menu page

100 poke 59468,14:print " ":list
110 " ********************************
120 " *** OK to copy but NOT to ****
130 " *** be sold or published ****
140 " *** for profit. ****
150 " ********************************
160 " * To the best of our knowledge *
170 " * the programs on this disk *
180 " * are in the public domain. *
190 " * *
200 " * Should this not be the case, *
210 " * please contact us at -CSL-. *
220 " * *
230 " ********************************
240 "
250 "
260 " this is disk 98.1's contents "
261 "------------------------------------------
280 :rem text screen = poke 59468,14
290 :rem to use printer
300 :rem open1,4,7:print#1:close1:open1,4:cmd1:list
310 :rem when listing finished type in 'print#1:close'
311 ":-----------------------------------------------
320 "** 10 "sipod" prg
330 "** this prg turns your cbm/pet into an ieee interface
331 "** for the c64 to use your cbm/pet peripherals
332 "** instructions for making the needed lead on disk
333 "** ----------------------------------
340 "** 6 "penboot" prg
350 "** 15 "demo" prg
360 "** this is for creating a light pen for your cbm/pet"
361 "** instructions for making the interface on disk"
362 "** -----------------------------
370 "** 4 "wurm-info" prg- info about the game
380 "** 22 "hyperwurm" prg
390 "** 1 "h.o.f." seq
391 "--------------------------------------------
400 "** 469 "moreau1.txt" seq
410 "** 488 "moreau2.txt" seq
411 "** the h.g.wells book :- the island of doctor moreau
412 "** warning about vivisection/ genetic engineering
413 "** or an exploration of what defines a human ....
414 "** take your pick or use both definitions ..
415 "** takes up two 4040 disks along with a reader prg
416 "** that can save book marks to save your place
417 "** save sections to disk & print
420 "
430 " ************************* that's all folks ************
ready.




1 rem
10 poke 59468,14:print " ":list
32 " ********************************
33 " *** OK to copy but NOT to ****
34 " *** be sold or published ****
35 " *** for profit. ****
37 " ********************************
38 " * To the best of our knowledge *
39 " * the programs on this disk *
40 " * are in the public domain. *
41 " * *
42 " * Should this not be the case, *
43 " * please contact us at -CSL-. *
44 " * *
45 " ********************************
46 "
49 " contents of disk 98.5
51 "
60 " a typical copy of commodore hacking mag
61 " it's mostly c64 biased but it's a good e-zine
62 " there's the reader prg on the disk
63 "--------------------------------
101 :rem text screen = poke 59468,14
102 :rem to use printer
103 :rem open1,4,7:print#1:close1:open1,4:cmd1:list
104 :rem when listing finished type in 'print#1:close'
105 "---------------------------------
110 "@(#)contents: Table of Contents
111 "--------------------------------
112 "
113 "Features
114 " 6. "headerolygonamy": A Study in 3 Dimensions by Stephen Judd
115 " (Reference: polygon)
116 " Did you ever feel real time 3 Dimensional graphics was just asking
117 " too much from a Commodore 64? Well, ask no more, as Stephen shows
118 " us just how it can be done. The 64 steps up to the challenge of
119 " displaying correctly rendered shaded 3D polygons right before your
120 " very eyes.
121 " 9. Underneath the Hood of the SuperCPU by Jim Brain
122 " (Reference: cmdcpu)
123 " Delve into the technical details of this new accelerator
124 " under development by CMD. Jim will explain its advantages
125 " over existing offering, epxlain the features it provides, and
126 " dispel some myths about the unit.
127 "
128 "Columns
129 " 4. Hi Tech Trickery by Doug Cotton
130 " (Reference: trick)
131 " Trying to switch from 128 mode to 64 mode on a C128 without
132 " human intervwention is triccky. Doing it on modified KERNAL ROMs
133 " is doubly so. Doug details a routine that will work regardless of
134 " the ROM in use.
135 " 12. Hacking Graphics by Levente Harsfalvi
136 " (Reference: gfx))
137 " All you Commodore Plus/4 lovers, listen up. Levente delves into
138 " the Commodore Plus/4 TED chip, explains its many functions and
139 " details its various registers. Do you know all the things the TED
140 " chip does in addition to handle video. Now you'll know.
141 "
142 "Departments
143 " 1. The (cough,cough) Hacking Editor
144 " (Reference: editor)
145 " 2. Input/Output
146 " (Reference: io)
147 " 3. Newsfront
148 " (Reference: news)
149 " 5. Hacking the Mags
150 " (Reference: mags)
151 " 7. UseNuggets
152 " (Reference: usenet)
153 " 8. FIDO's Nuggets
154 " (Reference: fido)
155 " 10. Hack Surfing
156 " (Reference: surf)
157 " 11. Commodore Trivia
158 " (Reference: trivia)
159 " 13. ? DS, DS$: rem The Error Channel
160 " (Reference: error)
161 " 14. The Next Hack
162 " (Reference: next)
163 " 15. Hacking the Code
164 " (Reference: code)
998 "
999 " ************************* that's all folks ************
ready.


