundred bytes of the game card is encrypted to
- prevent unauthorized developers from writing Lynx software. This scheme
- was introduced by Epyx as an effort to enforce game quality.
-
- With alkaline batteries, the reasonable average battery life is 5 hours.
- (4 hours with the original Lynx) The Lynx can run off rechargeable Ni-
- Cad batteries, but average battery life drops drastically to 1.5 hours
- per recharge (1 hour for the original Lynx). Your mileage may vary.
-
-
- Q. What are the differences between the original Lynx ("Lynx Classic")
- and the new Lynx ("Lynx II")?
-
- A. The new Lynx is a bit smaller and lighter than the original Lynx. It
- has a slightly longer battery life, and can also just turn the screen
- off during a game pause to save batteries. (The original Lynx had a
- five minute auto-power shut-off that would have prevented this from
- being useful. It is gone in the new Lynx). A power LED has been added
- (which also blinks when battery power is low), and cartridges are easier
- to insert.
-
- The only differences in a technical sense is that the new Lynx has a
- more efficient internal design, and the headphone jack supports stereo
- sound. The speaker in new Lynx is also not as loud as the original
- Lynx, although it's more than adequate for all but the noisiest
- situations.
-
- Also, the new Lynx can experience what is called "blinking pixel
- syndrome". With certain game cards, one pixel on the screen (usually
- stationary) cycles through all the colors very quickly. It does not
- affect game play, and isn't always noticed unless it's looked for. It
- seems to be fixed in later Lynxes, making it even less of a factor.
-
- The power consumption in the new Lynx is only slightly less than in the
- original Lynx, and is not enough to account for an extra hour of play
- time. The extra hour is claimed by assuming that the user will turn off
- the backlight for some of the running time, which could be counted as
- dead time, not game time.
-
-
- Q. Is the Lynx an 8-bit or 16-bit system?
-
- A. If 16-bit refers to the main CPU, (such as the Sega Genesis/
- MegaDrive) then the Lynx is an 8-bit system. If 16-bit refers to the
- graphics engine, (such as the NEC TurboDuo/PC-Engine) then the Lynx is a
- 16-bit system.
-
-
- Q. Why does the Lynx use a 6502 and not a 68000?
-
- A. "Some people believe it's less of a processor than the 68000, for
- example. That series of chip was used in the Amiga, but it wouldn't
- make our machine do things any better. In fact, it would only make the
- unit larger and more expensive. It's also harder to write 68000 code,
- so we definitely made the right decision." --R.J. Mical
-
- "The real answer for the choice for the 6502 vs. 68000 was price.
- Secondary considerations (that did not really enter into the decision
- making process): 68000 code is very fat compared to 6502 code. An
- application that takes 1K of 6502 code averages 2.5 to 3K of 68000 code.
- The 6502 is very bus-efficient, the 68000 has lots of dead time on the
- bus. As for it being harder to write 68000 code, that is probably not
- true, and in any case was not part of the reason the decision was made."
- --Stephen Landrum
-
-
- Q. What do I get when I buy a Lynx?
-
- A. The Lynx is available in two packages:
-
- The Lynx "Deluxe Package" costs $129.95. It includes the Lynx unit, a
- copy of the CALIFORNIA GAMES game card, a carrying case, a ComLynx cable
- and six AA Alkaline batteries.
-
- The Lynx "Base Package" costs $79.95. It comes with only the Lynx, and
- includes no accessories.
-
-
- Q. What accessories exist for the Lynx?
-
- A. The following products are known to be available:
-
- * ComLynx cable. Connects multiple Lynxes together for multiplayer
- games.
-
- * AC adaptor. Powers the Lynx from any AC wall socket.
-
- * Cigarette lighter adaptor. Powers the Lynx from any automobile
- cigarette lighter. Will support one or two Lynxes simultaneously.
-
- * Atari Lynx Sun Shield. Folds down to protect the Lynx screen, and
- pops open to shade the Lynx screen from sunlight for outdoor play.
- (NOTE: There are two models; you need the one appropriate for your
- Lynx)
-
- * D-cell battery pack. Holds six D-cell batteries, and can be attached
- with a belt clip. Alkaline batteries provides power for up to 20
- hours of playing.
-
- * Atari Lynx carrying pouch. Holds a Lynx, several game cards, and a
- ComLynx cable. Attaches with a wrist strap/belt loop.
-
- * Atari Lynx Kit Case. Holds a Lynx, up to 24 game cards, and assorted
- accessories. Padded interior with Velcro dividers, can be customized.
- Carried with a handle or a shoulder strap.
-
-
- Q. Is there a TV tuner option for the Lynx?
-
- A. No. Atari's official position is that market research shows that a
- TV tuner, while a neat idea, would not be bought by most players. The
- unofficial word from Stephen Landrum is that the Lynx screen display is
- not capable of handling a broadcast television picture.
-
-
- Q. What can I use to carry my Lynx game cards?
-
- A. A cheap and easy solution is the plastic cases used to hold trading
- cards. They're transparent, sturdy, and lock shut when closed. Most
- hobby and comic book stores will sell them; a large case costs $0.50 to
- $1.00, and can hold up to 14 Lynx cards.
-
- Another solution are Lynx card wallets. Sold by Realm, a wallet costs
- $5.95, holds up to 18 cards, padded for protection, and folds flat.
- Write to Joey Sherman at Realm, 10504 Easum Rd., Louisville KY 40299.
- On GEnie, send e-mail to REALM.
-
- For Lynx owners who don't care about brand names, a Gameboy plastic
- cartridge case holds two Lynx cards easily. The cases can be bought
- from Nintendo at 800-255-3700, part number 21648.
-
-
- Q. What does "ComLynx" mean, exactly?
-
- A. Some Lynx games allow multiple players to play together
- simultaneously. This works when each player has a Lynx game machine,
- and all of the machines are connected to each other via cables. The
- connection is the ComLynx port, and the cables are ComLynx cables.
- Games that support this mutiplayer simultaneous play are usually
- identified by the phrase "1 to N players Lynx up" on the box, the
- instruction manual, and/or the game card.
-
-
- Q. Do all players "Lynxed up" via the ComLynx need a copy of the game
- being played?
-
- A. Yes. All players need a copy of the game card.
