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1988-07-19
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PC Pursuit: The Final Frontier. These are the voyages of the mindship IBMPC.
Our continuing mission - to seek out new life and new BBSes. To boldly go where
no human has ever gone before (sysops don't count!).
ICECAT - concatenation utility for Icex - combines 2 directories into 1
If you use PC Pursuit, have an IBM or clone, and have NOT experienced ICEX
v2.03 you are missing out on a wonderful aid for your addiction! Sure, you can
use scripts, you can use macros, but none can approach the speed, power, and
ease of use of the new ICEX dialer. It isn't perfect. It still locks up my
computer on occasion (but my computer, an aging IBM PC known as the "Pet Rat",
is not known to be completely "clone compatible" so that probably explains it).
But, ICEX seldom does that since the new release (v2.03) came out...and it's
multitude of dialing directories allow me to go out and explore previously
uncharted territory without having to spend years modifying macros, or ruin my
eyes squinting at some print-out of a BBS list as I type it by hand at
Telenet's Racal-Vadic modem prompt.
Unfortunately, about as soon as I got ICEX v2.03 up and running I discovered
I WAS spending years (or so it seemed) adding new numbers to the directories,
ruining my eyes squinting at print-outs while I typed them in, one at a time.
Besides that, I was constantly having to refer to OTHER print-outs, to remind
me whether a certain areacode required adding a "one plus the areacode, if it's
different from your own" (as the old Ma Bell jingle used to go), and which
city went with which area code... This was cutting severely into my on-line
time, so I resolved to DO SOMETHING. As is usual with me, what I did was devise
a program (or in this case, a series of utilities) to let the computer do all
this work for me.
Thus: The Cracked IceX Utilities were born!
ICECAT - concatenation utility for Icex - combines 2 directories into 1
This comes in handy sometimes. Let's say you started out with all your TXDAL
(202) numbers in one directory, and the (817) numbers in another, just to be
organized. But, after a few weeks or months of calling TXDAL BBSes, you have
"weeded out" the directories, down to the boards you call frequently. You
discover you have two directories, each with only about 30 entries. You wish
they were in ONE file, so you wouldn't have to keep hitting the Left/Right
arrow keys all the time to swap directories. So...you can either keep jumping
from one directory to another (while in Icex), looking up an 817 number,
scribbling it on a pad, jumping to the other directory and Adding it...or just
run ICECAT on the two files, and make one file.
It's also handy when you want to update your directories, especially in
conjunction with the (not included here) Icex Editing program, which WILL
handle directories with more than 50 entries! Of course, you'll have to pare
the directory down again before Icex can use it, but ICECAT & the Editor make
it easy to combine a new list of boards with your current list, then edit out
duplicates.
For insturctions on how to use ICECAT, just type:
ICECAT
without any parameters on the command line. It will tell you what to do.
THE REST OF THE ICExBERG:
Other Cracked IceX utilities include (but are NOT limited to):
FRI2ICE - This utility takes Meade Frierson's famous Pursuit BBS List (which is
updated on a semi-monthly basis) and converts it into a series of
ICEX203-compatible dialing directories.
* the afore-mentioned concatenation (ICECAT) & seperation tools
* an entry editor superior to the one built into IceX. For one thing, you can
edit any field using all the DOS editing keys, including INS, DEL, the
cursor keys, etc. The old entry will NOT just "disappear" when you type a
key on that field
* a utility to PRINT an IceX directory (either send it directly to the
printer, or save it to disk in a form you can edit, or print later)
* other conversion utilities, similar to this one, for processing other
formats and styles of BBS lists into IceX directories. Eventually, there
will even be one which can scan ANY file containing BBS numbers/names, and
pull them out regardless of the format (and check to make sure they are
PCPable before creating the IceX entry)
* a utility which produces a "clean" copy of any IceX directory - that is,
one where all your name & password fields have been blanked - so you can
safely upload &/or distribute your IceX directories without fear of someone
getting your passwords to the BBSes you call
Anyone having further suggestions may contact me by mail or via the BBSes or GT
Net-Mail nodes listed in the program itself.
One last thing: If you like the utilities well enough, and find them useful
enough, to send for a registered version, I would appreciate it. I'm not going
to beg for your money, or demand payment or threaten legal action or tear my
hair or start releasing "crippled" versions of the Cracked IceX Utilities. I
think that's counter-productive. However, as each new utility comes out I will
put it on a disk (for distribution to registered users) and I will also upload
it....various places around the country - not always in the same places each
time. If you want, you are welcome to keep chasing me around the BBSes, and
you'll probably catch many of the utilities as other download and upload them,
but the only way to receive a FULL collection of the LATEST versions is going
to be if you order a registered copy. That's just common sense. Besides, the
more registrations I receive, the more incentive I will have to keep producing
MORE useful additions to the collection. Sure, I'll keep writing IceX tools,
but normally the software I write for myself is pretty "user-hostile", and it
takes time to "spruce it up" for general consumption, and whether or not I take
that time, and feel comfortable continuing to distribute my creations, is
entirely up to YOU.
By the way, while we're talking about registering stuff, go ahead and do that
with Wayne Wolf's ICEX program, too. He only wants, I think, $25, and that's a
fair price, considering the time and energy ICEX saves, and all the work he's
put into it.
Okay, now go concatenate some Icex directories. And keep your eyes peeled for
MORE Cracked IceX Utilities...
Thanks,
Ben Sansing