C HACK mag 17

112 " (Reference: hw)
113 " You have graduated from a 64 to a "you'll have to pry my dead fingers
114 "from the keyboard" 128. owever, your favorite editor works only in
115 "40 column mode and your application runs in 80 column mode. Your
116 "40/80 key is giving you carpal tunnel sybndrome, and you think no end
117 "is in sight. Well, let Michael Nausch relieve some of your problems
118 " with this innovative project.
119 "8. The Canonical List of Commodore Produced Products, v2.0
128 "11. Scott Ballantyne : Blazing into Forth - An Interview by Jim Lawless
129 " (Reference: forth)
130 " Have you ever wondered who wrote the programming language you use
131 "for your projects, or why? Well, for those who have ever used Blazin'
132 "FORTH, here's your chance to get the scoop on how the Commodore
133 " implementation of FORTH came to be.
134 "15. Technical Information on the VIC-20 by Ward Shrake
135 " (Reference: vic)
136 " Of the CBM 8-bits, the 64/128 machines
Sean proves everyone
147 " wrong. Sean discusses a previously unknown side effect of the illegal
148 " $AF opcode that turns on extra cicutry in the NMOS code and reduces
149 " cycle exuction times by almost half for 3+ cycle opcodes! Imagine
150 " executing an Indirect X EOR (Opcode $41) in 3 cycles.
151 "10 . Hacking BASICs by Richard T. Cunningham
152 " (Reference: basic)
153 " The JAVA community does not have a monopoly on the concept of "write
154 " once, run anywhere". ichard discusses ways to write your apps
155 "so they will run equally well on both the C64 and the C128, while
156 "not compromising speed or flexibility.
157 "13. Twiddling the Bits by Frank Kontros
158 " (Reference: bits)
159 " In this age of 33,600 bps modems with a 56K standard on the way,
160 " Getting by with the software UART in the 64 and 128 is even harder
161 " to swallow. In the past, commercial offerings like Swiftlink and the
162 " new Turbo232 have offered us hope in the form of a hardware UART
163 "replacement. However, many do-it-youself folks have put together the
164 " DataPump circuit by Perry M. Grodzinski. Well, Frank Kontros has
165 " updated this useful circuit with simpler circuitry and an easier
166 "layout.
167 "Departments
168 "1 the (cough, cough) Hacking Editor
169 " (Reference: editor)
170 "2. Input/Output
171 " (Reference: io)
172 "3 . Newsfront
173 " (Reference: news)
174 "5 . Hacking the Mags
175 " (Reference: mags)
176 "7 . FIDO's Nuggets
177 " (Reference: fido)
178 "9 . Hack Surfing
179 " (Reference: surf)
180 "12. Commodore Trivia
181 " (Reference: trivia)
182 "14 . ? DS, DS$: rem The Error Channel
183 " (reference: error)
184 "---------------------------------------
187 "*** 15 "contents.txt" seq
188 "*** 23 "editor.txt" seq
189 "*** 79 "io.txt" seq
190 "*** 306 "4080.lnx" seq -lynx file
191 "*** 27 "basic.txt" seq
192 "*** 16 "bits.txt" seq
193 "*** 42 "dp.gif" prg - c64 graphic
194 "*** 5 "error.txt" seq
195 "*** 238 "hackprn1.exe" prg - for use on pc's !
196 "*** 93 "forth.txt" seq
197 "*** 23 "fido.txt" seq
198 "*** 7 "legal.txt" seq
199 "*** 33 "hw.txt" seq
200 "*** 11 "info.txt" seq
201 "*** 250 "list.txt" seq
202 "*** 30 "mags.txt" seq
203 "*** 41 "news.txt" seq
204 "*** 5 "next.txt" seq
205 "*** 1 "order.lst" seq
206 "*** 8 "rch.txt" seq
207 "*** 9 "readme" seq
208 "*** 186 "surf.txt" seq
209 "*** 4 "top.txt" seq
210 "*** 6 "trick.txt" seq
211 "*** 93 "vic.txt" seq
212 "*** 132 "trivia.txt" seq
213 "*** 76 "dp.mac" seq - c64 graphic
998 "
999 " ************************* that's all folks ************
ready.




