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- .IF DSK1.C3
-
- ^^^^^^^^^^TEXTWARE, SOFTWARE, and ELSEWHERE
-
- ^^^^^^^^^^^^Goings on in 99-Land
-
- ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^by Jack Sughrue
-
-
-
- Reviewing books and software for computers is a lot like reviewing
- movies. Some of that old stuff was great. CITIZEN KANE, WHITE HEAT, the
- original INVASION OF THE BODY SNATCHERS. All great stuff. But if you
- watch them, say, with a teenager; someone who is used to the the
- brilliant colors, stereophonic sound, incredible special effects of STAR
- WARS, it is hard to convince them that these films, for their day and for
- the people who recall those earlier film days, are magnificent. Who can
- forget Jennifer Jones, the Gypsy dancer riddled with bullet holes,
- crawling and scratching her way to the top of a cliff only to die as she
- grasped the hand of the evil-doing Gregory Peck in DUEL IN THE SUN? The
- youth today scoffs at such nobility, such caring. They split their sides
- at the word-of-honor approach to humor of the Wodehouse movies and
- books.
- What has happened to the world of yore?
- Nothing.
- It still lives (maybe with an illusory cherry on top) in our
- memories. What has seemed to make it less than what it was is our own
- sophistication. Once we know the how and why and where and what and once
- we've "been there" there seems no purpose in exploring what we already
- know. Or is there?
- This edition of TEXTWARE/SOFTWARE/ELSEWHERE travels to both worlds:
- the reasonably innocent TI world of Reston Publishing Co. to the
- high-powered sophistication of a relative newcomer, Asgard Software.
-
- First the innocence (or seeming inncocence) of a book by Claire
- Bailey Passantino called ITTY BITTY BYTES OF SPACE FOR THE TI-99/4A
- COMPUTER ($6.95, Reston Computer Group, 11480 Sunset Hills Road, Reston,
- VA, 22090).
- It is one of a series of three: MATILDA THE COMPUTER CAT and SCHOOL
- DAYS. (I haven't seen the other two.)
- What kept me from buying this book is the title. Just as I can't
- stand grownups who talk baby talk, so I can't stand books whose titles
- are in baby talk.
- But, eventually, I succumbed and bought the book, only because there
- were no new TI books out for so long that I needed a fix.
- I'm glad I bought it.
-
- It's a 5X7 book with a ring binding for nice, flat layout. The print
- is dark and even. The listings are a little larger than the text for
- nice, easy typing. And, for the most part, the listings are by 10s. The
- illustrations by Nancy Gurganus are perfect. They go with the text. They
- are delightful. And, because they are line drawings, are suitable for
- coloring. (I always keep my colored pencils handy for such activity.)
- Because Ms.Passantino is a computer teacher and a parent, she was
- able to put together a perfect little book for beginners and some beyond-
- beginners.
-
- I just paused for a half hour while I coffeed up a bit and typed in a
- few more of these programs (There are 20.), and I find them to be rather
- cute.
-
- Both the structure and function of this little book are ideal for
- kids and kid-like adults. Each even-numbered page starts off with the
- Main Ideas of the program (which is complete on the opposite odd-numbered
- page.) The ideas include the new things the program will introduce (data
- statements, CHR$, variables, loops, and so on). Then comes a
- line-by-line explanation/tutorial that is truly the clearest, most
- explicit I have ever come across my desk. There isn't an adult BASIC
- programmer who wouldn't find this interesting. Finally, there are
- suggestions and a bunch of "Watch out for" items.
- The programs could be typed in by youngsters within a sitting. They
- are not frustrating, and, yet, they DO something.
- And I thought about how far I have come in computing these past few
- years and how I could fairly easily have created some of these programs
- and, therefore, what good is a book like this to me?
- But.
-
- I didn't create these programs.
- I did learn some things from this book.
- My students at school LOVED it. They all had remarkable success with
- typing the programs in and playing them.