-
-
- Q. What's the ComLynx port like?
-
- A. There is limit of 18 players via ComLynx. In practice it may be
- possible to connect more units together, but to operate within
- specifications, the drivers in the Lynx cannot drive over more than 17
- units with pull-ups on the serial ports.
-
- ComLynx runs from 300.5 to 62.5K baud. It works on a "listen and send"
- structure. Data transmission between Lynxes is done in the background,
- freeing up the CPU to run the game instead of communicating. It's
- called "RedEye" in-house at Atari, named after an early idea of having
- Lynxes communicate with infra-red transmissions.
-
- It uses a three-wire cable (+5V/Ground/Data) and allows for bi-
- directional serial communications. The system frames messages in terms
- of 11-bit words, each consisting of a start bit, eight data bits, a
- parity bit, and a stop bit. The ComLynx port is used solely for
- communications; it can't be used to control other aspects of the Lynx,
- though in theory it can be used to send signals to external devices.
-
-
- Q. Sometimes a multiplayer ComLynx game will freeze up. Why?
-
- A. A ComLynxed game will freeze if communication between the Lynxes is
- interrupted. If communications can be restored, the game will continue.
- The most common cause of this problem is a fray in one of the ComLynx
- cables, or a loose seating in one of the ComLynx jacks. Communication
- is broken, and the game "freezes". Jiggling the cable or reseating the
- jacks may fix the solution temporarily, but the best cure is a new
- cable.
-
-
- Q. I hear there's a ComLynx port on the Atari Jaguar. How does that
- work? Can I connect my Lynx to it? Will there be a Lynx adaptor for
- the Jaguar?
-
- A. The ComLynx port allows communication between Jaguar units and Lynx
- units. In theory, it would be possible to daisy-chain multiple units of
- either machine type for multiplayer games. At the current time,
- however, no such plans are in the works. Instead, it is seen as
- allowing Lynxes to be used as peripherals: software can be developed to
- allow Lynxes to be part of a Jaguar game as controllers.
-
- An adaptor to allow the Jaguar to play Lynx games is not currently
- planned.
-
-
- Q. What are the current Lynx games available?
-
- A. The following is a list of Lynx games currently available in the
- United States. The notation "(x)" means to refer to footnote number x:
-
- Title Players Publisher Type
- | ----------------- ------- ------------ -------------------------
- | A.P.B. 1 Atari Arcade
- | Awesome Golf 1-4 Atari Sports
- | Baseball Heroes 1-2 Atari Sports
- | Basketbrawl 1-2 Atari Action/Sports
- | Batman Returns 1 Atari Action/Platform
- | BattleWheels 1-6 Beyond Games Action/Driving
- | Block Out 1 Atari Action/Strategy
- | Blue Lightning 1 Atari Action
- | Bill & Ted's 1-2 Atari Action/Adventure
- Excellent Adventure
- | California Games 1-4(1) Atari Action/Sports
- | Checkered Flag 1-6 Atari Sports
- | Chip's Challenge 1 Atari Puzzle
- | Crystal Mines II 1 Atari Puzzle
- | Desert Strike 1 Telegames Action/Strategy
- | Dinolympics 1 Atari Puzzle
- | Dirty Larry: 1 Atari Action
- Renegade Cop
- | Double Dragon 1-2 Telegames Arcade/Fighting
- | Dracula the Undead 1 Atari Adventure
- | Electrocop 1 Atari Action/Adventure
- | European Soccer 1-2 Telegames Sports
- Challenge
- | Fidelity Ultimate 1-2(2) Telegames Strategy
- Chess Challenge
- | Gates of Zendocon 1 Atari Action/Shooter
- | Gauntlet: The 1-4 Atari Action/Adventure
- Third Encounter
- | Gordo 106 1 Atari Platform
- | Hard Drivin' 1 Atari Arcade/Driving
- | Hockey 1-2 Atari Sports
- | Hydra 1 Atari Arcade
- | Ishido: The Way of 1-n Atari Strategy
- the Stones (2,3)
- | Jimmy Connors Tennis 1-4 Atari Sports
- | Joust 1-2 Shadowsoft Arcade
- | Klax 1 Atari Arcade/Strategy
- | Kung Food 1 Atari Action/Fighting
- | Lemmings 1 Atari Strategy
- | Lynx Casino 1-2 Atari Strategy
- | Malibu Bikini 1-2 Atari Sports
- | Volleyball
- | Ms. Pac-Man 1 Atari Arcade
- | NFL Football 1-2 Atari Sports
- | Ninja Gaiden 1 Atari Arcade
- | Pac-Land 1-2(2) Atari Arcade
- | Paperboy 1 Atari Arcade
- | Pinball Jam 1 Atari Arcade/Action
- | Pit-Fighter 1-2 Atari Arcade/Fighting
- | Power Factor 1 Atari Action
- | Qix 1-2(2) Telegames Arcade
- | Rampage 1-4 Atari Arcade
- | Rampart 1-2 Atari Arcade/Strategy
- | RoadBlasters 1 Atari Arcade/Driving
- | Robo-Squash 1-2 Atari Action/Sports
- | Robotron:2084 1 Shadowsoft Arcade
- | Rygar 1 Atari Arcade
- | Scrapyard Dog 1 Atari Platform
- | Shadow of the Beast 1 Atari Action/Strategy
- | Shanghai 1-2 Atari Strategy
- | Steel Talons 1 Atari Arcade
- | S.T.U.N. Runner 1 Atari Arcade
- | Super Skweek 1-2 Atari Action/Strategy
- | Switchblade II 1 Atari Platform
- | Todd's Adventures 1-8 Atari Action/Adventure
- in Slime World
- | Toki 1 Atari Platform
- | Tournament 1-4 Atari Arcade/Sports
- Cyberball 2072
- | Turbo Sub 1-2(3) Atari Action/Shooter
- | Viking Child 1 Atari Action/Adventure
- | Warbirds 1-4 Atari Action/Strategy
- | World Class Soccer 1-2 Atari Sports
- | Xenophobe 1-4 Atari Arcade
- | Xybots 1-2 Atari Arcade
- | Zarlor Mercenary 1-4 Atari Shooter
-
- Footnotes:
-
- (1) Manual says 1-2 players, 1-4 is possible
- (2) Multiple players on one Lynx, alternating turns.