10 poke 59468,14:print " ":list
32 " ********************************
33 " *** OK to copy but NOT to ****
34 " *** be sold or published ****
35 " *** for profit. ****
37 " ********************************
38 " * To the best of our knowledge *
39 " * the programs on this disk *
40 " * are in the public domain. *
41 " * *
42 " * Should this not be the case, *
43 " * please contact us at -CSL-. *
44 " * *
45 " ********************************
46 "
51 "
101 :rem text screen = poke 59468,14
102 :rem to use printer
103 :rem open1,4,7:print#1:close1:open1,4:cmd1:list
104 :rem when listing finished type in 'print#1:close'
105 "
106 "
107 "disk 98.11
108 : first men in the moon
109 " by h.g.wells
110 "
111 " this is over 3*4040 disks or 1*8050
112 " prof cavor invents cavorite - a substance that enables
113 " him to build a space ship in victorian england and he
114 " and a companion set off to the moon and encounter the
115 " selenites .........
116 "
117 " text from project gutenburg
118 "comes with a reader prg to use with it .
119 "
120 "------------------------------------------------
998 "
999 " ************************* that's all folks ************
ready.




1 " ********************************
2 " *** OK to copy but NOT to ****
3 " *** be sold or published ****
4 " *** for profit. ****
5 " ********************************
6 " * To the best of our knowledge *
7 " * the programs on this disk *
8 " * are in the public domain. *
9 " * *
10 " * Should this not be the case, *
11 " * please contact us at -CSL-. *
12 " * *
13 " ********************************
14 "
15 "---------------------------------------
16 "disk 98.12 contents
17 "this is on 4*4040 or 2*8050 disks "
18 "jules verne's '' off on a comet '' first pub'd 1877
19 "e-text from project gutenberg
20 "comes with reader prg
21 "----------------------------
22 "
23 "
24 :rem text screen = poke 59468,14
25 :rem to use printer
26 :rem open1,4,7:print#1:close1:open1,4:cmd1:list
27 :rem when listing finished type in 'print#1:close'
28 "
29 "*** WORKS
30 "*** of
31 "*** JULES VERNE
32 "*** EDITED BY
33 "*** CHARLES F. HORNE, Ph.D.
34 "***
35 "*** Professor of English, College of the City of New York;
36 "***
37 "*** [colophon omitted]
38 "***
39 "*** F. TYLER DANIELS COMPANY, INC.
40 "***
41 "*** NEW YORK : : : : LONDON
42 "*** COPYRIGHT, 1911
43 "*** BY VINCENT PARKE AND COMPANY
44 "*** INTRODUCTION TO VOLUME NINE
45 "*** COPYRIGHT, 1911
46 "*** BY VINCENT PARKE AND COMPANY
47 "*** INTRODUCTION TO VOLUME NINE
48 "*** Among so many effective and artistic tales, it is difficult to give
49 "a preference to one over all the rest.Yet, certainly, even amid Verne's
50 "remarkable works, his Off on aComet" must be given high rank. erhaps
51 "this story will be remembered when even Round the world in 80 days"
52 "and Michael Strogoff" have been obliterated by centuries of time.
53 "at least, of the many books since written upon the same theme as Verne's,
54 "no one has yet succeeded in equaling or even approaching it.
55 "In one way Off on a Comet shows a marked contrast to verne's earlier
56 "books
57 "not only does it invade a region more remote than even Trip to the Moon,
58 "but the author here abandons his usual scrupulously scientific attitude.
59 "in order that he may escort us through the depths of immeasurable space,
60 "show us what astronomy really knows of conditions there and upon
61 "other planets, Verne asks us to accept a situation frankly impossible.
62 "the earth and a comet are brought twice into collision without mankind
63 "moreover several people from widely scattered places are carried
64 "off by the comet and returned uninjured. Yet further, the comet
65 "snatches for the convenience of its travelers, both air and water.
66 "little, useful tracts of earth are picked up and, as it were, turned
67 "over and clapped down right side up again upon the comet's surface.
68 "even ships pass uninjured through this remarkable somersault.
69 "these events all belong frankly to the realm of fairyland.
70 " If the situation were reproduced in actuality, if ever
71 "a comet should come into collision with the earth,
72 "we can conceive two scientifically possible results.
73 "if the comet were of such attenuation, such almost infinitesimal
74 "mass as some of these celestial wanderers seem to be, we can
75 "imagine our earth self-protective and possibly unharmed.
76 "if,on the other hand, the comet had even a hundredth part
77 "of the size and solidity and weight which Verne confers
78 "upon his monster so as to give his travelers a home--
79 "in that case the collision would be unspeakably disastrous--
80 "especially to the unlucky individuals who occupied the exact
81 "point of contact.
82 " But once granted the initial and the closing extravagance,
83 "the departure and return of his characters, the alpha and omega
84 "of this tale, how closely the author clings to facts between!
85 "how closely he follows, and imparts to his readers, the scientific
86 "probabilities of the universe beyond our earth, the actual knowledge
87 "so hard won by our astronomers! Other authors who, since Verne,
88 "have told of trips through the planetary and stellar universe
89 "have given free rein to fancy, to dreams of what might be found.
90 "verne has endeavored to impart only what is known to exist.
91 " ************************* that's all folks ************
ready.



