------------------------------------------------------------------- F.A.C.T.Net, Inc. (Fight Against Coercive Tactics Network, Incorporated) a non-profit computer bulletin board and electronic library 601 16th St. #C-217 Golden, Colorado 80401 USA BBS 303 530-1942 FAX 303 530-2950 Office 303 473-0111 This document is part of an electronic lending library and preservational electronic archive. F.A.C.T.Net does not sell documents, it only lends them according to the terms of your library cardholder agreement with F.A.C.T.Net, Inc. ===================================================================== GETTING STARTED with FactNet These pages from F.A.C.T.'s Technical Director are preliminary instructions to get you started. You will be amazed how many vital questions are not answered. We will grope along and learn together as we build a unique and powerful defense of basic human rights Additional documentation will be written ad hoc as time and resources permit, in response to the questions and problems that you describe in your comments to the sysop and other e-mail. FactNet is only useful if people can use it. Let us know what you need. Macintosh users. A version of RipTerm for the Mac is expected Real Soon Now (private joke among software developers). Until it is released, Mac users will have to use the command line interface rather than the graphical point-and-click interface available to IBM users. The BBS (H)elp functions provide a very good reference for the command line interface. All FactNet functions can be performed from the command line interface. To begin using FactNet, assuming you have an IBM PC, your steps are (1) install RipTerm onto your hard disk and then (2) use it to call us. Think you can handle that? Once you are logged on, point-and-click to explore the menu structure and use the (H)elp functions to learn more about specific commands and operations. Click on any HELP button and type INDEX from the (H)elp prompt for a list of topics. These pages include sections called RipTerm Program Installation, Calling FactNet, and Using FactNet. There is also a page telling how to add RipTerm to a Windows program group, so that you can run RipTerm by clicking on its icon in Windows. That is an optional procedure. These instructions are discursive, and relevant information may be found anywhere in these pages. We suggest you read through all of it so you will know what topics are covered and where to find information when you need it. Besides these pages, your best source of information will be the (H)elp functions on the BBS. Explore, experiment, and enjoy. RIPTERM PROGRAM INSTALLATION You can call FactNet with any communications program (SmartComm, ProComm, etc.) but you will not be able to use FactNet's mouse operated point-and-click interface unless you call with a communications program that supports the "Remote Imaging Protocol" (RIP). One such program is available as "freeware" from many BBS systems, including ours. It is called RipTerm. A copy of RipTerm is provided on the enclosed diskette. To use RipTerm, your computer must be IBM PC DOS-compatible with an EGA or VGA display, and a mouse. It must have a hard disk with at least two megabytes free. RipTerm can be run from the DOS command prompt or used with Microsoft Windows or other multitasking software. If you do not know how much space is free on your hard disk: From any DOS prompt, type CHKDSK C: The resulting display will include a line that says "xxxxx bytes available on disk." The "xxxx" number must be at least 2000000. If it is less, you will have to erase some files until you have enough space. If your hard disk has multiple volumes, try CHKDSK D: and CHKDSK E: etc. until you find a volume that has enough space. If you are on a network, ask your system administrator which volume to use. If the CHKDSK command produces a "Bad Command or Filename" error, your computer was not set up correctly (a bad PATH command). Consult your hardware supplier. In these instructions, we will assume that you found sufficient disk space on Drive C:. If you are using some other volume, use its drive letter in place of C:. Place the diskette that you received from F.A.C.T. into your floppy drive, either A: or B:. In these instructions we will assume that you put the diskette into drive A:. Use B: instead if appropriate. Change to the drive containing the F.A.C.T. diskette by typing A: . ( means to press the ENTER key.) Your screen prompt should now say A:> Type INSTALL A: C: (There is a space after INSTALL and a space after A:. There is no space after C:. Be sure to use the appropriate drive letters if A: or C: is not correct.) That's all you have to do. The program will create a directory on drive C: called C:\RIPTERM and copy all necessary files into it. If you are not using Microsoft Windows, be sure your MOUSE driver is loaded before you run RIPTERM. This might be done by adding the line MOUSE to your AUTOEXEC.BAT file, or DEVICE=MOUSE.SYS to your CONFIG.SYS file. Consult your hardware supplier if there is any problem with this. To run RIPTERM, change to the drive where you installed it. This might be done by typing, for example, C: Change into the appropriate directory. Type, for example, CD \RIPTERM . From the C:\RIPTERM> prompt, type RIPTERM . RipTerm Setups The first time you run RipTerm it