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- The Future of CP/M: Dead or alive?
-
-
-
- Msg #17907 posted 05/31/86 at 6:10 am by Sypko Andreae
- To: ALL USERS About: SPECIAL CP/M MEETING (16 lines)
-
- =====>> SPECIAL MEETING OF BAMDUA (MORROW USERS GROUP) <<======
- ---------------- EVERY ONE IS INVITED -------------------------
- --- When: Tuesday, June 24th, 1986, 7:30 pm -------------------
- --- Where: West Branch, Berkeley Public Library ---------------
- --------- 1125 University Ave., Berkeley ----------------------
- --- TOPIC: A meeting with five of the major influences --------
- --- in the CP/M community: Dick Ezzard, Ken Fowler, -----------
- --- Irv Hoff, Wayne Masters and Nancy Mulvany. ----------------
- --- This promises to be a most exciting BAMDUA meeting where --
- --- these people will join us in a discussion of the ----------
- --- situation of CP/M and its Public Domain networking power --
- --- and liveliness in the computer world today, particularly -
- --- with regard to its relative merits vs. those of MS-DOS. ---
- ----------- Be there or be square -----------------------------
- --- ( BAMDUA, (415) 644-2805, PO Box 5152, Berkeley, CA ) -----
- ---------------------------------------------------------------
-
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- *******
-
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-
-
- BAMDUA is an active local group of Morrow users, and this was one
- of their regular meetings, but with a twist. The topic was "The
- Future of CP/M" and the panel included names familiar to anyone
- in the Bay Area who has hooked a modem up to their computer. In
- the world of computer bulletin boards, relationships take on a
- disembodied quality. People write messages back and forth over
- years yet never meet face-to-face. It leaves room for the
- imagination. When a luminary such as Irv Hoff actually makes an
- appearance, I suspect many would attend just to see the face
- behind the name. Who is Irv Hoff? Is he seven feet tall? Does
- he speak with an accent? Perhaps he's a college kid with a bad
- case of acne. There was even a rumor once that "Irv Hoff" was a
- pseudonym used by a collective group of public-domain programmers
- for the prolific quantity of software issued under that name.
-
- The meeting room filled quickly and from start to finish there
- was standing room only - one certain indication that CP/M is
- definitely alive and well, contrary to some of the pronouncements
- that would be uttered this evening. The average age was around
- 40, with gray hair and receding hairlines common. This was not a
- group of novices, but dedicated people who took the time to come
- and make sure there was still a viable CP/M community.
-
- The Idealistic organizer
-
- Rick Charnes, BAMDUA member who organized this panel, opened
- things up. He related some of his own personal evolution since
- overcoming a case of computerphobia 2 years ago after taking a
- Media Alliance workshop for writers. One of the main reasons he
- chose a Morrow Micro Decision was its attractive design. With no
- technical background, he wanted to use a computer for writing;
- then he purchased a modem, and nothing was the same again.
- "Computer bulletin boards changed my life," Rick confessed,
- relating a familiar story of all-night sessions on 4 hours of
- sleep.
-
- "Computer message boards foster an exchange of ideas, a sharing,
- in a way verbal communication doesn't touch," Rick said,
- explaining his attraction to the world of modem-izing. He has
- actually met more friends since getting a computer, contrary to
- the common image of the shut-away programmer.
-
- Rick's vision for this meeting was a celebration of what the CP/M
- community has done and to address the issues that will keep CP/M
- alive in a world increasingly dominated by IBM. He sees computer
- bulletin boards and the world of public-domain software as the
- main achievements of CP/M users. "If we can stick together, we'll
- stay alive."
-
-
- The Wizardly Sysop
-
- The first panelist to speak was Wayne Masters, an engineering
- administrator for Lockheed who wanted a computer to bring work
- home from the office. He is now one of the most renowned Sysops
- (System Operators) with his Potpourri RCP/M, flagship of
- BYE5/PBBS/MDM/IMP/KMD public-domain programmers. The BYE5 series
- (a program which allows a computer to be run by a remote user,
- an essential ingredient in setting up a board) came about
- because of the peculiar nature of CP/M systems. Back in 1983,
- anyone interested in setting up a remote system had to install
- half a dozen separate programs to run on their particular
- computer. Wayne designed BYE5 so that only one program needed
- to be modified. All the others (the message system, the file
- transfer utility) would be system-independent.
