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G E N E R A L C D - R O M I N F O R M A T I O N
July 15, 1994
========
OVERVIEW
========
This document provides general information about my CD-ROM series, including
CD-ROM's that are in production and ones that are planned for the future.
It includes all necessary details for ordering CD-ROM's and a sample order
form at the end. This is currently the most comprehensive document I have
for answering questions about the CD-ROM's. There are two CD-ROM series
that are intended to meet significantly different needs, and a one-time
CD-ROM production that contains the entire contents of my 1000 floppy disk
library.
========================
WHY CD-ROM DISTRIBUTIONS
========================
More Cost Effective
It is simply far more cost effective, both for me and for the library
subscribers, to distribute the library on CD-ROM's than on floppy disks. The
cost of a subscription to the floppy distribution averaged about $40 per
month for less than 12Mb of new material per month. A CD-ROM distribution
averages about $25 per CD-ROM every couple months, for 50-150Mb of new
material with each release. Thus I can supply almost an order of magnitude
more new material at about a quarter the average cost of a floppy
subscription during the same period.
Multiple Distribution Formats
With the floppy distributions, the name of the game was sometimes to see
just how much material could be crammed onto a single floppy. There was
almost always a tradeoff between the convenience of having the material in
unarchived format and the desire to get as much material as possible into a
new release, or to make something fit on a single floppy. A significant
amount of time actually went into juggling things around until a set of 10
floppies achieved the desired density of 95-100% full. In some cases,
material had to be rejected since it was simply too large for a floppy
distribution. This is one reason why there are not very many animations or
large graphics images in the floppy library.
With a CD-ROM distribution, we get the best of both worlds. Given a vastly
larger amount of space, the new material can be distributed directly in two
forms: an unarchived (ready-to-run) form, and an archived (BBS-ready) form,
on the same media. This is how the FreshFish CD-ROM is organized. The
FrozenFish CD-ROM's that are scheduled for release after about each third
FreshFish CD-ROM will eventually contain only the BBS-ready form of new
material from as many previous FreshFish CD-ROM's as will fit on a single
CD-ROM.
==================================
FLOPPY DISTRIBUTION PAST DISK 1000
==================================
Now that the floppy library has reached disk 1000, I will not be doing any
more floppy releases. When I first announced several months ago that I
would cease doing floppy based distributions at disk 1000, a number of
organizations and individuals inquired about taking over this job and
continuing the library past disk 1000, with my "official blessing". I have
selected Amazing Computing (PIM Publications) for this job, based on their
longtime commitment to the Amiga.
The conditions of continuing to keep my endorsement include adherence to my
standards for quality, production values (look and feel), and free
redistribution of the resulting work. The plan is that they will select the
best bits and pieces off each FreshFish CD-ROM, and organize new floppy
releases using this material. They may of course, decide to incorporate
material from other sources as well.
They are expecting to start with the Jul/Aug FreshFish CD, so I anticipate
that the first batch of floppy disks after 1000 should be available sometime
in August 1994. Contact PIM Publications directly for further information
(1-800-345-3360 voice, 1-508-675-6002 FAX).
====================
THE FRESHFISH CD-ROM
====================
Goals
The FreshFish CD-ROM is designed to meet the needs of users who want copies
of new releases of material as soon as practical with a CD-ROM distribution.
Depending upon when the material is received in the CD-ROM production cycle,
and the time to go from CD-ROM master to production CD-ROM's, there should
be an average latency of about three to six weeks between receiving new
material and its availability on a FreshFish CD-ROM. This CD-ROM is
currently on about an 8 week production cycle, and typically contains 50-100
Mb of new software with each release. Eventually I hope to increase the
amount of new material to 200 Mb or more with each release.
History
As of 15-Jul-94 five FreshFish CD-ROM's have been produced. The October
1993 CD-ROM went into production in late October, however because of a virus
on the CD-ROM, most copies were destroyed and replaced with another
production run in mid November. The December 1993 CD-ROM was completed in
late December, but because of holiday delays, did not go into production
until early January 1994. The March/April 1994 CD-ROM was completed in the
first week of March and went into production about a week later. The
May/June 1994 CD-ROM went into production on May 23rd and the Jul/Aug 1994
CD-ROM is expected to go into production on Jul 22nd.
For the first two CD-ROM's, they were named after the month in which the
work was done to produce them. Starting with the third FreshFish CD-ROM, I
decided to do like magazines do, and name them after the period of time over
which they are expected to be current before the next release comes out.
Both the October 1993 and the December 1993 CD-ROM's are now sold out and no
more production runs are planned. There are still enough of the March/April
1994 and May/June CD-ROM's available to meet the anticipated demand for back
issues for the next couple of months.
Structure
Since there is not enough new material of sufficient quality released every
couple of months to fill a CD-ROM (or enough time to organize it if it was
available), I include some other material on the FreshFish CD-ROM to make
effective use of the available space. Each FreshFish CD-ROM is organized
into several different sections:
A overview section containing information about the library,
this particular CD-ROM, hot breaking news, etc.
A section containing material that is newly released with
this CD-ROM, in ready-to-run (unarchived) form.
A section containing material that is newly released with
this CD-ROM, in BBS-ready (archived) form.
A section containing installed versions of popular tools
that are anticipated to be released in updated form on each
CD-ROM. By leaving the CD-ROM mounted, you can potentially
free up several hundred megabytes of hard disk space to use
for other purposes. Of course the tools can still be copied
from the CD-ROM to a hard drive if you prefer the faster
access speed of the hard drive or don't wish to leave the
CD-ROM mounted all the time. If this section gets too
large, it may eventually be split off onto a separate tools
CD-ROM.
A "filler" section. Whatever space remains after putting
everything else on the CD-ROM will be filled with selected
material from a previous CD-ROM or from the floppy based
library distributions. This may or may not include all the
new material from the previous CD-ROM, depending upon space
available. The intention is that users will be able to
order every other FreshFish CD-ROM (at least in the
beginning) and because of the overlap, not miss any new
material.
=====================
THE FROZENFISH CD-ROM
=====================
Goals
This CD-ROM is intended to meet the needs of users who prefer to get their
doses of new material in larger chunks over longer intervals. It also
provides a way for BBS operators to have the maximal amount of recently
released new material on-line using a single CD-ROM. All of the material on
the FrozenFish CD-ROM's will be in the BBS-ready format.
History
The current plans are for a FrozenFish CD-ROM to be produced after every
third FreshFish CD-ROM. The first FrozenFish CD-ROM started shipping on
April 27th. Future FrozenFish CD-ROM's are expected to be released
approximately every 6 months or so.
Structure
Each FrozenFish CD-ROM will contain