920 lines
26 KiB
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920 lines
26 KiB
Plaintext
[This copy of Z*Mag 25-Oct-86 #2.3 is incomplete.--aa700]
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___________________________________
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ZMAGAZINE
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___________________________________
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October 25, 1986 Issue 2.3
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___________________________________
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Publisher/Cheif Editor:Ron Kovacs
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Assistant Editor:Larry Mihalik
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___________________________________
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Assistant Publishers:
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Ken Kirchner
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Larry Mihalik
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___________________________________
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Xx Editors Column
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Welcome to the constant changing
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face of New Jersey Zmag.
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In the weeks to come we will continue
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updating our issues to make them
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more interesting and diversified in
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topics to keep all our readers
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informed.
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Please call these New ZMAG Systems.
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THE SURF CITY BBS- 201-929-9351
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THE CULT BBS 201-727-2274
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SANDY BEACH 201-356-8411
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Due to the extended length of this
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weeks issue, The Zmag BBS Systems
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list will appear next week.
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___________________________________
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Xx COPS CRACK DOWN ON CRACKER BBS
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Maryland police have closed down
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what they describe as a -pirate
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bulletin board- called -The British
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Exchange- which they say was dealing
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in stolen phone codes from MCI
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Telecommunications Corp. and other
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phone companies.
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Police Cpl. Brian Uppercue told
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United Press International in Towson,
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Md., that a weekend raid in the
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Annapolis area resulted in the
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seizure of three complete computer
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systems and peripherals.
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The raid follows a three-month
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investigation, he said, in which it
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was determined the computer bulletin
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board system was used for the sharing
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of stolen phone access codes from
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MCI, Sprint and AT&T, as well as
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stolen credit card numbers.
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No arrests have been made because,
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reports UPI, -police did not catch
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the (crackers) using the stolen
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codes.-
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The case is to be referred to the
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Baltimore County grand jury, which
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will be asked to issue indictments,
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police say.
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This is the second cracker raid
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in Baltimore County since Sept. 12,
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when police seized two computer
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systems, but did not turn up the BBS
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itself.
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As reported in a September issue
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of Zmagazine, police have credited
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new -anti-fraud software- installed
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in MCI's switching system for
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enabling authorities to trace
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alleged crackers.
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___________________________________
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Xx COMPUTER CRIME BILL SIGNED INTO
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PUBLIC LAW
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Congress and the president want
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to take a bite out of computer
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crime, and that's just what they
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will do with the enactment into
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public law (99- 474) of the Computer
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Crime and Abuse Act (S 2281 and HR
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4718). President Reagan signed the
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bill into law late last week
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following numerous congressional
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hearings and compromises over a
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period of several years.
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Originally introduced in the
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Senate by Sen. Paul Trible (R- Va.)
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and in the House by Rep. William
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Hughes (D-N.J.), the measure will
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expand the protections against
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computer crime currently governed
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by the nation's first computer crime
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statute (18 USC 1030), enacted in
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the last days of the 98th Congress
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in 1984.
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This updated law will clarify
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specific portions of the first statute
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making it punishable for unauthorized
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users to electronically trespass into
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the federal government's computers
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or the computers of federally insured
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financial institutions with the
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purpose of intentionally destroying
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computer data or committing fraud
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via computer.
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In addition, the same offenses
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will be covered when the crime itself
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is interstate in nature, as well as
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permit prosecution of those who traffic
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in computer passwords belonging to
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others.
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Federal computer crime laws have
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notoriously lagged behind the
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technology. A majority of states
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have enacted their own laws, but
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computer crime transcends the
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boundaries of states, requiring an
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effective national law.
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___________________________________
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Xx CHICAGOAN SENTENCED FOR CRACKING
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A 25-year-old former college
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student was sentenced yesterday to
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30 months' probation and ordered to
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undergo counseling after he pleaded
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guilty to breaking into his college's
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computer and altering academic records
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for himself and 11 friends.
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Donald J. Moon of Oak Park, Ill.,
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pleaded guilty to one count of
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unlawfully entering Triton College's
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computer, one count of unlawfully
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altering records and two counts of
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theft, according to United Press
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International.
