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| subject: | Re: I found Fred |
Hello Nancy... just a requote of everything, and a really nice
history of Blue wave which I had for my users to DL ... Liked it
the best! Wish they were back, it would be interesting to
see what kind of a BW we'd be using today.
Thanks for the history....
Peter
-=> Quoting Nancy Backus to Mike Roberts <=-
-=> Quoting Mike Roberts to All on 06-13-07 15:16 <=-
MR> I knew I would have a hard time searching out my old reg paper, but
MR> did find Fred! Anyway here is a snippet from wikipedia.. Does
MR> it ring any bells now? I don't fully agree with the last statement
MR> 8-)
NB> That explains why I wouldn't have remembered him.. :) Wiki doesn't
NB> give dates of submission (or authors), does it? That would be quite
NB> interesting to know, too... :)
MR> -----------------------------------------------------------------------
MR> Blue Wave was released to the public September 20, 1990 by Fred
MR> Rappuhn and George Hatchew, and marketed via their company, Blue Wave
MR> Software. Fred Rappuhn and George Hatchew were fellow Sysops who met
MR> at a picnic for local area Sysops. During this picnic, the concept of
MR> Blue Wave was born and development was started immediately. Fred
MR> Rappuhn concentrated on the offline reader while George Hatchew
NB> Now that I didn't know. Interesting.
MR> concentrated on the doors that would convert the BBS message system to
MR> a Blue Wave format. This packet could then be downloaded and read
MR> offline by the Blue Wave Reader. It quickly gained success and soon
MR> became one of the top offline mail readers available. This team proved
MR> to be very successful and within a short amount of time had support
MR> for all the top BBS systems.
NB> That fits with what I did know. :)
MR> Fred Rappuhn was hired as a programmer by EDS in September 1991 and
MR> soon was unable to continue development for Blue Wave Software. Blue
MR> Wave Software dissolved and George Hatchew started Cutting Edge
MR> Computing to continue the development of Blue Wave. Hatchew was later
NB> My first reg letter was issued by Cutting Edge Computing, signed by
NB> George. No wonder I didn't know about Fred...
MR> involved in a serious car accident, and was unable to continue
MR> development of the system past 1993. Blue Wave soon disappeared from
MR> the BBS scene, replaced by a wave of QWK-based readers.
NB> The date here is off a bit... considering that 2.20 and following came
NB> out in 1995. By then George was handling the software end and his
NB> brother Scott was doing the business end.
NB> I agree with you, that last sentence is rather overstating the case,
NB> too...! I wouldn't say BW has disappeared even now... and there
NB> have always been QWK-based readers around, before AND after... and QWK
NB> seemed to be more likely to be built into a bbs system than BW. Not
NB> to mention, of course, the other major competitor to BW, Silver Xpress,
NB> that Hector Santos worked up, also not a QWK system.
NB> ttyl neb
NB> ... Hey, look! A completely new undocumented fea&%$#*{at} NO CARRIER
NB> ___ Blue Wave/QWK v2.20
NB> -!- SBBSecho 2.12-Win32
NB> ! Origin: :::The Holodeck BBS:::Telnet://holodeck.myip.us (1:261/1381)
... Pete is currently {at} Lake Simcoe,Ontario,CANADA
___ Blue Wave/DOS v2.30 [NR]
--- Platinum Xpress/Win/WINServer v3.0pr5
* Origin: Doc's Place BBS Fido Since 1991 docsplace.tzo.com (1:123/140)SEEN-BY: 633/267 5030/786 @PATH: 123/140 500 379/1 633/267 |
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