will ask you three questions: what port is your modem on, how fast is your modem, and what port is your printer on. If you do not know the answers, you will have to speak to your hardware supplier. F.A.C.T. personnel do not know about your hardware or system setup. Answer 0 (zero) to the third question if no printer is connected. Usually the modem will be on COM1: which is serial port #1. The most common exception occurs when you have a serial mouse on COM1:, in which case the modem most often would be on COM2: which is serial port #2. If you get this wrong and RipTerm hangs trying to use a serial port which does not exist, you may have to re-install RipTerm and try again. The most common modem speeds are 2400 baud and 14,400 baud. The 14,400 baud modems are usually "intelligent" modems which adjust automatically to the fastest speed possible. If you have an "intelligent" modem you should say that the speed is 38,400 baud (so that your choice is not the limiting factor) and let the modem figure out the actual connect speed. If you have a 2400 baud modem then probably you should say that the modem speed is 2400 baud. If your modem is slower than 2400 baud then it is not satisfactory for use with FactNet. Editing your RipTerm Setups In case your hardware setup changes (for example, you buy a faster modem) you can examine and change your RipTerm setups after RipTerm is installed. There are two setup questions you may want to change before using RipTerm, although both are optional. These are the Up/Download Directories and your Dialing Directory. See appropriate sections of the instructions below. To do the setups, run RipTerm as described above. Press to get past the introductory screen. You will see a blank screen which is where information comes and goes to and from the modem. Right now you aren't sending or receiving anything so the screen is blank. Use F10 or the right mouse button to display the top-of-screen menu. Modem Setup Options From the top-of-screen menu, select MODEM. From the MODEM menu options, select SERIAL INTERRUPTS. You will have a choice of Com Ports 1-4. Usually your modem will be on Com 1. If you have a serial mouse using Com 1, your modem may be on Com 2. Check with the person who installed your modem. This must be set correctly or you will be unable to dial. The next MODEM menu option, Serial Addresses, should be 3F8 for Com 1 or 2F8 for Com 2. This should not be changed except under very unusual conditions. Use F10 or the right mouse button to get the top-of-screen menu again. Select SETUP. The first SETUP option is MODEM SETTINGS. The only options you might change on this screen are Com Port (if it does not agree with the Com Port you specified above) and Baud Rate. The baud rate should be the fastest that is supported by your modem. In some cases this will be 2400. In other cases it will be 14400. If your 14400 baud modem has v.42bis compression and error correction set baud rate to 19200 or 38,400. Check with your modem supplier if you are unsure how to answer these questions. General Settings -- DOWNLOAD DIRECTORY and UPLOAD DIRECTORY The second SETUP option is GENERAL SETTINGS. Do not change any of the default settings, except if you have a 101 key keyboard then click in that checkbox. Ensure that the boxes for "Zmodem recovery" and "Automatic Zmodem download" are checked. They should be. Near the bottom of this screen you may specify the directories to be used for uploads and downloads. The DOWNLOAD DIR is the directory into which RipTerm will place files that are sent to your computer from F.A.C.T., from other BBS services, or from a friend with a modem. You can move them later, if you wish, to a permanent location depending on the logic of your directory organization. A suggested directory name for received files is C:\RIPTERM\RECV. The UPLOAD DIR is the directory into which you will place files that you intend to send to F.A.C.T., to another BBS service, or to a friend with a modem. You may create the files elsewhere, such as in the directory where your word processor saves its files, but you should copy them here before sending them to a remote computer so you will not have to remember and specify each file's location during the upload process. You can erase files that you have sent from this directory (after you have sent them) to reclaim the disk space. A suggested directory name for this purpose is C:\RIPTERM\SEND. The directories that you specify here for uploads and downloads must exist. RipTerm does not create them. Use the DOS MD (Make Directory) command if necessary. If you do not specify upload and download directories, the default is your RIPTERM programs directory -- a bad place to keep your uploads and downloads. The third SETUP option is "modem prefixes and suffixes." ATDT is correct for touch-tone dialing when you do not have to dial 9 to get an outside line. ATDP is used for pulse dialing, if you do not have a touch-tone phone. ATDT 9, will dial 9 first on a touch-tone phone then pause for half a second (the comma is a half-second pause) and then dial the phone number. Select the option that fits your circumstances. Refer to the help screen if needed. The fourth SETUP option is to save the setup when you are done, so you will not have to go through this again. Do it. Dialing Directory You could use F10 