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- [ THE KAY*FOG RBBS | Filename=CPM-CC28.ART | posted 07/05/86 | 137 lines 8k ]
-
- The CP/M Connection Originally published in
- by Computer Currents
- Ted Silveira 5720 Hollis Street
- (copyright and all rights reserved) Emeryville, CA 94608
-
- June 3, 1986
- WHAT THE FUTURE HOLDS
-
- As I started this column I realized it's number 28, which means
- I've been babbling away here for over a year. I should say it seems
- like no time at all, but really it seems like forever--I can barely
- remember when I wasn't doing the CP/M Connection and making a fool of
- myself every two weeks.
-
- I'm not a great fan of anniversaries of any sort, but all the same,
- it seems like a good time to look around a bit. The CP/M world, of
- course, isn't the same place it was a year or so ago. Osborne and
- Morrow--two of the three major CP/M players when I bought my first CP/M
- computer--are gone. Kaypro, the third major player from that time, now
- produces only one CP/M computer.
-
- Many publishers of major applications programs have stopped
- supporting or even selling the CP/M versions of their programs. (Have
- you tried to buy the CP/M version of dBase II recently? Difficult, if
- not actually impossible.) And the CP/M public domain, which seemed to
- revive in a burst of productivity six or eight months ago, has now gone
- back to sleep (a few new programs but mostly minor updates).
-
- Among the CP/M magazines, _User's Guide_ has disappeared entirely
- (it has a new owner and is supposed to reappear, but so far, nothing),
- _Profiles_ (a Kaypro magazine) is now about half MS-DOS (reflecting
- Kaypro's changing business), and _Micro Cornucopia_, the last oasis for
- the dedicated CP/M tinkerer, went through a remarkably rapid
- transformation some months back and is now almost entirely devoted to
- articles on the 68000 chip and the building of Far Eastern PC clones.
-
- But it's not all so grim . . .
-
- The CP/M user community has gotten a big boost with the appearance
- of CP/M for the Commodore 128. From what I can see on the bulletin
- boards and on CompuServe (where there's now a special Commodore section
- in the CP/M forum), CP/M is attracting a lot of interest from Commodore
- users, despite the fact the Commodore isn't an ideal CP/M machine (slow
- drives). Considering the vast number of those computers sold, is it out
- of line to suggest that Commodore users may eventually add another
- million to the CP/M user base?
-
- A number of small software companies are aggressively mining the
- CP/M world as the massive niche market it really is--companies like
- Spectre Technologies (Rembrandt, a graphics program, and Presto!, a pop-
- up desk organizer), Echelon (ZCPR3 and related products), Xpert Software
- (XtraKey, a key definition program), Kamasoft (OutThink and KAMAS,
- outline processors), and Spite Software (Thoughtline, another outline
- processor). Spite has also been doing massive mailings of its catalog
- (a sort of "cooperative" catalog that lists software from many
- companies) to every CP/M user it can find.
-
- And smaller, machine-specific CP/M magazines like _Morrow Owner's
- Review_ and _Foghorn_ (mainly Osborne) are seriously looking for ways to
- expand their readership and support to all CP/M computers. (Though
- running a magazine is more marginal than just about anything except
- starting your own restaurant.)
-
- What does it all mean, you're dying to ask? Honestly, I don't
- know, except that there seems to be a growing "Volkswagen" mentality
- among CP/M users, the kind of attitude that leads people to keep Beetles
- and VW buses on the road long after other cars have vanished, that made
- the repair book "How to Keep Your Volkswagen Alive" a long-running hit,
- and that supports at least one "bug" shop in every town large enough to
- have a stop light.
-
- To that, I'll add a curiosity. Looking over the want ads in
- _Computer Currents_, the San Jose _Mercury_, and the San Francisco
- _Chronicle_, I notice that ads for CP/M computers have all but
- disappeared. There are plenty of Apples of all models and ages, and
- columns of IBM PC clones, but hardly a Kaypro, Osborne, Morrow,
- Bondwell, Epson, etc., to be seen. What happened? Have they been
- stored in the attic and forgotten? Are they just impossible to sell?
- Is the market price so low that the owners have decided to hang on to
- them? And are the current owners actually using the machines or just
- stuffing them in closets? If you think you know, write and tell me.
-
- [Plans for the Future]
-
- Enough of that. What I really want to do here is ask for your
- help. I need to know what you want to read about in the next year's
- worth of CP/M Connection. I try to stay away from topics that are
- specific to one particular computer, but beyond that, anything goes--
- from a review of hard disks (I'm still working on it) to a patch that
- will let you change WordStar's default ruler line (yes, it's possible).
- So sit down, now if you can, and make a list--things you want to know,
- things you know that you think others will want to know, software or
- hardware you're interested in, whatever comes to mind. Write it all
- down and send it to me, even if it's only one line scrawled on a
- postcard.
-
- Just to give you some ideas, here are a few things I already have
- in mind:
-
- How to use a key-definition program to soup up your current
- software. (If you already use one and have some tricks you're
- especially proud of, let me know--except for WordStar, I have a bag full
- of those.)
-
- What you can do with an outline processor. (Like key-definition
- programs, outline processors perform a simple task but have applications
- almost everywhere.)
-
- How to patch WordStar within an inch of its life and live to tell
- about it.
-
- How to rescue files from a crashed disk. (Some call it surgery,
- but it's more like a jungle expedition).
-
- What it takes to install a hard disk and which ones are worth
- installing (if I can ever get these guys to send me their products).
-
- How you can make the computer of the future from a CP/M computer, a
- RAM disk, and a battery back-up power supply.
-
- And more, including reviews of interesting commercial and public
- domain software and any intriguing rumors that float my way.
-
- But I may miss the thing you're dying to read about unless you tell
- me what it is. So write.
-
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
- Ted Silveira is a freelance writer and contributing editor to several
- computer-oriented publications. He appreciates suggestions or feedback
- and can be reached through the KAY*FOG RBBS (415)285-2687 and CompuServe
- (72135,1447) or by mail to 2756 Mattison Lane, Santa Cruz, CA 95065.
-
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