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- X-Last-Updated: 1995/11/08
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- From: t.lawrence@bbcnc.org.uk
- Newsgroups: misc.writing,rec.arts.prose,rec.arts.sf.written,misc.answers,rec.answers,news.answers
- Subject: the Internet Writer Resource Guide (2/2)
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- Archive-name: writing/resources/part2
- Version: 2.8
- Last-modifed: 95/10
- Distribution-agent: ldetweil@csn.org
- URL: http://bel.avonibp.co.uk/bricolage/resources/lounge/IWRG/index.html
-
- Internet Writer Resources v2.8 (10/95)
- ======================================
-
- (5)
- A Note to Editors
- =================
-
- >From the current perspective, you are in one of two categories: a
- backward Luddite or a visionary pioneer, depending on whether you have
- never heard of internet email or are utilizing it and supporting
- submissions through it. (That is a joke.) Sincerely however, in the near
- future conducting writing transactions over the internet may become the
- medium of choice for many markets. Of course, there are disadvantages
- along with the grand incentives to support this capability. Many editors
- however have found the ability to receive submissions and queries via
- email to be immensely valuable in cultivating future issues' articles.
- In some cases, you may be competing with them directly for knowledgeable
- and interesting articles and writers. If a writer sees two outlets with
- similar content but one with more ideal rights or remuneration
- arrangements, which will s/he submit to?
-
- The author of this list strongly encourages you to support and solicit
- articles via email. It may allow you to interact and direct your writers
- more effectively and less stressfully. It may allow you to improve the
- quality of submissions by expanding the available pool and increasing
- the target and focus of individual pieces. Ultimately it may make you
- more responsive to readers than your competition. Potentially, both the
- writer, editor, and reader benefit from the dynamic arrangement. All
- this is written in speculative terms, however, because it is not
- guaranteed. You may find that irrelevant or useless queries increase,
- but even so a wider selection pool may render that unproblematic.
-
- (6)
- A Vision of the Future
- ======================
- (By L. Detweiler)
-
- I wrote this FAQ for a variety of reasons. The Internet has completely
- exploded into the collective human psyche and it is radically altering
- the realm of writing, and writing for money. It is clear that Cyberspace
- offers unprecedented opportunity for *everyone* to profit from writing
- and editing, not just a anointed elite clique as is often the case in
- many existing publishing structures. This threat to the status quo
- upsets many. But to me the bottom line is that the quality of writing
- available to the consumer (the reader) is ultimately going to improve,
- and the cost of that quality is going to decrease, and selling writing
- will be more accessable and profitable for everyone who truly has
- something valuable to offer.
-
- But the definition of `valuable' is going to be upheaved and
- revolutionized over the next few years. I feel very strongly that a
- certain kind of `parasitism' whereby a middleman takes advantage of a
- writer, reselling the `product' without adding any value himself, is
- going to become a much more difficult or even impossible niche in the
- future cyberspatial society, because all writers will have available
- their *own* unparalleled publishing capabilities.
-
- I think we are entering an age where *everyone* will be able to run
- their own publishing stations at home (sort of like FTP sites but far
- less complicated!) -- they will become perhaps as common as answering
- machines. And a structure to allow for transparent, seamless, painless
- transaction charges will evolve very soon as well. And ultimately, this
- was partly the motivation in writing this FAQ-- to encourage everyone to
- market their writing independent of people who seek to take advantage of
- them by denigrating, underpaying, monopolizing, and diminishing their
- choice of outlets. I seek to advance this vision of the future where
- everyone who can type can `publish'.
-
- Some people think, or fear, that the role of the writing `middleman' is
- threatened to the point of extinction. But I must emphasize that most
- existing editors, critics, proofreaders, etc. *do* add value to writing
- and deserve to be rewarded and sought by the better writers. In fact, I
- think these future developments in Cyberspace will also help to
- separate, more than ever before, the parasites from the truly talented
- artists (writers) and `meta-artists' (critics, proofreaders, editors,
- etc.) by rewarding the latter beyond their wildest dreams and making the
- former an unprofitable and untenable existence. Cyberspace is going to
- revolutionize publishing *more* than the printing press did, and in
- amazingly similar ways.