or the right mouse button to get the top-of-screen menu, select MODEM and then select DIALING DIRECTORY. But this will be your most frequently used option, so you may as well learn the shortcut. It's Alt-D (hold down Alt and press D). Bring up the dialing directory by pressing Alt-D. You will see ten numbered rows. Click on row #1 (or type 1 ) and then click on the EDIT button (or type E). You will get the Phone Entry Editor screen. This entry on row #1 will be for F.A.C.T. Your answers should be: Name: F.A.C.T., Inc. Phone: 1 303 530-1942 (for one-plus long-distance dialing to area code 303. Adjust as needed.) Dir: ICONS\ This entry tells RIPTERM where to find the pictures (icons) which appear on your screen when you call F.A.C.T. For other numbers that you may add to your dialing directory, which do not display RIP icons, you may leave this field blank. Baud Rate should be the fastest supported by your modem, as was discussed earlier. Com Port must agree with your previous answer. Data bits, Parity, and Stop Bits are 8, N, 1 respectively. In the same way you may add other entries to your Dialing Directory if you wish to use RipTerm to call other BBS services or your friends who have modems. If the computer you call does not support RIP graphics then RipTerm will act like any other communications program such as ProComm, SmartComm, etc. CALLING FACTNET There are three keystrokes you will need to learn for use while running RipTerm. Other functions can be done from a menu or with the mouse. Alt-D gets you the dialing directory. Alt-X ends the RipTerm program and returns you to DOS or Windows. Alt-= (Alt and the equals sign) toggles (turns on and off) what is called "Doorway Mode." It will help if you understand Doorway Mode. Doorway Mode When you run Ripterm or Procom or Smartcom or any communications program, that program uses some keystrokes for its own purposes. For example, many communications programs use Alt-X to end the communications program and return to DOS or Windows. These keystrokes are not sent across the phone line to the computer you are talking to. If the other computer needed an Alt-X in response to some question, and if you typed it, the other computer would not get your answer. Instead, your communications program would end and you would return to DOS or Windows, which would abort your communications session. This problem occurs commonly with the arrow keys, function keys, Cntrl- keys, Alt- keys, and other keys that might be used to control your communications session. This can result in unpleasant surprises when you need the arrow keys, for example, to scroll up and down through a file you are examining on FactNet or some other BBS. The solution to this problem is "Doorway Mode," which is activated and de-activated by pressing Alt-=. When Doorway Mode is active, all keystrokes are sent over the phone line to the other computer. Alt-X for example would not end RipTerm and return you to DOS or Windows. It would send an Alt-X to FactNet. You would be unable to end your communications program until you turned Doorway Mode off. Rule: If the arrow keys (or any keys) don't do what you expect, try turning Doorway Mode off if it is on, or on if it is off. Example: F.A.C.T.'s file "view" function is designed for use on a BBS so it uses the "P" key for PgUp because it knows that pressing the PgUp key would produce strange results on many systems. If you prefer, you could turn Doorway Mode on and use the PgUp key. Example: F.A.C.T.'s "database query" function requires that you use the arrow keys to get around. This looks like you would need "Doorway Mode" -- as indeed you do, so F.A.C.T. turns it on for you automatically every time you enter "database query." If you forget and accidentally turn it off, the arrow keys will not work properly. Example: You are finished and want to get out of RipTerm. You press Alt-X but it won't let you out. Probably Doorway Mode is on. Turn it off then press Alt-X. When you wish to call F.A.C.T., run the RipTerm program by typing RIPTERM from your C:\RIPTERM directory. Bring up the Dialing Directory by pressing Alt-D. Click on row #1 (or type 1 to use the default English language or select the appropriate language. FactNet will ask if you want graphics (n=no y=yes r=RIP). YOU MUST ANSWER R TO GET F.A.C.T.'S POINT-AND-CLICK GRAPHICS. You must not answer R unless you are calling with a communications program that supports Remote Imaging Protocol (RIP) graphics. Answer R if you are using RipTerm. Mac users answer Y to get ANSI graphics or N for plain vanilla. FactNet will ask for your first name, last name, and password. You must enter these according to your registration with F.A.C.T., Inc. After F.A.C.T. received your signed subscriber agreement, you should have received a letter from F.A.C.T., Inc. telling you how to answer these three questions. No other answers will give you access to FactNet. You could answer first name, last name and password as each question is asked, or you could type all three answers (separated by spaces) in answer to "first name." That's up to you. You will be shown the latest News Bulletin and any mail that is waiting for you. Then you will see the FactNet main menu screen. Just point-and-click your way around the system to find what you want. Use the BYE button to log off FactNet