* dialogue-freeware.txt Textfile with Gary Farmaner's Freeware statement. -------------------------------------------------------------- * Dialogue-docs.txt - The full documentation for Dialogue v2.2 This file is over 700 C= disk blocks. If you only have a 1541 disk drive, download the SFX files below and prepare to use two disk sides to hold the documentation. * dlg-docs1.sfx thru dlg-docs4.sfx Dialogue128 documentation. Robert Saltiel added the Table of Contents and made it easier to find the chapter headings. If you only have a 1541 disk drive, the last SFX file should be dissolved to side two of your documentation disk. -------------------------------------------------------------- * dlg-s1-1.sfx thru dlg-s1-4.sfx Dialogue 128 v2.2d by Gary Farmaner - NON Swiftlink version. Dialogue was released as freeware on 5 February 1998. Please read the freeware notice. * dlg-s2-1.sfx thru dlg-s2-4.sfx Dialogue 128 v2.2d-SL by Gary Farmaner - SwiftLink version. Dialogue was released as freeware on 5 February 1998. Please read the freeware notice. -------------------------------------------------------------- The same files but archived with .lzh: To dissolve the .LZH files, use either CS-DOS, or from C64 mode, use lhx64-09.sfx, which can be found in the unarc_unzip directory. If you don't want to deal with .lzh archives, download the SFX files (above) instead. * dlg128.lzh Dialogue 128 v2.2d by Gary Farmaner - NON Swiftlink version. Dialogue was released as freeware on 5 February 1998. Please read the freeware notice. * dlg128sl.lzh Dialogue 128 v2.2d-SL by Gary Farmaner - SwiftLink version. Dialogue was released as freeware on 5 February 1998. Please read the freeware notice. -------------------------------------------------------------- Dialogue128 Additional files * dlg-tbls.sda This is the replacement tables and charsets + docs, as done by David Schmoll. * dlg-rtc.txt This is David Schmoll's HD RTC patch for the Dialogue boot file. * dlgextns.sda This is the sda of Henry Sopko's Dialogue extensions. Contains 2 sda's; the two releases of his various extensions + his docs. -------------------------------------------------------------- * LA.BIN From: Adam Vardy Here is a file I wrote. I have wanted to access URLs efficiently, right as they may appear in e-mail messages. Took a while to come up with this. I had considered writing an Extension file for this purpose even. After much ado, it dawned on me that I could write a term script to accomplish my goal. And, it has worked out. This is a script for Dialogue 128. The file is uuencoded. Extract it, and put it on your Dialogue disk. Here's how it works. When you come upon a "http..." reference in a message, you can run the script, and it will attempt to run the Lynx browser quite Automatically (la). If none is there, then you're still in control, and if you scroll to a URL, then the script will proceed. It doesn't matter what UNIX program you are running. The script should "catch" any reference, exit, and invoke Lynx. No mouse click here, but it's close to that. The script is called LA. I might have called it "Grab Url" or "Access Web Page"... but I would prefer little typing to get this done. If you do like rather long names, you can always pick the script right from the directory. Any important content in your Dialogue buffer should be saved before running the script. Once thy Winter Web tidings have been viewed and thyself doth quit Lynx, thee may return to any program thee exited by typing "fg". --------------------------------------------------------------