ST PRODUCT NEWS
ST reviews
ST-TERM
Commnet Systems
7348 Green Oak Terrace
Lanham, MD 20706
(301) 552-2517
$39.95
Reviewed by John Kosiorek
ST-TERM software provides a host of useful features for 520ST
telecommunications, including three popular file transfer methods and fully
controllable RS-232 settings. At $39.95, ST-TERM is a good value-particularly
when used with a Hayes-compatible modem.
ST-TERM offers VT52 terminal emulation in a program with
similarities to the design and flow of AMODEM for the 8-bit Atari. This
program makes appropriate use of the [HELP], [UNDO] and Function keys,
but the lack of color, GEM icons and mouse control result in drab-looking
screens.
The documentation consists of 20 well-organized pages.
Among ST-TERM's features are full control of the RS-232 configuration including
host remote echoing and six baud rates from 300 to 9600, 16K buffer for
toggled capture, printer logging and three file transfer protocols. Files
can be transferred by Kermit; XMODEM with unlimited file size; in standard
and AMODEM dialects; or ASCII format with user control of delays between
characters and lines, and optional line prompting.
In addition, ST-TERM utilizes files for initial RS-232
settings, defining macro function keys and-for Hayes compatible modems-a
400-entry autodialer with the ability to reconfigure the RS-232 port.
Each autodialer entry has fields for name, number, baud,
data bits, stop bits, parity, password, account number and comments. Fields
are provided for timers and billing rates-which are to be utilized in upcoming
version 2.0. TOS disk functions are also available from within the program.
Throughout the command menu system, each screen displays the valid choices.
After you become familiar with the commands, you can enter most of them
without going to the main menu.
ST-TERM is installed as a TOS-Takes Parameter application.
When loading the program, a setup file can be entered to set the initial
values for the macros and the RS-232 port.
When the program is running in terminal mode, pressing
the [HELP] key displays the main menu from which all commands can be entered,
either as a direct command or through a series of secondary menus.
For example, if you type [A] at the main menu the first
10 entries of the [A]utodial directory are displayed. At this point you
can edit any of those entries, page through the directory, or select a
number to dial.
The account number and password of an autodialed entry
are transmitted once a connection is made. When a number is autodialed,
the RS-232 port is re-configured to that entry's specifications. Through
the use of the autodialer and macros, only four keystrokes can sign you
off a 7-bit, even parity, 300 baud CompuServe session and connect you to
an 8-bit, no parity, 1200 baud BBS.
Utilizing the 10 Function keys along with the [ALTERNATE]
key, ST-TERM provides 20 macros storing as many as 60 characters each.
The macros are stored in setup files. By loading a different setup file,
macro sets could be customized for different terminal sessions.
While there are no GEM interface bells-and-whistles, many
little touches make the program enjoyable to use. For example, all file
transfers start transmission with an [ALTERNATE] [T] key entry. All editing
is accomplished with the same keys, regardless of the data being entered-macros,
autodialer or disk functions. If you accidentally press the [UNDO] key-
which will exit the program-you are asked, "Exit, Are you sure?". This
is certainly one appropriate time for the much overused confirmation request.
The manual warns against selecting any printer function
when a printer is not online. The ST's operating system waits for the printer
to respond and the result is computer lock-up. (Actually, there is a
BIOS call that will check for device availability The software, not the
computer, is at fault here for not checking to see if the printer is there.
-ANTIC ED)
The 520ST is a very powerful computer. It would be nice
to have modem software that takes advantage of more of its features. ST-TERM
version 2.0 promises various improvements that are not currently included-such
as connect timers and a billing calculator.
Also, having an autodialer with 400 entries almost requires
some form of automated search capability beyond the current method that
merely displays 10 entries at a time. In addition, the main menu or a status
screen could display all the current RS-232 settings and translation modes,
making it easy to scan this data if things aren't going right.
The ST-TERM disk is copy-protected but Commnet Systems
will provide a backup disk for $10.
TRANSYLVANIA,
CRIMSON CROWN
Polarware/Penguiri Software
P.O. Box 311
Geneva, IL 60134
(312) 232-1984
$34.95 each
Reviewed by Mike Fleischmann
In Transylvanla you are a brave traveler journeying to Transylvania
to search for the king's daughter who disappeared under mysterious circumstances.
You receive a letter from King John (in your program documentation) asking
for your help, as well as a business card from Zin the Wizard and a page
from the local newspaper.
