</orderedlist>
<para>If you are part way through entering a command and you change your
-minde, you can cancel the command by typing -1 as one of the
+mind, you can cancel the command by typing -1 as one of the
parameters, with the exception of the manual move command.</para>
<para>If anything is not clear to you, experiment. The worst you can do is
<sect1><title>Photon Torpedoes</title>
<literallayout>
-Mnemonic: PHOTONS
-Shortest abbreviation: PHO
-Full commands: PHOTONS <NUMBER> <TARG1> <TARG2> <TARG3>
+Mnemonic: TORPEDO
+Shortest abbreviation: TO
+Full commands: TORPEDO <NUMBER> <TARG1> <TARG2> <TARG3>
</literallayout>
<para>Photon torpedoes are projectile weapons—you either hit what you aim
P PHASERS <TOTAL AMOUNT> phasers and computer
PHASERS AUTOMATIC <TOTAL AMOUNT> phasers, computer, sr sensors
PHASERS MANUAL <AMT1> <AMT2> ... phasers
- PHO PHOTONS <NUMBER> <TARGETS> torpedo tubes
+ TOR TORPEDO <NUMBER> <TARGETS> torpedo tubes
PL PLANETS (none)
PR PROBE <ARMED> <MANUAL> <DISPLACEMENT> probe launcher, radio
PROBE <ARMED> AUTOMATIC <DESTINATION> launcher, radio, computer
<para>The original Star Trek seems to have been written by Mike
Mayfield at the beginning of the 1970s. His first version was in
BASIC for a Sigma 7 in 1971; in 1972 he rewrote it in Hewlett Packard
-BASIC. The source is <ulink
-url="&sst-site;www/historic/mayfield.basic">available</ulink> on the
-SST2K website. In January 1975 it became part of the DECUS library
-under the name <ulink
+BASIC. The source is inckuded in the SST2K repository. In January
+1975 it became part of the DECUS library under the name <ulink
url='http://www.trailing-edge.com/~shoppa/decus/110174.html'>SPACWR</ulink>.</para>
<para>While some people claim to have recollections of playing Trek
from Ahl's SPACWR. The header says "GENERAL IDEA STOLEN FROM
PENN. U.", and the game has several features not present in SPACEWR:
notably, the Death Ray, ramming, and the Klingon summons to surrender.
-And, of course, it predates Ahl's book. The source is <ulink
-url="&sst-site;www/historic/UT-Trek.basic">available</ulink> on the
-SST2K website.</para>
+And, of course, it predates Ahl's book. The source is included in the
+SST2K repository.</para>
<para>Dave Matuszek, Paul Reynolds et. al. at UT Austin played the
Hicks version on a CDC6600, but disliked the long load time and
BASIC, in that it used used polar coordinates (a clockface angle
and a distance) for manual navigation.</para>
+<para>Tom Almy writes: "I've received further information that the
+black holes, Tholian web, Super Commander, and Emeritus mode were
+added by Marc Newman."</para>
+
<para>At the time the UT FORTRAN source was last translated to C it emitted
the message "Latest update-21 Sept 78". Thus, it actually predated
(and may have influenced) the best-known BASIC version, the "Super
<para>Planets are auto-scanned when you enter the quadrant.</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
-<para>Mining or using crystals in presense of enemy now yields an attack.
-There are other minor adjustments to what yields an attack
+<para>Mining or using crystals in the presence of the enemy now yields
+an attack. There are other minor adjustments to what yields an attack
and what does not.</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<listitem><para>
I've cleaned up a lot of grubby FORTRANisms in the code internals —
used sizeof(), replaced magic numeric constants with #defines,
-that sort of thing.
+that sort of thing. Later I translated the code from C to Python.
</para></listitem>
<listitem><para>
I fixed a surprising number of typos in the code and documentation.
</sect1>
<sect1><title>References</title>
+<para>These are the original references by Dave Matuszek and Paul
+Reynolds:</para>
+
<orderedlist>
<listitem><para><citetitle>Star Trek</citetitle> (the original television
series), produced and directed by Gene Rodenberry.</para></listitem>
David Gerrold. Similiar in scope to the above book.
(Bantam)</para></listitem>
-<listitem><para><citetitle>The Star Trek Guide</citetitle>, third revision 4/17/67, by Gene
-Roddenberry. The original writer's guide for the television
-series, but less comprehensive than (3) above.
+<listitem><para><citetitle>The Star Trek Guide</citetitle>, third
+revision 4/17/67, by Gene Roddenberry. The original writer's guide
+for the television series, but less comprehensive than (3) above.
(Norway Productions)</para></listitem>
<listitem><para><citetitle>The Trouble With Tribbles</citetitle>, by
</sect1>
</chapter>
+
+<appendix><title>Setting the Wayback Machine</title>
+
+<para>SST2K and its ancestors have a long history. One of the
+objectives of this project is to make that history available.
+Accordingly, here is a timeline of the development of SST2K and
+its ancestors, as closely as we can reconstruct it. Someday this
+may become the basis for a "wayback machine" switch that enables
+feature sets by year.</para>
+
+<itemizedlist>
+<listitem><para>1971 — Mike Mayfield's original BASIC Star
+Trek.</para></listitem>
+
+<listitem><para>5 April 1973 — Grady Hicks's BASIC version fot
+the Taurus.</para></listitem>
+
+<listitem><para>Summer 1973 — Dave Matuszek, Paul Reynolds, and
+the Austin crew begin work on the UT FORTRAN version.</para></listitem>
+
+<listitem><para>1974 — Dave Matuszek gets distracted by other
+things, notably a job change and the birth of his first
+child.</para></listitem>
+
+<listitem><para>c.1977 — Tom Almy translates the UT FORTAN
+version to PDP-11 FORTRAN.</para></listitem>
+
+<listitem><para>21 September 1978 — This was the date on the
+first version Tom Almy saw, on which he based his later C
+translation.</para></listitem>
+
+<listitem><para>1979 — Marc Newman adds Tholians, black holes,
+super-commanders, and Emeritus mode.</para></listitem>
+
+<listitem><para>1995-1996 — Tom Almy translates his FORTRAN
+port to ANSI C.</para></listitem>
+
+<listitem><para>1997 — Tom Almy finds the sources for UT
+FORTRAN on the Web and merges in features new since the 1978 version:
+EMEXIT, Tholian Web, improved death ray. He adds deep-space probes
+from the DECUS version.</para></listitem>
+
+<listitem><para>10 October 2004 — ESR starts hacking on Almy's C
+translation, de-FORTRANIZING the code. HELP/CALL/SOS becomes MAYDAY.
+</para></listitem>
+
+<listitem><para>30 October 2004 — SST2K project started on
+Berlios.</para></listitem>
+
+<listitem><para>18 January 2005 — First changes merged in from Stas
+Sergeev. The curses interface is added.</para></listitem>
+
+<listitem><para>September 2006 — BSD features merged
+in. Inhabited-worlds features and weighted critical hits date from
+this time.</para></listitem>
+
+<listitem><para>9 October 2006 — Translation to
+Python.</para></listitem>
+</itemizedlist>
+
+<para>One as-yet unanswered question is when the code changed from
+distance/direction navigation to coordinate offsets. Dave Matuszek
+believes it must have been after he stopped working on the game in
+1974.</para>
+</appendix>
</book>