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- Newsgroups: comp.os.msdos.programmer,comp.answers,news.answers
- Path: senator-bedfellow.mit.edu!enterpoop.mit.edu!usc!math.ohio-state.edu!magnus.acs.ohio-state.edu!usenet.ins.cwru.edu!ncoast!brown
- From: brown@NCoast.ORG (Stan Brown)
- Subject: comp.os.msdos.programmer FAQ part 4 of 4
- Expires: Fri, 23 Jul 1993 23:18:32 GMT
- Organization: Oak Road Systems, Cleveland Ohio USA
- Distribution: world
- Date: Sat, 26 Jun 1993 23:18:32 GMT
- Approved: news-answers-request@MIT.Edu
- Message-ID: <msdos-faq.9311.4@NCoast.ORG>
- Followup-To: comp.os.msdos.programmer
- Keywords:
- References: <msdos-faq.9311.3@NCoast.ORG>
- Supersedes: <msdos-faq.9310.4@NCoast.ORG>
- Lines: 520
- Xref: senator-bedfellow.mit.edu comp.os.msdos.programmer:24753 comp.answers:1135 news.answers:9759
-
-
- Archive-name: msdos-programmer-faq/part4
- Last-modified: 26 June 1993
-
-
- (continued from part 3) (no warranty on the code or information)
-
- If the posting date is more than six weeks in the past, see instructions
- in part 4 of this list for how to get an updated copy.
-
- Copyright (C) 1993 Stan Brown, Oak Road Systems. All rights reserved.
-
-
- section A. Downloads
- ====================
-
- QA01. What are Simtel, garbo, and wustl?
-
- (rev: 13 Jun 1993) These are three of the most popular archive
- sites, with a few bazillion files available for downloading by ftp.
- (For email access, see next Q.) Everything is free for downloading,
- though many of the files are shareware and you're expected to send a
- payment directly to the authors if you use them regularly.
-
- In comp.archives.msdos.d, Samuel Ko posts a two-part "Useful
- MSDOS Programs at SIMTEL20 and Garbo"; it's downloadable as
- pd1:<msdos.info>useful27.zip at Simtel
- /pc/filelist/useful27.zip at garbo
- /pub/usenet/news.answers/msdos-archives/part* at rtfm.mit.edu.
- For rtfm.mit.edu instructions, see "Where are FAQ lists archived?"
- in section C, "More information".
-
- A few words about file names and versions: Many files at the
- archive sites are updated from time to time. I have verified the
- filenames in this FAQ list as follows:
-
- garbo: from /pc/INDEX as of 10 Jun 1993
- Simtel: from pd1:<msdos.filedocs>simibm.zip as of 1 Jun 1993
- rtfm.mit.edu: via ftp access on 10 Apr 1993
-
- If you can't find a file given in these articles as mumble12.zip,
- perhaps there's a newer version; try mumble13.zip or mumble14.zip,
- or mumble*.zip if your ftp program supports wildcards (most do so).
- Please let me know of any out-of-date file names in these FAQs and
- I'll gladly update them.
-
- I have tried to list both garbo and Simtel directory and file names
- for every file mentioned for downloading. If you see a listing for
- only one of them, it means that I couldn't find the file at the
- other site, or that the other site's catalog shows an old version.
-
- Also remember that caps and lower case filenames are not inter-
- changeable at most archive sites, though they are at Simtel.
-
- 1) Simtel = wsmr-simtel20.army.mil [192.88.110.20]
-
- is located in New Mexico, USA. For instructions, see these monthly
- articles in comp.archives.msdos.announce:
-
- SIMTEL20 archives info for Internet FTP users
- How to find files in the SIMTEL20 msdos collection
- How to order SIMTEL20 files via e-mail
- How to upload files to SIMTEL20
-
- These are downloadable from Simtel as pd1:<msdos.starter>simtel20.inf
- and pd1:<msdos.filedocs>aaaread.me, mailserv.inf, and upload.inf.
- If you have no ftp access, you can get these files (and anything
- else) by email; see the next Q.
