Publisher
MicroSabio
6520 Platt Ave., #104
West Hills, CA 91307 USA
web site: www.microsabio.com
email: info@microsabio.com
Authors
Jack McGregor has been developing and documenting A-Shell since 1994, and his authorship continues through the date of this publication. Ty Griffin is responsible for editing, formatting, spilling and pulbishing.
Support
MicroSabio provides extraordinarily good support for A-Shell and its other software products.
The first place to go with a question is the A-Shell forum, also known as the "Bulletin Board" (BBS) and the "A-Shell Network." You can search the forum by keyword, quite possibly finding the answer(s) you need. If not, then post your question there; you have to create an account to post a question, but doing so is painless and free. Email us if you have any problems or questions about signing up. All of the forums are moderated by MicroSabio, which means that if another user or developer does not answer your inquiry, MicroSabio staff will.
The main MicroSabio web site contains a variety of documentation, utility, and other support pages and downloads.
If you are not getting satisfaction via these support avenues, send MicroSabio an email message with your question and it will be answered promptly.
MicroSabio provides free email support for A-Shell operational issues to anyone with a current maintenance contract, and also within the first 90 days of purchasing a license. If you are running a demo copy for evaluation purposes, you can obtain free support on the BBS. If you would like a free pre-sales consultation, please contact MicroSabio. Either of these avenues is also a good way to discuss or initiate a request for more advanced support than what we can provide for free, such as help with developing subroutines, custom enhancements to A-Shell, etc. We pride ourselves on providing a higher level of support than most other software developers with whom you may be familiar, so don't hesitate to take advantage of it.
Software History
Following is a table showing A-Shell versions and dates published. If you are trying to track down when some particular thing was introduced or changed, you might try searching the A-Shell History documentation available on our download...documents page.
While Under Development |
At Formal Release | ||||
|
First Release |
|
Final Release* | ||
Version |
Build |
Date |
Version |
Build |
Date |
6.5 |
1600 |
Spring 2017 |
|
|
|
6.3 |
1500 |
November 2015 |
6.4 |
1545 |
March 2017 |
6.1 |
1300 |
Spring 2012 |
6.2 |
1421 |
Autumn 2015 |
5.1 |
1100 |
November 2007 |
6.0 |
1270 |
Autumn 2011 |
4.9 |
850 |
October 2003 |
5.0 |
997 |
Autumn 2007 |
4.7 |
796 |
February 2002 |
4.8 |
833 |
June 2003 |
4.5 |
652 |
November 1998 |
4.6 |
712 |
December 1999 |
4.2 |
507 |
August 1996 |
|
|
|
** |
468 |
August 1995 |
|
|
|
4.0 |
463 |
August 1995 |
|
|
|
3.0 |
310 |
August 1993 |
|
|
|
2.0 |
134 |
June 1991 |
|
|
|
1.0 |
100 |
February 1990 |
|
|
|
* Bug fixes continue to be applied past the date of the "final" release.
** John Bown was the original developer of A-Shell, and continued through build 467. With build 468, Jack McGregor took over developer responsibilities.
Documentation History
In early 2002, a new documentation system and format was adopted, and version numbers for the documentation—as well as printed manuals—were abandoned. Between 2002 and 2010, documentation was published in the CHM format, with PDF and DOC (MS Word) files available on request. Since 2010, all A-Shell documentation has been online in a customized HTML format.