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- .IF DSK1.C3
- .CE 2
- *IMPACT/99*
- by Jack Sughrue
-
- ^^^^GOOD OLD DAYS
-
- ^^^^PART III: THE DARK AGES
- .IF DSK1.C2
-
-
- Were the Dark Ages really awful
- for all the people who lived through
- them? I mean, if I were a serf would
- I never have had any happiness if I
- truly didn't know about such things
- as freedom and rights? That's the
- impression we keep getting from
- everything we read about the Dark
- Ages (which were not called that, of
- course, except in hindsight).
- Might we not be living in the
- Electronic Dark Ages right now?
- Might not some future generations
- (freed from a flesh body thanks to
- robotics and the research into
- Artificial Intelligence) refer to us
- as primitive, what with degenerating
- bodies; minds cluttered with trivia
- and obsessions; politics of death
- rather than life; slums, homeless,
- terror, war, famine?
- But, still, might WE not think
- this is a pretty cool age? And we
- pretty cool cats? And Life a gas? (If
- not downright totally wicked awesome
- rad.)
- So we come to the eve of
- orphaning of the 4/A. That infamous
- date (was it really a Friday the
- 13th?) will linger on in many
- memories. The doomsayers leaped from
- what they thought was an abyss and
- began chanting, "Dark Ages. Dark
- Ages. Dark Ages.")
-
- I can clearly recall reading the
- announcement in the papers and
- saying, "Forsooth!" (or whatever was
- the proper expletive in those days),
- and going home that evening and
- taking the cover off my console and
- looking at it for a long time. Like
- Ol' Dog Tray, 4/A and I had been
- buddies for a long time. Now it
- looked like the last roundup.
- "Wait a minute!" I thought aloud.
- "This computer still works. It's
- still better than an Apple or IBM or
- Commodore as is. There's no one down
- in Texas who is going to snap a
- switch that will shut off the 4/As
- instantly worldwide. We still have
- over 2 million owners. We still have
- software being made, books being
- written, and, best of all, my user
- group is still intact."
-
- We're well into the second half
- of that decade now and we're not dead
- yet. Not by a long shot.
- There have been some remarkable
- misjudgments by publishers and
- software and hardware companies. I
- think, for example, that the biggest
- mistake came when companies and the
- user groups eliminated the
- non-techies. Forgetting about them.
- Magazines like SMART PROGRAMMER
- overestimated the number of techies
- who would be interested in such
- things as internal schematics or such
- software as Advanced Diagnostics.
- Once the market was quickly saturated
- (some estimate TI techiehood as high
- as 10,000 people worldwide, out of a
- possible 2 1/2 million owners and a
- possible 7 million users) that was
- it. Software, for the most part, was
- just not being made for the regular
- user. As a result, lots of software
- companies died (as did lots of
- Fairware projects). Pirates were
- blamed for ALL these deaths. There
- was piracy, no doubt about it; but
- the pirates, for the most part, were
- the very techies who were a small
- part of this very small part of the
- TI community. No non-techie would
- pirate Advanced Diagnostics, for
- example, even if they knew how (which
- would make them a techie), as it
- would serve no purpose in that
- person's computer life. Nor would
- they pirate "Popeye" because they
- wouldn't have the technical ability
- to do so.
- I think piracy has been overated
- as a cause of death. Particularly as
- there is no corpse.
- I know of many people in our user
- group (and this has happened at least
- nationwide) who left, first, because
- they believed the doomsayers; second,
- because they didn't understand the
- nature of undergrounding; and,
- finally, because the rest of us had
- bought RAMdisks and DSDDs and 512s
- and GKs and were getting into
- Assembly and were discussing GRAMS
- and GROMS and other such things. Our
- workshops were turning into boring
- nightmares of technical jargon and
- fast-moving files flashing across
- multiple screens.
- The general feeling of these
- enthusiastic techies was expressed
- often and loudly at faires and
- conferences and club meetings: "If
- you don't want to join the 20th
- Century and update your system, then
- get the hell out!"
- As simple as that.
- The tape recorder crowd who
- needed a slower pace or didn't have
- the money (or desire) for upgrading
- the system, was left in the lurch.
- So were those who only wanted
- cartridges for software applcation:
- PERSONAL RECORD KEEPING, MULTIPLAN,
- LOGO. The one exception, of course,
- was TI WRITER.
- I rembember one meeting where a
- speaker talked for 45 minutes on
- Eproms. I didn't know what they were
- and no one in the audience knew
- (either before or after). Or cared.
- Fewer of the old regulars came to the
- meetings. There was no longer
- anything for them. Each time we lost
- a few more members, my heart would
- sink. Without the user groups, I
- knew, there would be no TI. The
- machine would still work, but there
- would be no community, no sharing, no
- fellowship.
-
- We tried raffles and other
- bandaids for a while, but we didn't
- bring back the oldtimers. And there
- aren't any newtimers.
- Or are there?
- The TIs are still in the homes of
- many people. If only young people
- (including old young people) could be
- encouraged to take an interest.
- Many of the techies (if they've
- not already done so) are going to
- leave the TI for greater techiehood.
- This is too bad. They left behind
- some great things. But they left
- behind (in those cases where there
- were club takeovers) many dead
- groups. Some of us are not
- technically oriented, nor will we
- ever be. There are a lot of 99ers
- out there with tape recorders; a lot
- of 99ers who have never used FORMAT
- on their TI WRITERs; a lot of 99ers
- who wouldn't evencareto own a GRAM
- KRACKER (which is great for them as
- GK isn't made anymore). However, we
- non-techies can be assets to our
- groups. Wecancontribute and have
- lotstocontribute.
