[Coco] [Color Computer] Program Wanted

Boisy Pitre boisy at boisypitre.com
Thu Dec 28 11:52:27 EST 2006



On Dec 28, 2006, at 9:11 AM, L. Curtis Boyle wrote:

> On Wed, 27 Dec 2006 16:00:04 -0600, George's Coco Address
> <yahoo at dvdplayersonly.com> wrote:
>
>>  I'm reminded of the "OS-9 Level 2 BBS".. I still have it now, but  
>> it is
>> mostly useless except for some of the utilities that came with it.
>> Daily, I use "dloadx", uloadx", "dloady", "uloady", depending on  
>> the file
>> type and size. The BBS system was quite remarkable inasmuch as it was
>> fast
>> and fairly easy to configure.
>>  It's sad that today, a BBS is history.
>>
>>  HAH! I remember when I needed to call the author about an issue.   
>> The
>> answering machine played....
>>
>>  " Hello?....
>>
>>  Hello!
>>
>>
>>  I can't hear you.
>>
>>  I still can't hear you!
>     If you are talking about Keith Alphonso (Alpha Software), I am
> surprised... we (Bill Nobel and I) also contacted him for help, and  
> was
> very helpful (including letting us get dis-assembled source of some  
> of his
> utilities for use in our work enviornment, which used to run on a  
> Coco 3
> system in the early 1990's).
>

Yes Keith is still around.  He went to the University of Southern  
MIssissippi in Hattiesburg, the same university that I was attending  
when Microware hired me in 1992.  You can find a picture of Keith on  
this website: http://www.eigs.olemiss.edu/newsroom/annual_brief05/ 
photos.htm

I haven't been in touch with him in a while, but he's at Diamond Data  
Systems.  You can easily find his email address by googling his name.
--
Boisy G. Pitre
337.781.3570 mobile
email: boisy at boisypitre.com
Website: www.boisypitre.com

"If there is truth to the proposition that knowing the past helps us  
to understand the present, I believe there is at least as much truth  
to the proposition that what we know of the present is crucial to our  
understanding of the past.  What we have not ourselves experienced or  
observed we can at most only partially and imperfectly comprehend;  
and I suspect that there is much in history that is so remote from  
our own experiences or observations as to be largely beyond our  
understanding." - Kenneth M. Stamp





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