CHECK.COM        2176  05-06-93  [Check 1 of 2] Use this to check the CRC
                               | values of files you obtain from the library.
                               | Compare the values you obtain with CHECK
                               | against those listed in each "disk doc".
CHECK.DOC         768  05-06-93  [Check 2 of 2]
CPM000.DOC       7936  07-13-94  This is the description of the disk contents.
DE-LBR.COM       6272  05-06-93  [De-Library 1 of 2] A utility to quickly
                               | extract all members of a .LBR file.
DE-LBR.DOC        256  05-06-93  [De-Library 2 of 2]
DU-V89.ARK      13056  05-06-93  ver. 8.9 This disk utility allows you to
                               | modify any byte on a disk. With DU you may
                               | even rebuild a damaged disk directory. This
                               | program is not recommended for novices --
                               | they should first try to recover a damaged
                               | disk with NewSWeeP. Never work on your only
                               | copy of a disk and never practice on a disk
                               | you really need. The program and
                               | documentation are stored in an archive file
                               | to save disk space. Use UNARC.
EDFILE.COM      11008  05-06-93  ver. 1/10/84 [EDFILE 1 of 2] Modify any disk
                               | file, either in ASCII or hexadecimal, with
                               | ease. So easy-to-use that even novices can
                               | patch their software. Excellent for getting
                               | rid of an extra end-of-file marker (^Z or 1A
                               | hex) in your data file as well.
EDFILE.DOC      20352  05-06-93  ver. 1/10/84 [EDFILE 2 of 2]
FBAD57.COM       1792  05-06-93  ver. 5.7 [Findbad 1 of 2] Finds all the bad
                               | blocks on a disk and builds a directory entry
                               | to ensure those blocks cannot be accidentally
                               | used. Recommended for use on every disk
                               | immediately after it is formatted
                               | (initialized). An absolute must for any disk
                               | which will hold permanent archival copies of
                               | your files and data.
FBAD57.DOC       6144  05-06-93  ver. 5.7 [Findbad 2 of 2]
FBAD58X.COM      4736  05-06-93  ver. 5.8 [Findbad for CPM+ 1 of 2] Modified
                               | for CP/M 3.0 systems, this marks out bad
                               | sectors on your disks so they cannot be used.
FBAD58X.DOC      1280  05-06-93  ver. 5.8 [Findbad for CPM+ 2 of 2]
NSWEEP.DOC      28672  05-06-93  ver. 2.07 [NewSWeeP 2 of 2]
NSWP207.COM     11776  05-06-93  ver. 2.07 [NewSWeeP 1 of 2] Dave Rand's
                               | fabulous file management utility. For anyone
                               | who needs to copy, view, print, rename, move,
                               | squeeze, unsqueeze, or erase files, either
                               | individually or in groups. NewSWeeP can also
                               | change the file attributes. On a CP/M 2.2
                               | machine, will recover files from a disk with
                               | the dreaded "BDOS Error" -- just press return
                               | every time you get the "BDOS Error" message.
                               | What NewSWeeP can't recover is probably gone
                               | forever and not worth spending the time on.
RECVR21.COM      3328  05-06-93  ver. 2.1 [Recover 1 of 3] Unerase files which
                               | have been erroneously erased. RECVR21 is for
                               | CP/M 2.2 machines; RECVR21X is for CP/M 3.0
                               | machines.
RECVR21.DOC       640  05-06-93  ver. 2.1 [Recover 3 of 3]
RECVR21X.COM     5888  05-06-93  ver. 2.1 [Recover 2 of 3]
SAPP20.COM       1920  05-06-93  ver. 2.0 [Sort And Pack 1 of 2] For both CP/M
                               | 2.2 and CPM+ systems, this allows you to
                               | update the directory of your disk so that all
                               | files are organized alphabetically and all
                               | unwanted (erased) files are PERMANENTLY and
                               | IRRETRIEVABLY eliminated.
SAPP20.DOC       7040  05-06-93  ver. 2.0 [Sort And Pack 2 of 2]
SD.DOC           7808  05-06-93  ver. 13.0 [SuperDirectory 2 of 2]
SD130.COM        5248  05-06-93  ver. 13.0 [SuperDirectory 1 of 2] Use this
                               | instead of the directory program which came
                               | with your computer. Be sure to read the
                               | documentation so you know about the many
                               | options which are available.
UNARC-CR.DOC     1280  05-06-93  [File Extraction 4 of 4] Abbreviated
                               | documentation for the UNARC, UNARCA, and UNCR
                               | programs written specifically for inclusion
                               | on this disk. Complete documentation, and
                               | most of the source code, is in the regular
                               | FOG-CPM library.
UNARC.COM        4736  05-06-93  [File Extraction 1 of 4] Extract the members
                               | of an archive (.ARK or .ARC) file. Remember,
                               | .ARK normally signifies that the members are
                               | for CP/M systems and .ARC normally signifies
                               | that the members are MS/PC-DOS systems.
UNARCA.COM       5760  05-06-93  [File Extraction 2 of 4] Extracts members of
                               | archive files on 8080 systems.
UNCR.COM         6400  05-06-93  [File Extraction 3 of 4] Extract files which
                               | have been compressed with either a crunch or
                               | a squeeze program. Remember, not all files
                               | with a `Z' as as the middle character of the
                               | extension are crunched -- this `Z' can also
                               | signify AZM source code.