Beginning your trek at an ancient stump, you are almost
immediately confronted by the land's monstrous inhabitants. There are bats,
floating figures, voices from nowhere, strange forces, witches-and an annoying
werewolf that incessantly hounds you (excuse the pun) until you find a
way to dispose of it.
Now, in The Crimson Crown (Further Adventures In Transylvaala)
you are once again a bold adventurer. But this time the king has died and
the evil vampire has taken his magic crown. You must somehow find the crown
and get it back before the vampire learns of its magical powers and bends
them to his will.
In this adventure you have two traveling companions, Eric
the Crown Prince and the Princess Sabrina. Each has a definite role to
play in the adventure, but it is up to you to find out what those roles
are and to use them to succeed in your quest.
Included with your disk is a full color poster, a map
of the countryside, a journal, and a sealed parchment. Do not open the
parchment! In the game there are definite instructions for what to do with
the parchment and you lose some of the fun when you peek early.
You start the game on the shore of a lake, but soon fall
into a trap. It seems as if the entire land is out to get you!
You will also see some old familiar places and animals
from the earlier Transylvania adventure. I found that this gave Crimson
Crown a nice feeling of continuity. But you don't need to have played the
previous adventure to enjoy this one.
Crimson Crown is a riddler's delight. At least four major
riddles need to be solved. Also, during your journeys you will occasionally
come across a hooded sage who gives you cryptic hints-more riddles, of
course-about how to solve the adventure.
Of the two adventures, I would rate Transylvania as easy-to-medium.
Crimson Crown is definitely harder-especially if you have trouble with
riddles, as I do.
The graphics are good in both programs but Crimson Crown's
screens are somewhat superior. Nevertheless, both adventures contain colorful,
atmospheric and well-detailed pictures. In one screen, there is even a
small spider on a web that is clear and distinct.
Both Transylvania and Crimson Crown use an interpretive
parser called "Comprehend" which allows use of full sentence commands and
has a vocabulary of over 1,000 words. I found Comprehend easy to use. It
understood what I wanted to do about 80 percent of the time-which meant
that I wasted very little time rephrasing my instructions so the programs
could understand them.
The adventures are not without their flaws. The worst
is probably the text scroll. When there is enough text to fill the area
at the bottom of the screen, the program waits for you to press the mouse
button or a key. I often found myself typing in commands twice.
Also, if you try to type while the text is being put on
the screen, the type-ahead buffer captures only a few characters randomly.
This annoyed me at first, but I soon adapted and the problem became only
a minor inconvenience. In all fairness, when running the programs in text
mode, covering ground you are familiar with, you don't experience this
problem.
Crimson Crown has a few logic flaws. As an example, I
had been trying to get some flies to feed a hungry frog. In a cellar, when
I felt the ceiling, I had bugs raining down on me, but I couldn't get any
to feed the frog with.
The programs let you save as many as four games on the
game disk, so you don't have to constantly switch disks. Also the company
is supportive. You can get a free book of hints just by writing in.
Overall I think these two programs are worth the money
and quite enjoyable to play. Even my wife (who is no adventure fan) liked
the pictures and enjoyed the text.
WORD FOR WORD
Bay View Software
177 Webster Street, A-295
Monterey, CA 93940
(408) 373-4011
$39.95
Reviewed by Sol Guber
Why buy a computer Scrabble game? Well, it's fun to test your wits and
vocabulary against the 520ST. And maybe you have trouble finding opponents
at your own level.
Word for Word is a Scrabble-type game that even
lets you design your own boards. It is almost completely mouse-driven and
can be played by as many as four people simultaneously. Or the ST can take
on three human opponents-at three different levels.
The board used for the game can be a normal Scrabble board
with squares that double or triple the value of letters or words. There
are also bonus squares that increase the value of a letter by a fixed amount.
The computer plays at three levels-beginner, intermediate,
and advanced. And it thinks "out loud." You can see the words and their
placement on the board as the ST considers its move. At the beginner level,
the software plays a mediocre game and can easily be beaten. (Note:
this is the reviewer's opinion. We didn't find the beginners level all
that easy!-ANTIC ED) At the intermediate level, the computer plays
well. At the advanced level, the fun really starts.
Word for Word can help increase your vocabulary. You can
let the computer suggest words for you, using your letters. This will teach
you some new (and often arcane) words.
Another vocabulary booster is based upon the rule of Scrabble
that lets you challenge your opponent as to the validity of his words.
