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76:(EDS) in September 1991 and was unable to continue development for Blue Wave Software. Blue Wave Software dissolved and Hatchew started Cutting Edge Computing to continue development. Hatchew was later involved in a serious car accident, and was unable to continue development of the system past 1993.
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Another Y2K fix was created and released in
October 2005. This fix is a patch to the binary date library provided by the Borland International C++ libraries that the Blue Wave Door and Reader programs are compiled with. This fix is considered to be a cleaner solution to the problem because the actual
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In
October 1999, Dale Shipp created a fix called BWREPFIX that corrects the problem on the users end. This solution uses a batch file in the archiver section rather than calling the archiver directly. In the batch file, the outbound message dates are fixed and then the batch file calls the archiver
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and other networks that generated large volumes of mail. It allowed users to download all of their mail and messages, read and edit them offline, and then upload any replies. This reduced the amount of time they spent on line. The name "Blue Wave" originally referred to the client software, but as
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date problem hit Blue Wave, like so many other programs. The Blue Wave Reader that the end users use to read their mail exhibited the problem by the addition of a numerical digit leading the TO: name in the header. The Blue Wave Door on the BBS' exhibited the problem by creating three digit years
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program that would convert the BBS message system to a Blue Wave format. The first version was released to the public 20 September 1990, marketed via their company, Blue Wave
Software. Doors for most PC BBS systems were made available over time.
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system. It remained less widely used than Blue Wave until new QWK doors appeared covering many of the same BBS systems. The Blue Wave client software was then adapted to allow it to read and write QWK as well as Blue Wave files.
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where there should have been a two digit year. Several fixes not directly related to Blue Wave were created but they worked on the actual messages after they had been imported into the local message bases.
52:. The two developed the concept at the picnic and started development immediately. Rappuhn concentrated on the offline reader, while Hatchew concentrated on the
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Like QWK, Blue Wave message files consisted of a selection of seemingly randomly named files. Messages themselves were stored in the main
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library is repaired internally which means that this method doesn't require any external tools to perform the fixing of the dates.
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file, supported by an information file and a file containing the headers for each message, and a pointer to the body in the DAT.
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new clients were written that supported the same file format, the name came to refer primarily to the format itself.
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Blue Wave developed after Fred
Rappuhn and George Hatchew met at a picnic arranged for local area
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The Blue Wave packet format has also been supported by other offline mail readers such as
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291:"The Blue Wave Offline Mail System Mail Packet File Structures Revision Level 2.01"
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which then packs the messages for transmitting to the BBS.
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Pollard, Martin; Hatchew, George (18 January 1994).
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was created in 1987, but only ran on the commercial
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60:Another offline mail packet format called
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72:Rappuhn was hired as a programmer by
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1:
20:Blue Wave 3.20 welcome screen
315:"What are QWK and BlueWave?"
260:The SouthEast Star Mail HUB
230:The SouthEast Star Mail HUB
35:users, especially users of
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295:Help-Site Computer Manuals
172:"MultiMail Offline Reader"
319:alt.usenet.offline-reader
74:Electronic Data Systems
31:that was popular among
336:Bulletin board systems
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199:"Bertogg/Bbwave2mbox"
33:bulletin board system
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341:Offline mail readers
266:on 29 September 2007
236:on 30 September 2007
29:offline mail reader
147:SOUP (file format)
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142:QWK (file format)
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321:. 27 March 2014.
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301:on 21 March 2006
297:. Archived from
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303:. Retrieved
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256:"BW-Y2K.ZIP"
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305:10 February
177:SourceForge
80:Description
330:Categories
183:1 February
158:References
105:bwave2mbox
101:Wolverine
97:MultiMail
25:Blue Wave
210:11 April
136:See also
93:BlueMail
54:BBS door
270:14 June
240:16 June
152:ZipNews
111:files.
66:PCBoard
44:History
37:FidoNet
204:GitHub
99:, and
50:sysops
307:2006
272:2007
242:2007
212:2016
185:2012
119:The
109:mbox
86:.DAT
121:Y2K
115:Y2K
62:QWK
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