From owner-freebsd-hackers Mon Aug 28 04:57:45 1995 Return-Path: hackers-owner Received: (from majordom@localhost) by freefall.FreeBSD.org (8.6.11/8.6.6) id EAA27227 for hackers-outgoing; Mon, 28 Aug 1995 04:57:45 -0700 Received: from time.cdrom.com (time.cdrom.com [192.216.222.226]) by freefall.FreeBSD.org (8.6.11/8.6.6) with ESMTP id EAA27211 for ; Mon, 28 Aug 1995 04:57:33 -0700 Received: from localhost (localhost [127.0.0.1]) by time.cdrom.com (8.6.12/8.6.9) with SMTP id EAA03417 for ; Mon, 28 Aug 1995 04:57:30 -0700 To: hackers@freefall.FreeBSD.org Subject: postmaster@yggdrasil.com: Yggdrasil Product Information Date: Mon, 28 Aug 1995 04:57:30 -0700 Message-ID: <3415.809611050@time.cdrom.com> From: "Jordan K. Hubbard" Sender: hackers-owner@FreeBSD.org Precedence: bulk For your general amusement/info/enlightenment. I find the fanfare surrounding the "buildable source tree!" to be somewhat amusing, but some of the other features I don't get to be quite so smug about. They're not entirely stupid, these guys! Take a good look at the feature-set of this product.. ------- Forwarded Message Date: Mon, 28 Aug 95 04:44 PDT To: Subject: Yggdrasil Product Information From: postmaster@yggdrasil.com [For information on technical support services, send an empty email message to "tech-support-info@yggdrasil.com."] ********************************* Yggdrasil Computing, Inc. * YGGDRASIL PLUG-AND-PLAY LINUX * 4880 Stevens Creek Blvd., Suite 205 * FALL 1994 * (408) 261-6630, fax (408) 261-6631 ********************************* San Jose, CA 95129-1034 Contents: Executive Summary New Features About The Company Highlights Product Philosophy What Makes Plug-and-Play Linux Easy To Use? Software Version Numbers Hardware Compatability How to get a free copy How to get a copy by tomorrow Subscriptions Upgrades and Crossgrades The Linux Bible OSF/Motif Resellers and Technical Support Vendors Wanted Technical Support Direct sales order form EXECUTIVE SUMMARY 18 DEC 1994 SAN JOSE, California--Yggdrasil Computing, Incorporated produces a Linux-based operating system release on CD-ROM that includes a fully rebuildable source tree, hybrid hard disk/CD-ROM installation, and numerous graphical configuration panels, including automated internet connectivity setup. Our current release, Fall 1994, of Plug-and-Play Linux has been called the "Bargain of the year" by PC Magazine's John C. Dvorak in his "Inside Track" column. The company now expects to have a unit volume for this release of at least one quarter that of Novell UnixWare. Yggdrasil's product line also include OSF/Motif and "The Linux Bible, 2nd Edition." Five dollars per copy of OSF/Motif sold will be donated to the development of a free Motif clone, which is the subject of a seperate announcement. "The Linux Bible, 2nd Edition" is the collected works of the Linux Documentation Project (LDP). The LDP is not a part of Yggdrasil, but will receive a donation of one dollar per copy sold. For more information, contact Cyndi June at (408) 261-6630, fax (408) 261-6631, or send email to info@yggdrasil.com. PRESS CONTACT: Adam J. Richter (408) 261-6630 NEW FEATURES ARCHITECTURAL o FULLY BUILDABLE SOURCE TREE. Rebuild the whole system with "cd /usr/src ; make install-clean". Use the new "whence" command find source code for a file. For example: % whence csh /bin/csh is actually /usr/bin/tcsh /usr/bin/tcsh: Linux/i386 demand-paged executable (QMAGIC) /usr/bin/tcsh installed from /usr/src/system/tcsh-6.05/tcsh o HYBRID INSTALLATION. Any software not found on your hard disk is run from the CDROM if the CD is mounted. Useful for infrequently used programs or for trying out software before deciding whether or not to install it. o DOS MSCDEX SUPPORT. A new kernel facility written by Ross Biro at Yggdrasil that allows the kernel to use BIOS and DOS (MSCDEX) to access hard disks and CDROM drives that are not directly supported by Linux. The reliability of this facility is dependent on how well behaved the BIOS or MSCDEX driver being used is, but we have booted the system on a post-July-1993 Phillips cm205 and an Orchid, both of which