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- .IF DSK1.C3
-
- ^^^^^^TEXTWARE, SOFTWARE, and
- ELSEWHERE
-
- ^^^^^^^^^99er Happenings
-
- ^^^^^^^^by Jack Sughrue
-
-
- ^^^^THE PROPHETS AND PROFITS OF
- DOOM!
-
- The two books considered in this
- monologue are THE LAST WHOLE TI99/4A
- BOOK: Programs and Possibilities (by
- Paul Garrison, 1984, Wiley Press, a
- division of John Wiley and Sons Inc.,
- 605 Third Ave., NY, NY, 10158;
- $12.95) and THE LAST WORD ON THE
- TI-99/4A (by Linda M. and Allen R.
- Schreiber, 1984, TAB Books Inc., Blue
- Ridge Summit, PA, 17214; $11.50).
- They are as different as night and
- day. Or at least as evening and
- afternoon.
- They are both in the 9x7-inch
- range and are printed in paperback on
- reasonalbly cheap paper. Not
- newsprint, but greyish stock. The
- Schreiber programs are computer
- printouts, which are usually more
- accurate but harder to read. In this
- case the type is considerably larger
- for the actual program listings than
- the Garrison typeset listings.
- Neither is ring-bound, so they don't
- lie flat while you try to type in the
- programs. Both have very clear and
- logical tables of contents, but only
- the Garrison book provides appendices
- with the quick reference stuff (ASCII
- codes, speech words, glossary,
- resources).
-
- There is something I want to say
- about these two books that just is
- not getting through to my left brain
- this morning. I think I'll stop, get
- a cup of coffee, go out on the deck
- to watch the nuthatches and
- chickadees and sparrows at the
- feeder, and see if it all comes
- through.
-
- **********************
-
- Ah, nothing like dawn and coffee
- to clear the muddle from the brain.
- A squirrel gave me the clue.
- This is a particular brand of
- pig-squirrel. He had constantly
- devoured every sunflower seed I had
- been putting in the feeder all
- spring. Elaine, my wife, was getting
- frustrated daily by this creature:
- cute but unlovable. We tried moving
- the feeder, tried the rounded metal
- squirrel foils (Ha!), tried
- everything. But The Pig (as he is
- affectionately known in our house)
- managed to climb or leap onto the
- feeder no matter where we put it in
- our little yard.
- A few weeks ago my daughter Suzi
- and I were playing horseshoes. She
- accidently threw one that hit a
- branch almost above her. Later that
- day I took a horshoe and some thin,
- nylon cord, tied the cord to the shoe
- and hurled it over a high branch
- which jutted alone into an empty area
- of our side yard, not too far from
- the deck. And tied the feeder on.
- For days The Pig would come around,
- angrily chattering and beating that
- tail in frustration.
- Then he did the unexpected. He
- got on a higher branch on an
- adjoining spruce and leaped/fell over
- 20 feet onto the metal squirrel foil
- protecting the feeder. It must have
- hurt a bit when he hit, as he
- belly-flopped onto the thing with a
- very loud thud. After about 10 near
- wins, The Pig finally hung by one paw
- to the cord without falling. And
- worked his way to the sunflower seeds
- below before I shooed him away. But
- an attempt had succeeded, and I knew
- I would have no peace and the birds
- would have no food unless I could
- thwart the little bugger before he
- had another success. (Pavlov came in
- handy. Repeated failure is what The
- Pig needed.)
- I smeared the rounded foil with
- petroleum jelly. And watched.
- During the next four days and at
- least twenty attempts, The Pig
- leaped, hit, and shot off into the
- air for another 10 feet. It became
- longer between attempts, as he spent
- more and more time chattering and
- scouting for other possibilities.
- Now he has disappeared from our
- yard, and the birds have all
- returned, and life is beautiful once
- again.
- All of which brings me back to
- the idea of computering and
- word-processing (and any creative
- thing). Problem-solving is what it
- is all about. Problem-solving by
- being open the unexpected and using
- the unconventional method. Some
- times the tried-and-true is really
- just the tired. It's important to
- build on what you know, but it is
- equally important to take the step
- beyond. To risk.
- Risk. That's the difference
- between creative and dull. And
- creativity is always coupled with a
- strong sense of humor. (Imagination
- doesn't exist without humor.)
-
- And there lies the real
- differenes between these books. The
- Schreiber book is devoid of humor;
- the Garrison book is charged with it.
- The Schreiber book is careful, exact,
- textbookish; the Garrison book is
- eclectic and electric and reads as if
- he were talking to you. The
- Schreibers talk at you and explain
- and explain and explain. Each of
- their programs accompanies a
- flowchart (not the other way around).
- Very much ado is made about very
- little. Garrison, meanwhile, figures
- you have some basic intelligence,
- maybe some BASIC intelligence, and
- makes very little fuss about some
- profound computer thinking. He's so
- reasonable!
-
- Take the titles: they really tell
- you more than the authors probably
- intended.
- Garrison: THE LAST WHOLE TI99/4A
- BOOK: Programs and Possibilities.
- Schreibers: THE LAST WORD ON
- THE TI-99/4A.
-
- I got the distinct feeling after
- reading through both books that the
- Garrison book had been in the process
- of being written long before TI
- withdrew from the home computer
- market and that the Schreiber book
- was written after in order to make
- the last textware dollar in the
- "dying" TI marketplace. Linda
- Schreiber's Atari books are certainly
- better than this collaboration, which
- has certainly proved NOT to be the
- last word on the TI.
- The Schreibers obviously know a
- lot about computers and how they
- work. Garrison does, too. But
- Garrison knows a lot about how the TI
- works in ways that only a person who
- has owned, operated, and loved this
- machine can.
-
- I think if I had my first
- encounter with the TI through The
- Last Word I would probably own
- another machine (or no computer at
- all). Its 246 pages are filled with
- wasted space (mostly flowcharts). In
- Possibilities (I prefer this last
- word of Garrison's subtitle as the
- reference name in this article.)
- there is no wasted space (and no
- flowcharts). The type is smaller and
- the 460 pages somewhat larger than
- Last Word.
- They both provide a basic
- introduction to computers and the
- specifics of the TI. Both provide
- lin-by-line analyses of each program.
- However, there are three times as
- many programs in Possibilities, which
- also provides tutorials and programs
- or files for Logo, TI Writer,
- Personal Record Keeping, Speech
- Synthesizer, and more.
-
- I've had the books for some time
- now and have learned many things from
- both of them. Right now the Last
- Word is collecting dust.
- Possibilities is full of dog-eared
- pages and losing Megabuck tickets
- (perfect write-on book marks). I
- have gone back to Possibilities many
- times; not just to type in programs,
- but to reread sections or to look for
- good examples of specific
- applications.
-
- If you are striving for a
- complete TI library (as I am), I
- would recommend getting both books.
- If you are looking for real 99er
- value for your money, invest in
- Garrison's excellent book.
-
- And, despite the doom prophesy of
- titles which say The Last Of...,
- the 99 is far from dead. The
- textware has diminished to a trickle,
- but the software and peripherals and
- hardware seem to be approaching
- deluge level. Maybe the textware
- trickle will begin to swell during
- this downpour.
-
- [Jack Sughrue, Box 459,
- E.Douglas, MA 01516]
-
- ***************
-
- If any newsletter editor prints
- these articles, please put me on your
- mailing list. Thanks - JS
-
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