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Assistant Cook County Attorney
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Gael O'Brien said Moon apparently
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improved 37 grades and added 39
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course credits for himself and 11
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others. O'Brien said Moon could have
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been sentenced to a maximum of three
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years in prison if the case had gone
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to trial.
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UPI says Triton College lost
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about $6,400 in the fraud, which was
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uncovered after a three-month
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investigation by the Illinois State
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Police's computer fraud unit.
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___________________________________
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Xx Dis-Satisfied Customer
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TO: INFOWORLD
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SUBJECT: CANCELLATION OF SUBSCRIPTION
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FROM: MICHAEL L. CHAMPION (72477,3061)
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GENTLEMEN:
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I am so unhappy with your recent
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change of focus for INFOWORLD that
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I am requesting that you cancel my
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subscription, and compensate me for
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the remaining years that I have left.
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For the past several years INFOWORLD
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was without question the BEST
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periodical available that covered
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all aspects of the computer
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industry. You were praised, respected,
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and admired for the quality of your
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reviews and the depth of your
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reporting, and also for the
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knowledge of your conrtributors.
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Sadly, the same cannot be said of
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your current staff. John Gantz et
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al are irritating, arrogant, and
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ignorant, and Jonathan Sack's
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recent editorial shows that even
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the EDITOR does not seem to know
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what INFOWORLD is (or at least was).
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If you are going to become yet
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another advertiser-supported
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mouthpiece for the corporate computer
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market that is your right, but it
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is NOT the INFOWORLD that enticed
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me to a long-term subscription.
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There is no question why you
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have changed focus. You are part of
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the CW Communications conglomerate,
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which publishes the likes of
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MACWORLD and PC WORLD, among others.
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You call yourself a -PC Weekly-,
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where PC stands for PERSONAL
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COMPUTERS, yet you continually
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report on very expensive
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workstations, mainframes,
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minicomputers, and even machines
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that are scarcely beyond the rumor
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stage. And then you have the gall
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to catagorize such sophistocated
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REAL personal computers like the
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ATARI ST and the AMIGA as -low-end-
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home machines. ATARI calls the ST a
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PERSONAL COMPUTER, because that is
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exactly what it is. I find your
|
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current viewpoint paradoxical,
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since you yourself claimed the AMIGA
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the -hardware product of the year-,
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and the ATARI ST the -hardware
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value of the year- for 1985.
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You might find that you have so
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disappointed your PAYING subscribers
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that you will HAVE to give this rag
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away, just to find someone who
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considers it even worth reading. I
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no longer do.
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Please send refund to:
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Michael L. Champion
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EXP DATE: AUG, 1989
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___________________________________
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Xx Recomended Reading
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UNDERSTANDING EXPERT SYSTEMS
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By Mike Van Horn/The WaiteGroup
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Bantam Electronic Publishing
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233 pages; $14.95 (softcover)
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Reviewed by Ben Knox
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Expert systems are software
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packages which are able, in effect,
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to learn from information fed into
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them.
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Their main use has been in
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providing expert knowledge databases
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which non-experts can use to help
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them to reach a conclusion under
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given circumstances. For example, a
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doctor could use an expert system to
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help him narrow down the causes of
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symptoms to a single disease,
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particularly in an area in which he
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was not well versed.
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-Understanding Expert Systems- is
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a guide to the principles and
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practicalities of expert systems and
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their uses.
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The book begins by providing an
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overview of some of the uses to
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which expert systems have been put,
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using examples like computerised
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detectives, doctors and ore deposit
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prospectors.
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In the second chapter, some of
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the problems of setting up expert
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systems are dicussed. Perhaps the
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most difficult feat to achieve is to
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get a computer program, which is
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largely based on mathematical
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calculations, to make value, or
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heuristic, judgements. That is, to
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produce meaningful results from
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-wooly,- incomplete information and
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rules. There are limits to what an
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expert system can do, particularly
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where some form of common sense is
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required.
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Having covered all the easy bits,
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Mike Van Horn now gets down to the
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nitty gritty of explaining how to
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develop an expert system, initially
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only in terms of flow diagrams.