are not supported directly by Linux, as well a Mitsumi drive at an unsupported IO address. These enhancements will be submitted for inclusion in Linus Torvald's kernel releases and have already been released on the internet. o TRANSPARENT COMPRESSION. CD looks like a 1GB+ filesystem. PERFORMANCE o SCSI clustering, multisector IDE (turned off by default). All binaries, including the entire X window system, the kernel, the C compiler, and emacs compiled with "-O2" in QMAGIC format. SCSI clustering alone seems to have reduced the build time on the source tree on a 486DX2-66 from 28 hours to 22. o Minimal installation now puts the shared C library and bash on the hard disk, accelerating execution of almost all binaries and shell scripts. This CD dependent configuration now uses 10 MB of disk and is actually a bit of a misnomer because you *can* run it without the CD mounted, although you will be able to do little more than mount the CD. INTERNET CONNECTIVITY o INTERNET SHELL ACCESS up to 1 month or $40 (about 20 hours) with a major New England internet provider. If you're not in New England, you can save on the long distance charges by using the CompuServe from most populated areas of the world. (CompuServe-Net, AT&T and other phone bills are *not* included in the free service). You must be 18 or older, because the service has some "adult" areas. You must sign the credit card authorization for usage after the first $40 or first month, although it is perfectly OK to cancel after your free time has expired. o Graphical control panels for incoming InterNetNews (NNTP), outgoing UUCP, and serial internet connections by SLIP or CSLIP, preconfigured with sample values, so you just change a few fields and press "save." This should save you a lot of time and work if you're connecting to the internet. These are in addition to the existing graphical control panels. Screen snapshots in that illustrate the graphical control panel and multimedia email features are FTPable from yggdrasil.com: X windows screen dumps: ftp.yggdrasil.com:pub/pictures/*.xwd View with "xwud -in file.xwd" GIF files: ftp.yggdrasil.com:pub/pictures/*.gif View with "display *.gif" (if you use ImageMagic), or "xv *.gif" (if you use xv). You can also have these images shown on your internet color X display by logging into yggdrasil.com as "rdemo". o MULTIMEDIA EMAIL. When you log in as "guest", and start X windows, you are reminded to read multimedia email with Andrew "messages", which comes preconfigured with a sample multimedia email message. The message includes hyperlinks to some documentation and a picture of Saturn. Multimedia email is delivered just like regular email. If you've put off learning a multimedia email system, this is an easy way to take the plunge. MISCELLANEOUS o This release was the first Linux distribution to have X11R6 shared libraries (other distributions that have R6 only have static libraries, which can make binaries excessively large). The shared libraries and executables are downward compatible with R5 in all cases that we tested. o Linux 1.1.47 kernel, GCC 2.5.8, libc 4.5.2... . Lucid Emacs 19.10 and ImageMagic 3.2 have better looking menus. o A response card for a free copy of THE LINUX JOURNAL. o MOTIF: Locked copy of MetroLink Motif on the CD (also available on floppies) costs $149.95 per CPU. For each copy that we sell, $5 is donated to the development of a free motif clone. Ours is the only Linux Motif with a simple no-nonsense license statement instead of one of those ridiculous shrinkwrap licenses. PRICE CUT o $39.95 --> $34.95. Reseller prices were cut too. o Upgrade or crossgrade. Send us a complete copy of any previous Yggdrasil release and deduct another $7 from your order. Alternatively, deduct $7 if you send us a complete copy of any competing product *and* tell us where you bought it so that we can make sure that your favorite computer store also carries our products. ABOUT THE COMPANY In December 1992, Yggdrasil published the first free operating system CDROM ever. Since then, Yggdrasil distributions have been the first operating sytems to