-
- One example of this emerging egalitarianism and populism in
- cyberspatial writing is in the explosion of electronic `zines'. While
- generally of marginal quality compared to more sophisticated outlets,
- some 'zines have built up immensely prestigious reputations and quality
- of editing and writing surpassing many paper-published journals. This
- trend will continue until an entire spectrum (a sort of `food chain')
- of magazines will exist in cyberspace from the lowliest free, irregularly
- published, slapped-together paragraphs to the most professional, slick,
- typeset, paying, even advertising- and subscription-based outlets all
- coexist.
-
- (7)
- The FAQ as the Future
- =====================
- (By L. Detweiler)
-
- An interesting form of cyberspatial writing has existed for essentially
- as long as Usenet and continues to gain momentum and prestige, and may
- be the bridge to the vision of the future I have written about above.
- The Frequently Asked Question List, or FAQ, a document designed to
- answer questions that pop up on newsgroups to decrease the annoyance
- factor in reading them, started out as not even something that was ever
- archived at a public site-- FAQs were just regularly posted by their
- authors. (A regular Usenet posting itself represents different kind of
- publishing that is unique to cyberspace-- somewhat reminiscent of the
- way an electron beam of a television set displays a picture by
- continually retracing it.) But FAQs have evolved into extremely
- sophisticated collections of information on virtually any subject,
- becoming highly refined over many years and involving whole
- hierarchies of teams and editors. A FAQ is even superior to many other
- types of static collections of writing in this way-- they are far more
- valuable (but also sometimes more difficult to keep track of) because
- they are continually updated.
-
- The most important new development in FAQ writing is that of the
- `commercial factor'. Buried in that phrase are many multifaceted pots of
- gold, but also many bugaboos. Very soon, the Internet will have a
- standard for mercantile commerce, and some FAQs will be one of the first
- pieces of the pie to be commercialized. I foresee some great, wrenching
- upheavals in the FAQ structures as the forces of `volunteerism' and
- `entrepreneurialism' meet face to face. I believe that a certain
- percentage of all FAQs, which in many ways are a microcosm of the
- Internet, will remain free and maintained by volunteers. But the rewards
- to both writers and readers in a fee-based structure for access are
- great. For even extremely inconsequential fees to individual readers,
- writers could be compensated, rewarded, and encouraged in their writing
- quite tangibly. And I believe a commensurate increase in the quality of
- the FAQs written by them, for their `consumers', will be quite dramatic.
- The FAQ will continue to be at the forefront of cyberspatial writing
- frontiers.
-
- I encourage you to read about the CRAM service below involved
- `publishing' the collections of others into the FAQ infrastructure. This
- removes some of the bothersome overhead to the writer in disseminating
- their writing by having an `agent' take care of the details. CRAM has
- propagated over a half-dozen different compilations into the FAQ
- structure with extremely rewarding benefits to everyone involved. The
- writers are quite delighted at the increased exposure and the readers
- are quite delighted at running into the quality compilations they might
- never have discovered otherwise.
-
- I also urge anyone interested in cyberspatial writing to read the
- news.answers FAQ posted to that group and write a FAQ on their favorite
- subject of interest if it is not already covered. Even the simple
- process of taking existing FAQs and reorganizing them into more useful
- collections of information is an extremely valuable service to the net.
- Writing a FAQ in many ways is one of the ultimate community services to
- your fellow cyberspatial citizens. Just browsing the rtfm.mit.edu
- archives is an extremely pleasureable activity.
-
- The FAQ is a beautiful model of the future of writing in cyberspace. As
- it exists, the current process on Usenet to submit an `official' FAQ is
- far from Herculean and in fact highly accessable to virtually anyone
- with a modicum of interest in writing. In fact, the effort is
- astonishingly less than that required for that of say, a book, but, with
- newsgroup distributions reaching tens of thousands of readers, amazingly
- the exposure in many cases can be *greater* than that of a published
- book. And this exposure will increase tremendously as cyberspace becomes
- more ubiquitous, and I am convinced the `entrance requirements' will
- also become even more trivial to pass such that, as I wrote above,
- virtually anyone who can write can publish. Even the necessity of owning
- a computer is bypassed!
