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- .IF DSK3.C3
- .CE 6
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- ^W-AGE/99 * NEW-AGE/
- ^99 *NEW-AGE/99* N
- ^EW-AGE/99 * NEW-AGE
- ^/99 *NEW-AGE/99*
- ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
- ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
- ^^^^^^^^^^*by JACK SUGHRUE, Box
- 459, East Douglas, MA 01516*
- ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^#11
- THE LADY FROM LOWER BURRELL
- Mickey Schmitt, president of the West
- Penn 99ers, is a young lady with
- extraordinarily varied T.I.
- interests and talents. She is an
- ardent fairgoer, ranging along the
- eastern seaboard inland to Lima,
- Ohio, and north to Canada, visiting
- with her hundreds of TI friends and
- fans and oftentimes representing
- groups or companies who couldn't
- attend.
- Mickey is an author, programmer,
- tutor, collector, and adventure
- aficionado whose great sense of
- humor shows through almost all her
- activities. For example, in a very
- clever adventure she wrote for the TI
- Adventure Module (OLIVER'S TWIST -
- cassette or disk, Asgard, $7.95), she
- requires the player to PUT BACK
- treasures in order to win the game.
- Her latest Asgard adventure,
- RATTLESNAKE BEND, is like John Wayne
- playing Viva Zapata. Wild, hilarious
- stuff. But hidden beneath the
- jocularity is a mean adventure
- guaranteed to please, pardner.
- Adventuring seems to be in
- Mickey's blood. She is THE expert in
- the field. If there is an adventure
- for the TI she hasn't uncovered and
- played, it was probably written this
- morning.
- A few years ago we had a chance
- to talk for awhile at one of the
- computer fairs, and she felt there
- was a real need to compile a listing
- of all the various adventures
- available for the TI so that users
- could have some kind of idea what is
- out there. I agreed but felt the
- task was formidable. Mickey didn't,
- fortunately for the TI community.
- She began collecting, sorting, doing,
- evaluating, and compiling every
- available adventure for the TI.
- The result of this massive
- undertaking is THE ADVENTURE
- REFERENCE GUIDE, a 62-page, 8x11"
- commercially printed, easy to read
- book that not only gives a complete
- alphabetical listing of over 200
- adventures but breaks them down into
- different sections by language (XB,
- E/A, etc.) and type (INFOCOM,
- Educational, Role-playing, etc.).
- There are astute reviews of selected
- adventures and sections on sources,
- utilities, and adventuring history.
- There is also a checklist for solving
- and comments. This is an
- indispensable guide for any
- adventuring TIer (from Asgard, Box
- 10306, Rockville, MD 20848; $9.95 /
- $2 S&&H). [Last I heard, Mickey was
- continuing to test new and new-found
- adventures for updating this magnum
- opus.
- If you own Scott Adams' ADVENTURE
- MODULE or the disk loader interpreter
- of this module available from user
- groups, I'd highly recommend
- investing in Mickey's two games.
- Life is strange. At least the
- life that goes on inside my head.
- When I sat down to write this article
- I was planning a review of Mickey's
- newest book on cassette systems. But
- I pulled out THE ADVENTURE REFERENCE
- GUIDE from the Mickey Schmitt section
- of my TI library by mistake and
- couldn't resist rereading it. Then I
- couldn't resist playing SORCERER (an
- INFOCOM game reviewed in the book by
- Mickey which I had started but never
- finished). Then I couldn't resist
- eating lunch, still thinking of the
- spells and magic items I needed to
- get out of the SORCERER.) Finally, I
- put all that stuff behind (more from
- frustration than feeling the noble
- urge to return to task) and got back
- to doing this review. But I couldn't
- resist writing about this woman's
- profound adventuring influence
- first. Now, the "real" topic of this
- review: GETTING THE MOST OUT OF YOUR
- CASSETTE SYSTEM.
- GETTING is based on the series of
- articles by the same name that
- appears in newsletters throughout the
- world. This entirely rewritten work
- is a professionally published, 8x11",
- 52-page, loose-leaf package,
- containing all the original (though
- updated and revised) articles that
- first appeared in her group
- newsletter.
- Not only is this book handy for
- what it does, but Mickey has provided
- a way for user groups to make a few
- kopeks on it. She is offering this
- project for $9.95 plus $2.50 S&&H to
- any individual or user group. User
- groups need only purchase a single
- copy. She grants the rights for the
- group to reproduce it entirely for
- members of the group free or as a
- fundraiser, providing no copies are
- given or sold to persons outside the
- group. Neat idea. Hope it catches
- on. The packages must be ordered
- directly from the author: Mickey
- Schmitt, 196 Broadway Avenue, Lower
- Burrell, PA 15068.
- Now, what does GETTING get you?
- First, a chance to rethink your
- group membership and future growth,
- because the cassette is still a
- powerful tool for a beginner or basic
- user. This book might just show your
- group new ways to attract new (or
- old) members into the fold.
- Second, it opens one's eyes to lots
- of possibilities of cassetting
- previously unexplored. One of my TIs
- at school is cassetted, for example,
- and this book proved to be an immense
- help in ways I never dreamed of.
- More on this later.
- Finally, this book made a
- multi-system user of me. I really
- only need one disk drive system to do
- all the tasks I do, but many times
- the system is tied up with heavy-duty
- printing or converting graphics or
- any number of long-time chores.
- Rather than sit and wait or go watch
- TV or clean my wallaby's teeth, I
- just move over to my OTHER TI SYSTEM!
- That's right. I have set my other
- console ($3 at a yard sale) onto a TV
- with a tape recorder hookup. Many
- nights I now just use the SILENT tape
- recorder system for some utility or
- recreational use. And I'm finding
- more and more uses, including lots of
- cartridge (MINIMEM, LOGO, etc.)
- activities I had forgotten were so
- exceptional, even with tape. I have
- a sidecar 32K, though many people are
- putting the chip right in or making
- that chip part of a Zenoboard
- package. Anyway, with 32K and Will
- McGovern's CASSTRANS I can load
- ASSEMBLY games and utilites into my
- computer from tape. I can
- AUTOMATICALLY!!! locate and RUN
- programs from my tape recorder with
- Joseph Bartle's CS1*FINDEX. I have
- my cassette boxes labeled and a
- catalog on each tape, thanks to
- Mickey's LABEL and CATALOG programs.
- All this stuff, by the way, is in the
- book in short, easy to type in,
- clever programs. (Will's program is
- Fairware and in all group
- libraries.) No more being restricted
- to BASIC and XB files. Now I can
- play FREDDY from my tape recorder.
- No more searching for programs. I
- don't even need a tape recorder with
- a counter on it anymore. Now, like
- the Timex/Sinclair user, I can
- automatically run a program anywhere
- on a C-60 tape after locating it in
- the FAST FORWARD speed mode! In
- short, tape recorders have come of
- age. They can be powerful and fast
- and reasonably efficient and
- orderly.
- Mickey's book is extremely
- non-technical. She explains
- everything about computer taping from
- the VERY beginnings to the state of
- the art. And it really might get you
- into that SECOND system.
- [If you use NEW-AGE/99 please put
- me on your exchange list.]
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