when you are finished. Hang up After you have disconnected from FactNet, use the Ripterm Menu (F10 or click the right mouse button) to select the MODEM options. Choose HANG UP. (Alt-H is the "shortcut key.") It does not matter whether you hang up if you are going to turn off the computer, but if you might want to use the modem again you must hang up so it will be available for other use. After you hang up, you may use RipTerm to call other BBS services or your friends who have modems. When you are finished with RipTerm, press Alt-X to exit the program. USING FACTNET The Basic Situation FactNet is not just one software program. Both you and we are dealing with a number of products from a variety of manufacturers so there is no one source (not even F.A.C.T. itself) with answers to all the questions you may have. We will help as best we can, but there is no substitute for individual responsibility. Just as it is irresponsible and an invitation to trouble not to know how to check the oil in your car, so it is also irresponsible and an invitation to trouble not to understand the basics of your own computer system such as DOS commands and functions, Windows (if you use it), what hardware is installed on your computer and how it is configured, and so on. We cannot see your screen and we can't get our hands on your physical computer. We can be of far more help to you if you understand the basic operations of your system. F.A.C.T. is a startup enterprise staffed by volunteers. It does not have a paid staff of documentation writers or support personnel. F.A.C.T. is a cooperative endeavor which we are creating together. When questions arise, you are as likely to find the answers as we. You can help by working out procedures which work for you and which can be described to others, writing them up, and adding them to F.A.C.T.'s evolving documentation. At some point we will have a professional writer to put all the pieces together. The functions you will use most often and which you must learn most thoroughly are uploading, downloading, and e-mail. Use the BBS (H)elp features for these. Type INDEX when the BBS asks what you want help with, to get a list of topics for which help is available. An important "advanced feature," once you are comfortable with the basic operations, is F.A.C.T.'s "database query." The "database query" program (ISYS) has its own help features and is not described in the BBS help texts. Downloading is easy. Any time the files in a library directory are listed on your screen, you can type F (filename) to flag a specified filename for download. There is a space between F and the filename. As you look through the directory listings, flag each file you want. You can skip around and look at many directories, flagging files in each one. When you reach the bottom of each directory listing the screen will ask for a FILES COMMAND. When you have flagged all the files you want, type D for "download" at this prompt. The screen will ask "Download Flagged Files?" Answer Y. The screen will ask for additional filenames to download. Just press ENTER. Everything else will occur automatically. The files you requested will be on your computer. The MAIN CONFERENCE "GENERAL" directory contains basic information and instruction about F.A.C.T. and the BBS. You will probably want to download everything in it. Use it for practice. The basic e-mail functions are easy but there are a lot of options. This is the area where you should spend the most time reading the (H)elp text and experimenting. The basic sending and reading of mail is so easy you will probably be able to do it without instruction. Grow into more advanced functions slowly and gradually as you find need for them. Uploading is the only major function where additional instruction is needed at this preliminary stage. The remainder of this section concerns the Upload function. UPLOADING FILES TO F.A.C.T. Before attempting an upload, be sure you have defined your UPLOAD and DOWNLOAD directories in RipTerm as explained above. Uploading involves two steps. First, click on the Upload button (the icon shows a ladder with the letter U) and tell our BBS what to call the file you are going to send. This is the filename our system will use for whatever it receives. Don't use a drive or path because our system will automatically save the file that it receives to the proper place on our hard disk. The second step is to send the file. In this step you are talking to your copy of RipTerm, on your local computer, using its procedures to send a file via your modem. When it asks you what file to send, you must specify the full drive and pathname of the file as it exists on your hard disk. Only you know where it is. This is automatic if you are using RipTerm and have already set up an UPLOAD directory. Then, assuming that you have copied the file you wish to send into your UPLOAD directory, you will need to specify only the filename because your copy of RipTerm will know where to find it. Here are step-by-step instructions, assuming that you are using RipTerm. 