-
- (8)
-
- WWW: Cyberspatial Presses
- =========================
- (By L.Detweiler)
-
- The World Wide Web has grown at a breathtaking pace, in some ways more
- so than the actual physical growth of the Internet. There appears to
- be a great "cyberspatial Web rush" as diverse individuals and
- organizations work to "broadcast their signal" via home pages,
- electronic brochures and advertisements, etc. The age of the
- cyberspatial printing press has arrived.
-
- The old cliche goes that "freedom of speech only belongs to people who
- own presses". Doesn't this strike you as a kind of oppressive
- sentiment? Why should freedom of speech have anything to do with
- money or status? Indeed, the invention of the printing press by
- Gutenberg broke down entrenched barriers in exactly this realm. And
- the logical conclusion of this "equality, egalitarianism, and
- populism" in the ability to disseminate ideas is evident in the Web.
-
- Suddenly the computer and networks, "cyberspace", is engendering the
- same type of revolution that the printing press did, with a
- fundamental difference: the press made available cheap *books* for
- distribution, i.e. the burden of the *receiver* was diminished
- greatly, but sophisticated skill and expertise was still required of
- the *sender*. Today, anyone can set up a "printing press in
- cyberspace" for a very minimal cost that is dropping rapidly.
-
- Let me give an example of how to set up a cyberspatial broadcasting
- station for about $20 a month such that you don't even need to own
- a computer. The Internet provider Netcom provides unlimited internet
- access for $20 a month, including an anonymous FTP directory, and
- many providers provide a similar service. The anonymous FTP is
- capable of supporting not only the mundane (sometimes tedious and
- arcane) FTP access, but the seamless, transparent, smooth access of
- hypertext browsers such as Lynx and Mosaic.
-
- Netcom is going through growing pains, but provides the most universal
- Internet coverage in the U.S. for the least amount of money, and
- makes FTP setup a snap, and the system is entrenched with many local
- users creating their own stops, so I am going to describe this
- provider here.
-
- The steps involved in setting up a cyberspatial broadcasting system
- to cyberspace are simply:
-
- 1. Contact Netcom, 1 800 353 6600 or info@netcom.com, or telnet to
- netcom.com as "guest". Set up an account. With a credit card, you
- can get a login in *hours*.
-
- 2. Read their FAQ 119 with the command "faq 119". This tells you how
- the FTP setup works. Send mail to support@netcom.com saying "I have
- read faq 119". In a few days they will send you back a message,
- indicating they have set up an account.
-
- 4. Run "lynx" to access the WWW. Type "help". In the menu you will find
- help on the subject of HTML, the Hypertext Markup Language. HTML
- is easy to learn. Or, leap to any site and while viewing a document
- hit "\" which allows you to see the embedded commands in a file,
- and you can emulate the style and see how different commands are
- formatted.
-
- 5. In the FTP directory, create a file called "home.html" that contains
- your own billboard in cyberspace. Add files in subdirectories. Link
- the files to each other. Link to other sites. Its as easy as editing
- text files. Make sure rights are ok (chmod command) so people can get
- at them! No Catholic Church suppression here!
-
- 6. Test using the command "lynx home.html". You can also make sure
- rights are correct by going through the ftp interface, lynx
- ftp://ftp.netcom/pub/[you]/home.html
-
- 7. Voila! You are now ready to unveil your masterpiece to the world.
- Advertise in a relevant newsgroup. Watch enthusiastic people send
- you mail.
-
- 8. Two people at Netcom provide neat services to help you advertise
- and monitor the accesses to your files. noring@netcom.com keeps
- a list of all public pages and short descriptions. report@webcom.com
- provides a slick service of counting accesses to your files,
- and who accessed them.
-
- This is all it takes to run your own pseudo-BBS or "broadcasting
- station"! Imagine being able to bypass and thwart the entire World
- Media Monopoly with these simple steps! I claimed earlier that you
- don't even have to *own* a computer to accomplish all this, and it's
- true. Many libraries and some copier shops have public access
- terminals that would allow you to accomplish all these steps. If they
- have floppy disk drives, you could upload your own data!
-
- The SF novel about a bleak dystopian future by Ray Bradbury,
- Farenheit 451, was written on a typewriter in a library in about a
- week, according to his foreword. Will there be a similar case of a
- brilliant, fledgling, struggling author dazzling the world with his
- masterpieces in the same way, in cyberspace? I certainly have done my
- part to encourage you to do so!