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From chapter four onwards, the
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book becomes fairly heavy going for
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the non-specialist reader. Things
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are not made easy by the choice of
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examples, which most people will find
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fairly esoteric.
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Chapter six gives an introduction
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to artificial intelligence (which is
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what expert systems are) programming
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languages, taking Lisp as the main
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example.
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The last two chapters look at the
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present and future: which expert
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system development packages are
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available for various machines, from
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a VAX to an IBM PC and compatibles
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and what developments are upcoming.
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-Understanding Expert Systems-
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undoubtedly provides a very
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complete and indepth introduction to
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the world of artificial intelligence
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and expert systems. I highly recommend
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it to anyone who is intending to buy
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or use an expert system, if only to
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show how much work has gone into
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programming it.
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Finally, even if you don't intend
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buying the book, pop into a book
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shop and read the last page (number
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222) to find out where computers are
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REALLY going.
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___________________________________
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Xx Bargain??
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ELBOW-DEEP IN THE COMPUTER BARGAIN
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BASEMENT
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by Ken White
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We've all read the stories about
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the person who lucked into the -deal
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of a lifetime- in the eternal search
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to add that one last piece of
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equipment to his or her Atari
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collection. I've read the stories
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myself with a bit of envy and some
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small amount of skepticism as well.
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I'm not saying these people were
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exactly...lying, you understand, but
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their luck seemed a bit of a fluke,
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not the kind of thing that happens to
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the average person.
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On the other hand, I'm beginning
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to think that I just may have
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miscalculated the effects of good
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fortune....
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About a month ago, I was
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wandering through a local Sears store
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and, as is my custom, I swung through
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the computer section; there's always
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the possibility of running into an
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-unadvertised special- (okay, so I
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don't read the Sears ad flyers...so
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shoot me...) on disks, or maybe some
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discontinued piece of software at
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an unbelievably low price. And Sears
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generally features one of the best
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bits of free entertainment in town
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- endless demonstrations of the
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Commodore 64 and 128. You can stand
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there and watch, sneering in an
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-oh-so-superior way. Pretty funny
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way to kill ten or fifteen minutes,
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if you know what I mean.
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Anyway, there I was in Sears,
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watching the endless Commodore demos
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on the screens, when I spotted a
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familiar box out of the corner of
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my eye. Since I'd rather watch an
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inanimate Atari than a Commodore
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doing an Irish jig with twelve naked
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dancing girls (though thirteen naked
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dancing girls just...might...sway
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me...), I headed over to check out
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what they had in the way of Atari
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hardware.
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It was the usual hardware
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package, the one that's been
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advertised by all the big mail-order
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companies in Antic, Analog, Computer,
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etc. etc etc. A 130XE, a 1050 disk
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drive, and a 1027 printer. The big
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price tag taped to the side said
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$349.99. No surprises there, either.
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That's about the price the package
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can be purchased for at all the
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mail-order houses.
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Sure, those three pieces of
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Atari hardware looked kind of lonely
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sitting there, surrounded by the
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Commodore hordes. Sad? Oh, yeah.
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Pathetic? Oh, maybe a little bit.
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Was I going to take it home? Not on
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your life. I already have two
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800's, three 5 and 1/4 inch drives,
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two printers, a 1040ST, and three
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modems. The last thing I need in my
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life is more computer hardware.
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So I left the store, hoping
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that somebody would find these three
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items and decide to enter the world
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of Atari computing. Unfortunately,
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that person wasn't going to be me.
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Fast forward to about a week
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ago. There I am, back in the same
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Sears store, picking up a sale-pack
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of video tapes (yes, I'd taken up
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reading the Sears ad flyers..
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especially when it saved me a long
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trip for something I needed quick).
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Since the audio/video section is
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right next to the computer section,
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I decided to pay the Atari package
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a visit, to see if somebody had
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picked them up yet.
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The three pieces of equipment
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were still there, in their little
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corner. Only one thing had changed:
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the price. Like on those video
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call-in-and-buy-this-right-now-or
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-we-kill-your-dog shows, it wasn't
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$350. Not $300. Not $250. Not
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even $225. The price taped to the
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top of the three stacked boxes was
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$199.95.
