I recently commented on a post on Mastodon about Wordstar by Tom Jennings (yes, the one associated with FidoNet). In his post Tom extolled the virtues of Wordstar for what a good piece of software it was and I completely agree. Not only was it good for its time but it compares quite favorably against modern software. It needed to be configurable because software which ran on CP/M often required customization of the display and printer settings to match the hardware connected to the user's machine. It was also quite robust. I last used it around 1989 and I don't recall it ever crashing. I cannot say the same about any modern word processors I use. Finally, it was remarkably full featured for its time. I recall being excited to discover that it had a column editing mode which at the time I had only seen on IBM's PE (Personal Editor).
I appreciate both Mastodon and Bluesky because they allow me to see what favorite authors, scientists, engineers, and artists are up to at the moment.
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