10 poke 59468,14:print " ":list
32 " ********************************
33 " *** OK to copy but NOT to ****
34 " *** be sold or published ****
35 " *** for profit. ****
37 " ********************************
38 " * To the best of our knowledge *
39 " * the programs on this disk *
40 " * are in the public domain. *
41 " * *
42 " * Should this not be the case, *
43 " * please contact us at -CSL-. *
44 " * *
45 " ********************************
46 "
62 " disk 98.19 contents
63 " one disk either format
64 " 3 files dealing with repairs/upgrades/housekeeping
65 " on pc's - well i had them to hand but no info how
66 " usefull they are !
67 " comes with reader prg
68 "
101 :rem text screen = poke 59468,14
102 :rem to use printer
103 :rem open1,4,7:print#1:close1:open1,4:cmd1:list
104 :rem when listing finished type in 'print#1:close'
998 "
999 " ************************* that's all folks ************
ready.




1 poke 59468,14:print " ":list
2 " ********************************
3 " *** OK to copy but NOT to ****
4 " *** be sold or published ****
5 " *** for profit. ****
6 " ********************************
7 " * To the best of our knowledge *
8 " * the programs on this disk *
9 " * are in the public domain. *
10 " * *
11 " * Should this not be the case, *
12 " * please contact us at -CSL-. *
13 " * *
14 " ********************************
15 "
16 " disk 98.20 contents
17 " the wheels of chance
18 " h.g.wells
19 "
20 " 2*4040 or 1*8050 format
21 " comes with reader prg
22 "----------------------------
23 "
24 " drapers clerk hoopdriver sets off on a cycling holiday
25 " in 1896 through victorian s.e. england
26 " nowadays it'd be described as a journey of self discovery
27 " combined with a road movie .
28 "
29 "it maybe a trifle forgotten nowadays in comparison to his
30 " other works but it's a very sharply written novel that
31 "is worth taking the time to discover
32 "
33 "ken ross ,-CSL- cbm/pet librarian oct 1998
34 " petlibrary@bigfoot.com
35 "
36 "
37 "-----------------------------------------------------
38 :rem text screen = poke 59468,14
39 :rem to use printer
40 :rem open1,4,7:print#1:close1:open1,4:cmd1:list
41 :rem when listing finished type in 'print#1:close'
42 "
43 " ************************* that's all folks ************
ready.