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I stopped. I licked my lips
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a couple of times. I pulled my
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wallet out and ruffled through the
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thick wad of one dollar bills I
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carry around to feel like I've got
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money in my pocket. Nope. Don't
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have a hundred and ninety-nine one
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dollar bills in there. My heart was,
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as they say, filled with regret.
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Then I started thinking....Yes,
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I did have a couple of hundred
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spare dollars floating around that
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I could use if I had to. Yes,
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Christmas IS coming, and a complete
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Atari system would make a GREAT
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Christmas present for that special
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somebody (hey, you have to get them
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into Atari computing one way or
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another).
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So, back I went to Sears a day
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or so later, my...uh...regretful
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heart in my mouth. Had somebody
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else seen this -deal of a lifetime-
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and snapped it up? Had the computer
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center person at Sears (what am I
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talking about -computer center
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person at Sears? That's the guy who
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was fired from Toys R Us for not
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having enough computer knowledge to
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run THEIR computer center) realized
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that $199.99 was below dealer cost
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for those three pieces? Was it all
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a dream (like the last season of
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Dallas)?
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But no. There it was, sitting
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in the same place. But there was no
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price tag on it. I was beginning
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to sweat it when I saw a guy with a
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tie carrying a couple of boxes
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wandering around. -Do you work here?-
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I asked. He nodded. I jerked my
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chin at the three pieces of Atari
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hardware on the cheesy computer
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table in the dark corner. -Didn't
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you have these marked $199.99 a
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couple of days ago?- I asked
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pleasantly. He nodded again. -You
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want 'em for $199.99?-
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What a stupid question. I
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mean, really, why did this guy
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think I was asking? Did he think I
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was a comparison shopper for Consumer
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Reports or something? I somehow
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didn't think he was going to offer
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to sell it to me for $49 or
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something, so what was he asking me
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here?
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While he tried to figure out
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how to write up the ticket (there
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were no stock numbers of any of the
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three pieces), he informed me that
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1) he was a former Commodore user,
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2) he now owned an IBM PC that was
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too much computer for him, 3) that
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I should be saving up my money for
|
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the Franklin IBM clone behind me, 4)
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that he had -read- that the Amiga
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is a better machine than the ST, and
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5) that he had also -read- that my
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ST, though having a full megabyte of
|
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memory aboard, could only access 256K
|
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of it at once. It was, as you might
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imagine, painful to talk to this
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person. But I didn't have much
|
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choice. On the counter in front of
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him was my -deal of a lifetime-.
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So I endured. And I walked
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out of there with $350 worth of
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computer equipment at nearly 50% off.
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If there's a moral to this
|
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story (and after a story this long,
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you probably are waiting for a
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moral), it's that you should always
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(A-L-W-A-Y-S) keep your eyes open,
|
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wherever you go, for bargains. Atari
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went through some hard times in the
|
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past, and we Atarians lost a lot of
|
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the support we once had from some
|
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merchants. But consider this - on
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one hand, we've got the additional
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support (both hardware and software)
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of all kinds of new companies. And
|
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out there, in the vast PC wasteland,
|
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there are probably hundreds (yes,
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hundreds - perhaps thousands) of
|
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bargains available at those merchants
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who gave up on Atari and don't know
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about the -Atari Revolution-.
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Selfishly I say, -Good! Leave
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'em in the dark!- Because as long
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as these unenlightened folks don't
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realize that computer or disk drive
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sitting in the corner is worth a
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whole lot more than the price tag
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they've placed on it, there's more
|
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bargains for us all.
