I've heard of a c-128 on the net, but with what I have no idea. I know
there is a demand out there for mailers for the 64, there is probably
some sort of TSP/IP stack and associated software to go with it.
I think everything is text based, no whizz bang graphics.
Gary Hildebrand
Iggy Drougge wrote:
Russ Blakeman skrev:
I know I've seen many things on this in th
epast but wasn't paying
attention. I have some free time now and want to do some tinkering. Are
there browsers and email agents for the Commodore 64/128 series and DOS
(2.11 through 6.22). I prefer a free or shareware one to be able to test it
to see if it's a POS or not. I want to use the DOS version on a few
platforms from an 8086/8088 to a 386. I have a 286 portable NEC that I'd
like to try it out on first.
<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML
4.0 Transitional//EN">
<HTML><HEAD>
[snip]
<hrm> Hopefully some programms which won't let you send HTML.
As for MS-DOS and derivatives (I suppose that's the DOS you'd run), do a
search for WATTCP. That's the stack I use on my DOS box (PS/2 model 70, to be
replaced by a mod. 70 486). There's supposed to be a big WATTCP page in
Norway.
I seem to forget what the name of that OLR (off-line reader =) for C64/128 is
called, but it seemed awfully capable. I also seem to forget whether it is
developed by Cameron Kaiser. There are at least two browsers, too. Or three. I
think Cameron is developing one, then there's one for SuperCPU users, and one
developed by Fairlight. At least one goes by the name Wave.
--
En ligne avec Thor 2.6a.
You can't prove anything about a program written in C or FORTRAN. It's really
just Peek and Poke with some syntactic sugar.
Bill Joy