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  3. <TITLE>Untitled Document - Free Software for Microcomputers</TITLE>
  4. <P>Go to the <A HREF="gnu_bulletin_24.html">previous</A>, <A HREF="gnu_bulletin_26.html">next</A> section.<P>
  5. <H1><A NAME="SEC39" HREF="gnu_bulletin_toc.html#SEC39">Free Software for Microcomputers</A></H1>
  6. <P>
  7. We do not provide support for GNU software on microcomputers because it
  8. is peripheral to the GNU Project. However, we are distributing a few
  9. such programs on tape, CD-ROM, and diskette. We are also willing to
  10. publish information about groups who do support and maintain them. If
  11. you are aware of any such efforts, please send the details, including
  12. postal addresses, archive sites, and mailing lists, to either address on
  13. the front cover.
  14. <P>
  15. See "MS-DOS Distribution" for more information about microcomputer
  16. software available from the FSF. Please do not ask us about any other
  17. software. The FSF does <I>not</I> maintain any of it and has <I>no</I>
  18. additional information.
  19. <P>
  20. <UL>
  21. <P>
  22. <LI>
  23. <B>GNU Software</B> <EM>not</EM> <B>on Apple computers</B>
  24. <P>
  25. In lawsuits, Apple claims the power to stop people from writing any
  26. program that has a user interface that works even vaguely like the
  27. Macintosh's. If Apple wins in the courts, it will create for itself a
  28. new power over the public that will enable it to put an end to free
  29. software. So long as Apple is committed to establishing this kind of
  30. monopoly, we will not provide any support or software for Apple
  31. machines. We ask that you too refrain from developing for or porting to
  32. Apple Systems, since any more software adds to their business. Don't
  33. feed the lawyer that bites you!
  34. <P>
  35. <LI>
  36. <B>Boston Computer Society</B>
  37. <P>
  38. The BCS has thousands of shareware and free programs for microcomputers,
  39. including some GNU programs. Contact them to see what is available for
  40. your machine: Boston Computer Society, 1 Kendall Square -- Bldg 1400,
  41. Cambridge, MA 02139 USA. Phone: (617) 252-0600.
  42. <P>
  43. <LI>
  44. <B>GNU Software on the Amiga</B>
  45. <P>
  46. Get Amiga ports of many GNU programs using anonymous FTP from host
  47. <CODE>ftp.funet.fi</CODE> in <TT>`/pub/amiga/gnu'</TT> (Europe).
  48. <P>
  49. For info on (or offers to help with) the GCC port and related projects,
  50. ask Leonard Norrgard, <CODE>vinsci@nic.funet.fi</CODE>. For info on the
  51. GNU Emacs port, ask David Gay, <CODE>dgay@di.epfl.ch</CODE>, or Mark D.
  52. Henning, <CODE>henning@stolaf.edu</CODE>. You can get more info via
  53. anonymous FTP in <TT>`prep.ai.mit.edu:/pub/gnu/MicrosPorts/Amiga'</TT>.
  54. <P>
  55. <LI>
  56. <B>GNU Software for Atari TOS and Atari Minix</B>
  57. <P>
  58. Get Atari ports by anonymous FTP from <CODE>atari.archive.umich.edu</CODE>
  59. (maintained by Howard Chu, <CODE>hyc@hanauma.jpl.nasa.gov</CODE>). Ports
  60. are discussed on USENET in <CODE>comp.sys.atari.st.tech</CODE> &#38;
  61. <CODE>comp.sys.atari.st</CODE>.
  62. <P>
  63. <LI>
  64. <B>GNU C/C<TT>++</TT> 2.2.2 for OS/2 2.0</B>
  65. <P>
  66. Michael Johnson has completed a new, completely stand-alone port of the
  67. GNU C/C<TT>++</TT> Version 2.2.2 compiler for OS/2 2.0. It has the C/C<TT>++</TT>
  68. compilers, the GNU assembler, documentation, &#38; both OS/2-specific
  69. and the BSD C libraries. You can get it from host
  70. <CODE>hobbes.nmsu.edu</CODE> in file
  71. <TT>`/pub/os2/2.0/programming/gcc2-222'</TT> by FTP. To join the
  72. mailing list, send a message to <CODE>os2gcc-request@charon.mit.edu</CODE>.
  73. <P>
  74. <LI>
  75. <B>Linux: a free Unix system for 386 machines</B>
  76. <P>
  77. Linux (named after its author, Linus Torvalds, and Minix) is a free Unix
  78. clone which implements a subset of System V and POSIX functionality.
  79. Linux has been written from scratch and does not contain any proprietary
  80. code. Many of the utilities and libraries are GNU Project software.
  81. Linux runs only on 386/486 AT-bus (and some EISA-bus) machines. Porting
  82. to non-Intel architectures is hard because the kernel makes extensive
  83. use of 386 memory management and task primitives. Linux is freely
  84. distributable and available via anonymous FTP:
  85. <CODE>tsx-11.mit.edu</CODE> in <TT>`/pub/linux'</TT> (USA),
  86. <CODE>nic.funet.fi</CODE> in <TT>`/pub/OS/Linux'</TT> (Europe).
  87. Ask <CODE>linux-activists-request@niksula.hut.fi</CODE> about their
  88. mailing lists.