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Of course, recently I've begun
|
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noticing more people lingering in
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out-of-the-way computer-type places
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...looking over counters...standing
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on tip-toe to peer over piles of
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boxes...muscling me out of the way
|
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when I paw through discontinued
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software with a terse, -Sorry, I
|
|
thought I saw my little boy climb
|
|
into this bin.-
|
|
|
|
Perhaps I'm not the only
|
|
skulking bargain hunter around after
|
|
all....
|
|
___________________________________
|
|
Xx Give Print A Chance
|
|
Copyright 1986 Family Computing
|
|
Taken from October Issue
|
|
|
|
THE READING'S SO-SO, BUT SOME BOOKS
|
|
ABOUT COMMUNICATIONS ARE GREAT
|
|
REFERENCE GUIDES
|
|
|
|
BY NICK SULLIVAN
|
|
|
|
Senior editor Nick Sullivan, who
|
|
has failed on five occasions to
|
|
finish Moby Dick and is now reading
|
|
Deep In the Heart of Borneo (a
|
|
minor jungle classic), has read some
|
|
of the world's most boring books --
|
|
and lived to recount his adventures.
|
|
|
|
Strange sounds, strange sights --
|
|
that's what I got when I first
|
|
connected a modem to a computer and
|
|
tried to make a phone call. I
|
|
didn't know whether the problem lay
|
|
with the modem, the software, the
|
|
serial card (on an Apple lle), the
|
|
telephone lines -- or me. So I went
|
|
to the store that had sold me the
|
|
modem.
|
|
|
|
Big waste of time. They said,
|
|
in effect, -Insert Tab A in Slot
|
|
B,- which I had already done. I
|
|
had no choice but to turn to books
|
|
-- a very diffiuclt task for someone
|
|
just getting used to the immediacy
|
|
and interactivity of computers.
|
|
A few years ago, most books on the
|
|
topic were written by engineers who
|
|
had been weaned on mainframe
|
|
comunications in the 1950s and 1960s,
|
|
not Commodore 64s and VICModems in
|
|
the l980s. As ancient lore goes,
|
|
the books had less spark than Livy's
|
|
History of Rome, which I've also
|
|
had the misfortune to read.
|
|
|
|
But I plowed through, and
|
|
tried to piece together a likely
|
|
scenario for making a simple phone
|
|
call. I took notes, made diagrams,
|
|
begged strangers for the missing
|
|
piece of the puzzle. Ah, but the man
|
|
who had barely fulfilled science
|
|
requirements in high school and
|
|
college was ill-equipped to decipher
|
|
serious technical tomes. So I turned
|
|
to trouble-shooting -- the car buff's
|
|
ancient remedy -- and started
|
|
switching parts to isolate the
|
|
potential culprit.
|
|
|
|
The culprit was quickly
|
|
apprehended. It was the serial
|
|
card. The new one worked, I reread
|
|
the manuals that came with the
|
|
modem and software, and before I
|
|
knew it I was running up ghastly
|
|
phone bills.
|
|
|
|
I immediately swore off books.
|
|
Why had they not told me it was easy?
|
|
That I dind't have to know how the
|
|
telphone system worked to make a
|
|
phone call? Swine!
|
|
|
|
YEARS LATER, A FEW HUMBLE POINTERS
|
|
|
|
Time being a healer and all
|
|
that rubbish, I'm back on books. I
|
|
started picking them up here and
|
|
there (not in dentists' offices),
|
|
and here and there finding nuggets
|
|
of information. I don't read these
|
|
books per se, but use them as
|
|
reference guides. The secret is
|
|
knowing which book to turn to when.
|
|
And knowing what to expect from books
|
|
in the first place.
|
|
|
|
1) Books about computers are by
|
|
definition going to be out of date
|
|
when you buy them. Change in the
|
|
computer industry is rapid, and the
|
|
book publication process is slow.
|
|
|
|
However, if you don't take everything
|
|
you read as the gospel truth, you'll
|
|
still find much useful material.
|
|
|
|
2) Books about communications that
|
|
tell you -in general- how to do
|
|
something -in general- are of
|
|
dubious value. To me, these books
|
|
usually make computer communications
|
|
seem more difficult they they really
|
|
are. People who have a good grounding
|
|
in a subject can use these books to
|
|
add to their knowledge, or -brush up.-
|
|
Others may like the -overview- of
|
|
the field. But, most people,
|
|
especially novices, will find the
|
|
answers to their system-specific
|
|
questions in the product documentation.
|
|
Even if it's somewhat obscure, at
|
|
least it's about your system.