include as standard the ability to run directly from CDROM, multimedia facilities (editting, mail, sound IO), "fill in the blanks" graphical control panels for system administration, and now, with the Summer 1994 release, reconfigurable hybrid hard disk/CDROM installation, transparent decompression of the CDROM, and numerous automated internet connectivity features, including graphical SLIP and InterNetNews configuration, automated email configuration, and automatic routing of outgoing internet mail through the Yggdrasil bulletin board system. Yggdrasil releases have only about a quarter of the unit volume of Novell UnixWare or NeXTStep, but Yggdrasil is catching up, and has already passed many smaller operating systems. Yggdrasil's growth helps the free software community. To help fund the Free Software Foundation, Yggdrasil resells FSF manuals. Yggdrasil funded improvements in the seagate SCSI driver, and the development of the z5380 scsi driver used in Trantors and adapted by others to the MediaVision ProAudioSpectrum-16. These improvements were returned to Linus Torvald's Linux kernel distribution. Yggdrasil made the deals that insured freeness of the iso9660 filesystem writer and Mitsumi CDROM programming information. $1 of The Linux Bible's price supports the Linux Documentation Project. $5 per copy of Motif purchased from Yggdrasil goes to the development of a free Motif clone. Yggdrasil supports the future of free software, part of which involves creating the world's best operating system. Yggdrasil Computing, Inc. 408-261-6630, fax 408-261-6631, info@yggdrasil.com. HIGHLIGHTS Linux 1.1 kernel supporting most popular CDROM drives, an easy-to-use installation script, plus a graphical user interface for system configuration, The X Window System: X11R5 Xfree86 2.1 installed plus the pristine X11R6 distribution tar files. Xlib/Xt X windows libraries, the Tcl/Tk programming language and toolkit, the Xview 3.2 OpenLook(tm) toolkit, InterViews C++ toolkit, The Andrew System: version 6.2, including the ez editor for easy creation and reading of documents with imbedded images, equations, spreadsheets, hypertext links, and many other media types. Networking with TCP/IP, NFS and other Internet protocols. Games: asteroids, battle zone, chess, mille bornes, othello, pool, shogi, solitaire, tetris, and connect four. Multimedia: viewers for JPEG, GIF, TIFF and other image formats, MPEG video, sound, Text editors: the elvis vi clone, GNU Emacs with calc mode, and Lucid GNU Emacs (better graphical user interface). Desktop Publishing: TeX and groff typesetting packages with X previewers, and ghostscript, a postscript interpreter for X windows, faxes and a variety of printers, Telecommunications: Z-modem, Taylor UUCP, mail reader, threaded USENET News reader, with support for reading MIME multimedia messages with imbedded images, full motion video and sound. the Postgres 4.1 remote database system, Programming Languages: GNU C++, GNU ANSI C, FORTRAN-to-C and Pascal-to-C translators, and Prolog, Enhanced development environment: GNU debugger, bison, flex, GNU make, the GNU Coverage Tool, Revision Controls System, Concurrent Version System, and Gnats, System V-style shared memory and interprocess communication, File Systems: a filesystem with long file names, symbolic links, and FIFO's, System V, DOS, and iso9660/rockridge CDROM filesystems. Emulators: a BIOS emulator that can run DOS, an experimental ELF loader, and a snapshot of the WABI Windows emulator under development. Yggdrasil Computing, Inc. 408-261-6630, fax 408-261-6631, info@yggdrasil.com. PRODUCT PHILOSOPHY At each level of user sophistication, Plug-and-Play Linux offers useful capabilities found in few other operating systems, including other Linux distributions.