10 poke 59468,14:print " ":list
32 " ********************************
33 " *** OK to copy but NOT to ****
34 " *** be sold or published ****
35 " *** for profit. ****
37 " ********************************
38 " * To the best of our knowledge *
39 " * the programs on this disk *
40 " * are in the public domain. *
41 " * *
42 " * Should this not be the case, *
43 " * please contact us at -CSL-. *
44 " * *
45 " ********************************
46 "
51 "
52 " disk 98.21 contents
53 "
54 " the underground city
55 " jules verne
56 "
57 " 2*4040 or 1*8050 format
58 " comes with reader prg
59 "
101 :rem text screen = poke 59468,14
102 :rem to use printer
103 :rem open1,4,7:print#1:close1:open1,4:cmd1:list
104 :rem when listing finished type in 'print#1:close'
110 "----------------------------
111 " another classic adventure from the pen of
112 " jules vernes in which a mining engineer from
113 " scotland receives a mysterious letter which leads
114 " to adventure , excitement , danger ( and other such words!)
115 "
116 "
117 "
998 "
999 " ************************* that's all folks ************
ready.




1 poke 59468,14:print " ":list
2 " ********************************
3 " *** OK to copy but NOT to ****
4 " *** be sold or published ****
5 " *** for profit. ****
6 " ********************************
7 " * To the best of our knowledge *
8 " * the programs on this disk *
9 " * are in the public domain. *
10 " * *
11 " * Should this not be the case, *
12 " * please contact us at -CSL-. *
13 " * *
14 " ********************************
15 "
16 " disk 98.22 contents
17 " 4*4040 or 2* 8050 format
18 " comes with a reader prg
19 "------------------------------------
20 :rem text screen = poke 59468,14
21 :rem to use printer
22 :rem open1,4,7:print#1:close1:open1,4:cmd1:list
23 :rem when listing finished type in 'print#1:close'
24 "--------------------------------------------
25 "THE WAR IN THE AIR
26 "by H. G. WELLS
27 "CONTENTS
28 "CONTENTS
29 " I. OF PROGRESS AND THE SMALLWAYS FAMILY
30 " II. HOW BERT SMALLWAYS GOT INTO DIFFICULTIES
31 " III. THE BALLOON
32 " IV. THE GERMAN AIR-FLEET
33 " V. THE BATTLE OF THE NORTH ATLANTIC
34 " VI. HOW WAR CAME TO NEW YORK
35 " VII. THE ''VATERLAND'' IS DISABLED
36 " VIII. A WORLD AT WAR
37 " IX. ON GOAT ISLAND
38 " X. THE WORLD UNDER THE WAR
39 " XI. THE GREAT COLLAPSE
40 " THE EPILOGUE
41 "PREFACE TO REPRINT EDITION
42 " 1917
43 "The reader should grasp clearly the date at which this book was
44 "written. It was done in 1907: it appeared in various magazine
45 "as a serial in 1908 and it was published in the Fall of that
46 "year. At that time the aeroplane was, for most people, merely
47 "rumour and the "copyausage" held the air. The contemporary reade
48 "has all the advantage of ten years' experience since this stor
49 "was imagined. He can correct his author at a dozen points and
50 "estimate the value of these warnings by the standard of a deca
51 "of realities. The book is weak on anti-aircraft guns, for
52 "example, and still more negligent of submarines. Much, no
53 "doubt, will strike the reader as quaint and limited but upon m
54 "the writer may not unreasonably plume himself. The
55 "interpretation of the German spirit must have read as a
56 "caricature in 1908. Was it a caricature? Prince Karl seemed
57 "fantasy then. Reality has since copied Prince Carl with an
58 "astonishing faithfulness. Is it too much to hope that some
59 "democratic "peekert" may not ultimately get even with his Highnes
60 "Our author tells us in this book, as he has told us in others,
61 "more especially in The World Set Free, and as he has been tell
62 "us this year in his War and the Future, that if mankind goes o
63 "with war, the smash-up of civilization is inevitable. It is
64 "chaos or the United States of the World for mankind. There is
65 "other choice. Ten years have but added an enormous conviction
66 "the message of this book. It remains essentially right, a
67 "pamphlet story--in support of the League to Enforce Peace.
68 "K.
69 "
70 "----------------------------- oct 1998 note :-
71 " bert smallways ,cycle mechanic gets mistaken for a spy
72 " amongst other adventures set against a backdrop of transatlanic
73 " zeppplin crossings , niagra falls and post apocolyptic society
74 " written with h.g.well's usual eye for the small details that
75 " capture people that can still be recognized even today
76 "
77 "
78 "
79 " ************************* that's all folks ************
ready.




