Path: utzoo!attcan!uunet!lll-winken!ames!killer!gtmvax!dms3b1!caleb!jdp From: jdp@caleb.UUCP (Jim Pritchett) Newsgroups: comp.sys.amiga Subject: re: Credit cards and UUCP Message-ID: <0183.AA0183@caleb> Date: 8 Jan 89 23:44:14 GMT Followup-To: comp.sys.amiga Lines: 61 Organization: Expires: Keywords: Distribution: Please excuse me for continuing this side trip away from the real topic of this group (i.e. AMIGA.) By the way, even if you can still find a 30 day, no interest, no annual fee credit card; the major card companies (i.e. MasterCard, Visa, American Express, etc.) keep a percentage of the charges. This means that the retailer must raise his prices to compensate for the 'lost' income. So, even if you get it for 'free', it is NOT free!!! The credit card companies can get up to 4 or 5% of the amount charged. I believe that the actual percentage can vary significantly depending upon the institutions involved and the monthly dollar volume of charges the retailer has. Now, we return to our regularly scheduled program... Sometime back, I bombarded the net with questions about certain of the Lattice supplied library functions. You may have wondered why. Well... I have hacked on the Loftus, Schein, et. al. UUCP stuff in order to convert it to Manx C. I haven't converted everything, but I do have the uucico and some of the supporting stuff converted. Mostly this involved changing a few routine names with #define and writing replacements for several 'standard' library routines that Lattice has and Manx doesn't. Now, before I get a deluge of requests for the diffs and source code, please note the following. 1. There is a new version out now. I don't have it yet, so my changes will probably not be completely compatible with the new version. 2. My Lattice replacement routines are very 'quick and dirty' hacks. Although they seem to work, I haven't had time to fully test them. 3. The routines replaced are: strtok() getcwd() remove() chdir() getfnl() strbpl(). 4. I haven't gotten around to bundling up the stuff for posting. (No, sending me a 'round tuit' will NOT speed up the process.) However, if there is great interest in the stuff, I will consider posting it. (Assuming, of course, that SAS/Lattice will not object to my posting 'clones' of these routines. John Toebes, are you listening? I would think that they shouldn't object since since most of these functions are fairly common C functions, but logic rarely applies in legal matters these days...) 5. I will probably update the new version somtime, but I don't have much spare time these days... -- Jim Pritchett UUCP: killer!gtmvax!dms3b1!caleb!jdp