Red Ryder is a communications and terminal emulation software program released for the Apple Macintosh in 1984. Initially distributed as a shareware, the application offered rich features and configuration settings. Red Ryder was discontinued in 1989 and replaced by White Knight.
Original author(s) | Wat Buchanon, Scott Watson |
---|---|
Developer(s) | The FreeSoft Company |
Initial release | 1984 |
Final release | 10.3
|
Written in | BASIC, C |
Operating system | Classic Mac OS |
Type | Terminal emulation, BBS |
License | Proprietary software; shareware distribution (up to 9.4), commercial distribution (since version 10.0) |
History
editFirst released in 1984 for Macintosh computers,[1]: 65 early versions of Red Ryder were written by Wat Buchanon as a Microsoft BASIC program with documentation included on the disk filled with humor aimed at Apple and programmers.[2]: 152 After Wat Buchanon died, his friend Scott Watson entirely rewrote Red Ryder keeping the manual in a similar humorous style.[3]: 71 Watson's releases were a standalone Macintosh applications[2]: 152 programmed in C and the new author expanded features taking into account requests from Red Ryder users.[4] The application was distributed as a shareware until version 9.4, starting with release 10.0 in 1987 Red Ryder became a commercial program.[2]: 154 Red Ryder was discontinued in 1989 (10.3 being the last release) and replaced by White Knight (starting in version 11).[5]: 106
Features
editRed Ryder was the first Mac telecommunication application to support big screens and choice of fonts.[4] The program emulates several terminals (ASCII TTY (teletype), VT52 and VT100) and supports many file transfer protocols (uploading/downloading using XMODEM, YMODEM or Kermit; downloading using the CompuServe B protocol) with MacBinary file format. The application includes a procedure language and can be controlled by user defined macros.[2]: 154 Registered users could set up their own Bulletin board system using Red Ryder Host.[3]: 71 Highly flexible settings allow to use nearly any modem and Red Ryder also offers phone books for often used phone numbers and services.[2]: 156
Reception
editBoth Macintosh and general computing magazines rated Red Ryder highly.[2][1] Commended were its inexpensive price,[6]: 92 rich settings and features and excellent support (answering user questions by phone).[2]: 156 However, documentation included only few examples and with so many configuration options Red Ryder was somewhat hard to learn. Commercial release 10 was also not compatible with version 9.x procedures.[2]: 158 Despite powerful features and popularity among home users, Red Ryder was never successful in the business market, which preferred MacTerminal by Apple or Smartcom II by Hayes.[2]: 154 By words of an InfoWorld review, Red Ryder "tries to be too many things at once" and "it's not practical for a typical business user".[7]: S11
References
edit- ^ a b Wortman, Leon A. (November 26, 1984). "Macack, Mactep, Red Ryder". InfoWorld. Vol. 6, no. 48. IDG. pp. 63–66. ISSN 0199-6649.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i Wiggins, Robert R.; Bobker, Steven (December 1987). "A Perfect 10". MacUser. Vol. 3, no. 12. Ziff-Davis Publishing. pp. 152, 154, 156, 158. ISSN 0884-0997.
- ^ a b Wiggins, Robert R. (July 1986). "3-Ring Circuits". MacUser. Vol. 1, no. 10. MacUser Publications. pp. 68–72, 138. ISSN 0884-0997.
- ^ a b Bobker, Steven (January 1988). "Fixing What Ain't Broke". MacUser. Vol. 4, no. 1. Ziff-Davis Publishing. p. 15. ISSN 0884-0997.
- ^ Wiggins, Robert R. (May 1990). "White Knight". MacUser. Vol. 6, no. 5. Ziff-Davis Publishing. pp. 106, 110. ISSN 0884-0997.
- ^ Heid, Jim (December 1985). "No Static At All". Macworld. Vol. 2, no. 13. PC World Communications. pp. 86–94. ISSN 0741-8647.
- ^ Arnett, Nick (March 20, 1989). "Open Lines of Communication". InfoWorld. Vol. 11, no. 12. IDG. pp. S1, S2, S4–S8, S10–S11. ISSN 0199-6649.