- (3) Players can compare scores, but not interact directly
-
-
- Q. What are some of the upcoming Lynx games?
-
- A. Upcoming Lynx Games List:
-
- Note: This list is hardly definitive. It's based on many sources, and
- in some cases, it just might be dead wrong. Games also often change
- from pre-release to production.
-
- Title Players Publisher Type
- ----------------- ------- ------------ ------------------------
- | Aliens v. Predator 1? Atari Action
- | Battlezone 2000 1-2 Atari Action/Arcade
- | Blood & Guts Hockey 1-2 Atari Action/Sports
- | Cabal 1-2 Atari Arcade
- | Cybervirus 1 Beyond Games Action
- | Daemonsgate 1? Atari Adventure
- | Defender/Stargate/ 1? Atari Action/Arcade
- Defender II
- | Eye of the Beholder 1 Atari Adventure
- | Full Court Press 1-2 Atari Sports
- Basketball
- | The Guardians: 1-4 Telegames Adventure
- Storms Over Doria
- | Heavyweight 1-2 Atari Sports
- Contender
- | Krazy Ace Minature 1-4 Telegames Action
- Golf
- | Mechtiles 1-4 Beyond Games Action/Strategy
- | Ninja Gaiden III: 1-2? Atari Action/Platform
- Ancient Ship of Doom
- | Ninja Nerd 1 Atari Adventure
- | Operation Desert 1 Atari Strategy?
- Storm
- | R.C. Destruction 1-4 Telegames Action
- Derby
- | Relief Pitcher 1-2 Atari Arcade/Sports
- | Raiden 1-2 Atari Arcade/Shooter
- | Road Riot 4WD 1-2 Atari Arcade/Action/Driving
- | Rolling Thunder 1 Atari Arcade
- | 720 1 Atari Arcade
- | Spacewar 1-2? Atari? Action
- | Super Asteroids & 1? Atari Arcade/Action
- Missile Command
- | Super Off-Road 1-4 Telegames Arcade
- | Ultra Star Raiders 1? Atari Action/Strategy
- | Ultra Vortex 1-2 Beyond Games Fighting
- | Vindicators 1-2 Atari Arcade
-
-
- Q. Where can I get a review and/or comments about <insert game name
- here>? Where can I find secrets, tips, and hints for
- <insert game name here>?
-
- A. Peter Hvezda maintains the Usenet Lynx Guide. It offers the Lynx
- FAQ, every Lynx game review written by Robert Jung, and the Lynx cheats
- list. Send e-mail to phvezda@pnfi.forestry.ca, with one or more of the
- following in the body of the message:
-
- send faq - A copy of the Lynx FAQ (this file)
- send reviews - A copy of every Lynx review ever written -- over 200K!
- send cheats - Tricks and cheats for many Lynx games
- send help - Detailed instructions, including how to get reviews
- for individual/specific games
-
- Also, Robert Jung has written detailed reviews for every Lynx game ever
- released. If you want copies of specific reviews, or just general
- Lynx-related questions, you can reach him at rjung@netcom.com on the
- Internet.
-
- Atari Corp. has established a game tip hotline, at (900) 737-ATARI
- (2827). The cost is $0.95 per minute; minors should get their parent's
- permission.
-
-
- Q. Hey! I think I just set a new high score! How can I brag about it?
-
- A. Jim Leonard is maintaining a running list of high scores achieved on
- Lynx games. This list is posted to the Internet on a semiregular basis.
-
- If you've got a new high score, send it to jleonard@falcon.depaul.edu
- or jim@mwc.com on the Internet. Include all pertinent information,
- including your name and difficulty settings used to set that record.
-
-
- Q. My Lynx screen is badly scratched! How can I fix it, what can I do?
-
- A. Get some "plastic scratch remover" or "plexiglass scratch remover".
- You can find it in hardware stores, or look in your Yellow Pages under
- "Plastics."
-
-
- Q. Agh! My Lynx is broken! How can I fix it?
-
- A. For $50, plus $5 shipping and handling, and your old/broken Lynx,
- Atari will replace it with a new Lynx II unit.
-
- Send your Lynx to:
-
- Lynx repair service
- Atari Computer Corporation
- 390 Caribbean Drive
- Sunnyvale, CA 94088
-
-
- Q. How do I disassemble my Lynx II (assuming I want to)?
-
- A. The original Lynxes were easy to take apart, for whatever reason you
- needed. The new Lynx IIs are more puzzling, but not impossible. The
- following set of (edited) instructions are provided by Ken Small
- (kens@umich.edu):
-
- "It's not hard, but there are a lot of fragile pieces and the
- electronics are sensitive to all the things that electronics are usually
- sensitive to, like static. PROCEED AT YOUR OWN RISK.
-
- "First, remove the rubber pads from the bottom of the Lynx. They're
- glued on, but they peel off pretty easily. Beneath them are screw holes
- -- remove them. Note that it's *very* easy to tell if your lynx has
- been opened, since you leave holes in the glue stuff. Take off the back
- of the case.
-
- "Remove the screw located inside the battery area. Be careful when
- replacing this; it can strip easily. Mine is stripped, but the rest of
- the case holds the battery bay in place. Remove the battery bay piece.
-
- "You will see a circuit board with a couple of wires and circuit ribbons
- attached to it. Carefully unplug all of these. The ribbon in
- particular seems flimsy. Do not puncture or otherwise damage it.
- Remove the circuit board.
-
- "Beneath the circuit board is an assembly screwed to the inside of the
- case, which contains the screen, button contacts and buttons. A warning
- when unscrewing this-- the are LOTS of small pieces in here, and they're
- particular about how they go back in. In particular, be careful about
- the A/B buttons, which are slightly different sizes, and the rubber mat
- around the LCD screen, which has nothing to hold it in place.
-
- "The last thing is the joypad contact itself. This is a small rubber
- mat held in place by a snap-on piece of plastic. You can carefully
- remove the plastic to get under the apron, where the contacts can be
- cleaned. Clean in-between the contacts, being careful not to abrase the
- contacts themselves. They look like half-circles with a small (half-
- millimeter or less) space between. Grunge between them can register an
- intermittent false contact, which looks to the player like the joypad is
- being quickly, repeatedly pressed in one direction."
