Acknowledgements:
-----------------

Richard Sargeant writes (August 18th, 1997):

    Credit to Robert for conceiving the application, which as a
    matter of interest was started on Saturday, 14th May, 1994.

    Thanks to everyone who has been involved with the beta testing
    of my first release of TTFN, which I have been working on since
    its source code was released along with Robert's final version.

    Good luck to Robert and Carol Orwin, wherever you are now! :)

    A big thank-you to the maintainers of the two major internet
    starter software packages, containing PD (or is it freeware?)
    applications all in one bundle to help new users get on line.

    A major new release of Acornet (0.20) is in the pipeline, as
    I write this, which is being co-ordinated by Carol Carpenter.

    This application was built with the aid of files from OSLib.
    OSLib is a complete RISC OS library for C, assembler and ALF,
    and is a creation of Jonathan Coxhead.  Highly commended!


Robert Orwin writes (October 29th, 1994):

    Thanks go to the following people:

        Graham Allan     - For writing !NewsBase, without which this
                           application is somewhat less than useless.

        Richard Sargeant - For helping me out with various aspects of WIMP
                           programming, giving me a head start on the text
                           display routines, writing the odd routine in
                           machine code & a bit of detective work!

        Kevin Yang
        Michael Bergman  - For writing unix "kiss" upon which uuexplode
                           is based.

        Martin Glanvill  - For porting "kiss" to RiscOS as uuexplode
                           (modified by myself to do filename translation
                           to RiscOS).  I did try to contact you for
                           permission to include it but I never got a reply!

        A *big* thank you to the authors of DeskLib, without
        which this program would probably never have got off
        the ground and not forgetting John Stonier, James
        Woodman, Ian Stocks and David Walker who put up with
        some *very* buggy versions while testing the software...