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-
- title: The Online User's Encyclopedia
- : Bulletin Boards and Beyond
- by: Bernard Aboba (aboba@world.std.com)
- publisher: Addison-Wesley 1993
- subjects: computing, networking
- other: 806 pages, large format, appendices, index, US$32.95
- summary: together with a personal computer and a modem, this is all
- one needs to use the net
-
- The _Online User's Encyclopedia_ is not actually an encyclopedia at all.
- As the introduction admits, it is in fact a guide - a guide to getting
- online for personal computer owners (both Macintosh and DOS/Windows
- software and applications are covered). It begins with a brief
- chapter on why one would want to get online, with some warnings about
- what one can and cannot do with computer networks. It then gives all
- the information a first-time user needs to be able to connect -
- information about modems and software and detailed explanations of a
- wide range of bulletin board interfaces.
-
- The longest section of the _Online User's Encyclopedia_ is devoted to
- the Internet, beginning with a brief description of what it is and how
- to get access to it. Separate chapters then cover mail, ftp, USENET,
- IRC/MUDs/talk, libraries and WAIS/gopher/WWW. The final chapter gives a
- brief account of TCP/IP for those who want to run PPP or SLIP. The
- chapter on USENET is pretty good, managing to fit everything from a
- summary of the newsgroup creation procedure to ftp sites for Mac
- newsreaders into just fourteen pages - Kibo even gets a mention! (There
- does seem to be an undue emphasis on the negative aspects of the
- Internet in places; it is not true, for example, that all, or even most,
- alt.fan newsgroups are for abusing their subjects.)
-
- The next section has chapters on UUCP, BITNET, Fidonet and PCBoard nets
- and connections between them. This is mostly aimed at those wanting to
- set up their own bulletin board systems. The whole area is terra
- incognita for me (I've spent my entire networked life on the Internet,
- and have never logged onto a bulletin board), but the coverage seems
- fairly comprehensive.
-
- The rest of the book is a kind of miscellany of useful information
- (perhaps "encyclopedia" wasn't so inappropriate after all). The
- tutorial section contains chapters with advice on minimising phone
- bills, file conversion between different architectures and applications,
- compression, emoticons, K12Net, and even computer control of household
- electronics! Then there is a collection of short essays, including
- Bruce Sterling writing on freedom of knowledge and Vince Cerf on "How
- the Internet Came to Be" as well as pieces on the history of other
- networks. The appendices contain an annotated bibliography for further
- reading, eighty pages of product recommendations (ranging from addresses
- for access providers to hardware and software), a brief list of online
- resources, and a whole pile of other useful stuff. An extensive glossary
- rounds the book off nicely.
-
- --
-
- Extensive use of screen pictures, session printouts and step by step
- instructions make the critical bits of information and ways
- of doing things really clear, so _The Online User's Encyclopedia_ is
- suitable for absolute computer novices. On the other hand it also
- contains material that will interest seasoned network users, and
- some that few even of those will ever need (how many people ever worry
- about DNS internals or buy routers?). The formatting and layout support
- this kind of 'dual use' admirably.
-
- _The Online User's Encyclopedia_ is not really suitable for users on
- larger computer systems, but their administrators might well be
- interested - as system administrator of a university department with
- many Macintosh and PC users I found it a real treasure trove. And, while
- some of the material is specific to the US (or even to California),
- there is a little information on other countries (so two places to
- enquire about getting Internet access in Australia are listed) and there
- is no reason for it not have a worldwide readership.
-
- This would be the perfect present to buy for a friend who wants to get
- access to the net, or for yourself if you are still unsteady on your
- virtual feet or want to do fancy things like set up your own bulletin
- board. _The Online User's Encyclopedia_ is a genuinely engaging book,
- one that conveys not just information but also the author's enthusiasm
- for his subject; it is sufficiently comprehensive to answer almost any
- question dial-up users are likely to ask (and if not, online support is
- provided), but it is also a book which does its best to encourage them
- to actively explore and to become hooked on networking.
-
- --
-
- %T The Online User's Encyclopedia - Bulletin Boards and Beyond
- %A Bernard Aboba (aboba@world.std.com)
- %I Addison-Wesley
- %C Reading
- %D 1993
- %O paperback, large format, appendices, index
- %G ISBN 0-201-62214-9
- %P xxiv,806pp
- %K computing, networking
-
- Danny Yee (danny@cs.su.oz.au)
- 28 March 1994
-
-