[1] At the top of the sophistication hierarchy, programmers who want to explore or add the occasional feature know that Yggdrasil is the Linux distribution with a fully buildable source tree and with the ability to automatically trace installed files back to their sources. Can you imagine recompiling the whole operating system to use a new compiler optimization or binary format on a distribution without a buildable source tree? Users who want maximum performance will appreciate that the major system components have been recompiled with "-O6" optimization, and the SCSI clustering which reduces the build time on the source tree from 28 to 22 hours (over 20%) on 486DX2-66. Using IDE? Activate the multisector IDE code! New users or will appreciate the our 94 page manual, the largest of any Linux distribution, complete with screen snapshots of the install process, charts on hardware, software options, device names, and tips on hardware troubleshooting, among other things. The manual is also FTPable from yggdrasil.com:/pub/summer94/manual/*. A characteristic that benefits everybody, but is especially important to new users and users who value their time highly, is plug-and-play installation, which is the subject of the next section: "What Makes Plug-and-Play Linux So Easy To Use?" [1] Due credit: This philosophy was inspired by Guy Kawasaki's description of "deep" products in his concise insightful book, "The Macintosh Way." Boycott Apple, but read this book. Yggdrasil Computing, Inc. 408-261-6630, fax 408-261-6631, info@yggdrasil.com. WHAT MAKES PLUG-AND-PLAY LINUX SO EASY TO USE? Everybody, especially new users, will appreciate the Plug-and-Play operation for which our product is named. Put the media in a computer with supported hardware, turn the computer on, and it's running everything, straight from the CDROM. Unlike other Linux distributions, Plug-and-Play Linux automatically figures out what kind of CDROM is on the system, and uses it. The login screen lists a number of preconfigured user names, including "install", which installs the system, giving paragraphs of explanation about every question that it asks the user. The install script even searches for a modem, and, upon finding it, configures mail and UUCP so that mail sent to an internet address is transparently delivered through a bulletin board system at Yggdrasil. X windows configuration is automated too, prompting the user for configuration information the first time "xinit" is run. The configuration script automatically chooses sensible defaults based on what type of video display and what type of mouse, if any, the kernel detected at start-up. From X windows, a graphical control panel allows simple "fill in the blanks" configuration of networking, SLIP, outgoing UUCP, the printer, NNTP, and many other features that previously required the knowledge of a system administrator to configure. Even day to day operating is simpler with Plug-and-Play Linux. A computer should not ask you for information that it can easily figure out for itself. With Plug-and-Play Linux, when you mount a device without specifying the filesystem type, the system automatically figures out what kind of filesystem is on the device and uses it. Device drivers in Plug-and-Play Linux don't print messages announcing the absence of hardware that you don't have, and they don't interrupt you with information about routine retries (turning on debugging will, of course, make both of these things happen). Version numbers of programs in Fall 1994 Plug-and-Play Linux: adagio-0.4o gdb-4.13 minicom-1.60 tcsh-6.05 agrep-2.04 gdbm-1.7.1 mkdosfs-0.2 term-2.0.4 aic7770-1.0 getty_ps-2.0.7e mkisofs-1.01 texinfo-3.1 andrew-6.3.1 ghostscript-2.6.1 modutils-0.99.14 textutils-1.9 at-2.7 ghostview-1.5 moog-0.2 tiff-3.2beta aumix-0.2 gic-1.1 mpeg-1.2 tiff-3.3beta2 autoconf-1.11 glib-1.9e mule-1.0.01 time-1.6 bash-1.14.2 gmod-1.0 ncompress-4.2.4 tk-3.6p1 bbgopher-1.6 gmp-1.3.2 ncurses-1.8.5 tkinfo-0.6 bc-1.02 gn-2.12 nenscript-1.13++ tools-1.1.29 bin86-0.1 gnats-3.2 NetKit-A-0.05 tput-1.0 bind-4.83l gnuchess-4.0.pl68 NetKit-B-0.04 traceroute-4.4bsd binutils-1.9l.3 gnugo-1.1 nfs-server-2.0 trn-3.2 blt-1.5 gnuplot-3.5 nntpd-15.11a tset-jv-0.9.3 bootlin-4 gnushogi-1.1 oleo-1.6 UIT-3 byacc-1.9 grep-2.0 olvwm-3.3 umsdos_progs-0.3 capture-1.00 groff-1.09 p2c-1.20 usermaint-1.0 cbzone-1.00 gwm-1.7o patch-2.1 util-linux-1.9 cdwrite-1.1 gzip-1.2.4 pbmplus-10dec91 uucp-1.05 