|
|
|
|
3) Never buy a book you intend to
|
|
use as a reference guide unless it
|
|
has a very good index. To make an
|
|
in-store test, pick a topic, thumb
|
|
through the back pages, and see if
|
|
the index directs you to the right
|
|
spot.
|
|
|
|
Indexes that refer to the same
|
|
topic in several ways are good.
|
|
Ideally, you'd want to find the
|
|
salient facts on file-transfer
|
|
protocols by looking up Files, or
|
|
Protocols, or Transfer. You don't
|
|
want to have to outguess the indexer.
|
|
|
|
Second, indexes that list
|
|
endless page numbers (e.g., Games:
|
|
1-3, 27,28. 49-70, etc.) for one
|
|
subject are bad. Instead, that one
|
|
subject should be broken up into
|
|
pieces (e.g., Games: adventure 21,22,
|
|
astrology 38, biorhythms 6, blackjack
|
|
41, etc.)
|
|
|
|
Enough, Livy! Onto the topic
|
|
at hand!
|
|
|
|
HOW-TO BOOKS
|
|
|
|
Having just admonished readers
|
|
not to trust -general- books, let's
|
|
thumb through two that have risen
|
|
like cream.
|
|
|
|
Dialing For Data, A Consumer's
|
|
How-To Handbook on Computer
|
|
Communications (David Chandler,
|
|
Random House, New York, 1984,$9.95)
|
|
provides pleasant reading. Like all
|
|
good technical books, it teaches and
|
|
informs gently, so that you don't
|
|
know you're being taught or informed.
|
|
|
|
In style, the book is
|
|
reminiscent of Guide to Personal
|
|
Computers (Quantum Press, Doubleday,
|
|
New York), the Peter McWilliams'
|
|
computer classic with droll woodcuts
|
|
and natural laughs. Chandler, a
|
|
Pulitzer-Prize winner and People
|
|
magazine correspondent, walks along
|
|
with you chapter-by-chapter -- What's
|
|
Out There, Basic Information, The
|
|
Hardware, Modems and Software,
|
|
Computer Choices, Buyer Beware, The
|
|
First Call, etc. Droll woodcuts
|
|
and snappy sidebars complete the fine
|
|
presentation.
|
|
|
|
Dialing for Data is not a
|
|
reference guide, nor a guide to
|
|
making your specific system work. And
|
|
much of the information on
|
|
computers and electronics services
|
|
is dated. But as a general, accessible
|
|
introduction to electronic
|
|
information and what you can do with
|
|
it (-save money, make money, develop
|
|
new interests and friends), Dialing
|
|
For Data makes the big picture
|
|
clear enough to see your own reflection.
|
|
|
|
(Insert: Glossbreener's The
|
|
Complete Handbook of Personal Computer
|
|
Communications)
|
|
|
|
SYSTEM-SPECIFIC BOOKS
|
|
|
|
The standout in this relatively
|
|
small field is -How To Get the Most
|
|
out of CompuServe,- now in its second
|
|
edition (Charles Bowen and David
|
|
Peyton, Bantam, New York, 1986,
|
|
$18.95, plus $6 credit from
|
|
CompuServe). Ignore some of the
|
|
cute stuff (-How is CompuServe like
|
|
a restaurant? Both are menu-driven.-)
|
|
and you have a clear blueprint of
|
|
this labyrinthine information
|
|
service.
|
|
|
|
Who's the book good for? New
|
|
CompuServe subsribers who want to
|
|
learn their way around without
|
|
running up a big bill. A good index
|
|
will direct you to the right page
|
|
quickly, so you can use it when
|
|
on-line and snookered. And experienced
|
|
users who want to explore new parts
|
|
of CompuServe can find out what
|
|
else is available without taking
|
|
an expensive Cruise To Nowhere.
|
|
|
|
The same authors and publisher
|
|
have also produced -How to Get the
|
|
Most Out of the Source,- still in a
|
|
first edition.
