Technology
These pages will provide some background on the history of The Carrier Project and will describe some of the conventions used throughout the site.
Hardware
The original - and extremely crude - version of The Carrier Project was written on an old Unisys 386DX25 that barely deserved to be called a computer. The operating system was MS-DOS 6.22, with Windows 3.1 overlaid.
It has since been replaced by a 300 MHz Pentium II that has been massively upgraded. The current operating system is Windows 98, although I plan to upgrade to WindowsXP in the near future.
Update (January 2006): The old Pentium II has been replaced by an AMD Sempron system - big, fast, powerful, wow!!!
Update2 (August 2007): I apparently took a power spike or something that fried the Sempron. A new motherboard, mounting dual AMD Athalon processors, has been installed. Ho-lee buckets!
Software
Many programs were used to assist in writing this site. I should note that I hold a degree in computer programming, and I prefer to code by hand. Automated code generators have always annoyed me - they have no style. Also, by writing the code manually, the programmer knows exactly what is happening at all points in the program. This makes troubleshooting and modification much easier and more efficient.
The lists below identify most of the software I used. Any links presented are for the current versions of the software, not necessarily the version I have.
File Management
Any software project (and website development is a software project; don't let anybody tell you any different) requires file management. You can't design and execute a project until you can keep track of your resources. I have used two file managers during the development of this site:
Pathminder 4.0: An MS-DOS file utility by Westlake Data of Austin, Texas. Similar to the current ACDSee Classic.
![Wikipedia article [ Wikipedia icon ]](http://i572.photobucket.com/albums/ss162/RustyBill/website/icon/wiki.gif)
ACDSee 2.43: Although intended as a graphics manager, ACDSee is an excellent Windows file manager, much better than that included with Windows. ACD Systems
![WWW article [ World Wide Web icon ]](http://i572.photobucket.com/albums/ss162/RustyBill/website/icon/web.gif)
Text Editing
The basic editing was done on a variety of text editors and word processors. These included:
Pathminder 4.0: Mentioned above. PM had an internal text editor with some limited formatting and search-and-replace functions.
WordStar 5.0: An MS-DOS wordprocessor by MicroPro. Well-featured for it's time. I still use it, since I prefer it's sorting capabilities.
![Wikipedia article [ Wikipedia icon ]](http://i572.photobucket.com/albums/ss162/RustyBill/website/icon/wiki.gif)
Notepad: This is the Windows internal default text editor. No formatting capabilities, no automated functions, and a rather annoying 64k file size limit.
NoteBook 2.4: A shareware text editor similar to Notepad, but without the 64k limit. Notebook was written and distributed by C.T. Software of Elk Grove, Illinois. Unfortunately, C. T. Software appears to no longer exist.
WordPad: The wordprocessor integral to Windows 98.
Xchange 2.2.3: A project of this size often requires that text changes be made to many files simultaneously. The easiest way to do this is with an automated utility. I tried several before settling on Xchange, a shareware program. It is easy to use, inexpensive, and it allows the user to specify many changes and will execute them all at the same time. It's configuration file is user-editable, another plus. Xchange is by Simon Armstrong's Sadman Software
![WWW article [ World Wide Web icon ]](http://i572.photobucket.com/albums/ss162/RustyBill/website/icon/web.gif)
Img2HTML 1.1: This is a neat little freeware utility by Alan Balding
![WWW article [ World Wide Web icon ]](http://i572.photobucket.com/albums/ss162/RustyBill/website/icon/web.gif)
![WWW article [ World Wide Web icon ]](http://i572.photobucket.com/albums/ss162/RustyBill/website/icon/web.gif)
Graphics Editing
My graphics were all created or modified using Paint Shop Pro 3.12-32
![WWW article [ World Wide Web icon ]](http://i572.photobucket.com/albums/ss162/RustyBill/website/icon/web.gif)
I also used the freeware RGB/Hex Color Selector
![WWW article [ World Wide Web icon ]](http://i572.photobucket.com/albums/ss162/RustyBill/website/icon/web.gif)
An excellent reference to assist in selecting web-safe colors is Doug Jacobsen's RGB Hex Color Chart
![WWW article [ World Wide Web icon ]](http://i572.photobucket.com/albums/ss162/RustyBill/website/icon/web.gif)
The little logo icon (up there, top of the screen, next to the web address; looks like this:
![Carrier Project onsite link [ Carrier Project site icon ]](http://i572.photobucket.com/albums/ss162/RustyBill/website/image/cvproj-icon.gif)
![Photograph [ Camera icon ]](http://i572.photobucket.com/albums/ss162/RustyBill/website/icon/photo.gif)
![WWW article [ World Wide Web icon ]](http://i572.photobucket.com/albums/ss162/RustyBill/website/icon/web.gif)
The gradients used in highlights and backgrounds were created using the Multipoint Color Gradient Generator
![WWW article [ World Wide Web icon ]](http://i572.photobucket.com/albums/ss162/RustyBill/website/icon/web.gif)
![WWW article [ World Wide Web icon ]](http://i572.photobucket.com/albums/ss162/RustyBill/website/icon/web.gif)
Web Browsers & Testing
Most testing was done using my default web browser, Netscape
![WWW article [ World Wide Web icon ]](http://i572.photobucket.com/albums/ss162/RustyBill/website/icon/web.gif)
![WWW article [ World Wide Web icon ]](http://i572.photobucket.com/albums/ss162/RustyBill/website/icon/web.gif)
![WWW article [ World Wide Web icon ]](http://i572.photobucket.com/albums/ss162/RustyBill/website/icon/web.gif)
IncludeHTML
![WWW article [ World Wide Web icon ]](http://i572.photobucket.com/albums/ss162/RustyBill/website/icon/web.gif)
Website Management
File transfers for the website have been accomplished using WS_FTP, both the early freeware version (WS_FTP) and the current commercial program (WS_FTP Home). Information about WS_FTP can be found at Ipswitch Software
![WWW article [ World Wide Web icon ]](http://i572.photobucket.com/albums/ss162/RustyBill/website/icon/web.gif)
Occasionally, links on a website will stop working; the referenced page likely having been renamed, deleted or moved. Locating these broken links can be a pain - unless you use a utility like Xenu's Link Sleuth
![WWW article [ World Wide Web icon ]](http://i572.photobucket.com/albums/ss162/RustyBill/website/icon/web.gif)
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