💾 Archived View for gemini.spam.works › mirrors › textfiles › bbs › 221 captured on 2022-04-29 at 11:46:06.

View Raw

More Information

⬅️ Previous capture (2020-10-31)

-=-=-=-=-=-=-

                           Taming the Wild Kitty
                          Running a Wildcat! 4 BBS
                        Review by Jacci Howard Bear

        It's a jungle out there in the world of BBS software. Wildcat! 4.0
is the newest breed of cat from Mustang Software, Inc. (MSI). Wildcat has
fanatic fans and faultfinders. Because you choose your BBS software based on
your own needs and the demands of your new or existing BBS,  you should
listen to both sides--what they say and what they don't say--then make the
best choice for your own situation.
        Wildcat 4 easily molds itself to a variety of BBS configurations. It
is simple enough for the beginning Sysop to setup and run in short order,
yet powerful and flexible enough to meet the needs of the experienced BBS
operator.  It's not without a few oddities that might not suit
everyone--we'll discuss some of those later. But mostly, I find it to be a
great program.

Explore the Jungle

        Before looking at specific BBS software choices, including Wildcat
4, consider why you want a BBS. Software varies greatly in the way it
handles files, messages, subscriptions, access, and multiple lines. Also
consider how well it integrates with other programs you'll need such as
games, databases, and faxes. What you want out of your BBS helps determine
what software you need to put into it.
        There are two general types of bulletin board systems--hobby and
professional. Within each type are many varieties.
        Amateur or Hobbyist. Many amateur boards have true "professional"
Sysops. However, you will find that these boards are generally free or run
on donations from callers. The BBS may be public--accepting any and all
callers or a private board that you may never even know exists until the
Sysop tells you about it and grants you access. These hobby boards may be
"generalist" or cater to special interests.
        A common misconception is that all BBSs carry hundreds of files,
games, and X-rated material. Nothing could be further from the truth. My own
BBS is a free public board with only a handful of files (all rated G), no
games, and a slant toward home business and desktop publishing. A local
networking group also uses my board as an "on-line home." Other hobby boards
may specialize in Genealogy or Country Music or live chat. Big or small,
making money is not the purpose of a hobby BBS. It's pure pleasure or a
"labor of love." On being a Sysop, Cathy Keller, of Austin, says, "I love
it! It's nice giving something back to the community, and it's fun facing
the vast assortment of challenges one finds as a Sysop."
        Professional or Business. Boards that charge fees, customer or
technical support, and product information boards make up the other major
classification of bulletin board systems. These are usually run by
companies, and private networks for company employees or organization
members. Some of the professional boards may operate exactly like the Hobby
boards described above but charge a subscription or use a 900 number for
access. Companies and organizations run a BBS network for employees or
members or, as a way to disseminate company or product news. They may even
take orders on-line.

Panther, Lion, or Household Tabby

        Wildcat 4 comes in four versions--Single Line, MultiLine 10,
MultiLine 250, and MultiLine Platinum. The version you need depends on the
size and scope of your BBS as well as your equipment. The Wildcat 4 manual
describes a number of typical BBS setups. Described here are three real BBSs
using three different versions of Wildcat.
        My BBS, The Bear Necessities, running on a "homemade" 286 with 1 MB
of RAM, uses the Single Line version. MSI recommends this version for the
"entry level BBS for the small business person, hobbyist or special interest
group." That fits my BBS perfectly. Cathy Keller runs two Wildcat 4 BBSs.
Dingle Delaware uses the MultiLine 10 version, which can handle up to 4
dial-in lines. An "all-purpose" BBS that covers a wide range of topics,
multiple lines allow the BBS to accept more callers and callers get through
to the BBS more easily (fewer busy signals). E-source, operated by the Texas
General Land Office is "part of our efforts to make information easily
available to the general public on such issues as recycling, alternative
fuels, sustainable energy, etc." says Ms. Keller. This BBS runs on the
MultiLine 250 version of Wildcat 4. It also can handle up to 4 dial-in lines
and MSI recommends it for the "medium to large sized LAN E-mail or corporate
communications system requiring b al network access ... and only a small
number of dial-up lines." The MultiLine Platinum version is recommended for
medium to large LAN E-mail or corporate communications. Or, for large
multi-user public or private BBSs with up to 8 incoming telephone lines per
workstation. The MultiLine Platinum works with a wider range of serial
devices than the others and supports multiport serial boards.
        Ms. Keller believes that "there's a real misconception about Wildcat
being only a package for hobbyists. It's very powerful for use within a
business setting as well. Because of the ease of use, the callers to the
business BBS perceive that you've gone the extra mile to accommodate them.
... it's smart business using something that is easy, makes your customers
feel comfortable, and that hasn't bankrupted you in the process."

