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-*- text -*-
The prices on the order form below EXPIRE on 30 June 1992
GNU Emacs availability information, January 1992
Copyright (C) 1986, 1987, 1988, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1992 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
Permission is granted to anyone to make or distribute
verbatim copies of this document provided that the
copyright notice and this permission notice are preserved.
GNU Emacs is legally owned by the Free Software Foundation, but we
regard the foundation actually as its custodian on behalf of the
public, since all software ought to be the common property of mankind.
The foundation permits everyone to have and run copies of GNU Emacs,
at no charge, and to redistribute copies under certain conditions
which are designed to make sure that that all modified versions of GNU
Emacs remain as free as the versions we distribute. These conditions
are stated in the document "GNU Emacs General Public License," a copy
of which is required to be distributed with every copy of GNU Emacs.
It is usually in a file named COPYING in the same directory as this
file.
If you do not know anyone to get a copy of GNU Emacs from, you can
order a tape from the Free Software Foundation. We distribute Emacs
version 18 on mag tape in different formats for many machines. We also
distribute nicely typeset copies of the Emacs user manual, Emacs Lisp
Reference Manual, the Emacs reference card, etc. See the order form at
the end of this file.
If you have Internet access, you can copy the latest Emacs
distribution from host prep.ai.mit.edu. There are several ways to do
this; see the file `FTP' in the same directory as this file for more
information. Even better, get the latest version of the file from
`/pub/gnu/GNUinfo/FTP' on prep.ai.mit.edu for the most current
arrangements. It may also be possible to copy Emacs via uucp; the
file `FTP' contains information on that too.
Emacs has been run on both Berkeley Unix and System V Unix, on a
variety of types of cpu. It also works on VMS and on Apollo
computers, though with some deficiencies that reflect problems in
these operating systems. See the file MACHINES in this directory for
a full list of machines that GNU Emacs has been tested on, with
machine-specific installation notes and warnings.
Note that there is significant variation between Unix systems
supposedly running the same version of Unix; it is possible that what
works in GNU Emacs for me does not work on your system due to such an
incompatibility. Since I must avoid reading Unix source code, I
cannot even guess what such problems may exist.
GNU Emacs is distributed with no warranty (see the General Public
License for full details, in the file COPYING in this directory), and
neither I nor the Free Software Foundation promises any kind of
support or assistance to users. The foundation keeps a list of people
who are willing to offer support and assistance for hire. It is
usually in a file named SERVICE in the same directory as this file.
You get the latest version of the file from `/pub/gnu/GNUinfo/SERVICE' on
prep.ai.mit.edu.
However, we plan to continue to improve GNU Emacs and keep it
reliable, so please send me any complaints and suggestions you have.
I will probably fix anything that I consider a malfunction. I may
make improvements that are suggested, but I may choose not to.
Improving Emacs is not my highest priority now.
If you are on the Internet, report bugs to
bug-gnu-emacs@prep.ai.mit.edu; on UUCP, use the address
...!uunet!prep.ai.mit.edu!bug-gnu-emacs. Otherwise, phone the
foundation at the number listed below, or write to the address listed
below. General questions about the GNU Project can be asked of
gnu@prep.ai.mit.edu.
If you are a computer manufacturer, I encourage you to ship a copy of
GNU Emacs with every computer you deliver. The same copying
permission terms apply to computer manufacturers as to everyone else.
You should consider making a donation to help support the GNU project;
if you estimate what it would cost to distribute some commercial
product and divide it by five, that is a good amount.
If you like GNU Emacs, please express your satisfaction with a
donation: send me or the Foundation what you feel Emacs has been worth
to you. If you are glad that I developed GNU Emacs and distribute it
as freeware, rather than following the obstructive and antisocial
practices typical of software developers, reward me. If you would
like the Foundation to develop more free software, contribute.
Your donations will help to support the development of more useful
software to be distributed on the same basis as GNU Emacs. Eventually
we will have a complete imitation of the Unix operating system, called
GNU (Gnu's Not Unix), which will run Unix user programs. For more
information on GNU, see the file GNU in this directory.
Richard M Stallman
Chief GNUisance,
President of the Free Software Foundation
Free Software Foundation Order Form
This order form is effective 1 January 1992 - 30 June 1992
Prices and contents may change without notice.
Please allow six weeks for delivery (though it won't usually take that long).
All software and publications are distributed with permission to copy and to
redistribute.
Texinfo source for each manual is on the appropriate tape. The prices for
tapes do not include printed manuals.
All software and documentation from the Free Software Foundation is provided
on an "as is" basis, with no warranty of any kind.
Contents of Tapes:
GNU Emacs Tape
The tape includes source code for:
* GNU Emacs (the extensible, customizable, self-documenting, real-time display
editor)
* The GNU Emacs Manual, as Texinfo source
* The GNU Termcap Manual, as Texinfo source (the GNU termcap library is
included with GNU Emacs)
* The GNU Emacs Lisp Reference Manual, as Texinfo source
* Calc (the extensible, advanced desk calculator and mathematical tool that
runs as part of GNU Emacs)
* The Calc Manual, as Texinfo source
* MIT Scheme (a dialect of Lisp)
* T (Yale's implementation of Scheme)
* Texinfo (beta-test of an enhanced Texinfo. Texinfo is GNU's structured
documentation system, included with GNU Emacs. Texinfo is used to produce
both on-line and printed documents.)
* The Texinfo Manual, as Texinfo source
* texi2roff (for printing Texinfo source with [nt]roff)
* Data Compression Software (to uncompress source on the tape)
GNU Languages Tape
The tape includes source code for:
* GCC 1 (the GNU C Compiler, including COFF support)
* The GCC Manual, as Texinfo source (not yet on our order form)
* G++ (the C++ front end to GCC)
* The GNU G++ Users Guide, as Texinfo source (not yet published on paper)
* libg++ (the G++ class library)
* NIH Class Library (formerly known as OOPS)
* Gas (the GNU Assembler)
* GNU binary file utilities (ar, gprof, ld, nm, size, strip, & ranlib)
* dld (a dynamic linker)
* COFF support for GNU software tools
* Flex (Vern Paxson's fast rewrite of lex)
* Bison (a free, compatible replacement for yacc)
* The Bison Manual, as Texinfo source
* GDB 3.5 (The GNU source-level C debugger)
* The GDB Manual, as Texinfo source
* GNU make
* The GNU Make Manual, as Texinfo source
* GNU indent
* Gawk (the GNU implementation of the AWK programming language)
* The Gawk Manual, as Texinfo source
* GNU Smalltalk (the GNU implementation of this programming language system)
* Perl (a programming language interpreter)
* gperf (a perfect hash-table generator)
* ae (works with GCC to produce more complete profiling information)
* f2c (a FORTRAN to C translator)
* gdbm library (GNU implementation of the standard dbm & ndbm libraries)
* texi2roff (for printing Texinfo source with [nt]roff)
* Data Compression Software (to uncompress source on the tape)
GNU Experimental Tape
This tape will not be ready until March 1992. The tape's source code
will include:
* GCC 2 (the GNU C/C++/Objective-C Compiler with many new features)
* GDB 4 (The GNU source-level C debugger)
* BFD ((Binary File Descriptor Library)
* GNU C Library (POSIX.1 compliant, upward compatible with 4.3 BSD & System V)
* GNU Graphics (graph, plot, plot2ps, et al.)
GNU Utilities Tape
The tape includes source code fo