home
***
CD-ROM
|
disk
|
FTP
|
other
***
search
/
Floppyshop 2
/
Floppyshop - 2.zip
/
Floppyshop - 2.iso
/
diskmags
/
0022-3.564
/
dmg-3557
/
news.txt
/
editor.asc
< prev
next >
Wrap
Text File
|
1989-04-05
|
26KB
|
517 lines
_/_ / ___
/ /¯¯\ /__/
\__/ /__\___
/¯¯¯\ | ' | ' |
| \ | | -|-- | |
|--- /¯¯\| | | /¯¯¯\ |/¯¯ | /¯¯¯\ |
| / | | | | | | | | | | |
\___/ \___/ | \_/ \___/ | | \___|\ \_
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
~ STEN #12 : John Weller and Dave Mooney ~
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
"At dawn my lover comes to me and tells me of her dreams,
With no attempt to shovel them into the ditch of what each one means.
At times I think there are no words, except these to tell what's true,
And there are no truths outside the gates of Eden."
Dylan
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
~ GOING OUR OWN SWEET WAY ~
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Issue 12 - that means we must have been running STEN for over two
years now. Perhaps it's now time for us to take a close look at the
'zine and decide which direction to point it in for the future?
STEN was started by Dave and myself as a way of getting into contact
with other ST users and as a vehicle for our own philosophy of 'doing it
for free and for the hell of it'. Writers have come and gone, but I think
we've always kept close to that ideal - we don't rely on advertisers or
suppliers, and we're still free to speak our minds on any aspect of the ST
scene. This is more difficult than it sounds, as it's very easy to become
indebted to particular firms, PD libraries or individuals, and you then
feel that you can't really criticise them.
When we started STEN we were very much feeling our way and learning
as we went along. The emphasis was on writing for an imaginary 'average
ST user' and explaining as we went along, but we soon discovered that
there weren't no such beast - or if there was, then we never received any
support or feedback from it. We were throwing ideas into the wind and
waiting in vain for someone to pick up on them.
Issue 8 or 9 was the turning point. We knew people were reading the
'zine (there were always plenty of requests for it), and we knew that it
was liked, so we decided to change the tone and look for the type of
article that *we* enjoyed, but which never seemed to appear in the
commercial rags. By sheer coincidence this was at the time when the rags
started on their downward spiral to the lowest possible denominator.
We've now built up a good team of literate contributors that we can
call on for each issue, but we'd still like to hear from more of our
readers. The usual excuses for not contributing are 'lack of time' or
'not being able to write', but the way to get around that is to jot down
some notes or ideas when you're still enthusiastic about what you've just
read. This gives you something to kick-start yourself with when you
actully come to writing. As for 'lack of time', it's a cliche, but it's
always the busiest people who get things done.
Everyone reading STEN has something to contribute - it could be
comments, or suggestions for improvements, an article about your
favourite programme, an unexpected use for the ST, a picture, with some
text about how you drew it, or even a full-blown, ten-part series about
how to hack into NASA and hijack the Starship. All we ask is that you're
enthusiastic, and that you want to share that enthusiasm. Don't worry
too much about grammar and spelling; we can sort that out at this end.
And remember - all STEN contributors go straight to heaven!
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
~ WHICH WAY NOW? ~
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
One thing that we'd like to see in STEN is more news from the movers
in the ST scene. We will be contacting Atari UK very shortly and
will try to be placed on their Press Releases list. We will also be
taking advice about how to 'market' STEN and build up a greater awareness
of it.
No matter what we think about them, the commercial rags do reach the
largest number of ST users, and we will be trying to get at least one
mention a month in them. Don't worry, we certainly don't intend to
compromise our independence, it's just that we want to use them as a way
of bringing STEN to the attention of *all* ST users.
Another idea that we've been tossing around is to send sample copies
of STEN to all Atari user clubs and groups. The only problem is that we
don't have a current list of them.... can anyone help?