|
|
|
|
PHONE BOOKS
|
|
|
|
Once you get a modem working,
|
|
you want to explore the electronic
|
|
world. To reach bulletin board
|
|
systems (BBSes), information
|
|
services, and the thousands of
|
|
specialized databases, you need
|
|
electronic phone numbers.
|
|
Fortunately, three good directories
|
|
have been compiled.
|
|
|
|
The Omni OnLine Database
|
|
Directory (Owen Davies and Mike
|
|
Edelhart, Collier Books, New York,
|
|
1985, $14.95), updated each year,
|
|
lists over 1100 specialized
|
|
databases. It includes general
|
|
pointers on how to use databases
|
|
most effectively. The first sentence
|
|
even describes -database-: -An
|
|
organized collection of facts in
|
|
computer-readable form.-
|
|
|
|
The meat of the book is the
|
|
lisitng of databases, by category.
|
|
The list begins with Advertising
|
|
and Marketing, Agriculture, Auto
|
|
Industry -- and finishes with Social
|
|
Sciences, Trade, Transportation.
|
|
Comprehensive. For each specific
|
|
database (such as NASA Budgetscan,
|
|
Book Review Index, Exceptional
|
|
Child Education Resources, etc.) in
|
|
each category, you are given Contents,
|
|
User's Comment, Access, and
|
|
Suppliers.
|
|
|
|
This precis lets you know
|
|
what's available, how to get at it,
|
|
how much it costs, and how to find
|
|
more information. For professionals
|
|
doing computer research, the Omni
|
|
guide is a must.
|
|
|
|
The Computer Phone Book
|
|
Directory of Online Systems (Mark
|
|
Cane, New American Library, New York
|
|
and Ontario, 1986, $18.95) focuses
|
|
on local BBSes around the U.S. and
|
|
Canada. Author Mike Cane, who
|
|
dedicates the book to his -beloved
|
|
cat, Backspace,- warns us that many
|
|
of the phone numbers may no longer
|
|
be in service, because -the average
|
|
lifespan of a BBS is three months.-
|
|
At least he's made an effort to
|
|
list boards that have survived since
|
|
his first edition in l983, and thus
|
|
have a track record. Nonetheless,
|
|
be forewarned.
|
|
|
|
The book is well organized.
|
|
Bulletin boards are listed by
|
|
state, so you can check for boards
|
|
within a reasonable calling distance
|
|
of your house. Most listings include
|
|
System Name, Phone Number, Features,
|
|
Special Interests, Access Requirements,
|
|
Downloads, Fee, and Comments. In
|
|
some cases, Cane provides the
|
|
system's commands, or a printout of
|
|
material you're likely to find.
|
|
|
|
Infomania (Elizabeth M.
|
|
Ferrarini, Houghton Mifflin,Boston,
|
|
l985, $14.95), described as -the
|
|
need for information,- is Ferrarini's
|
|
second book. The first was
|
|
-Confessions of an Infomaniac.- You
|
|
get the idea -- Ferrarini (aka
|
|
Baud, or CosmoGirl) is kind of nutty
|
|
about information, and she regurgitates
|
|
a lot of it in this personalized
|
|
testimonial to the electronic age.
|
|
|
|
Organized with headings such
|
|
as Money, Travel, Learning, Careers,
|
|
and News, Infomania presents much
|
|
of the same information as the Omni
|
|
guide. It's much chattier, so some
|
|
may find it livlier reading. On the
|
|
other hand, the presentation is less
|
|
consistent, and key facts, such as
|
|
cost and access, are somewhat hidden.
|
|
|
|
At the bottom of each page a
|
|
short sidebar relating to the main
|
|
text generally peers into the future.
|
|
Alongside are juicy quotes about
|
|
information and related topics from
|
|
such savants as Oscar Wilde: -It is
|
|
a very sad thing that nowadays
|
|
there is so little useless
|
|
information.- Diverting, to say the
|
|
least, even though it dates to l896.
|
|
|
|
GREAT EXPECTATIONS
|
|
|
|
As in most endeavours (with
|
|
notable exceptions like surgery),
|
|
the best way to learn is by doing.
|
|
Reading books before you start may
|
|
dissuade you from ever starting.
|
|
Teach yourself how to use a m
|