-
- Wayne suggested this is one reason MS-DOS is so popular. No
- tinkering is needed. Unfortunately that's not the case with
- CP/M which has dozens of slightly-different operating systems
- to contend with. Wayne prefers S100-bus systems and hoped at
- one time (as many early users did) that this would become the
- standard in the 8-bit world. Alas, it was not to be.
-
-
- The Far-looking editor
-
- Next up was Nancy Mulvany, editor of the Kaypro Users newsletter,
- BAKUP. She had logged that day onto The Well, a teleconference
- run by the Whole Earth Catalog crew. On the IBM conference, one
- topic of burning controversy is "The future of the IBM PC". The
- general consensus on The Well is that the PC is already obsolete.
- "The only people talking about whether CP/M is dead are CP/M
- people," Nancy observed. "You have a machine, if it works for
- what you want, good." She agreed that for writers, CP/M machines
- are excellent. For desktop publishing, don't buy a PC - instead,
- look to the Atari in about a year, she suggested.
-
- Nancy, too, is enthusiastic about computer boards. "Bulletin
- boards are the way to transcend operating systems. Get a modem if
- you don't have one." She recommends spending the time learning
- the intricacies of on-line communication and file transfer on a
- local board (saves on long-distance bills). Fortunately, there
- are hundreds of boards today, and plenty of Sysops who
- specifically welcome and help out the novice.
-
- Nancy talked about software publishing and the fact that all the
- new commercial software is for IBMs. She is the U.S. agent for H.
- & D. Calvert, publishers of MACREX, an indexing program written
- originally for the Osborne 1, then upgraded with new features for
- MS-DOS. The publishers asked her to assess the feasibility of re-
- writing the program for CP/M. After six months of thinking about
- it, Nancy had to recommend against the idea. She reasoned that
- the market for such a program would be professional indexers,
- most of whom don't even own computers yet. The difference in
- price between CP/M and MS-DOS machines is not that great anymore.
-
- What she didn't realize was that in England the market is
- different. CP/M is booming there. Amstrad sells a CP/M system
- with 256K memory, 1 drive, monitor, keyboard -- for 400 pounds
- (including an Epson printer!) "And they're selling like hotcakes.
- IBM is not king in England." In the end, Calvert decided to
- upgrade the CP/M version of MACREX and completely re-wrote it in
- the C language. Nancy held a pre-release copy in her hand.
-
- "Is CP/M dead? Don't focus on that. If you have an application
- that works, what more do you need? Get an Atari if you want new
- programs every week. What we've got is fine. What is all this
- stuff? One operating system is in, another is out. It's
- marketing." Nancy predicted that the MS-DOS world will get further
- away from the individual end user who deals with computers on a
- one-to-one basis. Where will the end users find support? "It's
- places like here tonight where they'll get served."
-
-
- The Practical philosopher
-
- Ken Fowler spoke third. Sysop of the Kaypro Users board, Ron
- asked how many in the audience use a modem. Over 50 people raised
- their hands. A dozen of that group admitted to typical $100+/
- month phone bills. Six Sysops were present.
-
- Ken began by asking, "Is CP/M dead? No, but it ain't healthy. Who
- killed it? It's not worth worrying about. CP/M users are too set
- in their ways, not buying new software. The market allowed MS-DOS
- to shoot to the top. But that's tapering off too. Next year
- something else will be on top. If you're happy with CP/M, it
- doesn't matter if CP/M is dead."
-
- Ken uses CP/M 2.2 which does everything he wants and has an urge
- to do. Professionally, he writes code to run hardware -- EPROMs
- and such. A rule of thumb he uses is, "Don't worry what chip it's
- for -- you worry about cost effectiveness and if it does the
- job."
-
-
- The User's advocate
-
- Dick Ezzard, next up, was here "to represent the user. But I'm a
- shmoozer more than a user. If you have an application and
- something to do, and find a computer to do it, run by
- applications. Let the application drive your decision." But in
- all fairness, he said he would have to suggest to anyone looking
- for a computer to buy one of the XT or AT clones. He went to a
- swap meet recently looking to find a Seagate 20 Mb hard disk for
- his clone. After pricing all the vendors, he found one for $281
- -- all he needed was to plug it in and go. For CP/M, the cost
- would've been closer to $800. The dirt cheap prices in the clone
- market are due to the intense competition. "The little guys
- competing, the open architecture, brings the price down for the
- regular users."