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
~ THE CURSE OF STEN RIDES AGAIN ~
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
'Shareware Shopper', Europress' once-proud organ, has folded its
covers for the last time. The magazine that was rushed out as a
'spoiler' for the ill-fated 'Public Domain' is now no more. But does
anyone really care? This was the 'zine that decided after four issues to
drop its meagre ST and Amiga coverage, and concentrate exclusively on the
PC PD scene. The only problem was that even the Power Users weren't
stupid enough to buy it....
So perish all who try to cash in on PD. The Curse of STEN, once
laid, can never be recalled.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
~ THE FALCON HAS LANDED ~
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
It's time for JFW to eat his words... Contrary to what I wrote in
STEN #11, not only has the Falcon appeared in the specification that
Atari promised, but it's actually on sale in the shops! Ladbroke
Computing are offering the 1 Meg entry level machine for £479.99, and
Gasteiner has it listed at £499.
To quote from the November issue of ST Applications (the most
reliable source for ST news), "the Falcon was revealed to the UK trade at
the European Computer Trade Show, held in London last month. Paul Welch
of Atari UK concentrated on the Falcon's use as an applications tool as
opposed to yet another games console."
"The Falcon should be on sale as you read this, but only 15,000 units
are being made available between now and the end of the year, with full-
scale mass production starting early in 1993. Most of this year's
machines will be sold through independent retailers and it is unlikely
that they will be available from high street chain stores. The first
release of the machine will be in a standard ST case, but the Falcon is to
be repackaged in its own unique case next spring, and the price is
expected to fall slightly at that time."
Check out Steve Delaney's overview of the Falcon in this issue.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
~ CS DIES, LONG LIVE GRAPHIX ~
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Astute readers will have noticed that the Cybernetic Serendipity
PD column has not appeared for the last two issues. There's several
reasons for this, but the main one is that I (JFW) was sick and tired of
getting precisely nil, zilch, zero feedback to the column. What is it
with you lot - was it something I wrote? Was it someone I insulted? Was
it something I *didn't* do? Even offering to send out copies of the
superb 'Synthie' art programme produced no response.
The whole point of STEN is that we're doing it for free, and for the
hell of it. If there's no feedback, or if it becomes a chore, then we'll
stop doing it. It's that simple. So, with effect from this issue, we'll
only be reviewing the larger or more interesting PD programmes. If you
don't like this, or if there's a programme that you'd like to rave about,
then write in and we'll print it.
STEN is an enthusiasm engine, and the effort that used to be put
into CS will now be directed to a new area. Graphix are my other great
love (after Liz and the ferrets), and I'll be writing about those from
now on in; enthusiasm never dies, it's simply redirected.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
~ OUT OF THE MOUTHS OF BABES AND SUCKLINGS... ~
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Being blacklisted by Budgie UK obviously wasn't enough for those
fun-loving kiddies at Maggie disczine. They've now talked Riverdene PDL
into being their new distributor, and have set a new record for both
tackiness and lack of content.
The last issue, Maggie #10, contains the usual mix of inaccuracies
and childishness, but it also breaks new ground by introducing the ST's
very first one-handed user interface. Let's hear it in their own words:
"We have removed the 'PD List' button and added a new button
called 'Adults only'. The articles in this new corner are really
adult only, so watch your children. Some people will call us
perverts now, but we never intended to make a magazine just for 15
year olds."
Yes, it's now aimed at 13 year-olds as well.... And what does this
wondrous new 'adult' corner hold for its embarrassed readers? Three
pornographic stories and a twelve-part porn novel. Want to read about a
13 year-old boy and his 12 year-old sister? Then turn to Maggie's sticky
pages. 18 year-old virgins? Maggie's keen on those. Young boys
masturbating? Then Maggie's waiting for you with its little legs spread.
The sad, sad truth is that Maggie is now written by w*nkers, and for
w*nkers. But let's not be cruel. Sammy Joe and Co obviously have a lot
of growing up to do, and didn't we all go through that phase when *we*
were 12 or 13?. But don't worry, Sammy, puberty doesn't last forever.