-
-
- Q. How can I reach Atari Corp.?
-
- A. Customer Service: (800) GO-ATARI
- Mailing Address: Atari Corp.
- 1196 Borregas Avenue
- Sunnyvale, CA 94089-1302
-
- Company spokesman Bob Brodie can be reached by electronic mail on GEnie,
- via the address "BOB-BRODIE". E-mail can be sent over the Internet
- with "bob-brodie@genie.geis.com".
-
- Also, Atari Corp. sells Lynx units, games, and accessories by mail.
- Their number is (800) 221-EDGE.
-
-
- Q. What are other sources for Lynx information?
-
- A. Publications:
-
- - A.P.E. Newsletter Dedicated Lynx newsletter ("A.P.E."
- 2104 N. Kostner stands for "Atari Portable
- Chicago, IL 60639 Entertainment"). Write to Clinton
- GEnie: C.SMITH89 Smith. Published five times per year,
- cost is $6.00/year.
-
- - Die Hard Game Fan General video-gaming magazine with
- 18612 Ventura Blvd. Lynx coverage.
- Tarzana, CA 91356
-
- - Electronic Gaming Monthly General video-gaming magazine with
- 1920 Highland Avenue some Lynx coverage. Will often get
- Suite 222 screen shots and reports of new
- Lombard, IL 60148 games before other publications.
-
- - Gamemaster Dedicated specifically to the Lynx,
- Gamemaster Computer including reviews, tips, and buy/
- Publications Ltd. sell/trade activity. 10 issues/year
- P.O. Box 2224 for $10, free sample issue available
- Arvada, CO 80001-2224 on request. (303) 423-6805
-
- - Gamepro General video-gaming magazine with
- P.O. Box 3329 some Lynx coverage.
- Redwood City, CA 94064
-
- - Portable Atari Gaming System PAGS is a quarterly newsletter with
- P.O. Box 37692 reviews, editorials, news & info, and
- Raleigh, NC 27627-7692 gaming tips. One year costs $12.00.
- GEnie: E.SCHOFIELD
-
- - Video Games General video-gaming and computer-
- 9171 Wilshire Blvd., Suite 300 gaming magazine. Lynx news often in
- Beverly Hills, CA 90210 news articles and reviews.
-
- Internet/USENET newsgroups:
-
- - rec.games.video.atari Contains news of all Atari video-game systems.
- - rec.games.video.misc Often contains Lynx reviews and discussions.
- - alt.games.lynx Lynx-related discussions, often crossposted to
- rec.games.video.atari and rec.games.video.misc.
- Superceded by rec.games.video.atari
- Internet FTP sites:
-
- - atari.archive.umich.edu or terminator.cc.umich.edu (141.211.164.8):
- /pub/atari/portadd has back-issues of Portable Addiction, a
- newsletter about the Atari Lynx, Sega Game
- Gear, and Atari Portfolio. Subscribe by
- sending a note to tjerk@nikhef.nl.
-
- /pub/atari/misc contains lynx.txt.Z, a compressed file with
- some GEnie roundtable discussions on the Lynx.
-
- Internet TELNET site:
-
- - Cleveland Free-Net Atari SIG
-
- freenet-in-{a,b,c}.cwru.edu or 129.22.8.51 or nextsun.INS.CWRU.edu
- Access via modem at (216) 368-3888.
-
- You can log on as visitor to explore the system and apply for a Free-Net
- account online. At the opening menu, enter "2" to log in as a visitor.
- At the next menu, enter "2" again to explore the system. You will then
- read an opening disclaimer and a login bulletin, then be sent to the
- main menu. Once inside, type "go lynx". Follow the menus to read
- discussions, reviews, news, and information. In order to post messages
- and send e-mail, you need a Free-Net account. Apply for a Free-Net
- account by entering "1" at the second menu instead of "2".
-
- BBS:
- - MADNIX BBS (608) 273-2657, 300/1200/2400 bps
- It's located in Madison, Wisconsin (USA) and has a Lynx section.
- Login as "bbs" and create an account. Once on the BBS enter "go lynx".
- MADNIX has game reviews and hints from the net as well as old message
- threads from UseNet on LYNX related topics.
-
- - Star-Linx BBS (602) 464-4817, 300/1200/2400 bps
- It's located in Mesa, Arizona (USA) and has a Lynx Club. Be sure to
- have your California Games game-card handy when you call to gain higher
- access.
-
- - Video Game Information Service. (201) 509-7324, 300/1200/2400/9600
- Located in West Orange, New Jersy (USA). The BBS is completely
- dedicated to video gaming, and maintains files of cheats and reviews for
- all game systems. Carries video-game-related conferences from other
- computer networks, including Fidonet, Worldnet, and Globalnet.
-
- Online service:
-
- - GEnie Atari ST Roundtable BBS, Category 36
- - CompuServe, Lynx Data Library and Message Group, in the ATARI8 forum.
- Reviews, discussions, tips, and a monthly contest. (Type "GO ATARI8",
- and join the forum)
-
- International clubs:
-
- - Germany: Internationaler Lynx Club
- Hans-Jorg Sebastian
- Siegfriedstr. 3
- 3684 Schmitten 3
- Germany
-
- - Netherlands: International Lynx Club
- Leon Stolk
- Vanenburg 2
- 7339 DN Ugchelen
- The Netherlands
-
- - Austria: Internationaler Lynx Club
- Christian Lenikus
- Obertraun 27
- 4831 Obertraun
- Austria
-
- - Switzerland: Swiss-Lynx-Info-Club
- Eugene Rodel
- Sangeliweg 45
- 4900 Langenthal
- Switzerland
-
-
- Q. What's the Lynx developer's kit like?
-
- A. Hardware:
-
- - Commodore Amiga computer: 3M RAM and hard disk.
- - "Howard" board: A parallel-interface module that has the electronics
- of the Lynx, also with debugging tools. A large PC board inside of a
- metal case with power supply, and connections on the back for cable to
- connect to the Amiga, and to the "Howdy" unit.
- - "Howdy" unit: A small PC board in a plastic case with buttons and a
- Lynx display, and a cable that connects to the "Howard" board.
-
- Software:
-
- - Handy-Bug: A powerful symbolic debugger, also contains a disassembler.
