home
***
CD-ROM
|
disk
|
FTP
|
other
***
search
/
Telecom
/
1996-04-telecom-walnutcreek.iso
/
book.reviews
/
exploring.inet-malamud
< prev
next >
Wrap
Text File
|
1995-01-01
|
3KB
|
62 lines
Date: Mon, 30 May 1994 12:44:28 MDT
From: Rob Slade <roberts@decus.ca>
Subject: Book Review: "Exploring the Internet" by Malamud
BKEXPINT.RVW 940310
Prentice Hall
113 Sylvan Avenue
Englewood Cliffs, NJ 07632
(515) 284-6751 FAX (515) 284-2607
phyllis@prenhall.com
70621.2737@CompuServe.COM Alan Apt
Beth Mullen-Hespe beth_hespe@prenhall.com
"Exploring the InterNet", Malamud, 1993, 0-13-296898-3, U$26.95
carl@malamud.com
The naive reader might be forgiven for thinking that this book is
about the Internet and how to use it. The author seems to think that
this book has something to do with the ITU's initial interest in, and
later refusal of, publishing the "Blue Book" of telecommunications
standards on the Internet. The phrase, "technical travelogue," gets
bandied about as if it had some meaning. (It is interesting that on
the fourth or fifth visit to Paris the author is unable to explain to
anyone, including his aunt, what the phrase means.) Dan Lynch reports
as Malamud's proposal a statement that makes as much sense as
anything: "Buy my airplane tickets and I'll try to get into as much
trouble as I can. Then, I'll write a book." After reading the cover
blurbs, one suspects that if you were to try to design a project
antithetical to the aims and workings of the Internet, one couldn't
get much closer than a six- month trip circling the globe a few times,
dropping in on a number of people engaged in esoteric projects for
interviews.
It isn't a travelogue, since that would imply some sort of logical
plan behind the route travelled or the places visited. It isn't all
that technical, except that the majority of people discussed work in
technical fields. Some of it has to do with the Internet; much of it
doesn't.
What it is, is hilarious. While novice users looking for documentation
on ftp will be mystified, net gurus, particularly those with some
knowledge of the players mentioned, will be laughing their socks off.
Even the net-illiterate will get some chuckles out of it -- Malamud has
a dry wit and a keen eye for the absurd. I can readily sympathize
with his tale of a story killed by a marketing department.
I still haven't got the slightest idea what the book is supposed to be
*about*, but it's a lot of fun.
copyright Robert M. Slade, 1994 BKEXPINT.RVW 940310. Distribution per-
mitted in TELECOM Digest and associated mailing lists/newsgroups. PAT]
Vancouver ROBERTS@decus.ca
Institute for Robert_Slade@sfu.ca
Research into rslade@cue.bc.ca
User p1@CyberStore.ca
Security Canada V7K 2G6