Just wash regularly, and one day soon some kind girl will take pity on
you.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
~ THE END OF THE AFFAIR ~
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Regular readers OF STEN will know that the South West Software
Library was raided by the Dorset Trading Standards Office in January of
this year and, as a result, decided to discontinue its PD service.
The library's owner, Martyn Dryden, was formally interviewed in
April under the terms of the Police and Criminal Evidence Act, and was
told that the library was being investigated as the result of a complaint
that some of its discs were in breach of commercial copyright. He was
told that he would hear from the TSO in due course.
That was in April, and he has finally heard that no charges are to
be brought after all, but that he is officially cautioned on eleven
counts of breaching copyright. To quote from his own account (printed in
full elsewhere in this issue), "The caution would be taken into account
in the investigation of any future offences that we might commit. Of
course, this doesn't arise, as we have now closed the library."
The SWSL was the first ST PD library to be set up in this country,
and was primarily run as a hobby, and as a way of sharing the
enthusiasm that Martyn felt about the PD principle. For it to close
under these circumstances is *particularly* sad, and we would like to
wish Martyn and Barbara the best of luck with their future projects.
See the SWSL RAID file for more details, and some thoughts on the
raid's implications for the PD scene.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
~ TIMEWASTERS COME IN ALL SHAPES AND SIZES ~
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
You may remember that a few issues back we said that we'd obtained
permission to reprint edited versions of Jack Schofield's pieces from the
'Computer Guardian'. Some of you may even be wondering why they haven't
appeared. The answer's quite simple: despite two very gentle reminders,
Jack has yet to send us anything. Sometimes I wonder why we bother...
'Mark' at Ladbroke Computing is another example of how our already
scarce free time gets wasted. I (JFW) 'phoned him at the end of
September and asked for a review copy of the interesting-sounding
Silhouette utility. He couldn't send it because the first version had
been found to be bugged, and they were waiting for a later version to
arrive from the States. Fair enough, it could happen to anyone.
"Ring us in October" he said. We did just that. "Our three review
copies are all going the rounds of the magazines", he said. Fair enough.
"Ring us around the middle of November - they'll be back by then." So
we made a note, and waited, and 'phoned again. "Ah, we haven't got them
back yet..." Not so fair enough. I don't want to sound ungrateful, but
this is what happened *every* time we asked for a review copy of any
item. Ladbroke's are very good when it comes to customer orders, but do
I detect more than a hint of disorganisation here?
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
~ THE GOLDEN GATES ~
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Microsoft's boss, "Billionaire Bill" Gates, 36, is now officially
the richest man in Amerika. Forbes Magazine estimates that that he is now
worth $6.3 billion. Of course he doesn't actually have that much money,
but he does hold a large slice of Microsoft and, like Topsy, their share
price keeps growin' and growin'.
IBM's value, by contrast, keeps going down and down. At the
beginning of October, IBM's share price hit a ten-year low, slipping
below the psychological $80 barrier to $78.9. This means that IBM is now
worth $44.9 billion, compared to $105.9 billion in 1987.
At this rate, how long will it be before Gate's personal wealth
equals IBM's market value?
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
~ GFA USER ~
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
And now for a story with a moral. The last update sheet from GFA
Technik contained the following item:
"The GFA User magazine will not publish another issue. Despite
an appeal to readers for editorial help, the response was not
sufficient enough to continue the high quality content. This was a
publication that all wanted to receive and read, but not contribute
to. One of the editors (Barry Capel) can now be found in the pages of
ST Format hosting their GFA Programmers clinic. BC is also currently
developing shareware software to be found on various cover discs of PC
magazines. The other editor is currently writing a book on
programming GFA-BASIC for Windows. We will advise you on the
availability of this directly. The contributors to GFA User, once
stout defenders of the Atari technology, now seem to have acquired the
very machines that for many years they hated."