- - Handicraft: Graphics translator that takes IFF files and turns them
- into coded Lynx sprite definitions.
- - HSFX: Sound editor
- - Macro libraries
- - Example programs
- - Notebook of system documentation ("about 3 1/2 inches thick... we've
- stopped counting pages") plus updates
-
- A full Lynx Developer's Kit currently costs around $5,000.
-
-
-
-
- ###### ATARI VENDORS LISTING
- ###### Capture from GEnie ST RT
- ###### ---------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
- This list of Atari related developers and vendors was compiled by fellow
- users who did so for the purpose of helping other Atarians. This list
- is not an endorsement for these businesses. Some of the information may
- be outdated. Rule of thumb when dealing with mail order or unknowns....
- byer beware.
-
-
- Accusoft ST, P.O.Box 355, Edmonds, WA 98020, (800) 676-2402
- public domain/shareware software
-
- Application & Design Software, 280 Peach Street, Merlin, OR 97532
- voice: (503) 476-0071, orders: (800) 800-2563
- Universal Item Selector, Universal NETwork
-
- Apprentice Software, 22205 Swan Road, South Lyon, MI 48178
- (313) 437-0526 Neural-network Construction Set
-
- Atari Corporation, 1196 Borregas Ave., P.O.Box 61657, Sunnyvale, CA
- 94088 (408) 745-2000
-
- Atari Advantage, P.O. Box 610121, Houston, TX 77208, (713) 526-6436
- Atari Advantage magazine
-
- Atari Explorer, P.O.Box 6488, Duluth, MN 55806, subscriptions: (218)
- 723-9202, editorial/ads: (408) 745-2000, cust. service: (800) 346-0085
- Atari Explorer magazine
-
- Atari Systems, 118 West Broadway, Suite 6 Altus, OK 73521, voice: (405)
- 477-3777, fax: (405) 477-3780, orders: (800) 942-6227
-
- ATY Computer, 3727 13th Avenue, Oakland, CA 94610, (510) 482-3775
- vendor
-
- B & C Computervisions, 2730 Scott Blvd., Santa Clara, CA 95050
- (408) 986-9960
- vendor
-
- Barefoot Software, 19865 Covello St., Canoga Park, CA 91306, voice:(818)
- 727-7143, fax: (818) 727-0632
- Genedit, Easy Score, SMPTE Track, SMPTE Mate,, MIDI Plexer, Ludwig, Edit
- Track, Hybriswitch
-
- Beckemeyer Development Tools, P.O.Box 21575, Oakland, CA 94620
- voice: (510) 530-9637, fax: (510) 530-0451
- Hard Disk Sentry, Hard Disk Toolkit, SCSI Tape Kit
-
- Best Electronics, 2021 The Alameda, Suite 290, San Jose, CA 95126
- (408) 243-6950
- vendor
-
- Brainstorm, 56, Rue Sedaine, Paris, France 75011, voice: 331 47008907
- fax: 331 47003798
- Adebug, Assemble (development package), Atari DSP debugger, Frac! X25
- driver, Fast JPEG decoder/viewer, FLI/FLC movie viewer
-
- Branch Always Software, 14150 NE 20th Street, Suite 302, Bellevue, WA
- 98007, (206) 885-5893
- GEMulator
-
- BRE Software, 352 W. Bedford Avenue #104, Fresno, CA 93711, voice: (209)
- 432-3072, fax: (209) 432-2599, orders: (800) 347-6760
- public domain/shareware software, books
-
- E. Arthur Brown Co., 3404 Pawnee Dr., Alexandria, MN 56308, voice: (612)
- 762-8847, orders: (800) 322-4405
- vendor
-
- D.A. Brumleve, P.O.Box 4195, Urbana, IL 61801-8820, voice: (217)
- 337-1937, fax: (217) 367-9084
- Kidpublisher Pro, Kidpainter, Super Kidgrid, Telegram, Learning Games
- Packet, Multiplay, Creative Discovery Packet
-
- C-Lab Software, P.O.Box 750, Neveda City, CA 96959, voice: (916)
- 265-6481, fax: (916) 265-0263
- Notator
-
- Cali-Co. Superior Software, P.O. Box 9873, Madison, WI 53715, (608)
- 255-6523
- Mah-Jong Solitaire
-
- Canoe Computer Services, 1671 - 42 Street, Edmonton, AB, Canada T6L 2R8
- (403) 461-6903
- Warp 16 accelerator
-
- Carter Graphics & Computers, 520 North 200 East, Washington, UT 84780
- (801) 628-6111
- vendor
-
- chro-MAGIC Software Innovations, 516 N. Jackson, Joplin, MO 64801, (417)
- 623-7393, (417) 782-2364
-
- Clear Thinking, P.O.Box 715, Ann Arbor, MI 48105, (313) 971-8671, bbs:
- (313) 971-6035
- EdHak text editor, Metapsychology Primer
-
- CodeHead Technologies, P.O.Box 74090, N. Hollywood, CA 90004, (213)
- 386-5735, fax: (213) 386-5789
- HotWire, MultiDesk, CodeKeys, Avant Vektor, MegaPaint, Repro Studio,
- Genus, LookIt/PopIt, Utilities, G+Plus, MaxiFile, MidiMAX, Midi Spy, TEC
- Board, Calligrapher, Warp 9, etc.