checker-0.5 hdparm-1.0 pcnfsd-1.40 uuencode-1.0 checklinks-1.00 hfs-0.3 perl-4.036 vacation-1.00 cpio-2.3 host-1.01 pgbrowse-3.1b vlock-0.8 cvs-1.3 ibcs-940727 pidentd-2.2 wdiff-0.04 dc-0.2 ifs-5 pine-3.89 web2c-6.1 dejagnu-1.2 ImageMagick-3.2 postbrowse-0.1 wine-940815 devX100-12 inn-1.4 postgres-4.2 WorkBone-0.1 devX75-12 InterViews-3.1 procps-0.96 wu-ftpd-2.4 diffutils-2.6 ismodem-1.00 rcs-5.6.0.1 X-11R6 dld-3.2.4 ispell-3.1 readline-2.0 xaster-1.00 dlltools-2.11 itcl-1.3 readlink-1.00 xbmbrowser-2.0 dosemu-0.52 joystick-0.7 realpath-1.0 xboard-3.0.pl9 dosfsck-1.0 jpeg-5-alpha reve-1.4.0 xfm-1.3 e2fsprogs-0.5a kbd-0.87 rshd-5.38 XFree86-3.0 ed-0.1 kterm-5.2.0 rwhod-5.19 xpipeman-1.01 efax-0.6a ld.so-1.4.3 sed-2.05 xpm-3.2f elm-2.4 lemacs-19.10 selection-1.7 xpm-3.4c elvis-1.8pl4 less-177+ sh-utils-1.10 xpool-1.3 emacs-19.25 libc-4.5.26 shar-3.52.3 xrisk-2.14 f2c-1994.April.20 libc_s-940731 smail-3.1.28 xshogi-1.1 file-3.14 libg++-2.5.3 smalltalk-1.1.1 xtank-1.3f fileutils-3.9 lilo-14 sound-2.4 xtetris-2.5.2 find-3.8 linux-1.1.47 sox-7 xvier-1.0 finddev-1.0 m4-1.2 strace-3.0 xview-3.2 flex-2.4.7 mailx-5.5 symlinks-0.3 ytalk-3.0.1 ftape-0.9.10 majordomo-1.62 sysvinit-2.50 zlibc-0.3 fvwm-1.22f make-3.71 tar-1.11.2 zmodem-0.11 gas-2.3 malloc-930716 tcl-7.3 gawk-2.15.5 man_db-2.2 tclX-7.3a gcc-2.5.8 metamail-2.6 tcp_wrapper-6.3 Hardware Compatibility for Fall 1994 Release: System: RAM: 4MB (8MB without swap partition), CPU: 386 or above, Bus: ISA, EISA, VLB, PCI, or other localbus (not microchannel). Disk: IDE, RLL, MFM, ESDI, SCSI with supported SCSI controller. Other disks accessible through DOS callbacks. Configurations range from 10 megabytes to 1 gigabyte of disk. All binaries without sources come to 350 megabytes. Hard disk can be shared with other operating systems on separate partitions. Tape: SCSI tape with supported SCSI controller. Experimental (i.e., unsupported) driver for floppy tape. CDROM: Sony 531, 535, CDU-31A, SoundBlaster-compatible CDROM's Mitsumi, any SCSI CDROM with supported SCSI controller. Other CDROM's accessible through DOS callbacks. SCSI: Adaptec 154x, and 174x in enhanced mode, Bustec 542B, Future Domain 8xx, or 16xx, other controllers based on the TMC-950 chip, Ultrastor, Trantor T128. Experimental: other Trantors, Always in-2000, Adaptec AIC 6260 chip (151x/152x boards), Seagate ST-01/ST02, MediaVision and Creative Labs sound cards, NCR 53c7xx/53c8xx, Adaptec 274x (EISA only). Video: (For X windows.) 640x480 16-colors for any VGA card, 256 colors and resolutions up to 1280x1024 (for sufficiently fast hard-ware) for the following chipsets: S3 801/8055/911/924/928, 8514, Tseng ET3000/ET4000, Oak oti-067/077/087, Western Digital 90c00/90c10/90c30 90c31, Genoa, ATI Mach8/32/64, Trident 8900b/c/cl/cs, Cirrus Logic 5420/5422/5426/62x5, NCR 77c22/77c22e, or Compaq AVGA. Hercules monochrome. Note: Diamond cards are not supported. Sound: Adlib, SoundBlaster, MediaVision, and compatibles. Installable Gravis Ultrasound and MPU-401 drivers are also included. PC speaker is used if sound card is not present. Ethernet: Novell NE1000/NE2000/NE2100, 3Com 3c501, 3c503, 3c509, 3c579, AT1500, AT1700, D-link DE600 pocket adapter and ethernet II, AT-LAN-TEC/RealTek pocket adapter, Artisoft LANtastic AE-2, Alta Combo, Cabletron, Hewlett-Packard 27245, 27247, 27250 and PCLAN, Western Digital 8003 and 8013, other 8390- based ethernet cards. HOW TO GET A FREE COPY Yggdrasil is greatly indebted to the many free software developers whose efforts have made this release possible. As a token of our appreciation, any author of any software or documentation in Plug-and-Play Linux can get a free copy. Operators of free Linux BBS's or Linux FTP sites and other major contributors to the Linux community can also get a free copy. We request that Linux BBS operators and FTP sites carry the Plug-and-Play Linux announcement in the appropriate forums, however this request is optional. HOW TO GET A COPY BY TOMORROW [updated 2 June 1994] Plug-and-Play Linux costs $34.95 and is available directly from Yggdrasil or from your local computer, software or technical