This option is built into Word for Word. The computer can challenge one
of your words and vice versa. The computer has a 50K dictionary built into
the system. However, it cheats! Every so often in the advanced version,
it will throw in a bogus word. I do not feel that this is an error on the
part of the programmer, but a feature to keep human players on their toes.
You can, of course, also use made up words and when the
computer challenges the word, explain that you have looked up the word
in a dictionary. You do this by clicking the CORRECT box. But it takes
a mighty low person to cheat a trusting 520ST.
It's easy to use the mouse to design and save your own
board layout and your own letter values and frequencies. This feature makes
the game even more fun.
For example, I always thought it was unfair to have only
one high-value X. And now I regularly play with 12 Xs. This makes for a
much higher-scoring game. Or you can increase the amount of letters taken
by each player per turn. Add more blank tiles, lots of triple word squares
and higher values for exotic letters-the whole character of the game is
changed.
Word for Word uses drop-down menus for commands, so the
clear and complete manual is not really needed at all. The play is quick
and exciting and uses the capabilities of the 520ST very well. The mouse
is used to good advantage both in manipulating the letters and pointing
to the spot where they should go. When there are more than one human players,
you can hide your words from the other person when you take your turn.
My only complaint is that Word for Word came from an IBM
PC version, and there is not a word in the manual about the ST. Otherwise,
this is a good, solid version of a board classic.
A MIND FOREVER VOYAGING
Infocom
125 Cambridge Park Drive
Cambridge, MA 02140
(617) 492-6000
$44.95
Reviewed by Harvey Bernstein
As any longtime reader of Antic probably knows by now, I have
been an avid Infocom text-adventure freak ever since I bought my Atari
810 disk drive and Zork I on the same day Thus it was with great anticipation
that I greeted A Mind Forever Voyaging-Infocom's first 128K-minimum
game and its first original release for the ST Written by the venerated
Steve Meretzky, whose previous credits include Planetfall, AMFV is the
most original game to come out of the Infocom stables in ages.
The game begins in the year 2031, when you make the shocking
discovery that your life and memories until now are just electronically
implanted delusions-that you are actually a sophisticated computer known
as PRISM! The reason for revealing your true origin is somewhat sinister.
Society is on the verge of collapse, so the ruling powers have instituted
the Plan-a complex series of sociopolitical steps designed to put civilization
back on the right course. Your job is to enter a series of simulations-10,
20, 30 years into the future-in order to test the long-term effects of
the Plan. But what is the Plan, and who is really behind it? Is the Plan
truly a boon to mankind, or does it need to be stopped? And if so, how
can it be stopped? Answering these questions becomes the ultimate goal
of A Mind Forever Voyaging.
As expected, AMFV makes no use of the GEM interface and
contains the usual Inocom parser, only larger. Command structure is actually
twofold. In the early parts of the game, you cannot move or pick up objects-
don't forget, you are a computer. Instead you can enter different "modes"
allowing you to tie into a worldwide news service, communicate with human
beings, review your own message banks, or even interface with other terminals.
In this manner, AMFV is very much like Suspended. Once in-side the simulations,
however, it becomes a standard adventure.
AMFV is considerably more open-ended than your average
text adventure. You can wander almost anywhere, and you don't get killed
(at least not that I've discovered). The bad news is that this game continues
the trend started with Cutthroats and Hitchiker's Guide-if you don't do
the right thing at the right time, everything comes to a standstill. Oh,
you can walk around, all right, but nothing happens to advance the story
and the other characters can't be found. At least with a locked door you
have some idea of what to try next.
The expanded memory of the ST allows for one of the nicest
upgrades of the Infocom parser-the "oops" command. If, like me, your mind
works faster than your fingers, you might type something like "Unlock the
doob." Rather than retype the whole command, simply typing oops door" will
correct it. Nifty!
A Mind Forever Voyaging is an essential addition to the
library of any ST owner who loves Infocom games as much as I do. Whatever
else they may have in the works for 128K-minimum computers will have to
go a long way to beat this.
New Products
Rising Star Industries has announced the first of what will apparently
he a series of software development utility packages. Resource Disk-Volume
1 ($79.95) contains a command line interpreter called COMMAND.PRG that's
similar to the interpreter in the Developer's Toolkit. The disk also contains
a modem program, a file comparison utility and other goodies.
Rising Star Industries, 25500 Hawthorne Boulevard, Suite 2000, Torrance, CA 90505. (213) 373-9112. PRESS.