-
- If Simtel is busy, you might try the mirror site oak.oakland.edu,
- which is operated by the University of Rochester (Michigan). Both
- are maintained by Keith Petersen (w8sdz@TACOM-EMH1.Army.Mil or
- w8sdz@Vela.ACS.Oakland.Edu), so oak will probably be updated faster
- than any other mirror. At Oak, the directories /pub/msdos/*
- correspond to Simtel's pd1:<msdos.*>, so the starter files mentioned
- above are downloadable as /pub/msdos/starter/simtel20.inf and
- /pub/msdos/filedocs/aaaread.me, mailserv.inf, and upload.inf.
-
- 2) garbo = garbo.uwasa.fi [128.214.87.1]
-
- is located at the University of Vaasa in Finland and maintained by
- Timo Salmi (ts@uwasa.fi). garbo and Simtel contain many of the same
- files, but there are many differences too. Among them: the
- directory structures differ greatly, and case is significant in
- directory and file names at garbo.
-
- 3) wustl = wuarchive.wustl.edu [128.252.135.4]
-
- mirrors both garbo (in /mirrors4/garbo.uwasa.fi) and Simtel (in
- /mirrors/msdos). As with any mirror site, it may lag by a day or
- two, so you may not want to try it on the same day you see an upload
- notice posted.
-
- 4) others
-
- A comprehensive list of MS-DOS archive sites is downloadable as
- /pc/pd2/moder25.zip at garbo.
-
- For archie.au via Telnet (different from the Archie file-finding
- mail servers): Oceanian users should try archie.au first. Paul
- Brooks has written to say that it "mirrors garbo and simtel-20 (in
- /micros/pc/simtel-20, /micros/pc/garbo) as well as many other
- archives. Telnetting to 'archie.au' and logging on as 'archie' (no
- password) will access the Oceanic ARCHIE server." Email Craig Warren
- (ccw@archie.au) for instructions if needed.
-
- QA02. I have no ftp access. How can I get files from the archives?
-
- (rev: 14 June 1993) First, be _sure_ that you have no ftp access
- before trying email methods. (Ask your sysadmin, or a knowledgeable
- user at your site.) ftp is better for you because it's faster, and
- it uses less net resources too.
-
- When using an email server, make sure the Reply-to path in your
- message is valid. If it's not, you'll get no reply from the server.
- Do wait a few days before assuming you're not going to get a
- response; some servers have long pending queues. After a suitable
- wait, get your sysadmin's help to correct your reply-to, and send
- your message again.
-
- Occasionally a machine goes down for an extended period, which may
- prevent a timely reply to your message. If you're sure your message
- bears a good reply path and you haven't got a reply in a week or so,
- you might send your message again, once. Don't post it as an
- article in a newsgroup.
-
- For files from Simtel, see "How to order SIMTEL20 files via e-mail",
- posted monthly in comp.archives.msdos.announce; or send email
- containing only the word "help" to listserv@vm1.nodak.edu. For
- instructions on using garbo's email server, send a request to
- Timo Salmi at ts@uwasa.fi.
-
- The DEC Western Research Labs server will get files from any ftp
- site by ftp and then email them to you. Send email containing
- "help" to ftpmail@decwrl.dec.com.
-
- QA03. Can I get archives on CD-ROM?
-
- (rev: 24 May 1993) Copies of the SIMTEL20 MS-DOS, Macintosh and
- Unix-C collections (also of wuarchive, cica, and others) are
- available from Walnut Creek CDROM, 1547 Palos Verdes, Suite 260,
- Walnut Creek, CA 94596-2228, telephone (800) 786-9907 or +1 510
- 674-0783, or FAX +1 510 674-0821, or email rab@cdrom.com.
-
- For a catalog of disks available, send email to info@cdrom.com, or
- ftp the catalog as /cdrom/catalog from cdrom.com.
-
- QA04. Where do I find program <mumble>?
-
- (rev: 2 Feb 1993) There are several newsgroups to help;
- comp.binaries.ibm.pc.wanted is generally the best place to ask your
- question. Please review the guidelines in "What other newsgroups
- should I know about?" in section 1, "General questions".
-
- Download and check the indexes from Simtel and garbo (see next Q).
- Unless what you're looking for is commercial software, there's a
- good chance it will be at one or both of those sites.