-
- When he first discovered bulletin boards, he was a "looker." "I
- watched Hoff on Compuserve help thousands. I eventually found a
- board in the Bay Area that I went to a lot." (This is KAY*FOG,
- the message system run by Bond Shands.) Dick would see messages
- left by callers asking for help on WordStar. He started answering
- questions from his experience, or by "not being afraid to go to
- the manual and find the answer." Eventually he was so involved
- that Bond twisted his arm to be the Assistant SysOp.
-
- His advice to anyone with a modem: "Hang around two or three
- boards until you find one that goes with your personality." His
- advice to anyone without a modem: "Hang a modem on your computer
- and for a small increase in price, you get a powerful tool that
- opens up the world."
-
-
- The Programmer's programmer
-
-
- When Irv Hoff was introduced as a "big name" in the computer
- world, he stood up to his full imposing height of 6'4" and said
- "You can see he means my size." Shy and retiring, like a heavy-
- set Mr. Wizard, in person Irv Hoff comes across as the patient
- genius he is. Over the years, I have seen hundreds of messasges
- left on computer boards asking Irv for help on one of his many
- public-domain programs. Always he responds with detailed
- instructions. The only time I ever saw him get angry was with
- programmers who modified one of his programs and released it with
- a bug and a higher version number.
-
- Irv related how he got started in radio teletype back in 1960 and
- worked on modem development with Keith Petersen, another pioneer
- in digital communications who eventually wrote the XMODEM program.
- Irv got his first computer in 1970, a Datapoint minicomputer with
- 8k circulating ram that cost $11,500. He mentioned they developed
- the idea for the microprocessor and got Intel to develop the 8008.
- Datapoint was unsatisfied with the 8008 as it was 10 times slower
- than specified and over a year late. The 8008 led to the 8080 and
- nearly everybody using a microcomputer is aware of the story from
- that point to present. Irv used his Datapoint computer on radio
- teletype and CW, being over four years ahead of other hams who
- eventually got the Altair 8800 and the IMSAI computer. He was the
- first ham in the world to have a privately owned computer on RTTY.
-
- Irv asked how many in the audience use their computers just for
- fun and how many for their job? It was 1/2 and 1/2. He told of a
- Radio Shack survey (that was never made public) which found over
- 3/4ths the owners of Radio Shack computers didn't use their com-
- puters at all, just kept it on the shelf in the closet. (This was
- offered with regard to "what does the typical owner of a home
- computer use it for?)
-
- "Public domain software is in a quandry," he said. "The easiest way
- to learn programming is by modifying what's already been done. But
- how do you modify something without altering someone else's work?
- If you don't put out the source code, you won't get see others add
- innovative ideas." Irv found that as more people got into program-
- ming, the old days have faded when it was just hackers who knew each
- other. As newcomers try their hand at modifying existing programs,
- too often the new version has bugs or messes up some feature that
- that was previously working correctly. Many people then erroneously
- assume the original author had put out a program that never had been
- working properly. Irv said he realized that a lot of people wanted
- to modify programs just for the solitary reason they didn't want to
- have "exactly what everybody else was using".
-
- In closing, Irv graciously mentioned some of the people to whom
- we all owe a debt of gratitude in the CP/M world. "The main
- reason my name is big now is because nearly all the original big
- names in CP/M programming went to MS-DOS. People such as: Ron
- Fowler (who is selling MEX now), Keith Petersen who established
- the first-ever RCPM (still available in Royal Oak, MI), Dennis
- Recla who has been working with RBBS38, Frank Wancho who developed
- RBBS4105, Paul Traina who wrote the OxGate BBS, Mark Ziegler and
- Jim Mills who developed the MODEM7 program and of course Ward
- Ward Christensen whose name is legendary among early users of CP/M.
- He said there were many, many others who had contributed to the
- literally thousands of free programs currently available.
-
- For all of us, I'm sure a hearty thanks is extended to Irv
- especially, but also all the panelists for their hard work in
- keeping CP/M not just alive but growing.
-
-
- The Inevitable questions
-
- The floor was opened for back and forth discussion, comments,
- questions/answers. A comment was made there are nearly 200 BBS
- sysemts in the San Francisco Bay area (including Oakland and San
- Jose areas). With all the talk of computer boards, the first
- question was, "How to get started using a modem?"
