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1992-01-01
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╔═══════════════════════════════╗
║ THE FREEWARE HALL OF FAME ║
╚═══════════════════════════════╝
┌─────────┐
WHAT IS IT? We are a list of programs and databases which are
└─────────┘ commonly found on public access Bulletin Boards.
The programs on this list have been tested and found to work as
described, and to be worth downloading. The list is limited to
Freeware. These are programs and databases for which NO FEE is
required for use by individuals. (The meaning of Freeware,
Shareware and Public Domain are given below.)
┌────────┐
WHAT'S NEW We've added a dozen or so new entries for January.
FOR 12/92│ They include a large typeface for the visually
└────────┘ impaired, a re-sizeable RAMdisk for XMS memory, and
a ham license Q&A test for all the license classes. And we are
now issuing a call for nomination of OS/2 Freeware to be
included in future editions. The HOF believes OS/2 has a
promising future and we would hate to see it wall-to-wall with
annoyware and beg-screens.
┌───┐
NAMES in the circle of Great Freeware Writers for their output
└───┘ and quality are John McNamara, Raymond Kaya, Vern Buerg,
Ward Christensen, Robert Vostreys, Frederick Volking, Michael
Mefford, Keith Graham, Keith Ledbetter and the writer who gave
us CED and so much more, Chris Dunford.
┌────┐
IN ALL the HOF lists more than 330 entries by 250 authors
└────┘ indexed 3 ways--by author, program name and use.
┌────┐
LAYOUT The Freeware Hall of Fame comprises three sorted ASCII
└────┘ indexes. Each index contains the same information:
Author, Program Name, a brief Description of the program, and
the Program Category. Index One is sorted by Author, Index Two
by Program and Index Three by Use.
┌──────┐
TO PRINT the indexes, set standard 80-col narrow-carriage
└──────┘ printers for 12 chars per inch (Elite). The file
prints very nicely with appropriate page breaks on 8½ by 11
paper, and this edition runs 21 pages. QEDIT prints it
perfectly. Otherwise you can type HALLFAME.TXT > PRN or PRINT
HALLFAME.TXT or use any word processor. The file is prepared
using QuattroPro 2.0 and appears here in standard ASCII.
┌─────┐
UPDATES will always be named HOFmmyy.ZIP and there will never
└─────┘ be two in one month. HOF packets should contain
HALLFAME. TXT, README.HOF and a SYSOP.NOTe. Adding BBS
advertising and Comments to ZIP files is common so finding a
BBS ad attached should come as no surprise. I didn't put it
here and don't want it here but what can you do.
┌────────────┐
WANT A HOF D/L We are now giving away 3-disk sets of the
│DIRECTORY ON│ ON-LINE Freeware Hall of Fame to any Sysop who
│ YOUR BBS? │ would like to install it on his BBS. The 2
└────────────┘ megs of Freeware amount to 90 or so programs.
These are a choice selection of the programs themselves, not
merely an index. With it comes a DIR created for PCBoard
containing multi-line descriptions of the files. See SYSOP.NOT
for more information.
┌──────┐
WHO'S IN Among the most prominent people in the computer
THE HOF? world, past and present, are those programers who
└──────┘ allow us to use their programs at no cost. Writing
software and distributing it via Bulletin Boards with no
request for payment, they enable everyone to share the fruit of
their knowledge, the benefit of their discoveries, and the
steady advances that have typified the computer industry from
the beginning.
┌───────┐
GRATITUDE This file is intended to honor those generous and
└───────┘ wonderful people. The file is not finished and
never will be. It's a list that will grow every few months as
we attempt to catch up with the hundreds of fine people who
represent the hobby side of the PC world, some from the era of
CP/M (lest we forget), some writing for DOS, and now we're
expanding to include OS/2.
┌────────┐
AMONG THEM are some of the best programmers in the profession,
└────────┘ software experts sought after and employed by the
most advanced government and industry employers in the world.
The Freeware they write on their own time (cough) commonly
reflects the highest level of concept and execution.
┌──────┐
BENEFITS This Freeware Hall of Fame is the only published
└──────┘ guide to tested Freeware. All these programs work.
All are free. Nearly all are commonly available on public
access Bulletin Boards. We can recommend them as programs that
will do the job they were intended for.
┌───────┐
WHERE YOU The file is indexed to make these programs easier to
FIND THEM find, but locating them on a Bulletin Board can
└───────┘ require a search. The Board's ZIP, ARC or LZE
packets commonly are named with an abbreviation of a program's
full name, often adding a version number to that. You might
have to hunt and peek unless the Sysop has set up a Freeware
Hall of Fame Directory all to itself.
