August 2005

CSL Contributions still safe, but index sits in stealth mode

At last week's OpenMPE meeting, the 20-plus attendees in person and the 50 online got a brief report on the location of programs contributed to the Interex Contributed Software Library (CSL). Links to the CSL went dark when Interex cut off its Web access on July 18, but the programs are safe in the hands of Chuck Shimada, a longtime Interex volunteer and de-facto curator of this collection of HP 3000 utilities.

Shimada reported that he won't be releasing the entire CSL library for quite some time. Legal rulings over the years have established the group of programs in its entirety as a copyrighted Interex asset, he said. A few cases of outright piracy in Europe — where tech support companies simply put their label on the CSL and called it their own — led to a successful Interex defense of its rights, he added.

As an interesting aside, the CSL programs are not listed among Interex assets in its Chapter 7 bankruptcy filings. Shimada said that although that might be true, he's still going to wait until "several months" after the Dec. 5 bankruptcy claim deadline before making the full collection available to the 3000 community. OpenMPE would be a logical place to host the programs, if rights can be worked out among the contributors. Contributing a CSL program used to earn you a free copy of the CSL. (The CSL could be considered worth a lot more than the former group's custom membership app, which now comprises almost three-fourths of Interex's stated $431,433 of assets. Of course, Interex doesn't own those CSL programs, just the right to offer them as a collection. Full rights revert to the companies and individuals that contributed the programs.)

But anyone can get individual CSL programs from Chuck, if you send him an e-mail (at his personal address, cshimada@verizon.net) and ask for an individual program. Knowing what to ask for becomes a matter of research if you don't have the full CSL index of programs. The index doesn’t appear to be hosted on any server that’s open to the entire HP 3000 community. [We’d love to hear from you if you know where the community can review the CSL index.] So the alternatives would be to look for swap tapes, the mechanism Interex used to create its CSL. Interex members would donate software to the swap tape, then receive a tape of all contributed programs.

Swap tape programs, Shimada believes, are open for redistribution by anyone who’s received one by participating in the swap. He added that the full CSL should be available in the future “when we get rolling on this, with several mirrored sites where all the stuff can be had. After all, there’s always the problem that Southern California Edison will do a brownout in my area, and then my 3000 might come crashing down and not come back up.” Shimada, whose volunteered as tech support for Interex conferences using his adroit experience with older, power-hungry 3000 models, added a jab at his collection of power-hungry legacy models. “And no, the [CSL] is not hosted on a Series III. Though I bring up my Series III from time to time, and Edison loves it when I do. I just have to figure out where the smoke is coming from it.”