10 poke 59468,14:print " ":list
32 " ********************************
33 " *** OK to copy but NOT to ****
34 " *** be sold or published ****
35 " *** for profit. ****
37 " ********************************
38 " * To the best of our knowledge *
39 " * the programs on this disk *
40 " * are in the public domain. *
41 " * *
42 " * Should this not be the case, *
43 " * please contact us at -CSL-. *
44 " * *
45 " ********************************
46 "
49 " disk 98.23 contents
50 " 2*4040 or 1*8050 format
51 " comes with a reader prg
52 "---------------------------------------
53 " a tween wars book dealing with airships from project gutenberg
54 "
101 :rem text screen = poke 59468,14
102 :rem to use printer
103 :rem open1,4,7:print#1:close1:open1,4:cmd1:list
104 :rem when listing finished type in 'print#1:close'
105 "------------------------------------------------------
110 "
111 "British Airships: Past, Present and Future
112 "by George Whale (Late Major, R.A.F.)
118 "CHAPTER I
119 "INTRODUCTION
121 "CHAPTER II
122 "EARLY AIRSHIPS AND THEIR DEVELOPMENT TO THE PRESENT DAY
124 "CHAPTER III
125 "BRITISH AIRSHIPS BUILT BY PRIVATE FIRMS
127 "CHAPTER IV
128 "BRITISH ARMY AIRSHIPS
129 "CHAPTER V
130 "EARLY DAYS OF THE NAVAL AIRSHIP SECTION--
131 " PARSEVAL AIRSHIPS, ASTRA-TORRES TYPE, ETC.
133 "CHAPTER VI
134 "NAVAL AIRSHIPS: THE NON-RIGIDS--
135 " S.S. TYPE
136 " COASTAL AND C STAR AIRSHIPS
137 " THE NORTH SEA AIRSHIP
139 "CHAPTER VII
140 "NAVAL AIRSHIPS: THE RIGIDS
141 " RIGID AIRSHIP NO. 1
142 " RIGID AIRSHIP NO. 9
143 " RIGID AIRSHIP NO. 23 CLASS
144 " RIGID AIRSHIP NO. 23 X CLASS
145 " RIGID AIRSHIP NO. 31 CLASS
146 " RIGID AIRSHIP NO. 33 CLASS
148 "CHAPTER VIII
149 "THE WORK OF THE AIRSHIP IN THE WORLD WAR
151 "CHAPTER IX
152 "THE FUTURE OF AIRSHIPS
156 "-----------------------------------------------
157 "INTRODUCTION
159 "Lighter-than-air craft consist of three distinct types:
160 "Airships, which are by far the most important, Free Balloons,
161 "Kite Balloons, which are attached to the ground or to a ship by
162 "cable. They derive their appellation from the fact that when
163 "charged with hydrogen, or some other form of gas, they are
164 "lighter than the air which they displace. Of these three type
165 "the free balloon is by far the oldest and the simplest, but it
166 "entirely at the mercy of the wind and other elements, and cannot
167 "be controlled for direction, but must drift whithersoever the
168 "wind or air currents take it. On the other hand, the airship,
169 "being provided with engines to propel it through the air, and
170 "with rudders and elevators to control it for direction and
171 "height, can be steered in whatever direction is desired, and
172 "voyages can be made from one place to another--always provided
173 "that the force of the wind is not sufficiently strong to overcome
174 "the power of the engines. The airship is, therefore, nothing
175 "else than a dirigible balloon, for the engines and other weight
176 "connected with the structure are supported in the air by an
177 "envelope or balloon, or a series of such chambers, according to
178 "design, filled with hydrogen or gas of some other nature.
179 "
180 "It is not proposed, in this book, to embark upon a lengthy and
181 "highly technical dissertation on aerostatics, although it is a
182 "intricate science which must be thoroughly grasped by anyone who
183 "wishes to possess a full knowledge of airships and the various
184 "problems which occur in their design. Certain technical
185 "expressions and terms are, however, bound to occur, even in the
186 "most rudimentary work on airships, and the main principles
187 "underlying airship construction will be described as briefly and
188 "as simply as is possible.
998 "
999 " ************************* that's all folks ************
ready.