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mirror of https://git.zap.org.au/git/trader.git synced 2024-06-09 19:20:43 +00:00

Updated the history of the game based on emails from Patrick Dumais

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John Zaitseff 2024-01-12 01:16:22 +11:00
parent 0004b73922
commit bf92d6495d
2 changed files with 50 additions and 12 deletions

32
NEWS
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@ -25,6 +25,10 @@ __ https://www.zap.org.au/
Version 7.20 (not yet released) Version 7.20 (not yet released)
------------------------------- -------------------------------
Updated the history of the game based on information kindly supplied by
Patrick Dumais, who pointed out the source of Star Lanes in its original
incarnation. Reworked the manual page as part of the updated history.
Updated the Swedish, Norwegian Bokmaal, French, German, Serbian and Updated the Swedish, Norwegian Bokmaal, French, German, Serbian and
Esperanto translations (in that order), with thanks to Anders Jonsson, Esperanto translations (in that order), with thanks to Anders Jonsson,
Johnny A. Solbu, Frédéric Marchal, Roland Illig, Мирослав Николић and Johnny A. Solbu, Frédéric Marchal, Roland Illig, Мирослав Николић and
@ -339,16 +343,32 @@ locales (such as US-ASCII, ISO8859-1, etc.) worked correctly.
Early history Early history
------------- -------------
The original (and very primitive) Star Traders game was written by S. J. The original (and very primitive) game was written by Steven Faber and
Singer in 1984 using Altair Basic. This was modified for Microsoft Basic published as Star Lanes on pages `131138`__ in :t:`Interface Age`,
(MBASIC) running under the CP/M-80 operating system by John Zaitseff and June 1977. It was described by the magazines software editor as:
released on 7th March, 1988.
… a new imaginative Monopoly-type microcomputer game that everyone
can and will want to play if you have a microcomputer. Like the
Monopoly game, STAR LANES combines financial and positional
strategies as players attempt to lay claim to valuable pieces of
space real estate between the stars in the Galaxy.
-- Robert A. Stevens, page 123__, :t:`Interface Age`, June 1977
__ https://www.zap.org.au/projects/trader/historical/mbasic/src/star-lanes.pdf
__ https://archive.org/details/197706InterfaceAge/page/n124/mode/1up
S. J. Singer took Star Lanes and republished it in 1984 as Star Traders.
His version was modified by John Zaitseff for Microsoft Basic (MBASIC)
running under the CP/M-80 operating system; it was released on 7th
March, 1988.
Star Traders was then completely rewritten in 1990 for the Star Traders was then completely rewritten in 1990 for the
Australian-designed 8-bit MicroBee computer running CP/M-80 on a Zilog Australian-designed 8-bit MicroBee computer running CP/M-80 on a Zilog
Z80 processor, using Turbo Pascal 3.01a. Essentially, only the name of Z80 processor, using Turbo Pascal 3.01a. Essentially, only the name of
the game and some of the ideas were retained in this version. Version the game, the names of the first five companies and some of the key ideas
4.1 of Star Traders was released on 1st August, 1991. were retained in this version. Version 4.1 of Star Traders was released
on 1st August, 1991.
In 1992, it was recompiled for the NEC Advanced Personal Computer (with In 1992, it was recompiled for the NEC Advanced Personal Computer (with
8-inch floppy drives!) running CP/M-86 on an 8086 processor, using Turbo 8-inch floppy drives!) running CP/M-86 on an 8086 processor, using Turbo

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@ -277,16 +277,34 @@ into future versions of the program, allowing others to benefit from
them. them.
.\" ********************************************************************* .\" *********************************************************************
.SH HISTORY .SH HISTORY
The original (and very primitive) Star Traders game was written by The original (and very primitive) game was written by Steven Faber and
S.\~J\. Singer in 1984 using Altair Basic. This was modified for published as Star Lanes on pages 131\(en138 in
Microsoft Basic (MBASIC) running under the CP/M-80 operating system by .IR "Interface Age" ,
John Zaitseff and released on 7th March, 1988. June 1977. It was described by the magazine's software editor as:
.PP
.RS
\[hellip] a new imaginative Monopoly-type microcomputer game that
everyone can and will want to play if you have a microcomputer. Like the
Monopoly game, STAR LANES combines financial and positional strategies as
players attempt to lay claim to valuable pieces of space real estate
between the stars in the Galaxy.
.sp 0.3v
\(em Robert A\. Stevens, page 123,
.IR "Interface Age" ,
June 1977.
.RE
.PP
S.\~J\. Singer took Star Lanes and republished it in 1984 as Star
Traders. His version was modified by John Zaitseff for Microsoft Basic
(MBASIC) running under the CP/M-80 operating system; it was released on
7th March, 1988.
.PP .PP
Star Traders was then completely rewritten in 1990 for the Star Traders was then completely rewritten in 1990 for the
Australian-designed 8-bit MicroBee computer running CP/M-80 on a Zilog Australian-designed 8-bit MicroBee computer running CP/M-80 on a Zilog
Z80 processor, using Turbo Pascal 3.01a. Essentially, only the name of Z80 processor, using Turbo Pascal 3.01a. Essentially, only the name of
the game and some of the ideas were retained in this version. Version the game, the names of the first five companies and some of the key ideas
4.1 of Star Traders was released on 1st August, 1991. were retained in this version. Version 4.1 of Star Traders was released
on 1st August, 1991.
.PP .PP
In 1992, it was recompiled for the NEC Advanced Personal Computer (with In 1992, it was recompiled for the NEC Advanced Personal Computer (with
8-inch floppy drives!) running CP/M-86 on an 8086 processor, using Turbo 8-inch floppy drives!) running CP/M-86 on an 8086 processor, using Turbo