┌─────┐
PCBOARD Some of the programs for running a BBS such as PCBoard
└─────┘ make the search easier. On a PCBoard, entering
Z filename A
should reveal every version of <filename> the BBS has available
for download. For example, you will not find DIRX, a file
management program for compressed files, listed in a BBS file
index. The index name for the program is DXRxxx where xxx is
the version number, and that changes every few months. The Z
command in PCBoard is a -text search- command and it will find
the word DIRX in the file -description- since it can't be found
in the file index.
┌──────┐
FREEWARE Freeware refers to programs or databases that an
DEFINED│ individual may use without payment of money to the
└──────┘ author. Commonly the author will copyright his work
as a way of legally insisting that no one re-write it prior to
getting his approval. The copyright has nothing to do with a
user fee, aside from giving the author a legal right to require
one. Freeware authors don't exercise that right, though in some
cases a program will be Freeware for an individual but require
a site license if used by a business. The HOF includes these.
┌────┐
PUBLIC Other Freeware is in the Public Domain, which means the
DOMAIN author donated his work to the public and retains no
└────┘ ownership rights. No fee can be required for the use of
these programs, though a polite and sometimes humorous request
for author support might drift into the Docs.
┌────────┐
WHAT'S NOT Shareware is not here. Shareware refers to a way
│ HERE? │ of marketing programs on the "try before you buy"
└────────┘ plan. Because you must buy it, it isn't Freeware.
As Shareware, many superb programs are made available at
reasonable cost and on a far fairer plan than purchasing
"commercial" software where you must buy before knowing if a
program will do what you need. Most Shareware is a delight to
use. Some is not.
┌───────┐
SHAREWARE always asks for a fee for continued use of the
└───────┘ program and the author says so, usually in a
professional way. A few authors aren't professional in the
least when discussing payment. They presume you're not going to
pay and in their Docs they insult you.
┌──────┐
CRIPPLED Some Shareware comes crippled. You get only a
└──────┘ limited version of the program until you buy it.
Shareware might have annoying delays and payment dunnings built
into the program which only go away when you purchase a
registration number. Some Shareware quits working if you don't
buy a code nunber within a few weeks.
Freeware does none of these things. The author might
ask as one did that you take him to dinner (he called his
method Dinnerware), and another suggests you take your spouse
out to atone for the time you spend at the computer. Freeware
authors often show a sense of humor. They also frequently
provide the source code.
┌───────────┐
WHO GOT HERE? To gain entry to the Freeware Hall of Fame,
└───────────┘ a program can be discovered by the FHOF compiler
or nominated by someone. Anyone may nominate a program and we
encourage Freeware authors to nominate their own programs. The
only requirement is that the file nominated be a PC program or
database available for use at no cost. Every program gets a
1-line listing. Ward Christensen gets one line for his CP/M
communications programs--perhaps the most influential Freeware
of all time--and you'll get a one-line entry for your program.
┌─────────┐
NOMINATIONS are made to the compiler of this list and we need
└─────────┘ to know 4 things:
(1) Author name
(2) Software name
(3) Brief description of what the program does
(4) Your certainty the program is Freeware.
┌───────────┐
CALL THE HALL We can be contacted three ways: via the ILink
└───────────┘ computer network anywhere, through CHEERS! in
Memphis, TN, or through CAVU in Charlottesville, VA. CHEERS!
and CAVU are the HOF home boards and the latest edition of the
HOF will always be found there.
┌───┐
ILINK Hundreds of BBS's around the world are members of the
└───┘ ILink network and many North American cities have an
Ilink affiliate or two. The network is a collection of 200 or
so topic conferences which are provided to member Bulletin
Boards for the use of their callers. The HOF monitors the
Shareware conference for mail addressed to Rey Barry. The
monitoring is autonated so watch the spelling. All Ilink
messages are public.
┌────┐
CHEERS CHEERS! public line is 901-373-5941, 14400 HST. CAVU is
& CAVU 804-977-0750, 9600 HST. Both are 14.5 PCBoards. Both
└────┘ have a special download Directory devoted to Hall of
Fame files. It is DIR 39 on CHEERS! and DIR 18 on CAVU. Both
public and private messages can be left in the Main Conference
on these Boards.
┌───────┐
COPYRIGHT This file, the accompanying files HALLFAME.TXT and
└───────┘ SYSOP.NOT, and the name "Freeware Hall of Fame" are
Copyright 1989-91 by Rey Barry. HALLFAME.TXT is a Freeware
database offered for the use of all to accord Freeware authors
the recognition their monumental contributions have made to the
PC hobby.
Charlottesville, VA, USA 1/92