-
- Compo, 104 Esplanade Avenue Suite 121, Pacifica, CA 94044, (415)
- 355-0862, fax: (415) 355-0869
- That's Write, Write On, C-Font, CompoScript, That's Address, Musicom,
- PC Speed, AT Speed, AT Speed C16
-
- Computer Safari, 606 West Cross Street, Woodland, CA 95659, (916)
- 666-1813
- Safari Fonts
-
- Computer Software Services, P.O.Box 17660, Rochester, NY 14617, (716)
- 429-5639, fax: (716) 247-7158, bbs: (716) 247-7157
- 8-bit Atari products
-
- Computer Studio, 40 Westgate Parkway - Suite D, Asheville, NC 28806
- (704) 251-0201, orders: (800) 253-0201
- vendor
-
- Current Notes, Inc., 122 N. Johnson Road, Sterling, VA 22170, (703)
- 450-4761
- Current Notes magazine
-
- Cybercube Research Ltd., 126 Grenadier Crescent, Thornhill, Ontario,
- Canada L4J 7V7, (416) 882-0294, fax: (416) 886-3261
- CyReL SUNRISE M16-1280 and SERENADE M16-1280, True Color High Resolution
- Graphics Cards, CyReL VidiMix8 Desktop Video Module, CyReL Serial Mouse
- Manager, CyRel Palette Master
-
- D & P Computer, P.O.Box 811, Elyria, OH 44036, voice/fax: (216) 926-3842
- orders: (800) 535-4290
- vendor
-
- Debonair Software, P.O.Box 521166, Salt Lake City, UT 84152-1166
- cis: 70611,2552
- El Cal, Min Cal, Star Base, Big Sky
-
- Ditek International, 2800 John Street, Unit 15, Markham, Ontario, Canada
- L3R 0E2, (416) 479-1990, fax: (416) 479-1882
- DynaCADD 2D
-
- DMC Publishing, 2800 John Street Unit 10, Markham, Ontario, Canada
- L3R 0E2, (416) 479-1880, fax: (416) 479-1882
- Calamus, Calamus SL, Calamus Font Editor, The Guide to Calamus Desktop
- Publishing, Outline Art, INVISION Elite
-
- Double Click Software, P.O.Box 741206, Houston, TX 77274, (713) 977-6520
- bbs: (713) 944-0108
- DC Desktop, DC Squish, DC Utilities, DC Shower, Game Workbench, etc.
-
- DragonWare Software, Inc., P.O.Box 1719, Havre, MT 59501-1719, (406)
- 265-9609
- GMan, Dragon Battery, SmokeArt, PowerNet, FLEXOR, FontKit Plus,
- AtariTalk2, Satellite Locator, D_Graph @@elan software Elan Software 550
- Boul. Charest Est P.O. Box 30232 Quebec G1K 8Y2 Canada voice: (418)
- 692-0565, fax: (418) 683-9189
-
- Electronic Clinic, 4916 Del-Ray Ave., Bethesda, MD 20814, (301) 656-7983
- vendor, authorized service
-
- Electronic Spinster Graphics, P.O.Box 1517, Lawrence, KS 66044
- clip art packages
-
- eSTeem, inc., 72 Shades Crest Road, Hoover, AL 35226-1014, (205)
- 941-4910, fax: (205) 943-8390
- Pilot language
-
- Fair Dinkum Technologies, P.O.Box 2, Los Alamos, NM 87544, (505)
- 662-7236
- Crossword Creator, Word Search Creator, The Cryptographer, Cyberdrome
-
- Fast Technology, 14 Lovejoy Road, Andover, MA 01810, (508) 475-3810
- Turbo25, TinyTurbo030, Turbo030, TurboRAM
-
- Fouch Software, 1823 W. 8th St., Erie, PA 16505, (814) 455-1294
- Mailing Manager ST
-
- Gadgets By Small, Inc., 40 W. Littleton Blvd., #210-211, Littleton, CO
- 80120, (303) 791-6098
- Spectre, Spectre GCR, SST accelerator, MegaTalk
-
- GFA Software Technologies, Inc., 27 Congress Street, Salem, MA 01970
- (508) 744-0201, fax: (508) 744-8041
- computer languages
-
- Goldleaf Publishing, Inc., 700 Larkspur Landing Circle Suite 199,
- Larkspur, CA 94939, sales: (415) 257-3515, support: (415) 257-3513
- WordFlair II
-
- Gribnif Software, P.O.Box 779, Northampton, MA 01061, (413) 247-5620,
- fax: (413) 247-5622, orders: (800) 284-4742
- NeoDesk, Geneva, STalker, STeno, CardFile, X-Boot, Arabesque
- Professional, Convector Professional CardFile, Crazy Dots
-
- GT Software, 12114 Kirton Avenue, Cleveland, OH 44135-3612, (216)
- 252-4272
- CardFile (distrib. by Gribnif)
-
- Global Drive Solutions, 7351 Victoria Park Ave #101, Markham, Ontario
- L3R 3A5, 905-475-1964, FAX: 905-475-8102
-
- Doug Harrison, P.O. Box 66236, Baton Rouge, LA 70806-6236
- Opus (shareware), Lookit/Popit (dist. CodeHead)
-
- HiSoft, The Old School, Greenfield, Bedford, England MK45 5DE
- voice: +44 525 718181, fax: +44 525 713716
- Devpac, HiSoft BASIC, Lattice C, HighSpeed Pascal, FTL Modula-2, WERCS,
- Harlekin, HiSoft C, ProFlight, K-Spread, K-Comm, K-Word, K-Data (HiSoft
- products dist. Oregon Research Associates)
-
- IAAD, Indep. Assoc. of Atari Developers, D.A. Brumleve, President,
- GEnie: D.A.BRUMLEVE, Delphi: DABRUMLEVE
-
- ICD, Inc., 1220 Rock Street, Rockford, IL 61101-1437, (815) 968-2228,
- fax: (815) 968-6888, orders: (800) 373-7700
- hard disk systems and software
-
- Intergalactic Development, Inc., 1427 Washington Street, Davenport, Iowa
- 52804, voice: (319) 323-5293, fax: (319) 323-0407
- UMS: The Universal Military Simulator, UMS II: Nations at War, The UMS
- II Planet Editor, Jack the Ripper
-
- It's All Relative, 2233 Keevan Lane, Florisant, MO 63031, (314) 831-9482
- It's All Relative, BookMaker, Forecaster3, AbbreviatorST, PhotoCD
- Conversion
-
- JMG Software International, 892 Upper James Street, Hamilton, Ontario,
- Canada L9C 3A5, voice: (416) 575-3201, fax: (416) 575-0283
- HyperLINK
-
- Joppa Computer Products, P.O.Box 226, Joppa, MD 21085, voice: (301)
- 676-1948, fax: (301) 676-2989, orders: (800) 876-6040
- vendor
-
- L & Y Electronics, Inc., 13644C Jefferson Davis Highway, Woodbridge, VA
- 22191, voice: (703) 494-3444, metro 643-1729, fax: (703) 494-3663
- vendor
-
- Lexicor Software Corp., 1726 Francisco Street, Berkeley, CA 94703,
- voice: (510) 848-7621, fax: (510) 848-7613
