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- YOUR NEW PC - GETTING STARTED
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- The variety of software programs which are available for a PC
- (personal computer) and the tasks these software programs
- accomplish is stunning. Ultimately the reason for owning one of
- these marvelous machines is the variety of opportunities
- software presents.
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- IBM estimates over 130,000 programs exist for the PC family of
- computers! These programs range from the predictably practical
- to elegantly imaginative to utterly eccentric. All are worth
- investigating. Local software stores, public domain and
- shareware sources from local computer clubs contain more
- possibilities. Addresses for free software and hardware catalogs
- are listed in PC-LEARN under the PC-LEARN menu options SOFTWARE
- and also RECOMMENDED READING/BIBLIOGRAPHY.
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- A list of interesting computerized activities follows . . .
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- Trace your family roots (genealogy programs)
- Learn to speed read (reading tutorials)
- Improve typing speed or learn keyboarding skills tutorials)
- Manage your career (aptitude tests, resume writing)
- Plan a workable diet and appropriate meals (diet programs)
- Track stock market performance
- Design a floorplan for a house, boat, garden
- Write the great American novel (word processor)
- Budget and manage finances (money managers and spreadsheets)
- Learn a foreign language (language tutorials)
- Design a personal aerobics/exercise program
- Play games (computerized chess, bridge, checkers, monopoly)
- Learn to fly a plane (flight simulation programs)
- Prepare brochures and newsletters (desktop publishing)
- Visit with others and obtain free software (modems/bbs use)
- Automate a professional office (physician, lawyer, architect)
- Prepare/forecast your taxes (tax return preparation programs)
- Track horse race odds
- Chart and graph business data
- Prepare for the college SAT tests
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- And the list goes on! This is only a SMALL sample of some
- practical and entertaining programs which ACTUALLY EXIST for use
- with a personal computer. Most beginners guides start with a
- discussion of DOS. Let's do that in a later article, but first a
- little honesty to set the stage . . .
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- A TYPICAL ODYSSEY FOLLOWS . . .
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- Grownups who understand computers least will tell you to decide
- on one or two practical goals (word processing or accounting)
- and apply the computer to a task which will make you money or
- save you time. Grownups also unwisely suggest you should become
- organized in attempting these goals . . .
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- Children and computer users (is there a difference?) who
- understand computers best will suggest that you to PLAY to see
- what happens. Let the machine guide you. As you delve into the
- computer, ask important questions: What kind of machine will
- keep me addictively awake until 4 am? How can I afford a modem?
- Can I write my own software?
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- Week one - 6pm to 8pm. The marriage
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- The new computer is home. You can load DOS. Your spouse is
- skeptical about this "fantastic computer consulting business you
- are going to run out of the garage."
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- One way to start is to try learning a basic software function
- like word processing. Purchase a software package for beginners
- like Microsoft Works or First Choice. Or locate a free shareware
- copy of GALAXY or PC-WRITE from a computer user club. If you are
- just starting, nothing is as impressive, practical and fun as
- jumping from a typewriter to a word processor. Spouse is now
- mildly impressed that you have mastered the word processor but
- unaware of the savage reality which lies ahead . . .
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- Week two - 6pm to 10pm. The honeymoon
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- Now grab some games and play for a while. Study the visuals, the
- logic and the joy of computing. Continue delving deeper with the
- word processor. Join a computer User Club. The addiction is
- taking form . . .
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- Week 3,4,5. 6pm to midnight. Reality dawns
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- Study DOS and practice with the DOS tips contained in PC-LEARN.
- DOS lets you control the machine for faster, smoother results.
- Borrow a book on DOS from the library - see the suggested books
- and reading references contained elsewhere on this disk. DOS is
- a pain? Use a DOS shell software package like Xtree, DirMagic,
- Qfiler or PcTools which lets you manipulate the PC without
- having to learn too much about DOS. Get a copy of the PC-SIG
- shareware catalog and try some low cost and free shareware. PC-
- SIG address listed elsewhere on this disk under software
- resources.
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- Week six. 6pm to 3 am. Addiction phase/personality shift
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- Next move on to a good database program and index some christmas
- card lists or business data you use frequently. Tackle
- spreadsheets or number grids with ASEASYAS or a commercial
- program such as lotus 123 or Microsoft Works. Databases can act
- like spreadsheets and spreadsheets can act like databases.
- Software starts to blend together.
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- Good programs have layers like an onion. You can go deeper for
- greater layers of complexity and reward, but (as with the onion)
- you can be left crying as you peel the layers. However, once you
- get this far you find your computer curiosity is overwhelming.
- Spouses of male computer-holics refer to "the man and his
- midnight mistress." However, being an "equal opportunity
- software package," the author of PC-LEARN hastens to add that
- women also find the PC addictive and equally infatuating!
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- Week seven through 14. 6pm to 6am. Loved ones move away.
- Computer user does not notice or care . . .
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- Now start to learn in greater detail. Go to the library and get
- some back issues of Personal Computing (interesting and basic),
- PC magazine (practical), and Byte (sophisticated). Try to see
- the pattern: you can use a computer for an infinite variety of
- tasks all of which may be at the same time fun/productive/silly/
- lucrative/exhausting. Spouse realizes belatedly that this is a
- full blown addiction and finds solace by reading and writing
- personals ads which leads to discovery of a dynamite divorce
- attorney . . .
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- End of first six months. Fatal discovery: programming
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- Next plunge is to try programming. Basic or turbo pascal allow
- you to write programs that do exactly what you want.
- Alternatively there are keyboard macro programs (smartkey,
- prokey, newkey) that do "sort of programming." At this point
- you begin to see that the machine has logic and always does
- exactly what you tell it to do, even if you don't care for the
- result!
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- Terminal phase. Severe addiction. Purchase of modem
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- Getting a modem on your computer to "have a little fun" is sort
- of like getting a little bit pregnant. Basically things swell
- out of normal proportion, if you follow the drift. Modems let
- you hook into large databases, neighborhood "bulletin boards,"
- and all kinds of expensive long distance telephone things.
- Incredible 4 day "no food or sleep" modem orgies begin. Modems
- are fascinating, global, thoroughly useful and BIG TROUBLE!
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- Human Perspective phase. Back to the real world
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- After sampling everything, somewhere about 1 to 3 years after
- you first started, the computer will integrate nicely into the
- real world again. You start to think about camping trips,
- cooking classes, church on Sunday, bowling, the routine things.
- Bedtime settles in at 10 pm. Going near a computer is simply
- like walking by a typewriter or can opener. The computer is
- there when you need it, does the job and is essential to your
- normal daily routine. Loved ones return home again after
- discovering your alimony payments are unreliable and usually
- spent on computer toys anyway.
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