-
- One of the fantastic aspects of WWW is that it demonstrates how
- utterly important the role of *organizing* and *editing* information.
- In a sense our society is undergoing a fundamental shift from a phase
- of *generating* massive reams of information to now *organizing* it
- in cyberspace. And there is hidden gold, all over the place, waiting
- for the patient, methodical, inspired "cyberscholar" to plug it all
- together and revolutionize the world. Even the mere act of compiling
- your "favorite links" to the world is an immense service to your
- fellow citizens of cyberspace.
-
- (9)
- Other Resources
- ===============
-
- Newsgroups
- ----------
-
- alt.cyberpunk.chatsubo
- ``Original science fiction in the Cyberpunk / Shadowrun genre'
- posted for review. Accomplished and beginning writers as well as
- fans. Submissions of stories (any length) or poetry related to
- Cyberpunk themes will get constructive feedback from other writers
- in this style. Interactive stories with other authors a
- possibility.'' (Jay Brandt, FAQ maintainer)
-
- alt.journalism
- Journalists and journalism students.
-
- alt.journalism.freelance
- Freelance journalists
-
- alt.prose, alt.prose.d
- Predecessors to rec.arts.prose, lower distribution. Disscussion in
- alt.prose.d only.
-
- alt.zines
- `zines' or small low-circulation low-cost newsletters of fringe
- elements
-
- misc.writing
- Accomplished and beginning writers. Submissions, queries, markets,
- etc.
-
- misc.writing.screenplays
- Accomplished and beginning screenwriters. Submissions, queries, markets,
- etc.
-
- news.answers
- Also alt.answers, comp.answers, misc.answers, etc. The standard
- moderated newsgroups for `approved' or `official' Usenet FAQs.
-
- rec.arts.prose
- Posted fiction for review. Discussion of posted articles.
-
- rec.arts.poems
- Posting and discussion of original poetry.
-
- rec.arts.sf.written
- Written science fiction. Great authors. Writing style. (?)
-
- rec.mag
- Magazines (?)
-
- rec.mag.fsfnet
- Fantasy and science fiction discussion, movies and television (?)
-
- comp.infosystems.www.users
- comp.infosystems.www.providers
- comp.infosystems.www.misc
- WWW (World Wide Web) information groups.
-
-
- Mailing Lists
- -------------
-
- - AMFM
-
- Topics:Monthly newsletter about broadcast radio in the UK
- Subscription:send mail to LISTSERV@@ORBITAL.DEMON.CO.UK, `subscribe amfm
- <yourfirstname> <yourlastname>'
- Posting: <AMFM@ORBITAL.DEMON.CO.UK>
-
- - BOOKNEWS
-
- Topics:Reviews of upcoming books, cds, and videos (moderated).
- Subscription: send mail to LISTSERVER@COLUMBIA.ILC.COM, `subscribe booknews
- <yourfirstname> <yourlastname>'.
- Posting: <BOOKNEWS@COLUMBIA.ILC.COM>
-
- - BOOK-TALK
-
- Topics: Discussions and info about new books, cds, and videos.
- Subscription: send mail to LISTSERVER@COLUMBIA.ILC.COM, `subscribe book-talk
- <yourfirstname> <yourlastname>'.
- Posting: <BOOK-TALK@COLUMBIA.ILC.COM>
-
-
- - Creative Writing Pedagogy for Teachers and Students
-
- Topics: ``a place to discuss how and why creative writing is being
- taught at colleges and universities, including the role it plays
- in the curriculum, the history of creative writing programs, the
- shape and flavor of creative writing courses, and the influence
- it has or should have on students' lives''
- Subscription: send mail to listserve@MIZZOU1.BITNET, `subscribe
- crewrt-l <yourfirstname> <yourlastname>'.
- Posting: <CREWRT-L@MIZZOU1.BITNET>
-
- - English Forum
-
- Topics: ``An archived discussion forum on electronic
- communication in instruction and research of English, writing, and
- literature.''
- Subscription: send mail to listserve@MIZZOU11.BITNET, `subscribe
- ENGLMU-L <yourfirstname> <yourlastname>'.