Let the Cat out of the Bag (or Box)

        With some software, installation and initial setup is the hardest
part. With others, it's the only easy part of the process. Setting up a BBS
requires careful use of resources and hardware. Do you have enough hard
drive space? Memory? Will it work with your modem? Do you prefer a different
directory structure? Are you running Windows or DESQview or OS/2 or on a
network? Will it work with your other existing software such as that
required for some mail gateways like Fido Net or Internet?
        Wildcat 4 offers menu-driven installation that does most of the work
for you, yet allows you to customize directory names and control which files
the program installs. As with any program, a basic understanding of
DOS--especially editing your AUTOEXEC.BAT and CONFIG.SYS files--is
desirable. If you don't feel confident enough to do this on your own, find a
friend to help you or buy a good book on DOS.
        Many Sysops consider the ability to customize their BBS the number
one consideration when choosing BBS software. But custom-tailoring takes
time and often a Sysop is in a hurry to get their new board on-line. Seeing
and working with "live" menus, rather than just pictures in a manual, is
also a good way to help you decide exactly how you want to change the look
and feel of your BBS. Wildcat 4 comes with pre-configured screens and a
"basic setup" that gets you up and running quickly. (The manual says "in 1
hour or less." It took me a little longer than that but I encountered some
special problems--described later.) Sooner or later though, you're going to
want to ... customize!

Put the Stripes or Spots on the Cat

        My old software was downright flexible. I could make my BBS look and
act any number of ways. The problem was that I had to read volumes of
instructions and then "hand write" the configuration files. That is, I
created each custom menu or script in a generic text editor, with no on-line
help, using cryptic commands that were (to me, anyway) less than obvious as
to their use and purpose.
        On the other hand, Wildcat 4 makes customization easy with
menu-driven configuration programs and a program for drawing great-looking
screens. The Wildcat 4 manual is thorough in most areas; but, it doesn't go
into enough detail about using the wcDRAW program (for drawing those great
screens). I would welcome a separate manual with color screens and examples.
Along with screens and menus, you may want to create access profiles
(certain callers will have access to different parts of the BBS), special
conference and file areas, bulletins, on-line questionnaires, and more. The
easier it is to customize your BBS, the sooner you can turn your attention
to enjoying your new board--knowing you have a truly unique
system--different from all the others in town.
        Menus. Menus are screens that allow the caller to navigate your
system. In Wildcat 4 a menu item can display a text file such as a news
bulletin or newsletter, go to another menu, perform built-in functions
including file uploads, downloads, scanning conferences for messages, and
more. Each menu can have its own RIP, ANSI, ASCII, or a generic dynamic
display screen. You can hide certain commands and areas of your BBS from all
or some callers through the use of security profiles. Each security profile
can have their own tailor-made menus up to a maximum of 650 menus.
        Bulletins & Newsletters. The Sysop creates these special text files
and displays them to callers either automatically or as a menu choice.
Bulletins might contain helpful advice about your system, business,
organization, or anything you wish.
        Questionnaires. Wildcat 4 has 4 types of questionnaires. You can
edit the existing questionnaires or create your own. Some uses for
questionnaires include on-line order entry, surveys, voting, and gathering
addresses, phone numbers, and other caller information.
        Messages. One of the most fascinating and fun features of a bulletin
boards system is the message capabilities. Through messages written on-line,
you can get to know your callers or they can meet other callers to your
board. If you join a network, then you can exchange messages with other
people in the network--across town or across the globe. A BBS may have both
local conferences that exist only on that BBS, plus "echo" conferences that
include messages from users throughout the network on other BBSs.
        Wildcat 4 supports up to 32,760 message conferences with up to
65,520 messages per conference. (More than I'll ever need!) Message
conference types include public and private messages, Fido Net-style private
netmail, Internet E-Mail, and public Usenet Newsgroup messages. Users can
scan and mark messages based on sender, receiver, subject, text, message
number, and conference. The message editors (for entering new messages or
replies) support spellchecking and quoting. You can setup message
conferences on an individual basis to allow forwarding, carbon copies,
return receipts, and file attachments. They can also be Read Only, Write
Only, Join Only or any of the three combined. Also, each message conference
can have its own set of bulletins, menus, questionnaires, help files, and
display screens.
        Files. Considered the "most important feature" by many BBS callers,
some Sysops take great pride in providing callers with the largest number of
downloadable files possible. The more files that are available to callers,
the greater the need for software that makes it easy for users to search and
find specific files and download them. It must also be easy for the Sysop to
add, delete, inspect, and move files, and edit file names and descriptions.
If the software you are considering has limited file management
capabilities, look for the existence of third party utilities that add these
enhancements.
        Like message conferences, Wildcat 4 handles a maximum of 32,760 file
areas and a mind-boggling total of 2 billion files. The file areas feature
the most popular transfer protocols and support for external protocols.
Files can have short and long file descriptions. A thumbnail option allows
preview of GIF files. Multi-changer CD-ROM support extends your file areas
beyond the limits of your hard drive. Other features include indexing; virus
scan; password protection; duplicate file names; and built-in support for
FILE_ID.DIZ and DESC.SDI.
        Ms. Keller calls the underlying structure of Wildcat 4's message and
file databases "a double-edged sword." She cites fast scanning of message
and file areas as a plus for the user. On the other hand, the way the it
builds message areas makes nightly maintenance almost a requirement. In my
own case, my BBS computer has a small hard drive. With hundreds of messages
coming in daily it fills up fast. Although MSI does provide utilities for
trimming back the messages it doesn't provide a way to trim messages "on the
fly"--replacing older messages with newer ones rather than just adding to
the database.