Activision's Hacker ($44.95), demonstrated at COMDEX, has reached the Antic offices in final form. Nice graphics. A real improvement over the 8-bit version. We're still awaiting Borrowed Time ($49.95) and Mindshadow (no price at press time).
Activision, P.O. Box 7286, Mountain View, CA 94043. (415)960-0410. FINAL/PRESS.
After all the publicity on Brataccas ($44.95), it's nice to see that the game has made it into the marketplace. From Psygnosis LTD, this sci-fi animated graphics epic includes very nice packaging and a bonus poster by Roger Dean.
Distributed in U.S. by Apex Resources, 17 St. Mary's Court, Brookline, MA 12146. (617) 232-9686. FINAL.
Polarware/Penguin Software has more graphics adventure games coming. The Coveted Mirror, Frank and Ernest's Adventure, and Oo-Topos are all currently in development. Prices are not yet available. Oo-Topos is a space-pirate adventure hy Michael Berlyn of Infocom fame. We can't wait.
Polarware/Penguin Software, 830 Fourth Avenue, RO. Box 311, Geneva, IL 60134, (312) 232-1984. PRESS.
In what is hopefully the continuation of a recent trend, another Macintosh developer is announcing software for the ST Assimilation, Inc. has officially announced the development of four software applications/utilities and two hardware products. The company, which has not yet named the new ST products, created a macro-key programmer and a printer spooler for the Mac. Also in the works is an ST version of their successful Macintosh Turbo Touch-a trackhall-like device-for the ST.
Assimilation, Inc., 485 Alberto Way, Los Gatos, CA 95030. (408) 395-7679. PRESS.
Firestorm ($15) is a new arcade game from inner fire software. Written entirely in 68000 machine language, Firestorm features a three-track music sequencer, smooth colorful animation and 19 levels of multiple rounds. User groups ordering 10 or more copies of the game directly from inner fire will pay only $10. The company has also announced that the complete source code for the game, music sequencer and custom graphics drivers is available for $100.
inner fire software, P.O. Box 36503, #259, San Jose, CA 95158. PRESS.
Monarch Development has created a Shape & Icon Editor for the ST called SHICED ($19.95). This programmer's utility should help you customize your icons. It can also be used to create small graphics shapes to be manipulated by your programs.
Monarch Development, 3927 Fisher Road N.E., Salem, OR 97305. FINAL.
For those game players with monochrome monitors, The Other Valley Software presents Monkey Business and Delta Patrol ($24.95 each). Delta Patrol is a helicopter arcade blaster and Monkey Business bears a marked resemblance to the classic Donkey Kong.
The Other Valley Software, 8540 Archibald, Suite A, Rancho Cucamonga, CA 91730. (714) 980-0440. FINAL.
Holmes & Duckworth, the unusual programming duo from Mirage Concepts, have thrown their hats into the ST language arena with Holmes & Duckworth Forth ($39.95). This is an 83-standard Forth which is fully relocatable with a 32-hit stack and full GEM access. The language was used hy Holmes & Duckworth to develop their ST Toolbox ($39.95) utilities.
Mirage Concepts, 4055 W. Shaw, #108, Fresno, CA 93711. (209) 227-8369. FINAL.
Ultima II ($59.95), one of the most popular fantasy role-playing games in the 8-bit market, has been translated to the ST The popular Lord British adventure sits in GEM with full drop-down menus, from which you may choose your armor, weapons, or make other Life-and-death decisions. (See this issue's review of another Sierra On-Line ST graphics adventure, King's Quest II.)
Sierra On-Line, Coarsegold, CA 93614. (209) 683-6858. FINAL.
The anxiously awaited final installment of the Enchanter trilogy, from Infocom, is here. Spellbreaker ($44.95) concludes the fantasy text adventures which began with Enchanter and continued through Sorcerer. All three are very close relatives to the famed ZORK trilogy. Spellbreaker is rated up there in the 'expert" category by Infocom. So all you Infocom freaks should find this a real challenge.
Infocom, 125 Cambridge Park Drive, Cambridge, MA 02140. (617) 492-6000.
FINAL.
New ST product notices are compiled from information provided by the products' manufacturers. Antic assumes no responsibility for the accuracy of these notices or the performance of the product. Each mention is followed by a code word indicating that, at press time, Antic had seen a FINAL marketable version, near-final BETA, earlier ALPHA, incomplete DEMO, or PRESS release.