- Posting: <ENGLMU-L@MIZZOU11.BITNET>
-
- - MAGAZINE
-
- Topics: ``Expert opinion or help from established scholars and
- professionals. Covering the history, current state and future
- prospects of the American Magazine, and issues related to magazine
- publishing. Primary focus is journalistic, but also addresses
- other magazine-publishing matters of economic (management,
- marketing, circulation, production, research), technological,
- historical and social importance.''
- Subscription: send JOIN MAGAZINE <YourFirstName> <YourLastName> in
- message body to <COMSERVE@VM.ITS.RPI.EDU> or (BITNET)
- <COMSERVE@RPITSVM.BITNET>
- Moderator: David Abrahamson <ABRAHAMSON@ACFCLUSTER.NYU.EDU>
-
- - Megabyte University
-
- Topics: ``an unarchived list primarily for professors, teachers,
- graduate students and administrators involved in teaching
- composition using computers.topics of discussion have included
- software descriptions and comparisons for use in teaching
- composition, determining real audience for composition students,
- and announcements of upcoming conferences, both actual and
- virtual. Many of the members of this list also participate in the
- MediaMOO weekly online conferences and other activities''
- Subscription: send mail to listserve@TTUVM1.BITNET, `subscribe
- MBU-L <yourfirstname> <yourlastname>'.
- Posting: <MBU-L@TTUVM1.BITNET>
- Moderator: Fred Kemp
-
- - MEDIA LIST
-
- Topics: "A listing of newspapers, magazines, tv stations and other media
- outlets that accept e-mail and electronic submissions."
- Subscription: send 'subscribe MEDIALIST <YourFirstName>
- <YourLastName>' in message body to <MAJORDOMO@WORLD.STD.COM>
- List owner: Adam Gaffin <adamg@stworld.com>
-
- - nfu-chat
-
- Topics: A mail-list of the National Writers Union, nwu-chat@netcom.com,
- is open to any working writer, not only to NWU members.
- Subscription: send SUBSCRIBE nwu-chat <YourFirstName> <YourLastName>
- in message body to <listserv@netcom.com>
-
- - nfu-queer
-
- Topics: Another NWU mail-list, nwu-queer, is similarly open to working
- writers. It focuses on gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgendered
- issues.
- Subscription: send SUBSCRIBE nwu-queer <YourFirstName> <YourLastName>
- in message body to <listserv@netcom.com>
-
- - online-news
-
- Topics: Public Internet mailing list on electronic publishing
- Subscription: send 'subscribe ONLINE-NEWS <YourFirstName> <YourLastName> in
- message body to <MAJORDOMO@MARKETPLACE.COM>
- List owner: Steve Outing <outings@netcom.com> or
- <owner-online-newspapers@marketplace.com>
-
- - online-newspapers
-
- Topics: Private Internet mailing list on electronic newspapers, for newspaper
- professionals only. (Please write a short desription of your professional
- affiliation.)."
- Subscription: send 'subscribe ONLINE-NEWSPAPERS <YourFirstName>
- <YourLastName>' in message body to <MAJORDOMO@MARKETPLACE.COM>
- List owner: Steve Outing <outings@netcom.com> or
- <owner-online-newspapers@marketplace.com>.
-
- - Poetry list
-
- Topics: ``This list is designed to be a forum where original
- poetry (either complete or in progress) may be posted by members
- interested in critique-style discussion, examination, and analysis
- of their work. ...It is assumed that all members will at some
- point post an original piece, and not merely assume an exclusively
- responsive role.''
- Subscription: send mail to listserve@gonzaga.edu, `subscribe
- poetry <yourfirstname> <yourlastname>'.
- Posting: <POETRY@GONZAGA.EDU>
-
- - Purdue Rhetoric
-
- Topics: ``Rhetoric, Professional Writing, and Language Discussion
- Group - a scholarly forum for discussion of rhetoricand
- composition, professional writing, and language research.
- Subscription: send mail to listserve@URCCVM.BITNET, `subscribe
- PURTOPOI <yourfirstname> <yourlastname>'.