Multiple Wildcat-egories

        Wildcat 4's security profiles are one of its most valuable features.
At first I didn't understand their full potential but the more I work with
the software the more I learn. With security profiles you can customize your
BBS for a variety of purposes and users. Based on their security profile,
you can give one group of users access to certain message or file areas only
or just certain functions. With up to 1000 security profiles available, you
could make it appear that you are running 1000 different BBSs! As an
example, perhaps you want to run a BBS for your Cross-stitch Club and
another BBS with on-line games and technical computer discussion areas--both
using the same phone number, computer, and software. By assigning the
members of your Cross-stitch Club one security profile, and the game
players/computer buffs another profile you can hide portions of the BBS from
each group. The menus, bulletins, available file areas, and message
conferences would appear different to each t caller.

Dog & Cat Fights

        At some point, or from the beginning, you may want to expand your
BBS to include a message or file network such as Fido Net, Postlink, or the
Internet. These networks consist of message conferences or groups of files
that Sysops transfer among all BBSs that belong to that network. Callers to
your BBS can read and post their own messages to the conferences that the
network then routes from system to system. Some networks cover small
geographic areas or have set discussion subjects. Others may be
international in scope or carry hundreds of topics. The file networks allow
you to receive automatically certain types of files or request specific
files.
        If this type of expansion is important to you--be aware that not all
BBS software packages meet the specific requirements that some networks
place on message formats or transfer methods. Or, they may require extra
programs to work right. I found out almost immediately that Wildcat 4 is not
"Fido-friendly" straight out of the box. When I started The Bear
Necessities, I knew I wanted to connect to Fido Net--one of the oldest
volunteer networks in the world. The author of my original BBS software
specifically designed it to handle Fido Net messaging requirements and to
work flawlessly with a number of other programs required for network
compatibility.
        Wildcat 4 will work with Fido Net netmail and echo mail. But it
needs help. A small but growing number of utilities are available from other
vendors--most are shareware--that handle the special needs of Fido Net plus
work with Wildcat. Help with connecting to most networks has to come from
other Sysops. The MSI support staff can't provide much help on that front.
But there are a lot of Wildcat Sysops out there willing to assist. If you
now use an earlier version of Wildcat, you may find that your current
utilities (front-end, mail tosser, etc.) will need upgrading to work with
the significant changes in Wildcat 4.
        The recent deluge of books, articles, and television shows about the
"Information Superhighway" has many new and old Sysops itching to explore
one of its main thoroughfares--the Internet. MSI offers an add-on program
for Wildcat 4 called wcGATE. This program, coupled with a UUCP account from
an Internet provider makes Internet E-mail, Usenet Newsgroups, and uuencoded
file transfers available to the Wildcat 4 BBS. wcGATE also works with
Novels' MHS server for MHS E-mail and file attaches.

Free Kittens

        In addition to the wcDRAW program mentioned earlier, Wildcat 4 has
other essential utility programs that make setup, maintenance, and operation
easier. wcMAIL is a QWK-compatible mail door that creates packets of
messages, bulletins, and file lists for callers to download and read
off-line with their favorite QWK mail reader. wcFILE handles maintenance of
the file areas while you use wcPACK to trim the number of messages by date
or number. wcMODEM helps set up your modem to work with Wildcat 4. wcCHAT is
the program for live chat between users (on a multi-line/multi-node system).
wcECHO gives you the ability to participate in echomail systems that use the
QWK-style message networking. These programs are all part of the Wildcat 4
package.