- Phase-4 graphics programs, Phoenix 2, ANM link, Cybercolor, DA products
-
- M.P. Graphics Systems, P.O. Box 501289, Indianapolis, IN, 46250-6289
- (317) 335-3775
- Noids-II
-
- MacDonald Associates Publishers, 909 NW Starlite Place, Grants Pass, OR
- 97526, voice: (503) 476-0071, fax: (503) 479-1825, orders: (800)
- 800-2563
- ST Informer magazine, G-Print GDOS shell, Tax Wizard
-
- Machine Specific Software, 278-1 San Tomas Aquino Road, Campbell, CA
- 95008, (408) 370-9039
- HAYAI hard disk backup software
-
- MajikSoft, 348 Meredith Square, Columbia, SC 29223, orders: (800)
- 845-3070
- ButtonzBasic
-
- Maxwell CPU, 2124 West Centennial Drive, Louisville, CO 80027, (303)
- 666-7754
- Silhouette, Expose, Fractal Fantasy
-
- Medical Designs Software, 3235 Wright Avenue, Bremerton, WA 98310
- voice: (206) 373-4840, bbs: (206) 479-2157
- ECTStat, IOLCALC, MultiWriter, SERIALFX
-
- MegaByte Computers, 907 Melbourne, Hurst, TX 76053, (817) 589-2950
- vendor
-
- MegaType Software, P.O.Box 645, South Bend, IN 46623, (219) 288-7468
- PageStream and Calamus fonts
-
- Merlin Group, Inc., 96 Hoyt Street, Kearny, NJ 07032-3311, voice: (201)
- 998-4441, fax: (201) 998-0932
-
- MichTron, Inc., 3203 Drummond Plaza, Newark, DE 19711, (302) 454-7946
- 3D-Calc, Stereo Replay VIII, Hard Drive Toolkit
-
- Micro Computer Depot, 224 O'Neil Court, Suite 14, Columbia, SC 29223
- voice: (803) 788-5165, orders: (800) 845-3070
- vendor
-
- Micro Creations, 4609 Millbrook Way, Bakersfield, CA 93313, (805)
- 397-9414, (800) 333-3963
-
- G.I.M.E. Terminal/BBS, @@mid-cities, Mid-Cities Computers, 9406 Flower
- St., Bellflower, CA 90706, (310) 867-0626
- vendor
-
- Migraph, Inc., 200 South 333rd Street, Federal Way, WA 98003, (206)
- 838-4677
- TouchUp, OCR, Scan-It, Merge-It
-
- Missionware Software, 354 N. Winston Drive, Palatine, IL 60067-4132,
- (708) 359-9565
- Flash II, lottODDS, Printer Initializer
-
- Morrison Computers, 311 West Robinson, Orlando, FL 32801, (407) 649-8733
- Atari sales & service
-
- MS Designs, 611 West Illinois St., Urbana, IL 61801, voice: (217)
- 384-8469, fax: (217) 351-6412
- FontPaks, Wheeler Quick Art CD-ROM, Wheeler Quick Art Image Disks
-
- Muller Automation, Number 5, Third Ave., Belton, MO 64012, (816)
- 322-4919
- Mega Check 2, custom programming
-
- Music Loft, 2140 Lawndale Drive, Lawndale Shopping Center, Greensboro,
- NC 27408, (919) 378-1068
- vendor
-
- MusiCode, 5575 Baltimore Drive, #105-127, La Mesa, CA 91942, (619)
- 469-7194
- Blackjack Plus 3, Voice Development System
-
- New Dimensions Computer Center, 9026 W. National Ave., West Allis, WI
- 53227, (414) 327-3311
- vendor
-
- NewSTar Technology Management, P.O. Box 0122, Columbia, MD 21045-0122
- voice: (410) 544-6943, fax: (410) 544-1329
- STraight FAX
-
- Nice & Software, 1295 Britannia Road, Campbellville, Ontario, Canada
- L0P 1B0, voice: (416) 332-0075, fax: (416) 332-8679
- Cricit Bar Code +, Lantech network
-
- Oak Springs Software, P.O.Box 16529, Bear Creek Postal Station, Surrey,
- BC, Canada V3W 2P5, (604) 597-5775
- public domain/shareware software
-
- Oregon Research Associates, 16200 S.W. Pacific Highway, Suite 162,
- Tigard, OR 97224, voice: (503) 620-4919, fax: (503) 639-6182
- Diamond Back II, Diamond Edge, Knife ST, True Paint, Ultimate Virus
- Killer, ProFlight, HiSoft products
-
- Paradigm Software Products, 1369 Concord Place, Suite 3-B, Dept. NC-11,
- Kalamazoo, MI 49009, (616) 372-5972, ext. 313
- Omni-Banker ST MIDI software
-
- Power Thought Software, 116 Sumach Street, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
- M5A 3J9, (416) 594-9355
- INVISION Elite (distr. by DMC)
-
- Purple Mountain Computers, Inc., 15600 NE 8th St. Ste. A3-412, Bellevue,
- WA 98008, voice/fax: (206) 747-1519
- STealth, Freedom Floptical Drive, Xtra-RAM ST, ST News newsletter,
- recycleWARE, etc.
-
- Quidnunc Software, P.O.Box 819081 Suite 175, Dallas, TX 75381-9081,
- (214) 243-0663
- Stalk The Market
-
- Quill Publishing, AtariUser Magazine, 249 N. Brand Blvd., Suite 332,
- Glendale, CA 91203, voice: (818) 246-6277, fax: (818) 242-2129
- AtariUser magazine
-
- Rimik Enterprises, 836 Osborne Street, Vista, CA 92084, voice:(619)
- 630-1217, fax: (619) 630-5869
- MultiGEM, DTPaint, Menu Plus, Beetle Mouse
-
- Rising Star Computers, P.O.Box 20038, Dayton, OH 45420, voice: (513)
- 254-3160, fax: (513) 254-7970, orders: (800) 252-2787
- vendor
-
- Roland Corporation, 7200 Dominton Drive, Los Angeles, CA 90040,
- voice: (213) 685-5141, fax: (213) 722-0911
- MIDI hardware manufacturer
-
- RUN PC, 524 West Laurel #2, Ft. Collins, CO 80521, voice: (303) 493-5565
- orders: (800) 326-2344
- vendor
-
- San Jose Computer, 1278 Alma Court, San Jose, CA 95112, voice: (408)
- 995-5080, fax: (408) 995-5083
- vendor
-
- SKWare One, P.O.Box 277, Bunkerhill, IL 62014
- Seurat, ColorScan, Auto-Art
-
- Soft-Logik Publishing Corp., 11121F S. Towne Square, St. Louis, MO 63123
- phone: (314) 894-8608, orders: (800) 829-8608
- PageStream, ImageClub Clip Art, ImageClub Fonts, Business Forms
-
- Software Development Systems, 996 Redondo Ave. #404, Long Beach, CA
- 90804, voice: (310) 595-9799, orders: (800) 237-4SDS
- Newdesk Icon Editor CPX, Deskjet Utilities Pak, Printer Utilities Pak,
- Fotoman Digital Camera, Labeleaze!
