Friendlyware

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FriendlyWare was a set of 30 computer programs that were written in BASIC. There were several releases of FriendlyWare. A review of some its software appeared in the April 1983 issue of PC World magazine.[1]

Reception and distribution

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These programs, which were bundled with some IBM personal computers sold by hardware vendors, included computer games, business software and personal data analysis programs.[2]

The original copy, titled FriendlyWare I, was distributed on a 5.25" floppy disk with a green label. It had one arcade game (Brick Out) and other family software, including strategy games like Reversi.[3] The FriendlyWare PC Introductory Set was among the first games available for the PC. It was a best seller for three months with little competition.[4] The FriendlyWare Arcade pack came on a floppy disk with a red label and contained eight additional arcade-style games. The BusinessWare release came with a blue label and contained simple business software.

FriendlyWare was published in 1983 by a company named Friendlysoft. Over 29,000 copies of the original FriendlyWare were eventually sold.

FriendlySoft

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FriendlySoft was started by Michael Yaw, an investor who also owned several Domino's Pizza stores. The software was written by a team of four programmers; who were paid royalties on the sales. Development was completed on some of the earlier IBM PCs. One of these computers was a PC with an innovative CGA card (Color Graphics Adapter).

Cultural impact

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FriendlyWare was briefly referenced in Homestar Runner's "Strong Bad Email #65",[5] with a subsequent playthrough of a number of the games in "Disk 4 of 12 - FriendlyWare".[6] and on "Disk 4 of 12 - Friendlyware Attendum",[7]

FriendlyWare was one of the first pieces of software to implement a boss key,[8] a shortcut to obscure the nature of the software from superiors in the workplace,[4] Enhancements to this feature were still noteworthy in 2014.[9]

References

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