- Posting: <PURTOPOI@PURCCVM.BITNET>
-
- - Romance Writers
-
- Topics: Romance genre
- Subscription: send mail to listserv@netcom.com, 'subscribe rw-l
- <yourfirstname> <yourlastname>'
- Posting: <RW-L@NETCOM.COM>
-
- - Screen Writing Discussion List
-
- Topics: ``a discussion list of the joy and challenge of screen
- writing for film and TV ... Any topic of interest to writers or
- potential writers is appropriate (i.e. format, story ideas,
- dialogue, characters, agents, producers, directors, actors,
- studios, problems and/or solutions).''
- Subscription: send mail to listserve@tamvm1.bitnet, `subscribe
- scrnwrit <yourfirstname> <yourlastname>'.
- Posting: <SCRNWRIT@TAMVM1.BITNET>
-
- - Small Press Mailing List
-
- Topics: ``Concerns of authors and editors involved with the small
- press, both of books and of magazines. Printers and services,
- announcements, calls for submissions, bookstores, discussion of
- acceptance and rejections, book and signing events,readings, `war
- stories', advice for writers, editors, self-publishers.''
- Subscription: send your human-readable *request* to join or leave
- to <small-press-request@world.std.com>. *Posts* to the list go to
- <small-press@world.std.com>.
- Moderator: <ctan@world.std.com> (Cecilia M Tan)
-
- - SfnF-Writers
-
- Topics: A mailing list for people interested in writing Science Fiction
- and/or Fantasy. It is intended for both serious authors and dabblers.
- Subscription: send mail to majordomo@seidel.ncsa.uiuc.edu 'subscribe
- SFnF-Writers <yourfirstname> <yourlastname>
- Posting:
- List Owner: Peter Leppik, <leppik@seidel.ncsa.uiuc.edu>
-
- - SPJ-Online
-
- Topics: Society of Professional Journalists email list. A resource for
- journalists or those interested in journalism. It seeks to complement other
- popular journalism-related lists. It is an open, unmoderated list that can be
- used to discuss any journalism or SPJ topic.
- Subscription:</i></b> send 'subscribe SPJ-Online' in message body to
- <LISTSERV@NETCOM.COM>.
- Owner: Mike Barker <mbarker@mit.edu>
-
- - The Composition Digest
-
- Topics: ``a weekly newsgroup for the study of computers and writing,
- specifically writing instruction in computer based classrooms."
- Subscription: send mail to listserve@ULKYVX.BITNET, `subscribe
- COMPOS01 <yourfirstname> <yourlastname>'.
- Posting: <COMPOS01@ULKYVX.BITNET>
-
- - The Garret
-
- Topics: ``The Enclave Writers' Network and Support Group mailing
- list digest.''
- Subscription: send mail to server@nocturne.boulder-creek.ca.us,
- `join GARRET'.
- Posting: <garret@nocturne.boulder-creek.ca.us>
-
- - The Writing Workshop
-
- Topics: Fiction, Nfiction, Novels-L and Poetry-W lists are for submissions
- and critiques, Writing list is for general discussions, new member
- introductions, and announcements of various sorts. Tone is professional.
- Most members actually pursue publication. There is a requirement to
- contribute monthly (critique and/or submission) to retain membership status.
- Subscription: send mail to LISTSERV@PSUVM.PSU.EDU, `subscribe <listname>
- <yourfirstname> <yourlastname>' where <listname> is `fiction', `writing',
- `novels-l', 'nfiction' or 'poetry-w'. The lists are *not* self-serve, one
- of the list maintainer (Rheal Nadeau) will reply by emailsending the
- conditions of membership. Membership of the list is contingent on abiding
- by the non-onerous conditions (no broadcasting of submissions, contribute
- at least once per month, etc).
- Posting: FICTION@PSUVM.PSU.EDU, WRITING@PSUVM.PSU.EDU, NOVELS-L@PSUVM.PSU.EDU,
- NFICTION@PSUVM.PSU.EDU, POETRY-W@PSUVM.PSU.EDU (NB Postings only accepted
- from list members).
-
- - WIOLE
-
- Topics: Writing Intensive Online Learning Environment, an archived
- list for writing instructors.
- Subscription: send mail to listserve@MIZZOU1.BITNET, `subscribe
- WIOLE-L <yourfirstname> <yourlastname>'.