Kittens for Sale

        MSI provides some utility programs for separate purchase to expand
the capabilities of your BBS. In addition to the wcGATE software for
Internet/MHS, there is wcPRO with wcFAX that adds more powerful database
functions to manage your user records, files, messages, and more. The wcFAX
program adds fax-on-demand capabilities. Another powerful program that
benefits every Wildcat 4 Sysop--whether they have the program or not--is
wcCODE. It is a development tool that allows Sysops to write programs for
their own BBS or to give (or sell) to other Sysops. Ms. Keller notes that
"there are legions of Wildcat Sysops writing wcCODE applications to fill in
whatever gaps one may feel there are with Wildcat 4. They're easy to
implement and many of them are either free or exceptionally low cost."

When Kitty Ignores the Litter Box

        Even the best software in the world has its "bad hairball days."
Because your callers, your business, or your club depend on your BBS, you
need to know that help is readily available when things go wrong.
        MSI makes help easy to find. On MSI's own Wildcat BBS I found the
guidance and programs I needed to connect my Wildcat BBS to Fido Net. I've
also found answers in the Mustang Software section of CompuServe. Mustang
has support sections on Genie and America On-line too. They also have an
Internet mailing address for tech support, a voice support number, and their
own MSI SupportNET echo conferences carried on boards around the world. You
not only get fast, friendly support from their own staff, but in the on-line
conferences you can share experiences with hundreds of other new and
experienced Wildcat Sysops.

A Wild, Wild Ride

        I wish I could say that the switch from my previous software to
Wildcat 4 was seamless and painless, for my callers and myself. The Fido Net
connection problems caused a few extra gray hairs. However, the installation
of Wildcat 4 and setting up the basic operation of the BBS couldn't have
been easier. Like some other powerful programs I've reviewed, I found myself
caught up in some of the "fun" features and trying to use utilities that I
hadn't taken time to study. Now I'm ready to slow down, take my time, and
fully explore this feature-rich program. The mail is flowing so now it's
time to "make it pretty" too.
        I just celebrated my first anniversary as a Sysop and I look forward
to my first anniversary as a Wildcat Sysop. Perhaps later on, I can bring
you some more tales about my jungle explorations and Wildcat encounters. As
a longtime user of Wildcat 3 and 4, Cathy Keller guided me through some of
the steps of switching to Wildcat. She tells me, "this is going to sound
sappy, but I'm really proud to be a Wildcat Sysop." She and I both happily
recommend it to any new or experienced Sysop. But, like any software
package, choose it because it has the features you need--not just because it
gets rave reviews.

Wildcat! Single Line (version reviewed)
Recommended Software:
DOS 3.3 or higher
Recommended Hardware:
IBM AT or true compatible, 512K RAM, high density floppy, 15 MB hard drive space, RS232 serial port with external modem and cable or internal modem, voice grade telephone line.

Wildcat! MultiLine 10 and 250
Recommended Software:
DOS 3.3 or higher, DESQview 386, OS/2, or Windows, for multiple lines on one PC. Network applications require Novell Netware or LAN software that uses DOS SHARE for file and record locking.
Recommended Hardware:
Multitasking on a single PC: 386-33mhz or higher with 1-2 MB RAM per dial-in node, hard drive.
LAN connections: IBM AT or true compatible, 512K RAM, no floppy required.
A serial port and external modem or internal modem and voice grade telephone line is required for each incoming modem connection.

Wildcat! MultiLine Platinum
Recommended Software:
DOS 3.3 or higher, DESQview 386, OS/2, or Windows, for multiple lines on one PC. Network applications require Novell Netware or LAN software that uses DOS SHARE for file and record locking.
Recommended Hardware:
Minimum 486-33, 8-16 MB RAM, hard drive. Serial I/O boards required to run 8 lines are PC/8e or PC/8i Digiboard with connecting cable or multi-port serial card that is FOSSIL compatible. An external modem and voice grade telephone line are required for each incoming modem connection.
 
                           Mustang Software, Inc.
                            6200 Lake Ming Road
                           Bakersfield, CA 93303
                                805-873-2500

  Send your postal name, address, city, state, zip to 25prod@supportu.com
         for product literature to be sent to you via postal mail.