-
- The Archie servers maintain directories of many (not all) ftp sites
- worldwide. You can Telnet to a server or client to search for
- files, or perform a search by email. See the Anonymous FTP List,
- posted periodically in news.answers and other groups, for a list of
- Archie servers.
-
- QA05. How can I check Simtel or garbo before I post a request for a
- program?
-
- (rev: 2 Feb 1993) Simtel and garbo have indexes of their contents,
- which you can download and then search off line.
-
- garbo's index file, /pc/INDEX, is an annotated list, frequently
- updated, of the MS-DOS files there; to save download time, get the
- packed form /pc/INDEX.ZIP. The news file /pc/pd2/news-pd2 contains
- selected news on all MS-DOS directories at garbo.
-
- Simtel's index files, in pd1:<msdos.filedocs>, are updated several
- times a month. SIMLIST.ZIP contains a list in text format. But you
- may prefer the file SIMIBM.ZIP, which is comma-delimited for easy
- use with any of these search facilities:
-
- - Two downloadable search programs are SIMTEL35.ARC and
- SIMDIR22.ZIP. Of the two, I find I use SIMDIR much more often.
-
- - dBASE III or IV users can load the index from SIMLIST.ZIP using
- instructions in SIMIBM.INF and SIMIBM.DB3.
-
- - PC-FILE users should get SIMIBM.HDR, which tells how to use
- SIMIBM.IBM.
-
- QA06. How do I download and decode a program I found?
-
- (rev: 16 Mar 1993) See the "starter kit" in comp.binaries.ibm.pc,
- usually posted on the first and 15th of every month. Most binaries
- are posted and sent through email in 'uuencode' format. The starter
- kit contains a uudecode program to turn this file back into binary.
-
- If you can't wait (if?, bwaa-haa-haa), you can get the starter kit
- via ftp or email from rtfm.mit.edu, in the directory
- /pub/usenet/comp.binaries.ibm.pc as files
- v21inf02:_s.k,_C_S_s_K_v1.9.1_(p_01_01)
- v21inf04:_b.m,_B_s_G_t_B_V1.3_(p_01_01)
- For general instructions on rtfm.mit.edu, see "Where are FAQ lists
- archived?" in section C, "More information".
-
- If you're using Kermit, remember to set file type binary before
- issuing the send command. By the way, the uuencoded file is bigger
- than the binary, so you'll save connect time if you can uudecode it
- and then download the binary file.
-
- QA07. Where is UUDECODE?
-
- You can find it at Simtel and garbo, but it's easier to take it from
- the "starter kit" mentioned in the preceding Q.
-
- If you're logged in at a Unix site, there's almost certainly a
- uudecode there: just type "uudecode" followed by a space and the
- file name. The binary file is 25% smaller than the uuencoded file,
- so you'll save connect time if you can uudecode it on the Unix host
- and then download the binary file. Remember: set file type binary.
-
- QA08. Why do I get errors when extracting from a ZIP file I downloaded?
-
- (rev: 5 Apr 1993) There are many possible causes, but two of them
- probably account for 95% of all problems.
-
- 1) File transmission: You must tell the archive site to transfer
- .ZIP files in binary mode. Depending on your software, you may also
- need to set your local software to receive files in binary mode.
-
- 2) Unzipping program: Make sure you aren't using an obsolete
- version. In <9303290853.kp28285@tacom-emh1.army.mil> on 29 Mar
- 1993, Keith Petersen, Simtel administrator, wrote: "SIMTEL20 has
- standardized on the Info-ZIP group's ZIP and UNZIP because they are
- freely distributable and they have no restrictions on exporting.
- The latest version of Info-ZIP's ZIP and UNZIP can always be found
- in directory PD1:<MSDOS.ZIP> and will always have the name
- 'Info-ZIP' in the description to make them easy to locate." PKUNZIP
- version 1.10 may not unzip newer stuff from archive sites because
- site administrators have now embraced version 2.04. Also see
- "What's the current version of UNZIP?" in section B, "Vendors and
- products".
-
- section B. Vendors and products
- ===============================
-
- QB01. How can I contact Borland?