book store. If Plug-and-Play Linux is not available from your favorite reseller, help promote Linux by making it your mission to change that. Give your reseller our phone number and ask that they carry Plug-and-Play Linux. If you live in the United States, the $5 shipping and handling charge on direct orders includes Second Day Air delivery. For only another $1 you can get Next Day Air delivery, which means that if your order is received before 3:30pm Pacific Time (6:30pm Eastern Time), you can have Plug-and-Play Linux in your hands the next business morning. This $1 shipping upgrade does not apply to orders that include the Linux Bible. For those orders, the total shipping charge for Next Day Air Delivery is $11 (i.e., $6 extra). To order, call (800) 261-6630 or fax the attached order form to (408) 261-6631. International orders take more than a day of course, and shipping is $10. To place an international order, call (408) 261-6630, fax to the order form to (408) 261-6631, or send email to orders@yggdrasil.com. SUBSCRIPTIONS Plug-and-Play Linux is released quarterly. Update subscriptions are available and start with the release following the release that is current when your subscription order is received. For example, an update subscription ordered today would begin with the Fall 1994 release. Prices for update subscriptions are as follows: 1 year (4 releases) $ 99.95 2 years (8 releases) $179.95 3 years (12 releases) $249.95 THE LINUX BIBLE We are also offering the 2nd Edition of the Linux Bible. The Linux Bible is a compendium of documents produced by The Linux Documentation Project, a group of volunteer Linux developers. For each copy sold of the 1180 page book, the Linux Documentation Project receives a donation of US $1.00. The Linux Documentation Project is not part of Yggdrasil. There are several 'books' included within the covers of the Linux Bible: * Linux Installation and Getting Started by Matt Welsh * Networking Administrator's Guide 1.0 by Olaf Kirsh * Kernal Hacking Guide 0.5 by Michael K. Johnson * System Administrator's Guide (alpha release) by Lars Wirzenius * Users Guide 0.4 by Larry Greenfield The following 'How To' guides are also included: * Bus Mouse Howto * CD-ROM Howto * DOS Emulator Howto * Distribution Howto * Ethernet Howto * Ftape Howto * Hardware Howto * HOWTO-INDEX * Installation Howto * Keystroke Howto * MGR Howto * Japanese Extension * Mail Howto * Net2 Howto * NIS Howto * Usenet News Howto * PCI Howto * Printing Howto * SCSI Howto * Serial Howto * Sound Howto * Term Howto * Tips Howto * UUCP Howto * WINE FAQ * XFree86 Howto Yggdrasil Computing, Inc. 4880 Stevens Creek Blvd., Suite 205 OSF/Motif 1.2.x San Jose, CA 95129-1024 (408) 261-6630, fax(408) 261-6631 info@yggdrasil.com OSF/Motif is an X-Windows programming development toolkit which includes the Motif Windows Manager mwm. Yggdrasil Computing resells OSF/Motif 1.2.4 and donates $5 per copy to the development of a free Motif clone. We are in contact with developers in Protvino, Russia. Our business plan for Motif development is still in its formulative stages, and calls for sending these developers three Linux workstations and paying them salaries of approximately $200 per month for two years. If your organization would like to become involved in funding this work, please contact us and perhaps we can develop a more formal consortium to run and publicize this project. Besides currently being the only distribution that supports the development of a free Motif clone, our distribution is also the only one with a simple no-nonsense license statement instead of those ridiculous ``shrink wrap'' licenses that cast a legal shadow over any type of reverse engineering. Our no nonsense license statement reads as follows: OSF/Motif is proprietary software. Copying of this software is restricted by United States copyright law and international treaties. Therefore, you must treat this software just like a book, with the following single exception. You are authorized to make archival copies of this software for the sole purpose of backing-up the software to protect