Rich Salz reminded me of the name of the system I was thinking of -- Atex.
Given my later interactions with their editorial and IT departments, I'm
not sure that Carnex was in the production system there (particularly given
the Gunkies description). I never saw it but it could have been before
anyone I knew was working there. By the mid/late 80's, they were using
Atex for most things.
FWIW: By the mid/late 1980s, the IBM PC had been out for a few years, and
many people had access to DOS systems. At the Globe, their Atex System had
a 300-baud modem on it (and it was 300 baud, not 1200 because the IT folks
at the Globe claimed that the Atex required something special about that
model modem -- I never knew what -- I've always guessed it was something to
do with the maintenance contract not technical but it was not my job -- I
just took it as a wonderment and dealt with it).
But the big feature Atex offered the Globe was it allowed the reporters
to upload and spool their stories, and then the Atex set the type for the
editors independent of the filing. But the reporters had to file their
story using a very rigid format convention that they all hated (*i.e.*, ask
humans to conform to the needs of the computer, not the other way round).
By then, most of the reporters used a PC and a simple word processor to
edit and then upload to Atex via a terminal emulator program such as
ProComm or Kermit.
The Atex side was exceedingly dumb and unforgiving. If the user or the
system made any error, Atex would toss the story (*i.e.,* not put anything
in the spool), and there was no communications protection so that line
noise could cause issues. I never saw their side, but I gather Atex was not
too friendly to the editors, as there was no way to find out what had been
accepted remotely, so they often had to ask the reporters to file the
stories multiple times.
My sister was working as an occasional stringer for them, given her
statehouse connections. I got her to get me the specs for the Atex
input system, and I wrote some scripts for her to use the Masscomp box to
prep her stories for them and send them off to the Atex System. I became
an informal help desk for several of her reporter and photographer friends.
:-) I have some interesting stories WRT to all that - but they are not
particularly computer-based -- the Richard Reed (the shoe bomber) story and
its famous picture you have all undoubtedly seen is one of my favorites.
Clem
ᐧ
On Wed, Jan 10, 2024 at 2:25 AM Lars Brinkhoff <lars(a)nocrew.org> wrote:
Clem Cole <clemc(a)ccc.com> writes:
The software varied greatly, depending on the
target customer. For
instance, by the early 80s, the Boston Globe's input system was still
terrible - even though the computers had gotten better. I had a couple
of
friends working there, and they used to b*tch
about it.
Here's something about Camex used at Boston Globe.
https://gunkies.org/wiki/Camexec
Any comments or additions to this?
I occasionally bug Speciner about scanning his printouts.