-
- (rev: 18 Apr 1993) Borland has set up these email addresses.
- However, none of them is for technical support such as help with
- finding your own programming errors and explaining compiler
- messages.
-
- - bp7-info@borland.com will reply to any message with 17K of info on
- Borland Pascal with Objects 7.0 and Turbo Pascal 7.0.
-
- - customer-support@borland.com is for questions about prices and
- features of products, replacing bad or missing disks, info on
- upgrades, etc. They do not accept emailed credit-card numbers.
-
- - bugs@borland.com will take "a well-documented bug report" and send
- an automated response, but will not give you a workaround or a
- scheduled fix date or even confirm that it is or is not considered
- a bug. "The purpose of bugs@borland.com is to improve future
- products sooner, not as a substitute for tech support channels."
-
- Tech support is provided through Compuserve (GO BOR), by voice phone
- at +1 408 438 5300, by FAX at (800) 822-4269 in U.S. (use Touch-Tone
- voice phone), on a BBS at +1 408 439 9096, and by mail at
-
- Technical Support Department
- Borland International
- P.O. Box 660001
- Scotts Valley CA 95067-0001, USA.
-
- You'll need to give your product's name, version, and serial number.
-
- Borland's TechFax documents are also available for download:
- pd1:<msdos.turbo-c>bchelp10.zip from Simltel
- /pc/turbopas/bchelp10.zip from garbo.
- These documents are detailed answers to common questions about Turbo
- C and Borland C products, and aggregate about four times the size of
- this file.
-
- QB02. How can I contact Microsoft?
-
- (rev: 18 Apr 1993) Individual employees of Microsoft (not MicroSoft,
- please!) post here sometimes. Their addresses all take the form
- person@microsoft.com. However, Microsoft as a company does not
- provide product support through the Internet, as far as I'm aware.
- Technical support through your modem is available on Compuserve (GO
- MICROSOFT) or via Microsoft's BBS at +1 206 936-6735 in the U.S., or
- +1 416 507-3022 in Canada.
-
- If you want to place an order or get general pre-sales information,
- call the appropriate sales and service number:
-
- U.S. end-user sales (800) 426-9400
- U.S. corporate/gov't/reseller/
- educational sales (800) 227-4679
- Canadian sales (800) 568-3503
- International sales +1 206 936-8661
-
- For tech support you must make an ordinary long-distance phone call.
- Microsoft has separate incoming phone numbers for many products.
- Since it's your nickel, first check your documentation to see if a
- phone number is listed. Here are phone numbers (as of 1 June 1992)
- for a few products of most interest to the readers of this group:
-
- C/C++ (206) 635-7007
- MASM (206) 646-5109
- DOS Upgrade Users (206) 646-5104 (for 90 days after first call)
- Windows Users (206) 637-6098
-
- If you can't find the direct number any other way, call the "master"
- numbers below or the sales numbers a few paragraphs above. You'll
- get the "voice mail phone tree from h-ll" but you'll eventually get
- to the right department. They don't provide technical assistance,
- but a voice menu will help you find the current phone number for the
- department you need.
-
- U.S. end-user product support (206) 454-2030
- U.S. languages support (206) 637-7096
-
- You can also write to Microsoft Product Support, 16011 NE 36th Way,
- Box 97017, Redmond WA 98073-9717, USA.
-
- QB03. What's the current version of UNZIP?
-
- (rev: 14 June 1993) As of April 1993, the administrators of garbo
- and Simtel are accepting uploads in the ZIP 2.0 format. You can use
- the free Info-ZIP versions, or PKZIP 2.04g (not 2.04c or 2.04e).
- Simtel has standardized on the Info-ZIP versions for several
- reasons, as explained in an article posted 29 Mar 1993 in
- comp.archives.msdos.announce.