-
- Ken Fowler said the first thing is to know your communication
- program well -- how to use it to call into a BBS and then how to
- upload and download files. "Learn your end first. Read the .DOC
- files for the comm program you're running." (For example, IMP and
- MEX, both public-domain modem programs, come with extensive
- documentation.)
-
- Next, know that computer boards vary widely in the set of
- commands they use on their particular message system. Ken, when
- he first logs onto a new system, saves a file of all the commands
- then reads it off-line so as not to waste time (and keep other
- users from using the system.) Learn how to enter/read messages,
- how to say 'goodby', how to access the file areas. Every board
- will have a menu of commands. Print these out for handy reference
- whenever you call back. Some Sysops encourage voice calls (Wayne
- Masters displays his home phone number when a user first calls
- in.)
-
- Someone in the audience asked whether the dwindling numbers of
- CP/M users was leading to a reverse critical mass that would
- spell the end of support groups like this one tonite. Nancy
- Mulvany pointed out that Commodore has sold 800,000 of the
- Commodore 128 computers (which use CP/M+ and of course opens the
- door for Commodore users to the 1000s of public-domain CP/M
- programs). She also pointed out that there is a strong market
- for used CP/M machines. Irv Hoff mentioned that the ZCPR3 folks
- at Echelon have written complete CCP/BDOS replacements for Z80
- machines using CP/M. Their devotion to 8-bit computers is almost
- religious.
-
- Another question was "What is being done right now in the public-
- domain world?"
-
- Wayne Masters answered that a curious phenomenon has taken place
- in the past few months. For the first 1-2 years after the IBM PCs
- became popular, MS-DOS public-domain programmers duplicated what
- had been done in CP/M. Then for a period, the MS-DOS and CP/M
- public-domain worlds were on an equal footing. Recently, CP/M
- public domain has been looking at and implementing some of the
- new ideas coming out of the MSDOS world. As an example KMD (the
- XMODEM file transfer replacement) has been a new feature using
- routines developed by Bob Freed to download member files from an
- .ARC file that has become the standard in MS-DOS. (.ARC files are
- compressed library files similar to .LBR files in CP/M.) The .ARC
- standard will eventually mean that LU and NEWSWEEP will be replaced
- in CP/M. Wayne said, "We're now taking stock of what they're doing
- but they [the MS-DOS programmers] are often quite sloppy -- they're
- not memory-bound. "With 640k available they could care less about
- efficient code."
-
- Ken Fowler, as Sysop of BAKUP (a Kaypro users board), sees more
- and more MS-DOS public-domain software being uploaded to his
- system. Since he doesn't have a clone, he can't tell what he
- has. He has noticed that most of the programs being released are
- shareware rather than strictly public-domain. (He prefers to
- think of them as "beggarware" -- "Some guy writes a small program
- that transfers a file from one directory to another and puts in
- the documentation that he's asking $15 for it.")
-
- There are a growing number of MS-DOS boards around. The main
- difference between these and the old RCPM boards is they don't
- allow access to the operating system. (On an RCPM, you generally
- exit from the message system directly into the disk area with
- with the familiar "A>", and browse the files online.) On MS-DOS
- boards, everything is done from a menu -- from seeing what files
- are available to choosing which ones you want to download.
-
- Someone asked what is available still in the way of CP/M data
- base programs. Ken Fowler answered that "Condor" may be the only
- data base manager still being sold. But in the long run, he
- thinks the true data base computers will be the new 32-bit
- machines ("A 68000 running at 16 Mhz. is best for data base
- work"). There followed a discussion of the future technology
- we'll be seeing in desktop computers. Ken thinks the 68000 family
- of CPUs will become the standard. Desktop publishing will be
- snickered about in a few years, as the ability to do everything
- on-line becomes common. "There won't be any need to publish on
- paper any more. You'll just call up on-line databases", Ken
- predicted.
-
- Irv Hoff asked, "How long before we see use of non-rotating mass
- storage (disk drives), and before laser disk technology is
- practical?" Ken thinks laser beam disk drives will replace 5"
- floppy disks in another ten years. (Read-only laser disks are
- being experimented with now, but the ability to read AND write
- will take a few years to develop.) Anoter member of the panel
- expressed the thought within two years many larger firms would
- be using laser beam technology.
-
-
- The final comment of the evening appropriately came from a
- satisfied user who expressed a prevalent attitude in the CP/M
- community: "I enjoy and get better results writing on my CP/M
- machine than on the Wang or the IBM at work."
-
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- *******
-