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- These are some tips on up and downloading, from my board:
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- BBS Up/Download Help
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- Download Tips:
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- To download a file, you need to do three simple things:
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- 1. Make sure your "Protocol" setting on the board matches the one you're
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- using at home. Somewhere in your terminal program, probably with a
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- pull-down menu, you'll have various Protocol options, so pick ZModem
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- if your program supports it, then go to the Files Menu of the board and
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- pick P for Protocol and make sure they match. Making sure your Protocols
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- match is really the only important thing you have to do, but it IS
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- important, so do it right. Many, if not most, corrupt downloads can be
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- traced back to mismatched Protocols.
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- 2. Go to the Files Menu or Area Menu, pick an area of interest and check
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- out the files. Move the arrow keys up and down over the files, mark
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- any files you want to download by hitting the Return while the cursor
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- is over the file name. Cool, huh?
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- 3. Hit D to Download. Pretty tough, huh?
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- If you're using ZModem, that should do it. If your terminal program
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- has some kind of "Auto Download" feature, make sure it's on, otherwise
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- you'll have to start the download process yourself, either with a pull-down
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- menu or the keyboard.. If you're using a protocol besides ZModem, you'll
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- have to <gasp!> manually start the download with a pull-down menu. You
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- also need a new term program.
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- If you're using YModem because you think it's faster than Z, you're wrong,
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- and my download log can prove it.
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- Uploading is pretty much the same procedure:
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- 1. Protocols match? Hit "U" for Upload.
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- 2. Pull down the pull-down menu to Upload, find the file in the requester,
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- hit OK, away it goes.
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- 3. When the upload is complete, enter in the description. Batch uploads
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- are supported; when you're all done it will ask for all the descriptions
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- at once.
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- There aren't any settings on the board besides the Protocol that will
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- prevent a good download, so if you ARE having hassles, it's most likely a
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- problem on your end. If you're having any problems with your terminal
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- program, give NComm 2.0 a shot, the board recommendation. If you think I
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- can help, ring the bell. If you've downloaded the same file twice, maybe
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- with two different protocols, and it's still corrupt, then probably my copy
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- is bad, in which case you should notify me immediately.
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- *
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- If you have Call Waiting with your phone service, put a *70 after the ATDT
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- dial prefix in your terminal program, to disable the Call Waiting, and no
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- more interruptions! If you're living at your parent's house, just don't tell
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- 'em, they'll never know.
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- *
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- If this is your first call to this BBS, then you'll notice that all the
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- file names end with an ".lzx" (with one notorious exception), which means
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- they were compressed in the LZX format. BBS files are compressed for two
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- reasons: One, it bunches all the independent files into one neat little
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- package, and two, it compresses the files as it packs them, so you end up
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- with a smaller total package, thus a quicker transfer time.
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- There are six main types of compression you'll see out there:
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- .arc - very popular once. Poorest compression ratio
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- of the bunch
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- .zoo - another oldie, had some known quirks
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- .zip - works pretty well but never caught on much with Ami
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- .lzh - was the standard for a number of years before LHA
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- .lha - been the standard for last few years
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- .lzx - latest rave. First of the new `smart' archivers.
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- Since there are a bunch of compression methods, you'll naturally have to
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- have different tools to decompress your downloads:
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- Arc or Pkax - for .arc files (Pkax just decompresses)
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- Zoo - for .zoo files
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- PKAZIP or UnZip - for .zip files
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- LHA - for .lzh and .lha files
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- LZX - for .lzx files
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- In the Utilities section, in the Archive Tools directory, is a file called
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- "LZX.Run". That's the basic LZX tool you need to decompress all the .lzx
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- files on this board. It's a "self-extracting" archive, and contains a few
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- different files you need, instructions included. Just download it, transfer
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- it to an empty directory or an empty Ram, then CD in a CLI to that directory
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- and type out the whole name. It'll decompress automagically, then you can
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- read my docs and take it from there. The self-extracting method doesn't
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- work very well, and you won't see it very often, but for situations like this
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- it's perfect.
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- *
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- As stated at the beginning, downloading is really a simple thing to do, so
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- don't feel hurried or anxious. Just mosey through the files at your leisure,
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- and remember...
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- Hey, this is a BBS and you've got an Amiga!
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- ...have FUN!
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- ** The BenchMaster **
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