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- Newsgroups: alt.cd-rom
- Path: sparky!uunet!mcsun!news.funet.fi!ngw
- From: OTTOP@NYUACF.BITNET
- Subject: Review of ProPhone
- Message-ID: <01GSMH1U5PN6APU1KT@ACFcluster.NYU.EDU>
- Sender: CD-ROM <CDROM-L@uccvma.ucop.edu>
- Reply-To: OTTOP@NYUACF.bitnet
- Organization: FUNET-NGW
- Distribution: alt
- Date: Tue, 22 Dec 1992 21:09:25 GMT
- Lines: 29
-
- The Telephone Reference Division at Brooklyn Public Library received
- ProPhone two months ago and has been comparing it to PhoneDisc, which they have
- been using for over a year. Tel Ref is always on the lookout for ever more
- comprehensive listings of residential, business and organizational addresses
- and phone numbers.
- ProPhone comes in 3 discs, 2 for residential listings and 1 for
- businesses/organizations, just like PhoneDisc. However, it requires separate
- software to search residential and business listings; each program must be
- loaded into its own subdirectory and requires a different command to summon it.
- From the standpoint of installation and access therefore, ProPhone is already
- less user-friendly.
- There are other problems with ProPhone as well. The number of listings
- seems to be considerably less than that of PhoneDisc. For example, I found 88
- listings for my name in PhoneDisc but only 44 in ProPhone. The quality of the
- data appears about the same in both products, based on searches I performed on
- family and friends from across the country. However, the worst fault lies with
- ProPhone's business listings, which often include a street address, state and
- zip code, but *no city*, as strange as this may seem. The fact that ProPhone's
- business listings seem to be slightly more comprehensive than PhoneDisc's does
- not outweigh the sheer frustration of so much missing data. (As a matter of
- fact, for businesses and organizations, Tel Ref prefers UMI's ProDirect:
- Business, the most comprehensive and affordable CD-ROM directory they have been
- able to find.)
- ProPhone only cost us a couple hundred dollars. I don't know whether this
- was a special introductory price and whether the renewal will be much higher,
- but even at the original price I doubt that Tel Ref will be much interested in
- renewing their subscription. For those libraries which cannot afford to
- subscribe to PhoneDisc, I have heard that previous editions, only 6 months old,
- may be available from mail-order distributors such as DAK.
-