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-
- CCP/M Meeting Notes, May, 1989
-
- I'd like to talk briefly about what happened at last May's
- meeting and then talk in some detail about my visit to the
- Trenton Computer Festival on April 22, 23.
-
- Three new members joined. New member Rod Drymon and I talked
- about uncrunching and library (LBR) files etc. Bob Person snuck
- in some mind-blowing C-64 synthesized music at one point. No
- formal presentation. I handed out pamphlet newsletters (new
- format) and CCP/M guidelines as well as mentioned the upcoming
- Trenton Computer Fest. New member Reinhard May and I talked
- about OTHELLO. One OTHELLO program we have is written in E
- Basic. We also have a C version of OTHELLO.
-
- Al Hathway and I talked about an IOP he's written. This is a
- program which permits him to assign keystrings to his numeric
- keypad and function keys. I am trying to change it to make my
- Royal arrow keys work when I use VDE.
-
- Trenton, 1989
-
- My wife and I headed down Saturday morning, early. We got to
- Trenton at about 10:00 and found Bliss Hall shortly thereafter.
- I saw Jay Sage on the way over and we chatted a bit about the
- upcoming all-day CP/M Conference.
-
- There were about 40-60 people at the Conference I'd say. The
- number grew steadily from 10:00 AM to 4:00 PM. I spotted Howard
- Goldstein fairly quickly. I'd heard from Jay during our walk
- over that Howard was using a loaner hearing aid and that he was
- having difficulty with it. Howard is blind and this extra
- aggravation was surely annoying. I introduced myself to Howard
- and he smiled and shook my hand. It became clear to us that
- moving out of the main room and into the hallway would make for
- better conversation so we did that. I would like to quote from
- Jay Sage's Z33 manual what he has to say about Howard Goldstein.
-
- "One individual, Howard Goldstein, must be singled out for
- the transcendent role he has played in the development of ZCPR33.
- We have been in constant communication with him during the
- development process, and he has been a sounding board for all the
- new concepts. In his capacity as beta-tester extraordinaire, he
- has subjected the code to remarkable scrutiny, uncovering
- countless minor and occasional serious flaws. He has also
- suggested dozens of ways to shorten the code. Above all, working
- with him has been a pleasure and delight."
-
- Although I've chatted with Howard and he's called my
- computer, this was my first real encounter with him and it was
- great to be there!
-
- I bought Jay's Z33 Manual after Hal Bower's talk. It is a
- joy to read and will be a jewel in the archives of CP/M
- literature. I highly recommend it.
-
- Hal Bower told us that scheduled speaker Cam Cotrill was
- unable to come and was somewhere in Italy as we met! Hal then
- proceeded to take Cam's place with great skill and ease! Harold
- (Hal) Bower is a third of the team of three individuals who are
- responsible for the latest DOS replacement for the BDOS of CP/M.
-
- Jay spoke next. Jay gave an overview of the history of
- Z-System. The talk was introductory and per usual the audience
- was a mix of mostly Z-System users but occassionally non users.
- Frequent audience participation became the rule around this time
- and that marvellous situation occurred in which no leader emerged
- but rather each person in the room lead the topic for a spell,
- asking this, claiming that, suggesting this, announcing that.
- Bruce Morgen saw fit to suggest every so often that the speaker
- consider giving an overview of the topic at hand, for the benefit
- of those who might not be familiar with the topic.
-
- I kept thinking that it would be a good idea for us all to
- go around the room and give our names and anything else we felt
- like but it never happened! Oh well. Bruce Morgen. Now who is
- he? What did he write? This kind of question kept occurring to
- me! I knew I'd heard the name but in several encounters I could
- not place the accomplishment. Well, I've just satisfied myself
- that I am sure that among many other accomplishments, he's the
- author of an article in the latest TCJ. "REL-Style Assembly
- Language for CP/M and Z-System".
-
- Howard asked me at a slow point if I could find Bruce and
- take them both aside in the quieter hall for a chat. I found
- Bruce and we went outside. Howard then told a story about some
- guy who wanted to give a message to his neighbor and so scribbled
- one out and left the note on the neighbor's fence. After a day
- or so when it was apparent the neighbor still hadn't read the
- note, the fellow sent the same message to a Z-Node on the West
- Coast. It was answered by his neighbor the next day.
-
- Hal talked in the afternoon, after Jay, again. This time
- about the future of ZSDOS ZDDOS and Z-System. "Bank everything".
- This was the way he tried to summarize where we are going. With
- the 64 k limitation of CP/M, there is a growing need to bank
- BIOS, DOS and CP.
- Ian Cottrell was there. He's just released PBBS 4.50. Bill
- Earnest was there. He has been running a Remote Access System
- for probably 10 years. I recognized a fellow who'd come to our
- Z-Fest and who was giving Jay a board with a Z180 on it that will
- make an Apple run ZSDOS and Z34. There was a fellow who kept
- speaking out making this and that point. For example, the SYSLIB
- 16-bit divide function fails to return the remainder, apparently.
- He said he fixed this. The audience encouraged him to send his
- code to a RAS. (This bug has been repaired in the Version 4
- Libraries).
-
- Hal talked a bit about what he did to the older libraries.
- SYSLIB 3.6, Z3LIB 1.3 and VLIB 1.1. Harold Bower has completely
- rewritten every routine in all three libraries and added his own,
- called DSLIB. This one supports date and time stamping. Alpha
- Systems has released the REL files for free distribution. The
- code is smaller, faster and fully documented in online .HLP
- files. The manual of hard copy of the .HLP support was
- circulated by Hal. Impressive.
-
- The Flea Market on Sunday was amazing! Junk and Jewel. 5
- acres of hardware and software. I ended up escaping the whole
- experience by only buying for $5 a cable that will hook my
- brother's Zenith PC compatible's 9-pin serial port to his 25-pin
- modem. These cables are known to go for something like $25 I
- think. Bruce Morgen landed for $100 a 10 mb Xerox 820 system.
- New.
-
- All in all, a great time. If I told you all about all the
- people I met, all the other stuff I saw and did etc. I'd fill
- another few pages. Editor Jim Taylor has given me three pages
- and I'm still over that, so I'll close and see where else I can
- remove the excesses. See you June 13 in Farmingon. We're going
- to talk about FATCAT, the disk cataloguer. And if all goes
- according to plan, your next newsletter will be received encased
- in a floppy disk jacket. Please take the time to fill out and
- return the questionnaire (which you will be receiving shortly).
- It will tell us many things about your needs, one of which is the
- floppy format you would like your disk to have.
-
- Lee R. Bradley, CCP/M Secretary, April 27