-
- The official site for the latest versions of Info-ZIP's Zip and
- unZip programs is quest.jpl.nasa.gov [128.129.75.43] in directory
- /pub. Also downloadable are these files, in pd1:<msdos.zip> at
- Simtel and /pc/arcers at garbo (source code at garbo in /unix/arcers):
-
- unz50p1.exe UnZip 5.0p1 program and documentation
- unz50p1.zip UnZip 5.0p1 source code
- zip19p1x.zip Zip 1.9p1 .EXEs and docs (PKZIP 2.04 compatible)
- zip19p1.zip Zip 1.9p1 source code (PKZIP 2.04 compatible)
-
- An advantage of the Info-ZIP versions is that are not restricted to
- MS-DOS. Look at quest.jpl.nasa.gov for versions for all supported
- operating systems. At Simtel, look in pd8:<misc.unix> and
- pd8:<misc.vaxvms> for unix and VAX/VMS versions; the source code in
- pd8:<misc.unix> also compiles under MS-DOS and VAX/VMS.
-
- PKZIP and PKUNZIP are shareware products of PKWARE Inc. The current
- version is 2.04g, which is the third official version after 1.10.
- You can download them from PKWARE's bulletin board, +1 414 354 8670,
- or from garbo as /pc/arcers/pkz204g.exe. U.S. law forbids U.S.
- archive sites from making them available.
-
- By the way, if you want to develop your own utilities, you will find
- the ZIP 2.0 data structures described in the downloadable file
- pd1:<msdos.zip>appnote.zip at Simtel.
-
- QB04. What's in Borland Pascal/Turbo Pascal 7.0?
-
- You can send email to bp7-info@borland.com and get an automatic
- reply of the 17K information file from Borland, or the file is
- downloadable (6k, ZIPped) as /pc/turbopas/bp7-info.zip from
- garbo.uwasa.fi.
-
- QB05. What's in Microsoft Visual C++?
-
- (new: 24 May 1993) This is the replacement for Microsoft C/C++
- 7.0. It comes in Standard and Professional versions, as well as an
- upgrade from MSC 7.0. The Professional upgrade is $139 in U.S. and
- includes all software but less than half the full set of manuals.
-
- According to Microsoft Sales, (800) 426-9400 in the U.S., the
- Professional edition can develop applications for Windows or good
- ol' DOS and includes the optimizing compiler; the Standard edition's
- compiler lacks the optimization and can't develop Windows
- applications.
-
- QB06. Where is Microsoft C 8.0?
-
- There won't be an 8.0. Visual C++ is the upgrade to C/C++ 7.0 (see
- previous Q).
-
- section C. More information
- ===========================
-
- QC01. Are there any good on-line references for PC hardware components?
-
- (rev: 18 Apr 1993) I have heard good reports of HELPPC21, which is
- downloadable as
- pd1:<msdos.info>helppc21.zip at Simtel
- /pc/programming/helppc21.zip at garbo.
- There's an info file in the same directory, helppc21.inf.
-
- This hypertext system contains much information on ports and other
- hardware, as well as some overlap with Ralf Brown's interrupt list
- (see next Q). It is shareware ($25).
-
- QC02. Are there any good on-line references for PC interrupts?
-
- (rev: 6 June 1993) The definitive work is Ralf Brown's interrupt
- list, which is packed with information on documented and
- (officially) undocumented BIOS and DOS interrupts, DOS tables, and
- interrupts hooked by many software packages.
-
- The interrupt list comes from CS.CMU.EDU [128.2.222.173] in
- /afs/cs/user/ralf/pub (switch there with a *single* command) as
- inter35a.zip, inter35b.zip, and inter35c.zip. It's downloadable as
- pd1:<msdos.info>inter35*.zip from Simtel
- /pc/programming/inter35*.zip from garbo.
- These versions were uploaded in early June 1993; updates are
- announced every few months in comp.archives.msdos.announce.
-
- There is a book, {PC Interrupts: A Programmer's Reference to BIOS,
- DOS, and Third-Party Calls} by Ralf Brown and Jim Kyle
- (Addison-Wesley; ISBN 0-201-57797-6). This corresponds to INTER26
- with the most important new material from INTER27, so the on-line
- list contains more current information (and more information) than
- the book.
-
- QC03. What and where is "Ralf Brown's interrupt list"?
-
- See the preceding Q.
-
- QC04. Where can I find lex, yacc, and language grammars?
-
- The FAQ list of the comp.compilers newsgroup answers this for Basic,
- C, Pascal, and other languages. See later in this section.