1. Click on the Upload icon (or type U from a "conference command" prompt if you are not using the graphical interface). The screen will ask "Name of file to upload." Give it just a filename and optional extension -- no drive or path. 2. The screen will ask for a description of the file you are uploading. This is mandatory and must be at least five characters long. Use this description (maximum 8 43-character lines) to give as complete a description as possible of what you are sending us. We will need this information to know what to do with it and where to put it if your file is to be made available for others to download. Your description is finished after the eighth line or after you press on a blank line. 3. After you finish the description, you may notice garbage characters appearing on your screen. The BBS is trying to receive your file, so you'd better send it one. (If you don't do this quickly, the program will timeout and return you to the menu and you'll have to start over.) Press PgUp to start RipTerm's upload procedure. A window will ask you to choose a upload protocol. CHOOSE ZMODEM. Never anything else. 4. A window will ask for the name of the file to upload. If the file you want to send is already in your UPLOAD directory, then just give the name. (Otherwise you will have to specify the complete path so that your copy of RipTerm can find the file on your hard disk.) 5. Your copy of RipTerm will send the file you specified over the modem to FactNet. When it is finished you will be back at the BBS screen and you may continue using the BBS as usual. F.A.C.T.'s personnel will find your uploaded files in the conference you were in when you uploaded each file. The disposition of each uploaded file is a decision which will be made by F.A.C.T. personnel, based partly on the information you provided in the "description" when you uploaded the file. If a particular handling is required for any uploaded file, we suggest you leave e-mail for the sysop further describing the file and saying what is to be done with it. All uploaded files will be virus checked before anything further is done with them. Uploaded files are not available for download unless and until the sysop moves them to a download directory. PREPARATION TO UPLOAD A CONTRIBUTION TO F.A.C.T.'S LIBRARY DATABASE Certain information is required before any file you send can be added to F.A.C.T.'s libraries. There is a form to be filled out. The form is called TEMPLATE.TXT and can be found in the MAIN BOARD "GENERAL" directory. The best procedure would be to use your word processor to add this form as the first page of each document before you upload it to us. Otherwise the document can not be made available on FactNet until our scarce personnel find time to embed this information in the document for you. If you are uploading graphical images of documents such as made by FAX or a scanner, please use TEMPLATE.TXT as a template, and save the filled out form as a separate document with the same name as the graphical image it describes but with a .TXT or other word processor extension. Upload both the graphical image file (.PCX or .TIF) and the .TXT file which describes it. You will not have answers for some of the questions in TEMPLATE.TXT. Just leave those answers blank but the questions themselves (all of them) must appear exactly as shown in TEMPLATE.TXT on the descriptive page or in the .TXT file for every document which is to go into F.A.C.T.'s database. OTHER KINDS OF UPLOADS Not all files you upload will be destined for F.A.C.T.'s database. Perhaps you will upload a file that you want a colleague or some other F.A.C.T. user to see. In this case the file is "to" another F.A.C.T. user -- not to F.A.C.T. itself. It's like glorified e-mail. Upload the file. Include instructions in your description saying that the file is for private download. Send e-mail to the intended recipient telling him or her that you uploaded a file, what conference it is in, and what it is called. A password optionally can be required on downloads. If you say in your upload description (or in a message to the sysop) that you uploaded file "X" and that it is only for recipient "Y" and it is to be protected by password "Z" then the sysop can move the file into a download directory and password protect it for you. You'll have to give your friend the password. Another way to pass private files back and forth, if you don't want to be troubled about passwords, is to ask the sysop in your upload description to not put your uploaded file in the directory listing. Other callers will not see your uploaded file's name when the directory listing is displayed. Anyone in the conference who knows the file's name and types it in answer to "Name of file to download" could download the file. But how would anyone know the name unless you tell them? Many of you will help F.A.C.T. by proofreading and correcting raw OCR output. You will download the raw material from a special directory, work on it offline on your own computer, and upload it back to F.A.C.T. when you are finished. The special instructions and authorizations required for this work will be provided to persons approved for access to those areas of the BBS. Other occasions for uploading will be encountered by F.A.C.T. volunteers who may upload notes, ideas, drafts, or whatever to their appropriate areas of the BBS. There is nothing unusual about the procedure for such uploads. Just be sure you're in the right conference when you do the upload. The person(s) in charge of that conference will distribute or handle your upload appropriately. Use