This sounds OK to me.
I am in a rural (hillybilly) area and am stuck with a slow dialup
connection. So, downloading *large* files and directory trees has never
really been an option. In fact, there have been several times I have
pondered asking for a CD of bitsavers. A plan like this could be a real
godsend for someone like me.
I'm certainly not opposed to paying a duplication / handling fee for the
stuff I want. The only problem is: I don't know what trees I might want
tomorrow... Would this plan impose restrictions on surfing / downloading
docs from bitsavers for casual users or subscribers that want files other
than their subscriptions?
While I'm here, I want offer my sincerest thanks to both you and Al for the
services you provide.
See ya, SteveRob
----- Original Message -----
From: "Jay West" <jwest at classiccmp.org>
To: "General Discussion: On-Topic and Off-Topic Posts"
<cctalk at classiccmp.org>
Sent: Wednesday, March 21, 2007 2:01 PM
Subject: Bitsavers subscription
I credit Guy Sotomayor with the original idea, a few
others chimed in as
well. So I ran it by Al Kossow and this was officially blessed by him....
The plan is for me to offer subscriptions to bitsavers for a fee. The idea
is that you can sign up for a subscription and pick just the specific
directory trees you want, or the entire archive. You are initially sent a
complete copy of all the trees you selected (or full archive) on the
medium
of your choice (CD, DVD, HD, etc.). From that point on
- for the
subscription fee - you are automatically shipped a set of updates
periodically - say every month? - that keeps your own personal bitsavers
archive up to date. Perhaps this automated system could also allow
purchase
of a "one-off" cd/dvd without a subscription
containing just the files
and/or directories that you tag.
Why purchase a subscription? Well, for one - it keeps you from having to
constantly check bitsavers for what is new and download those files. It
also
will hopefully reduce the bandwidth on the site for
people who decide they
want a full copy. It gives you a way to get all the files in a courteous
manner and keep up to date. Another reason - the cost of the subscription
would be just a bit higher than the cost of media. The overage above the
cost of media goes to the care and feeding of the classiccmp server. That
means by buying a subscription you are helping to subsidize the cost of
the
classiccmp hardware, bandwidth usage, etc. etc. This
is much like the
FreeBSD CDROM subscription if you're familiar with that. You can get the
identical bits elsewhere, but buying a CD subscription is convenient and
directly supports the cause.
I would also point out that this in no way changes your ability to
download
files directly from bitsavers or any of the mirrors
for free. This is
merely
a packaging/update service to be viewed as a donation
to the cause and a
convenience for those who want to stay current on bitsavers. I am going to
check with the developer working on the classiccmp website to see if this
(tracking the membership, what directories they want, building the burn
directories, etc.) is something that will fit well into code he has
already
done for the new classiccmp. If it is, great. If not,
then I'll ask him if
he wants this task. If not, then I'll come back to the list and see if
people educated in the ways of php/mysql wish to contribute time to
creating
the software.
Of course, if no one is interested, I'll just continue making the
occasional
trip downtown to the datacenter and burning CD's
for people at no charge.
It
would be nice if there was interest in this though!
Jay West