  89. See USENET newsgroup <CODE>comp.os.linux</CODE> for Linux discussions.
  90. <P>
  91. <LI>
  92. <B>Free 386BSD</B>
  93. <P>
  94. William F. Jolitz et al. have written a 386 port of BSD Unix. This
  95. kernel is said to be free of AT&#38;T code and is freely redistributable.
  96. You can obtain more information from
  97. <CODE>sokol@reyes.stanford.edu</CODE>. This is the result of the work
  98. described in the Dr. Dobb's Journal series on 386BSD.
  99. <P>
  100. <LI>
  101. <B>Free NetBSD</B>
  102. <P>
  103. Chris Demetriou and friends have released another flavour of Unix for
  104. 386 machines. NetBSD is based on 386BSD 0.1, but also contains code
  105. from the Berkeley Networking 2 distribution, some original code from the
  106. NetBSD team, and many bug fixes. Anonymous FTP the NetBSD 0.8
  107. distribution from <CODE>agate.berkeley.edu</CODE> in
  108. <TT>`/pub/NetBSD/NetBSD-0.8'</TT>. For more info, contact
  109. <CODE>netbsd-help@sun-lamp.cs.berkeley.edu</CODE>.
  110. <P>
  111. <LI>
  112. <B>DJGPP, the GNU C/C<TT>++</TT> compiler for MS-DOS</B>
  113. <P>
  114. D. J. Delorie has ported GCC/G<TT>++</TT> 2.2.2 to the 386 MS-DOS platform.
  115. The compiler and programs it generates run in 32-bit mode with full
  116. virtual memory support. DJGPP is available via FTP from
  117. <CODE>ftp.clarkson.edu</CODE> in <TT>`/pub/msdos/djgpp'</TT>. You can
  118. subscribe to a mailing list on DJGPP by sending your e-mail address to
  119. <CODE>djgpp-request@sun.soe.clarkson.edu</CODE>.
  120. <P>
  121. The FSF is distributing DJGPP
  122. both
  123. on floppies
  124. and the CD-ROM
  125. (see "MS-DOS Distribution"
  126. and "GNU Source Code CD-ROM").
  127. <P>
  128. <LI>
  129. <B>Demacs, GNU Emacs for MS-DOS</B>
  130. <P>
  131. Manabu Higashida and Hirano Satoshi have released Demacs, a GNU Emacs
  132. port for 386/486 MS-DOS. Version 1.2.0 is the first post-beta release.
  133. Demacs provides several DOS-specific features: support for binary or
  134. text file translation, "8 bit clean" display mode, 80x86 software
  135. interrupt calls via an <CODE>int86</CODE> Lisp function, machine-specific
  136. features such as function key support, file name completion with drive
  137. name, child processes (<CODE>suspend-emacs</CODE> and <CODE>call-process</CODE>).
  138. Dired mode works without <TT>`ls.exe'</TT>. Anonymous FTP it from:
  139. <CODE>wuarchive.wustl.edu</CODE> in <TT>`/mirrors/msdos/demacs'</TT>,
  140. <CODE>utsun.s.u-tokyo.ac.jp</CODE> in <TT>`/GNU/demacs'</TT> (Japan),
  141. and <CODE>ftp.funet.fi</CODE> in <TT>`/pub/gnu/emacs/demacs'</TT>
  142. (Europe).
  143. <P>
  144. The FSF is distributing Demacs
  145. both
  146. on floppies
  147. and the CD-ROM
  148. (see "MS-DOS Distribution"
  149. and "GNU Source Code CD-ROM").
  150. <P>
  151. <LI>
  152. <B>Freemacs, an Extensible Editor for MS-DOS</B>
  153. <P>
  154. Russ Nelson, <CODE>nelson@crynwr.com</CODE>, has written a small
  155. programmable editor called Freemacs. It is compatible enough with GNU
  156. Emacs that Freemacs users can use the <CITE>GNU Emacs Manual</CITE> as a
  157. reference for it. It will run on most MS-DOS systems, including 8088
  158. machines.
  159. <P>
  160. Anonymous FTP it from <TT>`emacs16a.zip'</TT> (under
  161. <TT>`PD1:&#60;MSDOS.FREEMACS&#62;'</TT>) from <CODE>wsmr-simtel20.army.mil</CODE>;
  162. or send $15 (copying fee) to Russ Nelson, 11 Grant St., Potsdam, NY
  163. 13676 USA. Phone: (315) 268-1925 (Fax: 9201). Specify floppy
  164. format: <CODE>5.25"/360K</CODE>; or <CODE>3.50"/720K</CODE>.
  165. <P>
  166. <LI>
  167. <B>GNU Software on MS-DOS</B>
  168. <P>
  169. Russ Nelson has MS-DOS ports of many GNU programs available on floppy
  170. disk. Contact him at the above address for more information.
  171. <P>
  172. You can ask <CODE>info-gnu-msdos-request@sun.soe.clarkson.edu</CODE>
  173. about MS-DOS ports of GNU programs and related mailing lists. Or
  174. anonymous FTP files <TT>`/pub/gnu/MicrosPorts/MSDOS*'</TT>, on
  175. <CODE>prep.ai.mit.edu</CODE>.
  176. <P>
  177. The FSF is distributing MS-DOS ports of many GNU programs on floppies
  178. (see "MS-DOS Distribution" and "GNU Source Code on CD-ROM").
  179. <P>
  180. </UL>
  181. <P>
  182. <P>Go to the <A HREF="gnu_bulletin_24.html">previous</A>, <A HREF="gnu_bulletin_26.html">next</A> section.<P>