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who started studying <strong>astrology</strong> in <strong>the</strong> late 1960s, had purchased a copy of Michael<br />

Erlewine’s 1980 Manual of Computer Programming for Astrologers. Within two weeks,<br />

Halloran had figured out how to bypass <strong>the</strong> typographical errors in this <strong>book</strong> and<br />

released into <strong>the</strong> public domain an <strong>astrology</strong> calculation program that ran in <strong>the</strong> Basic<br />

interpreter on CP/M computers.<br />

Mac programmer David C. Oshel discovered Halloran’s program and rewrote it<br />

in modular form, which allowed Halloran to add chart comparison to its capabilities.<br />

Version 7, also called ASTROLPC.BAS, was <strong>the</strong> last version released with source<br />

code. When versions 8 and 9 added support for saved charts, a dating service search<br />

engine, a transits list, and an on-screen graphic wheel that even <strong>the</strong> commercial programs<br />

did not have at that time, Halloran began charging a modest registration fee to<br />

access <strong>the</strong> program’s more advanced features. By this time, in 1986, IBM PC and XT<br />

clones were becoming popular, and Halloran ported <strong>the</strong> program and compiled it for<br />

<strong>the</strong> IBM PC. In 1987, in response to a complaint from Matrix, Michael Erlewine’s<br />

company, Halloran deleted <strong>the</strong> calculation routines taken from Erlewine’s <strong>book</strong> and<br />

replaced <strong>the</strong>m with faster, more accurate astronomical routines. In addition to collecting<br />

shareware registration fees, Halloran sold many program copies from a classified ad<br />

in <strong>the</strong> back of Computer Shopper magazine, from which <strong>astrology</strong> magazine editors such<br />

as Richard Nolle and Kenneth Irving discovered and reviewed <strong>the</strong> program.<br />

Besides improving his shareware calculation program, Halloran wrote an astrological<br />

research program called TimeSearch that reverse-engineers an <strong>astrology</strong> chart.<br />

In collaboration with o<strong>the</strong>r programmers, such as John Molfese, author of <strong>the</strong> Astrodynes<br />

program, James Davis, author of <strong>the</strong> Self Search and Handwriting Analyzer programs,<br />

and at <strong>the</strong> urging of <strong>the</strong> late Joseph Hettiger, owner of a Texas company selling<br />

<strong>astrology</strong> programs for <strong>the</strong> Commodore 64 computer, Halloran wrote his first report<br />

writer program, LifeTrends, with transits interpretations by San Antonio radio<br />

astrologer Deanna Christensen. By 1989, Halloran was able to quit his technical<br />

writer/quality assurance job with an HMO data processing department to create and<br />

sell <strong>astrology</strong> software full time.<br />

In June 1990, Halloran Software announced <strong>the</strong> first version of AstrolDeluxe,<br />

which proceeded to sell one thousand copies in <strong>the</strong> first six months. This program<br />

added color printing and advanced calculations, such as progressed and return charts,<br />

as well as Chiron and <strong>the</strong> major asteroids. In <strong>the</strong> same year, Halloran began a productive<br />

collaboration with astrologer/journalism student Janice Barsky, who had written<br />

original natal, compatibility, and transits interpretations on her word processor and<br />

was cutting and pasting inexpensive reports for clients who could not pay for a professional<br />

reading. Out of this collaboration came <strong>the</strong> StarMatch and Natal Professional<br />

report writer programs. The last MS-DOS-based report writer was <strong>the</strong> hobbyist-priced<br />

Natal Profiles program with interpretations by Hollywood-based metaphysical<br />

astrologer Carolyne Lacy.<br />

Microsoft’s Windows operating system began to loom on <strong>the</strong> horizon, so while<br />

Halloran worked to finish Natal Professional, he began collaborating with Robert<br />

Brown, a Gemini friend who already owned 20 Windows programs, on AstrolDeluxe<br />

for Windows, <strong>the</strong> first copies of which sold in December 1992. The Windows environ-<br />

Halloran Software<br />

THE ASTROLOGY BOOK<br />

[291]

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