home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- .IF DSK1.C3
- .CE 5
- *IMPACT/99*
-
- ^^^^^^^^^by JACK SUGHRUE
- ^^^^^^^^^Box 459
- ^^^^^^^^^East Douglas, MA 01516
-
- OUR 99er LIFELINES
-
- QUESTION: What's the most important
- part of the TI/99-4A computer?
- ANSWER: The monthly newsletters
- written about, on, by, for, with, to,
- and from the 99 and/or 99ers. They
- are THE lifelines of our machines.
- This massive newsletter link keeps us
- an entity, a community.
- There are lots of hardworking BBS
- activists who are as important to the
- worldwide TI community as the
- newsletter editors but their final
- impact is different. There are about
- 1800 non-modemed, active,
- newsletter-reading 99ers for each
- active modemed BBSer. So, to begin
- with, the newsletter readers
- worldwide are a gigantic portion of
- 99ers whose only enhanced experiences
- are through the newsletters.
- Most newsletters do reprints from
- other newsletters, which is a good
- thing. Almost all user groups
- exchange newsletters, and we all
- learn from these exchanges. We learn
- what new products are coming out.
- Where and when the next TI faires
- will take place. How to use a new
- piece of software (like TI-BASE).
- What to do when something doesn't
- work. How users feel about a given
- product. There are also some
- wonderful teachers (like Jim
- Peterson, Chick De Marti, Anne Dhein,
- Martin Smoley, Harry Brashear, Bill
- Gaskill, Tom Arnold, Deanna Sheridan,
- Syles Bazerman, Tony McGovern, Jim
- Swedlow, Mickey Schmitt, Charles
- Good, John Willforth, to name too
- few.)
- Because each newsletter is SO
- distinctive, each gives options
- that couldn't be provided in any
- other way. There are some that are
- controversial and cantankerous (and
- badly needed to keep us on our
- collective toes). Some that are
- TOTALLY original; others that are
- very serious; still others that are
- very funny; and more that are quite
- eclectic - all reflecting the needs,
- desires, and abilities of the userss:
- emphasizing hardware or graphics or
- utiliites almost exclusively.
- I'm often asked what the best
- newsletter in the world is. I don't
- think there is any such thing.
- For those people who like to type
- in programs, the newsletters that
- have them wins out. For the fearless
- who love to rip apart things and
- solder all over the place, the
- hardware newsletters are best. For
- those who like the profoundly
- esoteric and philosophic the
- newsletters carrying IMPACT/99 are
- the best.
- Personally, I the variety of
- the newsletters. I get about 75 a
- month and can honestly say that
- Canada and Australia certainly give
- America, the home of TI, a run for
- its money. There is something to
- suit everybody in the TI World, and
- I wouldn't presume to pick the
- World's Best.
- However...
- There are lots of ways to improve
- weak newsletters; ways that are
- discussed often by user/readers.
- 1) Because so many newsletters now
- exchange, LIMIT the amount of low
- interest matericals. If your
- newsletter devotes a large amount of
- space to the business meeting and
- treasurer's report and time and place
- of the next meeting you can count on
- a drastic drop in readership and
- membership. Rightly so. Put that
- stuff on a single page insert or,
- better still, announce at the
- meeting. Don't waste valuable space,
- energy, time, printing costs with
- boring info.
- 2) Add some graphics. The TI (with
- MAX-RLE, GRAPH-X, TI-ARTIST, CONVERT,
- PICTURE IT, PICASSO, CSGD, etc. has a
- wealth of wonderful stuff. There are
- so many programs that can even INSERT
- stuff into text, if you don't want to
- paste up, that it seems foolish not
- to grab someone's attention with
- graphics.
- 3) List your library, even in
- pieces. This month: Music; next
- month: Games. Whatever. This is
- important for members and exchanges.
- Be sure to put it on disk, too.
- 4) Use people's talents. If someone
- is good at assembly, encourage
- her/him to write an article(s) about
- assembly. If someone got a new
- program off the BBS, have him/her
- demo it and write about it. Be sure
- to write about all the people who
- demo or in any way share with the
- club. These people don't get paid.
- They need and deserve the reward of
- recognition in their own
- newsletters.
- 5) Gripe! By having alittlegripe
- column, the TI World will change.
- It's as important to have a
- legitimate gripe as it is to have
- legitimate praise.
- 6) Thus, praise. If someone has
- found a program they like or love,
- encourage them to write about it.
- Or, because you are editor or writer,
- encourage them to demo it and YOU
- write it up for the newsletter.
- 7) Look through other newsletters.
- If an article interests YOU it'll
- probably interest your readers.
- 8) But be careful. Very few people
- have RAMdisks, Geneves, Triple-Tech
- Cards, or whatever. Most TI owners
- don't even have disk drives. Try to
- encourage them to get drives but
- don't overlook them. (You might write
- about options - add-on printers, 32K,
- etc.)
- 9) GET A DECENT ORIGINAL COPY!
- Change your ribbon or get someone
- else to make the original or go to
- another printer. There are lots of
- yucky, hard-to-read newsletters out
- there. Do something about it.
- 10) Sneak. Find someone who has easy
- access to a copier. Then make one
- picture-perfect copy (THAT IS THE BIG
- THING!) even if it costs you, and
- then have your friend make the
- copies. Now, user groups are getting
- smaller and smaller - BUT cleverer
- and cleverer and stronger and
- stronger. Let's exhibit these ideal
- characteristics in our newsletters.
- 11) Find out the maximum pages you
- can send through the mail for $.25 or
- (the next step) $.45 by going to the
- post office and having them EXACTLY
- weigh the number of pieces of paper
- of the kind you use. Then do
- EVERYTHING based on that specific.
- Including reproducing, reducing,
- pasting in graphics, and so on.
- Remember to eliminate all the local
- garbage. Nobody reads it, including
- the locals. And you can really get
- some good stuff into the expanded
- package.
- 12) Set goals. Make a club goal each
- year. Then work towards it
- andpublicizeit. Some clubs (like
- Connecticut's tiny NUTMEG 99er group
- create original programs and TI
- artifacts for faire sales each year).
- Though it's a good fundraising idea,
- it is more important that the WHOLE
- club work actively toward these
- newsletter-encouraged goals and share
- them with the whole TI community.
- 13) Finally, praise the heroic
- efforts of your newsletter editor
- publicly and often.
- TIs are on their last 8 or 10
- years. It's too short a time to have
- squabbles and to complain about who
- does more work at meetings. We're
- all smallifying, and it is not a
- comfortable feeling. Let's pull
- together as tightly as we can for as
- long a time as we've got.
- The 4A is still a remarkable
- computer. There are still remarkable
- things being done to and for it.
- Let our readers know.
-
- [If you reprint these articles please
- place the author on your newsletter
- mailing list. Thank you. J.S.]
- ÇçǼçïÉòƒ⌐╒╒╒╒╒╒╒╒╒╒Çï