-
- QC05. What's the best book to learn programming?
-
- Sorry, this FAQ list cannot settle religious arguments.
-
- Much of the heat over this topic arises because each person believes
- that the book that he or she learned from is the best book. But my
- observation is that different people have very different experiences
- of the same book. The only person who can tell you which is the
- best book for learning a given topic is you.
-
- Your best bet is to go to a fairly well-stocked bookstore when you
- have a couple of hours to spare. Start at one end of the shelf and
- work your way methodically through every book that looks like it
- might cover what you want to learn. Look at the tables of contents;
- read a page or two from each book. Then make your decision. If
- money is a problem, or if you're not sure of your choice, check out
- your top two or three from your library.
-
- QC06. Where are FAQ lists archived?
-
- (rev: 27 Apr 1993) Very possibly the FAQ list you want is already at
- your site. Check the newsgroup news.answers; if your site doesn't
- carry news.answers, check comp.answers, rec.answers, etc., according
- to the top-level name in the FAQ list's "home" newsgroup. Articles
- are posted to the *.answers groups in a way that should make them
- last until the next versions are posted. If they expire sooner at
- your site, you might want to lobby your sysadmin to treat the
- moderated *.answers groups as a special case and grant them longer
- expiry times than other groups.
-
- To ftp the FAQ lists, connect to rtfm.mit.edu, which is operated by
- Jonathan Kamens (jik@gza.com) at MIT. Change to directory
- /pub/usenet/news.answers. The name of the file that you want is the
- Archive-name from the top of the article. For instance, to retrieve
- this article you would get msdos-programmer-faq/part4.
-
- By email (only if you have no ftp access, please), the server is
- mail-server@rtfm.mit.edu; file names omit the leading "/pub/". For
- instructions about the mail server, send a message with "help" and
- "index" on different lines.
-
- Not just FAQ lists, but every article listed in the "List of
- Periodic Informational Postings" (LoPIP) can be obtained by ftp or
- email from rtfm.mit.edu. If you have an old copy of an
- informational article, look for an "Archive-name" at the beginning;
- rtfm.mit.edu stores it under that name in /pub/usenet/news.answers.
- If the article has no Archive-name, check the first name on the
- Newsgroups line and change to that directory under /pub/usenet.
-
- QC07. Where can I get the latest copy of this FAQ list?
-
- (rev: 22 Apr 1993) It is posted to news.answers in such a way that
- it should stick around until the next version has been posted.
- Please check news.answers or comp.answers first, looking for the
- Subject line "comp.os.msdos.programmer FAQ".
-
- If the article has expired from your site's news.answers, or your
- site doesn't get news.answers, you can retrieve the latest version
- of this list as
- /pub/usenet/news.answers/msdos-programmer-faq/part* via ftp or
- email from rtfm.mit.edu; see previous Q
- pd1:<msdos.info>faqp*.zip from Simtel
- /pc/doc-net/faqp*.zip from garbo.
-
- QC08. How do I use ftp?
-
- (new: 16 Mar 1993) I have been much impressed with {The Whole
- Internet User's Guide and Catalog} by Ed Krol (O'Reilly &
- Associates, ISBN 1-56592-025-2). It gives lots of information on
- using ftp, email, Telnet, Archie, etc. As a new user of ftp
- (January 1993), I found the information made me productive quickly.
-
- Disclosure: Though I don't believe it has biased my judgment, you
- should know that O'Reilly sent me a free evaluation copy.
-
- You may also want to look for the "Beginner's Guide to FTP", posted
- periodically in comp.binaries.ibm.pc. You can retrieve it from
- rtfm.mit.edu (see "Where are FAQ lists archived?", above), in
- /pub/usenet/comp.binaries.ibm.pc, as (hang on!)
- v21inf05:_b.m,_B_s_G_t_F_V1.7_(p_01_01) .
-
- (end of comp.os.msdos.programmer FAQ)
-
- --
- Stan Brown, Oak Road Systems brown@Ncoast.ORG
-
- Can't find FAQ lists? ftp to 'rtfm.mit.edu' and look in /pub/usenet
- (or email me >>> with valid reply-to address <<< for instructions).
-