I've had good experience as well. I got the full source for an Amiga
title just by asking. (Admitedly it was not a big corporation who made
it, but still).
On Tue, Mar 16, 2010 at 11:16:55PM -0500, Jim Leonard wrote:
On 3/16/2010 10:59 PM, John Foust wrote:
I hope there's a significant fraction of
software developers who would
be tickled to hear their old stuff is still being appreciated. I suspect
many would be glad to give it away.
I have had great reactions from everyone I've contacted regarding
their old works -- in fact, I recommend people try it. Some
examples:
- Neal White III and Rand E. Bohrer gave me some great
previously-unknown information about their work when I interviewed
them for an article (
http://www.mobygames.com/featured_article/feature,10/ ).
- Paul Carruthers was so tickled when I told him the true story that
I was able to complete all 100 designed levels of Archipelagos
(levels past 100 are seed-generated) that he sent me a free copy of
Archipelagos 2000, released only in the UK.
- The person who did the PC port of Jumpman, when asked questions
about it for a reverse-engineering project (
http://www.oldskool.org/pc/jumpman ), was kind enough to send as
much of the original code as he could find to the project to help
out.
- Mark Pelczarski of Pengiun Software/Polarware was kind enough to
send me the asm code for Graphics Magician when I was trying to
write a util to display graphics created by that program.
It's only the lawyers (who weren't even BORN when the original works
came out) that don't give two shits. In my experience, anyway.
Geez, I sound old. I'm not even 40 yet.
--
Jim Leonard (trixter at
oldskool.org)
http://www.oldskool.org/
Help our electronic games project:
http://www.mobygames.com/
Or check out some trippy MindCandy at
http://www.mindcandydvd.com/
A child borne of the home computer wars:
http://trixter.wordpress.com/