For the moment I'm not interested in actual disks (virtu, virtue, virtual).
Just unsorted directory listings by e-mail are fine (copyright problems, etc.).
Please add any info about The Software that seems appropriate for a Museum:
who is the owner (of the license), is it an original disk or a copy,
what is on the label (GIF or JPEG of the label or even of the full disk is also
welcome), is it a US or a Japanese version, etc. I will put all this on the
page, including a thank you to the provider. If you have any other ideas about
what The Software Museum should show, please let me know.
P.S.1: I use "DIR A:\ /S > C:\PCDOS320.DIR" to create a file PCDOS320.DIR
in the root directory of my C: that holds the output of the dir-command.
If there are more disks, use ">>" instead of ">" for the next disks, to
append the output to the same file. Then e-mail this file, either as
text or as an attachement.
P.S.2: If you can, also include the Copyright-message from the main file (for
DOS that's COMMAND.COM), I like to include that in the header of the
listing. I use Vernon D. Buerg's LIST.COM to read the Copyright-area in
the COMMAND.COM. So "LIST A:COMMAND.COM", switch on line wrapping,
"F copyr", and just copy what's there. You'll find an example of an
IBM/Microsoft copyright message in the header of my PC-DOS 3.20 page.
Thanks!