• The Commodore Products Source List has a new home

    From RJLong@3:770/3 to All on Wed May 1 10:17:42 2019
    Earlier this year, I moved the Commodore Products Source List over to a
    wiki located at cbm-products.fandom.com. The old website may or may not
    stay online, but it's not going to be updated any more. Google already
    picked up the new address, but not Bing.

    By moving to a wiki, it solves a bottleneck that's existed for a very long time. Entries can now be updated by anyone, not just me. It's not required
    to have an account, but without one, your IP address will be recorded in
    the editing logs, if you're concerned about having that publicly-viewable.

    If you're new to editing on a wiki, use the search line at the top of any
    page to search for "Help:Manual of style" or just click on Edit to see how
    a page is laid out. Any mistakes are easily fixable, so don't worry about
    them.

    At present, the bulk of the information still focuses on Commodore 64/128 products but I've set it up to allow for expansion into Amiga products. Newsletters from the clubs I was involved in are not yet online. I can
    easily scan in the paper copies, but for the issues I was the editor on,
    I'd like to try re-printing them directly into PDF files. Newsletters from other clubs should be added in the future once I dig those back up.


    If you need to contact me, the best way is to do it through the wiki. I'm
    RJ Long there. But if you insist on contacting me through email, don't take
    a nap.

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  • From Computer Nerd Kev@3:770/3 to RJLong on Sun May 5 00:46:42 2019
    RJLong <RJzzz.Longzzz.276@gmail.com> wrote:
    Earlier this year, I moved the Commodore Products Source List over to a
    wiki located at cbm-products.fandom.com. The old website may or may not
    stay online, but it's not going to be updated any more. Google already
    picked up the new address, but not Bing.

    By moving to a wiki, it solves a bottleneck that's existed for a very long time. Entries can now be updated by anyone, not just me.

    Interesting, I've found some new (old) sites there already. By only
    indexing websites by their names in the hardware and software
    categories, it does make it tricky to find anything specific though.

    At present, the bulk of the information still focuses on Commodore 64/128 products but I've set it up to allow for expansion into Amiga products. Newsletters from the clubs I was involved in are not yet online. I can
    easily scan in the paper copies, but for the issues I was the editor on,
    I'd like to try re-printing them directly into PDF files. Newsletters from other clubs should be added in the future once I dig those back up.

    Perhaps you could upload them at www.archive.org, then provide links
    to there on your Wiki. They automatically do OCR on documents to turn
    them into PDFs which can be searched within. You might have to upload
    them in just the right way for that to work though.

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  • From RJLong@3:770/3 to Nerd Kev on Sat May 4 20:53:18 2019
    On Sun, 5 May 2019 00:46:42 +0000 (UTC), not@telling.you.invalid (Computer
    Nerd Kev) wrote:

    RJLong <RJzzz.Longzzz.276@gmail.com> wrote:
    Earlier this year, I moved the Commodore Products Source List over to a
    wiki located at cbm-products.fandom.com. The old website may or may not
    stay online, but it's not going to be updated any more. Google already
    picked up the new address, but not Bing.

    By moving to a wiki, it solves a bottleneck that's existed for a very long >> time. Entries can now be updated by anyone, not just me.

    Interesting, I've found some new (old) sites there already. By only
    indexing websites by their names in the hardware and software
    categories, it does make it tricky to find anything specific though.

    At present, the bulk of the information still focuses on Commodore 64/128
    products but I've set it up to allow for expansion into Amiga products.
    Newsletters from the clubs I was involved in are not yet online. I can
    easily scan in the paper copies, but for the issues I was the editor on,
    I'd like to try re-printing them directly into PDF files. Newsletters from >> other clubs should be added in the future once I dig those back up.

    Perhaps you could upload them at www.archive.org, then provide links
    to there on your Wiki. They automatically do OCR on documents to turn
    them into PDFs which can be searched within. You might have to upload
    them in just the right way for that to work though.

    That's a good idea for the newsletters. Occasionally I have access to that
    same kind of process where I work, but not on a regular basis, though.

    The List used to be mailed out as a paper copy so it wasn't possible to
    include everything. It was just me doing the research, so I didn't have the money or resources to pick up where Tenex's "Everything Book" left off. Now with the wiki, we can put in as much as we want.

    I've already got links to a few items like the SuperCPU ready for people to
    add info. The template that sets the type of product can be updated for
    more choices, or we can manually add the categories we need at the bottom
    of the page. So for the page on the SuperCPU, the Infobox could keep the "Hardware" product type and auto-include a Hardware category, but we could
    add [[Category:Accelerators]] at the bottom. Or we make new Infoboxes that
    fit each type of product.

    It's a work in progress and we can refine and expand it as we go.

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