It's in limbo. McDiarmid licensed it to Puzzle Factory, who have the rights to sell it. But the guy behind Puzzle Factory died or something, and McDiarmid hasn't been able to contact the wife, so cannot get the rights back.
Thanks for the info copse. I wondered what had happened to The Puzzle Factory. Do you know if it's possible to get in touch with McDiarmid?
From
this thread:
If anyone's interested, I've also got disassemblies of Resource V6.06's executable and library files. It's a program that would benefit from some bug fixes and fixes to its Help File system. Let me know if anyone's interested and I'll post them.
What state are they in? Can they be assembled into a fully working version of Resource v6.06? Are they disassembled comprehensively with decent labels, or are they pretty raw?
I'll dig them out and post them in this thread to keep them separate from the AMOS stuff.
My main interest was to get at the Help text so I could get it organised into a usable format. All the detailed stuff is in that Help text, not in the manual. Especially when it comes to macros and strings. So I abandoned any further work when I'd got what I needed. The result is in that AMOS Extensions download in case you missed it in the detail. I couldn't have written the macros for the AMOS Extension disassemblies without it.
From a vague memory, the library disassemblies are pretty much complete. The Resource disassembly needs a lot of work as there are two huge offsets tables that are relocated to absolute addresses in its initialisation. Many of the resulting target addresses point into the middle of code instructions (self-modifying the effective address or register, tut, tut, tut...) which really screws the disassembly! Both the main executable and the libraries use a common data area referenced from A5 (mostly). So they all really need a Resource Symbol Library created to take them any further. Fill it in as we find out what each offset is used for. Some are obvious but there's a stack of ones that can only really be determined by a lot of tedious hard work... I may get back to it at some time in the distant future but I'm up to my neck in AMOS for a while yet.
My posts may be a bit few and far between for a while as my back needs some urgent medical attention. So I'm regretting my phobia for laptops as, lying down, there's only so much reading and watching videos I can put up with!
And all my stuff's on this desktop PC...