Info-IBMPC@C.ISI.EDU.UUCP (06/02/87)
Info-IBMPC Digest Sunday, 1 June 1987 Volume 6 : Issue 42 This Week's Editor: Billy Brackenridge Today's Topics: Administrivia INFO-IBMPC BBS Phone Numbers: (213)827-2635 (213)827-2515 ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Date: 1 Jun 1987 17:56:58 PDT Subject: Administrivia From: Billy <BRACKENRIDGE@C.ISI.EDU> I am resigning as editor of info-ibmpc as of 1 July 1987. The position is up for grabs. There is nobody here at ISI who is willing to take it over; so we need a new site as well. I will be motorcycling in the Pacific Northwest at that time so I won't even be around to answer the mail. I hope to be salmon fishing in mid July. INFO-IBMPC has outlived its original purpose. When we started the digest there was no source of technical information about programming the PC. Dick Gillmann was the first to publish an assembly language program. Many of us learned such basics as how to open a file from copying this program. Today there are dozens of well written books on DOS internals as well as monthly magazines and on line information services that can keep the serious programmer current on DOS and all its new variations. INFO-IBMPC isn't really necessary anymore as a source of technical information on PCs for computer scientists and career programmers. Today INFO-IBMPC serves a different purpose. The PC has been taken up by scientists of all sorts. A recent PBS documentary on "Chernobyl a year later" brought this home to me. The interviewees were scientists tracking radiation damage from the Chernobyl accident. From Poland to Sweden all of the scientists interviewed had PCs or PC clones on their desks. I would like to see INFO-IBMPC move to some institution (preferably a university) where it can be funded and make a serious attempt at supporting those non computer scientists who are joining the net. The net has also grown. When we started the digest there were less than 200 hosts on entire network. The users were computer weenies or military. Today we send the digest directly to nearly a thousand sites, and many of those forward the digest on to other sites and users. At that time the notion of a moderated digest was relatively new having been pioneered by human-nets a few years earlier. We have grown to the point that the digest form is too rigid. The digest is already too long for everybody to read twice a week. I do my best to cut down on the size of the digest by answering most of the queries myself. If we had a staff we could answer more queries call up the manufacturers and get definitive answers, publishing only those queries and answers of interest to the general community and keeping a database of all the answers. I think something more on the model of MOSES or FAST is appropriate. These are services consisting of programs and people built on top of mail systems. I would like to see an INFO-IBMPC where we can make greater use of data bases. The key word search function in our DLX BBS is very helpful. Our digest database has long since grown past my ability to remember digest discussions. It would be nice to keep a database of users and their interests. This way users with similar interests might be able to share information not of interest to the wider community. I am not satisfied with the digest in its present form. I would like to see it grow to fit the needs of the larger community. We don't have the resources to do that here. Also it is time for me to move on and do something else. An ideal situation would be to place INFO-IBMPC at a university that already has a PC resources staff that provides service to the university or group of universities. I have been negotiating with some good candidates with excellent international reputations, but everybody is short of money and can't afford a full time staff person to coordinate the volunteers. If we could get funding we have a good place to put INFO-IBMPC and can keep it going. If you have resources at your site and would like to take over the digest, you should have at least one full time paid staff member and arbitrary numbers of student volunteers some of whom should be able to read and write English. This is quite rare at universities as witness many of the messages before editing. Good network connections are essential. A university with Arpanet, Usenet, and Bitnet connections is ideal; an Arpanet connection is minimal. There is a lot more to one of these digests than just editing the messages. For example I haven't been able to adequately deal with the program library since our program librarian quit and got a paying job. Stories should be checked out. One of the nice things about editing INFO-IBMPC is people from IBM, Microsoft, Ashton Tate, Intel, and Lotus etc. know INFO-IBMPC and that it has some reputation for fairness and will return phone calls and definitely respond positively when people express legitimate complaints. Most people should get a response to their query without having to publish it in the digest. Not everybody cares about somebody's problem hooking a Toshiba printer via a serial line to a PC. Usually the editor can get an response and the query need not be printed. Sometimes several messages go back and forth and the query still gets printed. Most often the editor doesn't have time and the query gets printed sometimes with an editorial comment. I will not turn INFO-IBMPC into an automatic remailing list. I'd rather see it go away entirely than watch it degenerate. Of course the net is a free forum and anybody can do what they want. Please send me your suggestions and offers. If nobody volunteers, INFO-IBMPC will cease publication on 1 July 1987. ------------------------------ End of Info-IBMPC Digest ************************ -------