-
- What did we do in the old days of
- before and after the orphaning that
- was so different?
- We went to our user groups as a
- social occasion, a monthly night out.
- I think that came first for most
- people. The 4/A was our commonality.
- It was social. We talked and shared
- and learned. We were all, more or
- less, in the same boat. Those who
- knew a bit more than we did helped
- us. We did not feel excluded.
- I went to a large TI group last
- year with the intent of joining.
- When I got there I felt very
- uncomfortable. The members did not
- introduce themselves, nor did they
- ask me to "come on over" and chat.
- Nothing. The meeting was
- disorganized, but when it settled
- down, nothing happened. There were
- no workshops, no plans, no anything.
- Except for five or six men (a couple
- rather famous in the TI community)
- who kind of held sway, loudly
- cracking inside jokes as one or the
- other of them talked a little bit
- about what's on their BBS, about
- Eproms (Damn Eproms, I say!), about
- how to wire in an XB chip to your
- console (using all the terms but
- without a chart or graph). Everyone
- (except those five or six) was bored
- to tears. I couldn't understand why
- anyone even came to the meetings. I
- didn't join, though I belong to quite
- a few groups.
- When I went back to M.U.N.C.H. I
- noticed our meetings were getting
- like that (though not yet as bad).
- When meetings started to get down
- to three and four members present, I
- knew drastic changes had to take
- place.
- So what did we do to renew
- membership and keep it active?
- First, we started having user
- workshops. Things we normal types
- wanted the computer for. Most people
- want to do something with
- wordprocessing or graphics. (PRINT
- SHOP is, after all, the most popular
- home computer program on the market -
- for other computers.) Desktop
- publishing it's being called, and it
- is just that. We started giving
- workshops on FUNNELWEB and PLUS! and
- CFS and TI-ARTIST and FONTWRITER,
- primarily, because people owned these
- programs or were seriously
- considering getting them, and they
- wanted to know how to use them. They
- wanted to go slowly and in small
- groups and ask lots of questions and
- have things shown a few times.
- People have a mistrust of manuals, no
- matter how simple. (The ones that
- are very simple seem too wordy; the
- ones that are thin seem to assume too
- much knowledge on the part of the
- user.) People like to see things in
- operation. They don'tcarehow the
- TV or the car or the microwave or the
- washing machine work. They only want
- to be able to use the things. For
- most people, this is also true of
- computers. And for the TI in
- particular because most purchasers
- bought it for home and as their first
- computer experience.
- We tried to provide for these 99ers,
- but we first had to get them back.
- We improved the newsletter:
- increased the number of pages,
- eliminated the repitious or
- irrelevant materials, tried to
- jampack it with goodies from all the
- exchange newsletters and add graphics
- and PROGRAMS TO TYPE IN whenever and
- wherever possible.
- Next we mailed them to ALL former
- members inviting them back to the
- fold.
- We had coffee and goodies
- available.
- We greeted each new or returning
- visitor at every meeting and pulled
- them right into the pre-meeting group
- discussions.
- And had signs xeroxed. A batch
- was given to each member present to
- put anywhere and everywhere.
- We increased our raffles; brought
- back our text library, our
- long-forgotten tape library and
- dubber, our disk library.
- At each meeting we begin with a
- social time (to talk, eat, look at
- the stuff for sale, for loan, for
- raffle), pull everyone together for a
- general filling-in of what the
- workshops that night will be and a
- filling-in of what's happening in our
- computer's world. Lots of jokes and
- fellowship. Then we have a short,
- semi-formal meeting (president,
- treasurer, secretary) and conduct the
- workshops. Meetings begin officially
- at 7. Most members arrive by 6:30.
- We end abruptly at 9:30.
- We gave a list of all members
- names and addresses and phones to all
- members.
- There is much outside-the-club
- contact. Many members belong to
- other clubs, too, so there is a
- greater sharing. If members show an
- interest in Eproms, for example, they
- can bring it up at a meeting and
- request a workshop for those
- interested.
- The heart and the brain of the user
- group (for ALL user groups) is the
- newsletter. Without it, there is no
- real user group. It is the connector
- of members. It is the communicator.
- It is the touchstone and signature of
- each club around the world. The
- newsletters are as individual and
- quirky as the editors whose
- remarkable dedication continues to
- turn them out. You can tell from the
- newsletter if the club is friendly
- and worth joining.
- The main ingredients in successful
- user groups are the four F's:
- FUN, FELLOWSHIP, FOOD, AND
- FRIENDLINESS. When groups get away
- from these qualities, they're fading
- into the shadows. However, as
- M.U.N.C.H. is proof, with a little
- effort a group can leap back into the
- light.
- My 4A and I have been through a
- lot together. We're good buddies.
- It even sends me valentines.
- Would an Apple have been that
- loyal? An IBM? Ha!
- And 4A and me, we've got a long,
- long way yet to go.
- Join us by joining (and
- rejoining) your user group, go to the
- meetings often, voice opinions, run
- for office, staple the newsletters,
- bring a cake. Something! Because
- YOUarethe TI!
- Ten years from now I hope you'll
- be reading IMPACT/99 and sharing some
- of our mutual trips down Memory Lane.
-
- [This is the third of three
- articles about the author's personal
- experiences in the drama of 4Aing.]
-
- [Jack Sughrue, Box 459, E.Douglas
- MA 01516]
-
-
- If any newsletter editor prints
- these IMPACT/99 articles, please put
- me on your mailing list. Thanks -
- JS
-
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