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Internet Review
- From: Pat.McGregor
- Date: Fri Aug 28 16:00:01 1992
This is a review of Krol's new book on the internet. I don't intend
this as an endorsement, simply as information.
(Interesting note: All the Science Fiction magazines are running
full page ads for this book in their current editions. We may get
lots more questions.)
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From: Brian Erwin <brian@ora.com>
Date: Fri, 28 Aug 1992 12:11:59 PDT
X-Mailer: Mail User's Shell (7.2.0 10/31/90)
To: pat.mcGregor@um.cc.umich.edu
Subject: Internet Review
Pat: Here is a copy of Ian Hoyle's review. Please let me know if I
can provide any further information.
Brian
=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
The following review (well I wouldn't call it a formal review, but more of a
first glance) was made possible by receiving an early copy of the manuscript
of Ed Krol's new book from O'Reilly.
I was lucky to be able to get access to it because I wanted to include a
mention of it in a tutorial I am running at our AUUG conference - Australian
Unix Users Group - in a couple of weeks titled "Cruising the Internet".
O'Reilly kindly forwarded me a copy so I thought I'd do a quick review since
I was so impressed.
I have *no* affiliation with them whatsoever except for spending lots of $$'s
buying several titles in their catalog :-)
As a background to me, I've been looking after our Internet/USEnet link here
for some 4 years and this new book represents a _very_ handy compendium to
have by your side as you wander through the net ....
ian
############################################################################
Hi all,
I just received a few days ago a manuscript copy of the new O'Reilly book
"The Whole Internet User's Guide and catalog" by Ed Krol.
(ISBN 1-56592-025-2) There are a few changes yet to be made to the final
product, but what I have is pretty much what will hit the shelves in September
when it is published.
In a word, it is a *must* for all Internet sites as a complement to much
of the resource material and guides you would already have accumulated.
It is:
- big! This sucker comes in at over 400 pages of close typed material.
The chapters include
What Is This Book About?
What Is the Internet?
What's Allowed on the Internet?
Remote Login
Moving a File: FTP
Electronic Mail
Network nNews
Finding Software
Finding Someone
Gopher
WAIS
World-Wide Web
Other Applications
Dealing With Problems
Resources On The Internet
and some appendices
Sevice Providers
International Network Connectivity
- written in a conversational, non-frightening manner, ideal for
non-computer literate people who may be wary of the technology
but who can _really_ utilize what it might provide for them.
- up to date. Apart from the usual stuff like email, news, and ftp, the
chapters on finding sofware, people and things set it apart from other
Internet documentation. In particular, the chapters on gopher, WAIS and
World-Wide Web represent areas of intense current research into providing
easy access to information sources residing on the net.
To gather together all of this information previously I have had to amass
a considerable number of documents, FAQ lists and USEnet tidbits from
an countless sites and sources on the net. Indeed a beginning user
doesn't really stand a chance in coming to terms with the immense number
and variety of network resources that are "out there" without having
some kind of users kind to 'hold their hand' while they start out on
the journey to net.wisdom.
- a *huge* resources section dealing with servers for info on material
as diverse as agriculture, environment, libraries, literature etc etc
In fact there are roughly 300 items here. This cannot possibly be an
exhaustive list since this changes so rapidly, but it is a good starting
point.
- the chapter on network news will probably start a religious war because
of the choice of nn as the newsreader used for his example reader. Indeed
there was a flurry of debate/comment in news.software.readers just a
month ago whan Ed Krol solicited ideas on what peole would like to see
used.
Actually I agree with his decision to stick with using a single reader
as an example. The important point of the chapter is the fact that netnews
exists and that there are some basic things that can be done with it.
I won't belabour the point - you'll just have to read the book :-)
All in all, I'd very much recommend it!
BTW just drop O'Reilly a line at nuts@ora.com if you want any further info.
ian
---
/\/\ : Dr Ian Hoyle, Senior Research Scientist
/ / /\ : Image Analysis Group
/ / / \ : BHP Research - Melbourne Laboratories
/ / / /\ \ : 245 Wellington Rd, Mulgrave, 3170, AUSTRALIA
\ \/ / / / : Phone +61-3-560-7066
\ / / / : E-mail ianh@resmel.bhp.com.au
\/\/\/ :
: "The kernel IS a continuously running random number
: generator" -- Larry Wall
=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
--
Brian Erwin, brian@ora.com
Public Relations, O'Reilly & Associates
103A Morris Street, Sebastopol CA 95472
707-829-0515, Fax 707-829-0104
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