- And they liked the theme. It's just about the only TI book that has
- a real theme. Space. Everything in the book relates to that theme.
- This appealed to the kids. What also appealed was the fact that some
- programs were set up to join together. Not Extended Merge, but to join
- other lines to make the programs do something else.
- This really turned out to be a sleeper for me. There are lots and
- lots of kids and unsophisticated (computerwise) adults who would love
- this book and learn from it and be very comfortable with the TI as a
- result of it. For the rest of us maybe we have kids or grandkids or
- friends who are ready but need encouragement. Good book.
- (I'll review MATILDA THE CAT and SCHOOL DAYS if I am able to locate
- copies of them.)
-
- Meanwhile, lets leap to the sophisticated disk-only stuff.
- There is a company (Asgard Software, P.O.Box 10306, Rockville, MD,
- 20850) which has leaped into TI software in a huge way.
- Asgard's catalog is the most eclectic one you'll ever come across,
- and their products are just about the least expensive on the market for
- extraordinary quality.
- They also distribute the best (I MEAN the best!) quality public
- domain music, games, and utilites programs. All of these and more I will
- discuss in future columns.
- Right now I'd like to tell you about the most extraordinary disk
- cataloguer I have ever used.
- Why I needed another disk cataloguer I wasn't sure. I had four,
- each reasonably good. All fine when I had a dozen disks of files. Some
- even okay when I had two dozen disks.
- However, with the amount of work I do on TI Writer and Multiplan and
- my data bases, I find that my disk collection is growing by leaps and
- blastoffs. Add to that collection the stuff I use with my fifth-grade
- class, my home applications items, my precious games, my graphics
- programs, and all my other non-defined items, including the batch of
- disks of programs I'm always half-way through writing. And! You will get
- the picture.
- No disk cataloguing cartridge or disk or tape I own is sufficient for
- my ever-growing needs.
- In talking to a few TI friends I discovered they had the same
- problem. For the serious TIer there was no good disk data base. You
- notice I said "was".
- Because there is.
- It's a superb cataloguing disk called, appropriately enough, DISK
- DATA BASE. It does everything. And does it with such ease a manual is
- not even necessary.
- It makes no difference if your library contains 5,000 files (or more,
- of course). DDB handles it all.
- Nothing is forced on you. Do you want your files sorted? It does by
- disk name or file name. Not bad, eh? But what if you don't want them
- sorted? Unlike the other four (very limited) cataloguing programs I own,
- DDB will accept the disks as entered. A very handy feature which I've
- used already on a few occasions.
- Oh, yes. What if you have half-a-million files and you only want to
- print up (or screen view) just a few sections (say, the ones with your
- small dog-grooming business on them)? No sweat. DDB lets you catalog
- into blocks of 250 (thus removing all limits to the total number of files
- providing only that you have enough data disks). Take out the block or
- blocks you want, look at them, print them up, sing to them on the
- housetop. It makes no difference. DDB accepts it all.
- It there more to this program?
-
- Well, for starters, there is a very helpful on-line dictionary of
- terms you can call up at will.
-
- The screening (all extremely fast menu-driven easy-to-understand
- screens) and sorting is done by superquick assembly language.
- You can convert other disk-catalogued files created by other programs
- into DDB.
-
- If you're just starting? Why not start with DDB. It's the only
- program of its type that will grow with you.
-
- DDB requires Extended BASIC, 32K, disk drive with controller. A
- second drive and printer are sure helpful.
-
- (As an aside: my other disk cataloguing programs cost me a total of
- $169.85. This is terrible. I could have bought three more TIs for that
- and had money left over to buy DDB.)
- The Disk Data Base from Asgard is $14.95. It comes with a program
- disk and 2 or 3 database disks. Ask for their free catalogue. It's
- loaded with other inexpensive, intriguing, and intelligent programs.
-
- [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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