e-mail to communicate about the work being done. Uploads are NOT your primary method to distribute news throughout the F.A.C.T. network. Uploads are for documents of significant size where e-mail would be impractical, and especially when the document is to be kept on file by F.A.C.T. as part of a database. If you wish to announce a current event or share some news, send e-mail to ALL. If the news applies only to a certain group, you may be able to achieve the relevant distribution merely by selecting the appropriate conference (mail to ALL goes to ALL just in the conference you are in when you send the mail). You should also learn how to send mail to GROUPS of recipients. See the BBS help screens ADD FACTNET TO A WINDOWS PROGRAM GROUP This procedure is optional. Windows is not needed to call FACT. RipTerm must already be installed on your hard disk. You must know in what drive and directory RipTerm is located. 1. Run Windows. Get to the Program Manager screen. Ordinarily this will be the screen that is displayed when you start Windows. If your startup procedure left you in some other program, you may need to press Alt-Tab repeatedly until the Program Manager appears. Hold down Alt and press Tab repeatedly until "Program Manager" appears. Release the Alt key and the Program Manager screen will be displayed. If your startup procedure closed the Program Manager, you will find it as a minimized icon at the bottom of your screen. Double-click on it. 2. Click on the WINDOW menu item at the top of your Program Manager screen. This will display all of your Program Groups. Select the one you want FactNet to be in such as "Main" or "Applications". When the appropriate Program Group is selected (active), the bar at the top of its window will be blue. The bar at the top of inactive windows is not blue. If necessary, click anywhere inside the desired program group window to make it active. 3. Select FILE from the menu bar at the top of the Program Manager window. From the drop- down "File" menu, select "New." A dialog box will ask whether you want a new program group or program item. Select "Program Item." A dialog box will ask four questions. Description: FactNet (use upper and lower case, as shown) Command Line: This will depend on where you installed the RipTerm program. Assuming that RipTerm is in C:\RIPTERM then your answer would be C:\RIPTERM\RIPTERM.EXE. Working Directory: The directory where you installed RipTerm, such as C:\RIPTERM. Shortcut Key: NONE 4. Before you click on OK after answering the four questions, select "Change Icon" from the options at the right side of the dialog box. A message will appear telling you that no icons are available for the specified program but you may select one from the Program Manager. Click on OK. A "Change Icon" dialog box will appear with an answer already filled in next to the question "File Name." Change the file name to "C:\RIPTERM\FACT.ICO" (for a "key" icon, or FACT2.ICO for an "eye" icon or FACT3.ICO for a plain box that says FACT) and then press ENTER. (Use the appropriate pathname if "C:\RIPTERM\" is not correct.) After you press ENTER you will be back at the dialog box with the four questions. The FactNet icon will appear in the lower left of that dialog box. Click on OK. 5. The FactNet icon will now be located at the bottom of the specified Program Group window. You may have to use the scroll bar to see it. If you wish, you may click-and-drag the new icon to a more convenient location in the window. Double-click on the FactNet icon any time you want to run RipTerm. Follow the RipTerm instructions to call FactNet (Alt-D for dialing directory, etc.). ================================================================= If this is a copyrighted work, you are acknowledging by receipt of this document from FACTNet that on the basis of reasonable investigation, you have not been to obtain a copy elsewhere at a fair price, and that you are and will abide by the following copyright warning. WARNING CONCERNING COPYRIGHT RESTRICTIONS: The copyright law of the United States (Title 17, United States Code) governs the making of photo copies or other reproductions of copyrighted material. Under certain conditions specified by law, libraries and archives are authorized to furnish a photocopy or other reproduction. One of these specified conditions is that the photocopy or reproduction is not to be "used for any purpose other than private study, scholarship, or research." If a user makes a request for, or later uses, a photocopy or reproduction for purposes in excess of "fair use," that user may be liable for copyright infringement. FACTNet reserves the right to refuse to accept an order for copying or other duplication, or delivery of copied or duplicated material if, in its judgment, fulfillment of the order would involve violation of copyright law. ------------------------------------------------------------------- CARD CATALOG ENTRY DOS FILENAME OF TEXT FILE: E:\PCB\GEN\FILES\GENGEN\STARTUP.TXT DOS FILENAME OF IMAGE FILES: ADMINISTRATIVE CODE: SECURITY CODE: DISTRIBUTION CODE: NAME FOR BBS: SORT TO: CONTRIBUTOR: LOC. OF ORIG: NOTES: For additional verification see image files contained in the file with same name and .ZIP extension. UPDATED ON: UPDATED BY: =================================================================