-
- Sothan Software / IB Computers, 9395 North Wall, Portland, OR 97203,
- (503) 286-8816
- IB Harddisk Backup
-
- Spar Systems, 381 Autumn Avenue, Brooklyn, NY 11208, (718) 235-3169
- PageAssistant (PageStream help)
-
- ST Plus, P.O.Box 1197, Berkeley, CA 94701, voice: (510) 548-2119,
- orders: (800) 759-1110
- vendor
-
- Step Ahead Software, 496-A Hudson Street, # F39, New York City, NY 10014
- (212) 627-5830
- Tracker/ST
-
- STerling Connection, P.O.Box 4850, Berkeley, CA 94704, voice: (510)
- 655-2355, orders: (800) 624-2355
- LogoLibrary, Qwikforms, Cliptomania, Templicity
-
- STeve's Software Sales, 5 West Street, Woodlands, CA 95695, voice: (916)
- 661-1234 or (916) 661-3328, fax: (916) 661-1234, bbs: (916) 661-1538,
- orders: (800) 487-7753
- vendor
-
- Sudden, Inc., 5081 South McCarren Blvd., Reno, NV 89502, (702) 827-2996
- Sudden View text editor
-
- Supra Corp., 7101 Supra Drive S.W., Albany, OR 97321, voice: (503)
- 967-2410, fax: (503) 926-2401, orders: (800) 727-8772
- mnufacturer, modems and hard drives
-
- Suzy B's Software, 3712 Military Road, Niagara Falls, NY 14305, (716)
- 298-1986
- PD/shareware software
-
- Resources, 754 N. Bolten Avenue, Indianapolis, IN 46219, voice: (317)
- 356-6946, fax: (317) 231-4158
- GEMvelope!, SynthView DW-8000, SynthView K1
-
- Taylor Ridge Books, P.O.Box 78, Manchester, CT 06045, (203) 643-9673
- publisher
-
- TCN - The Computer Network, 1605 W. Glenoaks Blvd., Glendale, CA 91201
- (818) 500-3900
- vendor
-
- Team Computers, 22205 Kelly Road, East Detroit, MI 48021, (313) 445-2983
- vendor
-
- TEAM Software, P.O.Box 7332, Washington, DC 20044, voice: (703) 533-2132
- fax: (703) 538-4598
- vendor
-
- Tech Specialties Co., 909 W. Crosstimbers Street, Houston, TX 77022
- voice: (713) 691-4527, (713) 691-4528, fax: (713) 691-7009
- hardware/software vendor
-
- Toad Computers, 570-F Governor Ritchie Hwy, Severna Park, MD 21146-3818
- voice: (301) 544-6943, fax: (301) 544-1329, bbs: (301) 544-6999, orders:
- (800) 448-8623
- full service vendor
-
- Trace Technologies, P.O.Box 711403, Houston, TX 77271-1403, (713)
- 771-8332 [weekdays 1PM-5PM Central Time]
- Data Diet, Data Rescue
-
- Unicorn Publications, 3487 Braeburn Circle, Ann Arbor, MI 48108, voice:
- (313) 973-8825, bbs: (313) 973-9137
- Atari Interface Magazine
-
- Weinress Consulting, 3236 Velma Drive, Los Angeles, CA 90068, (213)
- 876-7704
- D.E.K.A.
-
- Steve Whitney, 655 South Fair Oaks Avenue I-103, Sunnyvale, CA 94086
- (815) 968-6888
-
- Wintertree Software, Inc., 43 Rueter Street, Nepean, Ontario, Canada
- K2J 3Z9, voice: (613) 825-6271, fax: (613) 596-1575
- The GramSlam Grammar and Style Checker, Grammar Expert, Spelling Sentry
-
- WizWorks!, P.O.Box 45, Girard, OH 44420, (216) 539-5623
- scanLite, Image Cat, Mug Shot, The Tray, Coalesce, MVG (Multi Viewer
- Graphica)
-
- Wizztronics, 31 Hewes Street, Port Jefferson, NY 11776, (516) 473-2507
- Cartmaster, Comp.Plus, TOScard
-
- WordPerfect Corporation, 1555 N. technology Way, Orem, UT 84057, voice:
- (801) 225-5000, fax: (801) 222-5077
- WordPerfect
-
- Wuztek/Omnimon Peripherals Inc., One Technology Drive, Building 1E,
- Suite 301, Irvine, CA 92718, voice: (714) 753-9253, fax: (714) 753-9255
- DEKA keyboard interfaces, Omnimon monitors
-
- Zephyr Distribution, 514 University Avenue, Berkeley, CA 94703, voice:
- (510) 548-8999, orders: (800) 759-1110
- vendor
-
- Z*Net News Service, Post Office Box 59, Middlesex, NJ, 08846, Voice:
- (908) 968-2024, bbs: (908) 968-8148, fax: (908) 820-0409
- Z*Net Newswire Online Magazine, Z*Net PC Online Magazine
-
- Interfaces, Inc., 5243-B Paramount Blvd., Lakewood, CA 90712, voice:
- (213) 408-6715, fax: (213) 408-6748
- Z-Ram, Z-Keys, STime hardware
-
-
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- =======================================================================
- Reprints from the GEnie ST Roundtable are Copyright (c)1994, Atari
- Corporation and the GEnie ST RT. Reprints from CompuServe's AtariArts,
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