                                 Credits
                                 =======
                                 
                                 
The following people have influenced SVGATextMode in some way or another, or
have contributed to it in a major way. Don't be offended if you're not in,
just let me know if you think you've been wrongly omitted.


The entire Linux Developers' community:
    Without them, this program would be useless, since there would be no
    Linux...      Hip! Hip! ... Hop

Original idea: Wouter Gadeyne (Wouter.Gadeyne@p24.f1906.n291.z2.fidonet.org
    or gadeynew@sebb.bel.alcatel.be), who wrote the first program for the
    Cirrus Logic card, and it made me so jealous that I changed it to
    support S3 as well. He is also responsible for many tips on how to make
    the code more "C-like". And for constantly nagging about me not going to
    finish it up into something distributable. So I REALLY wanted to prove
    him wrong.

First Beta testers: (for ET4000 support and general features):
    Kris Coryn (Kris.Coryn@p13.f1906.n291.z2.fidonet.org) and Lieven
    Gesquiere (gesquiel@sebb.bel.alcatel.be). Seeing it run on my S3 made
    THEM so jealous that they wanted it for their ET4000 as well. They also
    allowed me to test it on their machines, with all the accompanying
    system shutdowns, reboots, filesystem checks, etc.).

Hardware: Kris 'McCore' Coryn provided an amazing amount of video cards for
    me to test. His continuous feedback has a big impact on the performance
    of SVGATextMode. 


Authors of programs used directly or indirectly in this package:

Greg Lehey (grog@lemis.de), author of vgaset. He sent me a corrected version
    of vgaset, and allowed me to include it here.
    
Eugene Crosser & Andries Brouwer (aeb@cwi.nl), authors of "setfont".

Frank Klemm (Frank.Klemm@hpux.rz.uni-jena.de), author of "freq", the ICD2061
    programming tool (see the "contrib/diamond" directory).

Andreas Beck (becka@hp.rz.uni-duesseldorf.de), author of the Video 7 mercury
    clock setting program (derived from Frank Klemm's version for the
    Diamond cards). (see the "contrib/v7mercury" directory)

Kenneth Albanowski (kjahds@kjahds.com), author of Ultra2Linux.  Also author
    of TONS of good suggestions, like the "Terminals" line, and many, many
    others. Also author of the DOS port of the mode grabber.

The XFREE development team, from whom I used some code for pixel clock
    selection (well, actually a lot of it).


And lots more good and usefull suggestions from (in no significant order):

- most of the above
- David M. Meyer <dmm0t@rincewind.mech.virginia.edu>
- Kenneth J. Hendrickson <kjh@seas.smu.edu>
- Russell Marks <mr216@greenwich.ac.uk>  (many new text modes)
- Piercarlo Grandi <piercarl@sabi.demon.co.uk>
- Roland Meier <meier@hp56.rbg.informatik.th-darmstadt.de)
  ET4000W32 wizardry, and valuable help with doc/README.ET4000.AltClockSelect.
- Andreas Beck <becka@hp.rz.uni-duesseldorf.de>  (v7mercury program)
- Warwick Allison <warwick@cs.uq.oz.au> (motivation!)
- Carsten Zimmermann <zimmermann@zimnet.hanse.de>  (more new text modes)
- Alessandro Rubini <rubini@ipvvis.UNIPV.IT> (lots of help on console/terminal
  stuff (VT_RESIZE!), lots of good ideas, and what more)
- Alexander JOLK <p6mqt001@cicrp.jussieu.fr>  (more text modes)
- Reuben Sumner <rasumner@undergrad.math.uwaterloo.ca>  (obscure ATI problem
  fix, automatic resizing of active VT's, SUID terminal protection fix)
- Jason Yanowitz <yanowitz@eternity.cs.umass.edu> (help in fixing the
  ICD2061 problem.)
- Michael Chew <mchew@uclink2.Berkeley.EDU>
- Jean-Louis DEBERT <jldebert@zen.dedal.fr.net> (very thorough problem
  reporting on ICD2061 problem)
- Stephen Lee <sl14@crux3.cit.cornell.edu> (author of the dialog-based mode
  selection script)
- Stefan Dalibor <Stefan.Dalibor@informatik.uni-erlangen.de>

S3 Inc. sent me an S3-805 data book, and that really got me going. Thanks.

Infomagic deserves a big thank you for distributing their "Linux developers'
Resource" CDROM-set at a ridiculously affordable price. It is the best
alternative for those poor bastards who don't have direct Internet-access
(like me). You allowed the "un-wired" part of the world to get their hands
on Linux, too! The Infomagic CD's are like a pocket-size FTP site.

And of course: BARCO, for providing me with an invaluable E-mail account.
It's been a rather busy one lately...