There's not a lot we can add to that. If a group, magazine or
computer isn't supported then it dies. D E A D.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
~ LATE NEWS ~
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
According to the December issue of 'ST Applications', "STEN is
now Britain's premier on-disc magazine for ST users". Thanks, Paul, the
cheque's in the post.
BJChrome, reviewed along with HPChrome in this issue, is a new
programme from Martyn Dryden that enables Canon Bubblejet owners to print
in full colour. The current version allows users to print at 360 x 360
dpi, compared to the previous maximum resolution of 150 x 150 dpi.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
~ IN THIS ISSUE ~
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
In this issue we have articles on the perils of setting-up a bulletin
board, how to print 'The Elusive £ Sign'; two raving pieces on UFOs;
hands-on reviews of HPChrome, BJChrome and the Inkmun Deskjet Colour Kit;
an overview of the new Falcon machine; three sets of background info on
the American hacker raids; technology news from around the world; the new
STEN pix gallery; discmag and rag reviews; the final development in the
South West Software Library saga; gossip, insults and rumours; a very
good short story from Dave Henniker; Digital Junction hardware projects;
language tutorials; a review of Easy Text Professional.... and lots more
that I can't remember off the top of my head. This has got to be one of
the best issues of STEN yet, so check out that Menu page now!
Dave's Bit
----------
STEN is almost finished. Well it's actually full to the brim with some
articles having to be left out, some more will have to go to make room for
the billboard and the editorial. This issue has been one of the easiest to
prepare yet as we got a bit of help from others in the way of articles. A
lot of help would mean going monthly and taking over the world... Come on,
start typing!
ARTICLES
--------
When sending in articles could you try to leave them in 1st Word (+) WP
format and right justified. This allows them to be spell checked and
edited very easily saving lots of time. 74 characters/line would be very
nice too.
WHO THE HELL?
-------------
This is an invitation to you, the reader, to take part in our infamous Who
the hell... series. All you have to do is load up the questionaire (in the
PROGRAMS folder, ASCII or 1st WP+ formats) and answer the questions as
truthfully as possible.
Send them back to me on a floppy disc and I'll return your disc with the
next issue of STEN on it. A compilation of STEN readers 'Who the hell...'
profiles will appear in that issue or the next.
Go on! You know what makes us tick, now let us see what you are made of.
We may even expand the series to 'Who the hell would run a PD library?'
or 'Who the hell would release programs as shareware?' or... any
suggestions?
WHAT'S THE CATCH?
-----------------
Did anyone tell you about the BT special deal? On Sundays between 3pm and
12am, during the months of November and December 1992 it is possible to
call anywhere in the UK for the price of a local call.
Now is the time to check out all those super BBSs that you never had the
chance to before. Or, you could call the family or your mates or... Oh,
the offer doesn't apply to Chatlines or Deviants Delite so don't call any
of those 0898 numbers, or use carphones etc. These are still charged at
normal rates.
SUBSCRIPTIONS
-------------
More people are now taking up our offer of subscriptions to STEN. This
does leave me with a bit more time to work on articles. So if you plan to
get STEN regularly could you do me a big favour and take out a
subscription. It is only 5 pounds for six issues and that includes the
discs, postage and packing.
Back issues can also be obtained at the same rates. Just say what six
issues that you want.
While I have a surplus of review software I will draw someones
subscription number and the lucky sod can take their pick from what's
available. This issue the winner is Colin Heggs of Melton Mowbray. I'll be
in touch Colin with a chioce of software for you.
Subscriptions to:
Dave Cowling
18 Aspen Mount
COOKRIDGE
Leeds
(Make cheques payable to STEN)
VIRUSES
-------
Seems that the comics are getting a bit careless again. ST Format gave
away copies of the ghost virus with a recent issue. Luckily it was caught
before it went to the shops and only subscribers got that particular
extra. The irony for me was a letter appeared in the magazine questioning
whether the late appearance of an previous edition was caused by the same
thing. The reply an emphatic NO with loads of reasons why Format's discs
could NEVER EVER go out with a virus on.
