YOU MUST READ AND AGREE TO THIS DOCUMENT IN ITS ENTIRETY 
OR REMOVE ALL OF THIS FROM YOUR COMPUTER NOW.

Licence for C:\AppleX\PROJECTS\TIME
The "What Time Is It?" Project
(C) Copyright Bill Buckels 2008
All Rights Reserved.

March, 2008

Build Environment

AppleX MS-DOS cross-development environment for 8086 and compatible
computers Preconfigured for Windows XP including:

Manx Aztec C65 for the Apple II ProDOS
Version 3.2b 15 July 1986
Target: Apple II Native Code
Target OS: ProDOS 8 operating system 
Compiler: Aztec C65 v3.2a 6-30-86 

AppleX is available for downLoad at:

http://www.clipshop.ca/Aztec/

Overview

The "What Time Is It?" Project is a complete Aztec C project which is
configured for the AppleX build environment for Windows XP (MS-DOS) which
will enable you to produce efficient 6502 machine-language programs which
will, when properly built, load and run from PRODOS 8 on an Apple IIe or
in an Apple II emulator, and which will exit cleanly to PRODOS when done.

Licence for The "What Time Is It?" Project

All my work is copyrighted and belongs to me.

The source code and all related files in this project were written and
produced in their entirety by me and me alone (with the exception of the
routines that are provided with the compiler and the bootstrap for the disk
image). This work represents significant original development that most
could not probably have done on their own.

I, Bill Buckels, herewith grant you a non-exclusive and conditional licence to use any and
all of my work included with the "What Time Is It?" Project for whatever use
you deem fit, provided you do not take credit for my work, and that you
leave my copyright notices intact in all of it.

If you augment my work you must always also include your own personal
copyright notice but it may never be a GNU public licence or anything else
that resembles fascism or totalitarianism and world-domination or a
commercial or educational licence either. You can use my stuff commercially
or for GNU with my conditions intact if they let you (they should since
copyright is for authors and the public and I belong to both groups) but you
must never copyright my work with any company copyright whatsoever; just
your own personal copyright like mine and leave mine in place. That is the
way copyright is intended to work and that is the way that it will work with
my stuff unless I selectively decide otherwise.

In addition you must agree that I am not liable in any way shape or form for
any damage from the use of any of this in any way whatsoever.

If you do not agree with all of the aforementioned conditions of use or if
your use is not Fair then remove all of this from your computer now.

Bill Buckels
bbuckels@mts.net
March 2008

(C) Copyright Bill Buckels 2008
All Rights Reserved.

Compiler Licencing

I, Bill Buckels, am the licence holder for a single copy of this compiler
(Manx Aztec C65 for the Apple II). which has no current commercial value
since it targets the obsolete Apple II platform.

This compiler is available for downloading at http://www.clipshop.ca/Aztec/

I purchased this compiler in and about 1990 from Manx Software Systems, the
copyright holder, before they went out of business and disappeared.I cannot
provide you with a legally licenced copy since all of my attempts to contact
the copyright holders for permission to redistribute this compiler have
failed.

In using or distributing this compiler, you must acknowledge and accept
complete responsibility and all liability as the result of your use and/or
distribution. You must further agree that I, Bill Buckels, am not liable or
responsible in any way for the results of said use or distribution. You are
solely and 100 percent responsible for your use and distribution of this
compiler.

If you do not agree with all of the conditions stated in this document or if
your use is not Fair then remove all of this from your computer now.

Background 

Manx Software Systems of Shrewsbury, New Jersey, produced C compilers
beginning in the 1980's targeted at professional developers for a variety of
platforms from C64's and Apple II's up to and including PC's and Mac's.

Throughout the 1990's they continued to make their Aztec C. As their market
share dropped, they tried to make the move to specializing in embedded
systems development, but it was too late. They disappeared a few years back
following the loss of market presence of some of their target platforms
(various 6502 machines, Atari and Amiga 68xxx, etc.).

It is not clear to me exactly when they disappeared, and all of my recent
attempts to contact them or their former developers (Jim Goodnow II, Mike
Spille) to obtain permission for redistribution of their compilers have
failed. My research also indicates that other people have been unsuccessful
for quite some time in contacting Manx for the purposes of permission for
redistribution of their now-discontinued compilers.

Please email me (Bill Buckels) at bbuckels@mts.net if you can provide me
with valid contact information as to the whereabouts of the Copyright
holder(s) for Aztec C. Manx may be gone, but since there is no such thing as
Abandonware in the legal context and the Copyright holder(s) are presumably
out there somewhere, it would be best to have their formal permission, and
better yet to have them release Aztec C into the Public Domain.

