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- .IF DSK1.C3
-
- ^^^^^^^^^TEXTWARE, SOFTWARE, and ELSEWHERE
-
- ^^^^^^^^^TI Articles and Reviews
-
- ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^by JACK SUGHRUE
-
- RUNNING RAMPANT AND LITTLE GEMS
-
- The optimism running rampant in the dedicated T.I. community is
- well-founded in the area of software and hardware. There are new items to
- plug into our little marvel coming out weekly. And better, more
- sophisticated software hitting the counters (mail-order) almost daily.
- All of this stuff continues to make our remarkable machine constantly
- more remarkable. (As a fifth-grade teacher I hear the word "awesome" used
- to modify the most awesomeless nouns to the point where I hesitate using
- it. But! Our trusty T.I. is truly awesome. Who among us would have
- dreamed two years ago that our computer would be capable of doing the
- things we take for granted today?) I fell in love with the 99/4 and used
- it in my classroom for a year (courtesy of T.I.). Then we got Apples and
- Commodores and TRS things. The teachers (more than half the staff) went
- out and bought their own 99/4As. And used them. And continue to use
- them. We just got used to a good thing, and none of the others held up.
- Better marketing on the others; true. More software; true. Friendlier
- machine; false.
- All the stuff we take for granted: automatic line numeration,
- resequencing, built-in sound/graphics subprogramming (None of those
- lengthy Peek-Poke procedures.), tape/disk/cartridge options, speech
- synthesis, music, and so on, were too good to give up. The other
- computers gathered dust, while the T.I.s whirred along through primary and
- intermediate classrooms. And still do.
- There isn't a program most of us can think of that hasn't been
- already created for our computer. Educationally it is superb. Home use
- it is superb. Arcade use it is superb. Business use it is superb.
-
- So what happened in the publishing business? Forget PERSONAL
- COMPUTING, CREATIVE COMPUTING (The T.I. has proven to be the most
- creative, ingenious computer still in existence.), BYTE. They never
- bothered with us anyway. COMPUTE! almost did us in until they received a
- zillion letters from irate 99ers. And FAMILY COMPUTING (which is an inane
- magazine to begin with, along with Scholatic K-POWER and other dead mags)
- has done us in, too. This, despite the fact that their advertisers were
- still doing stuff for us (Atarisoft, Parker, Infocom, Unisource, etc.) and
- we were still purchasing the printers, disks, cables, monitors, tapes, and
- so on from other advertisers. So, to hell with them. I began purchasing
- stuff from other sources and wrote to tell the advertisers why.
- Scholastic's so big they don't give a damn.
-
- Our text sources haven't dried up completely yet, but they will
- without support. We need COMPUTE! and MICROPENDIUM and HOME COMPUTER
- MAGAZINE and MINI-MAG 99 right now in 1985. And they need us. The best
- way to protect your thousands of dollars of hardware and software is to
- spend the (comparatively) miniscule amount of money to subscribe to these
- supporting magazines. And to keep up active memberships in users groups.
- That supportive attitude is what keeps the market alive for developers of
- more software and hardware. It's essential. Our computer hasn't died
- because WE make it live! We are its life-support system.
-
- Whew!
-
- A "friend" once told me I should take my act to Hyde Park in London,
- where diatribe is as essential as breathing.
- So I'll step off my soapbox and get on with this review.
-
- There is a crazy little (I MEAN "little") book that was published
- last September called SPEED WALKER: FUN TO PROGRAM YOUR TI-99 SERIES by
- Howard Budin and illustrated by Cris Hammond (Pinnacle Books, Inc., 1430
- Broadway, New York, N.Y. - $2.95) which impressed me in rather an unusual
- way. It seemed to be written like a novel. Not one of those MICRO
- ADVENTURE types that throw in decoders that have no relevance, but a
- novelish kind of thing. The comic-strip sequences are definitely
- plot-oriented. The text is program-oriented. Extremely lucid. Very
- simple. My fifth-grade class loved it.
- Each section, each subroutine of each program is described in detail
- as you lay the program in. Step by step. Clear. Intelligent. Full of
- humor. Then the program, in its entirety, is given at the end of each
- chapter to check against your listing to date.
- Nice.
- The six chapters are entitled WHAT'S YOUR FORTUNE, A SECRET CODE, AN
- INITIAL RACE, BURST THE BALLOON, SCRAMBLED STATES, GLOSSARY & INDEX. For
- anyone in for a night of light programming entertainment or for anyone
- with kids at home or in a classroom (quantity discounts are given to
- schools) this book is fun and extremely educational. But mostly fun.
- Anyone who follows the entire course of this marvelous tutorial and
- doesn't immediately write his or her own program has either died in the
- interim or has the mentality that thinks an Apple is superior. Both lost
- causes. The book's worth buying. And $2.95 is the price.
- It's 3 X 5, ring binder (I will buy any T.I. book that has a ring
- binder.), large type, newsprint paper, 90 pages.
- The programs aren't going to add teriffically to your library. They
- are not profound and are easily changed to your liking. It is the concept
- of the thing I like best. I hope it starts a trend of a thousand T.I.
- owner/thinker/programmer/writers making little books of their T.I.
- specialties. Little gems.
- Maybe a book on Multiplan sponsored by some user group. Or maybe a
- book on TI Writer put out by a guy with a copier. Or maybe someone who
- did a dozen programs that he or she really likes and wants to share with
- hopes of making a buck or two.
- Wouldn't that be great. More people with the Tigercub one-man-show
- approach who care and work at it and want to share in the Great T.I.
- Adventure.
-
- [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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