I've also just heard that another comic has got the ghost virus on the
December cover disc. Details are a bit sketchy and unconfirmed, but check
the discs if you buy any of them.
Finally, this issue of STEN could have been seriously delayed by a little
present that I got on one of the discs sent. It was the Green Goblin virus
and although I thought I had stopped it early on the bootchecker on the
STEN shell said otherwise. After running all of my discs through a virus
killer it's still active somewhere. I'll get everything done again before
sending anything out. The point being that the disc with all my files
suddenly lost its main directory. Whether this is a consequence of a virus
I don't know, but if I ever get a hold of a virus writer I'll leave him
speaking in a high voice.
BULLY BOYS
----------
I have been reading the details behind the raids on the Southwest Software
Library with disbelief and anger. The question I keep asking myself is
why! The SWSL has now been approached twice in connection with alleged
contraventions of the copyright act. The first was because they carried a
clone of Scrabble (tm) under a different name and secondly because they
carried discs with sampled sound.
What I don't understand is that for years software houses have been
producing clones. Many of the major companies today initially made their
money by bringing out flagrant copies and changing the names a bit. Many
PD libraries still carry versions of Scrabble, Risk, Monopoly, sampled
sound and other 'breaches' of copyright. Many music newspapers carry
advertisements for bootlegged records, tapes and CDs.
Are the people who bring these actions doing so because they see the ST
scene as being small compared to the music press or PC and Amiga
libraries. It certainly does seem strange when the breaches they seem so
eager to stamp out are so much more obvious on in the PC/Amiga scene and
music press. Or do they see those people as 'power' users and perhaps left
alone while they go after easy targets.
At the time of writing I have heard that Waddingtons have approached a PD
library in connection with them distributing versions of Risk and
Campaign. The library is supposed to be run part time by a couple of
coppers! Again, it seems to be the ST scene that gets hammered. Is there
an ST owner out their who likes to make trouble?
NEW PRODUCTS
------------
Floppyshop have now released their first commercial game. It's called
'Around the World' and costs £9.95 (I think, my usual organised self has
lost the info in a pile of discs and letters that are knee deep just now).
The game looks to be similar to the Digger type except the action takes
place in different locations around the world instead of underground. A
full review will be forthcoming next issue.
Caledonia have introduced a new discount scheme to make buying PD even
cheaper. For £15 you get a credit card sized discount card which entitles
you to 20% off all orders for a year. This drops the prices of discs from
£2.50 to £2.00. In addition there is a free disc with each of the first
six orders which means that the cost of joining needn't cost anything in
the long run. If that wasn't enough there are a host of other goodies like
free catalogue updates at anytime, priority over non card holders and a
chance to win an external disc and mouse. For more details call Jake now,
the number is in the PD library section.
Mike Goodman has sent me his new style of catalogue. It's been printed on
separate A5 (1/2 A4) loose leaf pages and comes with cardboard dividers,
all that needs adding is an A5 folder. Each section covers one topic and
the idea behind it is that when discs need to be updated or added only new
pages need to be produced. I think this is probably the best thing to
happen to PD catalogues in years and should allow the paper version to be
as up to date as the disc ones. Contact Goodman International for more
details, the cost is £2.95.
Darren Goodwin has written a Circuit Designer program which is intended
for anyone who wants to produce electrical schematic diagrams. Our
electronics expert, Dave Price has reviewed it in this issue and details
of how to obtain your copy can be found in the billboard section.
ST NEWS 7.3 has just popped through my door. I haven't had a chance to
look at it yet, but I've no doubt it will be excellent as usual. That's
the third one this year, well done Richard and Stefan.
GOTTA GO!
Ok that's all just now folks. STEN is finished for 1992. The next issue
should be out around mid to late January 1993.
Everyone at STEN wish you a merry Christmas and hope you have have the
best new year ever.
Dave
___ooOoo___