Disclaimer and Conditions of Use

I, Bill Buckels, do not guarantee, or warranty, in whole or in part, any of
this, and further do not offer support for any of this. All of this is
provided as-is.

Further, I am not liable in any way for the results of your use of any of
this, nor will I provide any technical or other support beyond what I have
already provided you with here, except as I deem fit. If you contact me for
support without making what I deem a reasonable effort research and to solve
any problem yourself first, please do not be surprised if I scold you, if
you get a reply at all.

You are solely and 100 percent responsible for your use of any of this. If
you do not agree remove all of this from your computer now.

Bill Buckels
bbuckels@mts.net

Copyright and Conditions of Use 

I have not been successful to date in finding the former or current
Copyright holder(s) of Aztec C to obtain permission to redistribute Manx
Software Systems discontinued Aztec C compilers for now-obsolete platforms
for educational purposes by researchers and enthusiasts. I will keep trying
to get permission. I have no idea whether or not Manx Software Systems went
out of business without explicitly transferring ownership of their Copyright
on Aztec C or if the Copyright was transferred back to the original
author(s) (Jim Goodnow II, et al).

Despite the fact that I have not been successful to date in my many attempts
to contact the Copyright holders of Aztec C whoever they may be, if you use
this compiler and its associated programs and files, your use must be Fair
as it applies to Manx's Copyright on this compiler. If you do not agree, or
if your use is not Fair remove all of this from your computer now.

Fair use is a right granted to the public on all copyrighted work.

Manx Software Systems native Aztec C compilers for Apple II development have
been available for free download from the Internet for a number of years as
diskimages for Apple II emulators, apparently without permission for
redistribution, apparently without any conditions of use and apparently
without Copyright infringement action being sought by Manx Software Systems
or anyone else against said distribution.

Aside from my Aztec C website (http://www.clipshop.ca/Aztec/) which offers
the Aztec C Apple II and C64 cross-compilers for MS-DOS and the MS-DOS C86
8086 native mode compiler (all 3 which are licenced to me), at least two
free internet distributions exist for native mode Aztec C Compilers for the
Apple II; one for Apple DOS 3.3 and the other for Apple ProDOS 8. A third
free internet distribution exists for Aztec C for the now-obsolete Commodore
Amiga. Aztec C for CPM is also distributed freely.

I have, in spite of the afore stated reservations, decided to follow suit
with others in offering Manx's obsolete Aztec C compilers (including this
one) for free download from my website (http://www.clipshop.ca/Aztec/), with
the caveat that the use of these compilers (including this one) must be Fair
as it applies to the Copyright of these compilers by Manx Software Systems.

From my point of view, if you use these compilers (including this one) as an
enthusiast or a researcher for non-commercial purposes with the intent of
educating yourself or others your use is arguably Fair as it applies to
Manx's Copyright on these compilers unless and until a legal enforcement by
Manx Software Systems or whoever currently owns the Copyright says
otherwise. If you do not agree or if your use is not Fair then remove all of
this from your computer now.

(C) Copyright Bill Buckels 2008
All Rights Reserved.

With this Aztec Apple II compiler, you will also receive a large body of my
own work. This work represents significant original development that most
could not probably have done on their own.

All my work is copyrighted and belongs to me.

I herewith grant you a non-exclusive and conditional licence to use any and
all of my work included with this Apple II compiler for whatever use you deem
fit, provided you do not take credit for my work, and that you leave my
copyright notices intact in all of it.

If you augment my work you must always also include your own personal
copyright notice but it may never be a GNU public licence or anything else
that resembles fascism or totalitarianism and world-domination or a
commercial or educational licence either. You can use my stuff commercially
or for GNU with my conditions intact if they let you (they should since
copyright is for authors and the public and I belong to both groups) but you
must never copyright my work with any company copyright whatsoever; just
your own personal copyright like mine and leave mine in place. That is the
way copyright is intended to work and that is the way that it will work with
my stuff unless I selectively decide otherwise.

In addition you must agree that I am not liable in any way shape or form for
any damage from the use of any of this in any way whatsoever.

If you do not agree with all of the aforementioned conditions of use or if
your use is not Fair then remove all of this from your computer now.

Bill Buckels
bbuckels@mts.net
March 2008

(C) Copyright Bill Buckels 2008
All Rights Reserved.

End of Document