your investment from loss. For the purposes of this license, ``just like a book'' means, for example, that this software may be used by any number of people and may be freely moved from one computer location to another so long as there is no possibility of it being used at one location while it's being used at another. Just like a book that can't be read by two different people in two different places at the same time, neither can the software be used by two different people in two different places at the same time. The version of Motif that we currently resell is OSF/Motif 1.2.4 from MetroLink. The package consists of four floppy disks and five pages of installation notes in a sealed Mead ``envelok'' folder. We are developing nicer packaging. There is also a locked copy of OSF/Motif on the Yggdrasil Plug-and-Play Linux distribution. Yggdrasil Computing, Inc. 4880 Stevens Creek Blvd., Suite 205 San Jose, CA 95129-1024 (408) 261-6630, fax(408) 261-6631 info@yggdrasil.com RESELLERS AND TECHNICAL SUPPORT VENDORS WANTED Yggdrasil Computing is always looking for resellers and technical support vendors. If you would like to carry or offer services for our products, please contact us by any convenient method. TECHNICAL SUPPORT Yggdrasil Computing offers an extensive array of technical support services, detailed below. Service Price Consulting Hotline $2.95/minute 1-900-446-6075 ext. 835 ("TEK") $2.95/minute, USA only 10am-noon,1:45pm-5pm Pacific Fixed Price Hotline* $25 per call Personal Technical Support $100 for 1 year or 1 engineer-hour Business Technical Support [machines+people+contacts] x $60/month Releases On Demand $500 General Technical Services $300/engineer-hour Development Contracts $400/estimated engineer-hour *New experimental service. The Plug-and-Play Linux manual lists vendors offering support services related to the Yggdrasil Linux/GNU/X distribution. If you or your business would like to offer a service related to Plug-and-Play Linux, send a description of your business and contact information to adam@yggdrasil.com. Yggdrasil Computing, Inc. DIRECT SALES ORDER FORM 4880 Stevens Creek Blvd., Suite 205 San Jose, California 95129-1034 United States of America (408) 261-6630, fax (408) 261-6631 toll free (800) 261-6630 SHIP TO: ______________________________ ______________________________ DAYTIME PHONE: _______________ ______________________________ EMAIL: _______________________ ______________________________ Item Quantity Price(US$) Plug-and-Play Linux ____ X $34.95 = $_______ (CDROM, 3.5" boot floppy, 90 page manual) Update Subscriptions starting with following release): 1 year update subscription (4 releases) ____ X $99.95 = $_______ 2 year update subscription (8 releases) ____ X $179.95 = $_______ The Linux Bible (764 pages: kernel hacking, ____ X $39.95 = $_______ networking, installation, over a dozen "How To" guides, and more!) OSF/Motif for Linux ____ X $149.95 = $_______ Prime Time Freeware for unix ____ X $59.95 = $_______ Personal Technical Support ____ X $100.00 = $_______ (1 year/1 engineering hour) SUBTOTAL $_______ ____________________________ Brand of credit card: ________ Card number: _________________________ California residents add 8.25% to help out with sales tax $_______ Shipping & handling (US: $5, elsewhere: $10) $_______ TOTAL $_______ Payment method: __ payment enclosed __ COD (USA only) __ credit card (America Express, Optima, VISA or MasterCard) Your name as it appears on credit card: _______________________________ Brand of credit card: ________ Card number: _________________________ Signature:______________________________________ Expiration: ___ / ___ SHIPPING ADDRESS MUST MATCH CREDIT CARD BILLING ADDRESS Offers subject to change without notice. For direct sales, you can return this software within 30 days for a full refund. Beyond that, THERE IS NO OTHER WARRANTY FOR ANY OF THIS SOFTWARE. THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS" WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EITHER EXPRESSED OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. ------- End of Forwarded Message