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1994-03-26
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EXCERPTS FROM:
─────────────
COMMENTS ON OS/2 MAGAZINES AND PERIODICALS
──────────────────────────────────────────
By:Richard E. Hodges
1. TRADITIONAL PRINTED PERIODICALS
1.1 DESCRIPTIONS AND COMMENTS
1.1.1 OS/2 Professional
This is a monthly periodical which has been around for just over
one year. OS/2 Professional is a slick, color glossy magazine
which typically runs about 100 pages. It features regular columns
by noted industry pundits such as William Zachmann and Jerry
Pournelle. Editor Edwin Black does a fine job of pulling together
a professional publication targeted primarily at the corporate
OS/2 user, MIS Manager, developer, etc.
OS/2 Professional is organized into four major sections:
Articles, Products & Reviews, Tech Talk, and Departments &
Columns.
The feature article section typically contains such categories as
"Special Report", "User Profile", "Vendor Profile" and "Feature".
Typical articles tend to run in two veins. One recurring
theme is coverage of OS/2-specific developments. Articles such as
"The Future of OS/2", "Integrating OS/2", "Windows Version of
OS/2--a Solid Integrating Platform", etc. The other theme tends
to highlight various corporations and individual OS/2 users.
These articles typically show examples of how OS/2 has helped
make someone a success, or solve some problem.
Black often conducts a Q&A interview with some industry
leader who is significant in some way to OS/2. For instance,
a recent issue featured an interview with Corel CEO Michael
Cowpland.
OS/2 Professional is relatively weak as a source of solid
information related to applications programs: this is not the
place to look for a comparison of the latest productivity apps.
Shareware, no matter how good, would scarcely be expected to
appear in an OS/2 Pro review. It doesn't appear that OS/2 Pro has
established or utilizes any benchmarks for OS/2 programs.
The editorials in OS/2 Professional have a decidedly political
edge. Edwin Black generally offers some market analysis ranging
from doom and gloom to cautious optimism. Zachmann's View is
usually gazing over the broad architectural landscape of IBM
operating systems vis a vis Microsoft's. Predictably, Zachmann
is inclined to put on the binoculars and focus attention on the
latest smokescreen from Microsoft. This politico-IBM orientation
also spills over into some articles and interviews.
Jerry Pournelle's recent addition, "The View From Chaos Manor"
brings a much needed end-user perspective to the magazine. For
instance, Jerry has discovered many obvious quirks in OS/2
(such as the idiotic "Find" and "Locate" commands). Hopefully,
if someone of Pournelle's reputation identifies these problems
the OS/2 developers (or someone!) will get around to doing
something about them. Unfortunately, Jerry still seems to view
OS/2 as a platform for running Windows programs. He can't resist
the ever present temptation to send IBM some more good advice...
Overall, I regard OS/2 Professional as a worthwhile publication.
It has plenty of advertisements, reports of new products, some
useful tips and REXX programming hints. Unfortunately, I sometimes
find the political tone of magazine tiresome and almost depressing.
Indeed, even the photos of the authors look gloomy. Nobody smiles.
1.1.2 OS/2 Magazine
OS/2 Magazine is a new monthly periodical which appeared last
December (1993). It is a glossy color periodical which
(so far) runs about 85 pages. OS/2 Magazine provides coverage
of OS/2 that is distinctly oriented toward the end-user. The
articles and editorial copy are aimed at _average_ end users,
a welcome perspective. Discussion of software products is
typically prefaced by some plain-language description of
why one would need it. Acronyms are always defined, and the
magazine seems to consciously avoid paragraphs that look like
they were taken from an IBM service manual, or a game of techo-
scrabble. It is enjoyable reading.
OS/2 Magazine is divided into four sections: Articles, Reviews,
Departments and Columns. The articles on OS/2 are typically
in the "how to" vein or else are tutorial in nature. Examples
include, "Customizing your OS/2 Desktop", "While You Wait" (a
very readable explanation of why multitasking is useful for an
average end user), "OS/2 on a Laptop". So far, the cover story
has tended to focus on OS/2 itself, rather than products for
OS/2. For instance, the March issue features, "OS/2 for Windows".
One thing I found distinctive about OS/2 Magazine is the honesty
of the product reviews. The reviews give a straightforward view
of the author's experience with the product. There is evidently
little bias shown to native OS/2 products -- for instance, the
March issue's review of word processors flatly states that
Windows word processors are better than the current crop of
native OS/2 word processors. On the downside, the product
reviews are not as precise and detailed as one would like.
In some cases, the reviews are a bit sloppy. There is little
_quantitative_ comparison of products (although, admittedly
these kinds of tests can often be misleading). Bottom line:
the magazine provides useful information about applications
software and how it performs.
Long-time OS/2 users will recognize some ex-IBMers among the
authors in OS/2 Magazine. They are unequivocally _NEW_ IBM. The
authors of editorial and opinion columns in OS/2 Magazine
avoid the geo-political-operating-system-war-game-strategy
attitude that is prevalent in many periodicals. Although
the editorials and opinions columns do not shrink from
complaining about problems (again, end-user viewpoint), the
overall tone is positive. All of the authors are smiling!
Another unique aspect of OS/2 Magazine is the column by Amy Wohl
(in fact, she's the only "big name" writer). This provides a
welcome departure from the male dominated computer press.
Columns in OS/2 Magazine are filled with useful "how to"
information. How to code REXX macros. How to find an OS/2
user group. How to find the latest OS/2 books. There's a
helpful "Tips and Tricks" column with useful information to
help a person set up and customize the system. Etc, etc, etc.
Overall, OS/2 Magazine is a very valuable resource, particularly
for NEW OS/2 users. It has plenty of advertisements and listings
of new products. The tone is positive and the magazine properly
focuses attention on how to solve problems and make things
work for you. The product reviews should improve over time
(bear in mind, this is only about the third issue -- VERY
impressive quality for a startup). One useful addition would be
a regular review of good shareware programs.
══════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════
SUBSCRIPTION INFORMATION:
OS/2 PROFESSIONAL (Monthly) OS/2 MAGAZINE (Monthly)
─────────────────────────── ───────────────────────
International Features Miller Freeman, Inc.
172 Rollins Avenue 600 Harrison Street
Rockville, MD 20852 San Francisco, CA 94107
Subs: $39.95/yr Subs: $39.95/yr
(301)770-3333 (800)765-1291
CIS:71572,431