- Posting: <WIOLE-L@MIZZOU1.BITNET>
-
- - Write (Writer's Internet Exchange)
-
- Topics: similar to a closed newsgroup in which the members post their
- original work and critiques of other members work. The members e-mail
- their submissions to WRITE@camcat.com for distribution to the full
- membership list.
- Failure to submit three on-topic posts each month will automatically
- cancel membership. Participation is important!
- Subscription: send your human-readable *request* to join or leave
- to <jkent@camcat.com>
- Owner/Moderator: Janet Kent <jkent@camcat.com>
-
- - Writer's Workshop
-
- Topics: The WRITERS list is an open, unmoderated electronic workshop for
- discussions of the art and craft of writing and sharing of works in
- progress. As might be expected, writers tend to write quite a lot,
- so be prepared for plenty of mail.
- Subscription: The workshop is self-serve - send email to
- <listserv@mitvma.mit.edu> (or <listserv@mitvma.mit.bitnet>) with the
- message SUBSCRIBE WRITERS <yourfirstname> <yourlastname>.
- Owner: Mike Barker <mbarker@mit.edu>
-
- - Writing Center
-
- Topics: ``A discussion list for directors of academic writing
- centers, including evaluating software for writing instruction,
- use of tutors, and other issues specific to writing centers.''
- Subscription: send mail to listserve@TTUVM1.BITNET, `subscribe
- W-CENTER <yourfirstname> <yourlastname>'.
- Posting: <W-CENTER@TTUVM1.BITNET>
-
-
- FTP sites
- ---------
-
- A large collection of electronic `zines' and other miscellaneous
- electronic text files can be found on the University of Michigan
- archives, etext.archive.umich.edu.
-
- Other writing-related FAQs can be found on rtfm.mit.edu:
- /pub/usenet/news.answers/writing. The FAQ site is also an
- outstanding collection of highly refined writing by `amatures' on
- virtually any topic, highly accessable to both readers and writers.
- The FAQ maintainers mailing list is available by request to
- faq-maintainers-request@mit.edu.
-
- WorldWideWeb sites
- ------------------
-
- Trevor Lawrence edits/publishes _bricolage_, a WorldWideWeb "trade"
- e-mag for on-line writers on:
- http://bel.avonibp.co.uk/bricolage/bricolage.html
-
- Debbie Ridpath Ohi maintains a WorldWideWeb page called _INKSPOT_, a
- resource for children's writers on:
- http://www.interlog.com/~ohi/inkspot
-
- Victory Crayne maintains a WorldWideWeb page reproducing her articles
- "Career Plan for Fiction Writers" and "How to Critique Fiction"
- http://www.webcom.com/~victory/
-
- Nancy McGough maintains a WorldWideWeb page called "Finding and Writing
- FAQs" on:
- http://www.best.com/~ii/internet/faqs.html
-
- Joe Chew maintains a list of Technical Writing WorldWideWeb Pages on:
- http://www-itg.lbl.gov/~jtchew/STC.pointer.pg.shtml
-
- Charles Deemer maintains Screenwriters, the WorldWideWeb pages for the
- screenwriters mailing list on:
- http://www.teleport.com/~cdeemer/scrwriter.html
-
- Telnet Sessions
- ---------------
-
- Brazilian Dreams
-
- Topics: Live writing games for professionals, semi-professionals,
- and amateurs. Running since February, 1994, the games include
- a Storytellers' Circle (telling a story in 'round robin' fashion),
- a Short-short-short story night (telling very short stories),
- a myth night, and a Variety-filk night.
- Location: Brazilian Dreams (telnet brazil.tbyte.com 8888). After
- typing 'connect guest guest' to connect, type 'events' for a
- current listing.
- Contact: Brent Edwards (edwardsb@cs.rpi.edu)
-
- Miscellaneous
- -------------
-
- A more accurate list of electronic `zines' is posted intermittently
- to alt.mag, alt.zines, posted by John Labovitz <johnl@netcom.com>.
- See netcom.com:/pub/johnl/zines/e-zine-list (most recent) or
- rtfm.mit.edu:/pub/usenet/news.answers/writing/zines.
-
- ``Electronic Writers' Workshops and Online Education in Creative
- Writing'' (Bowers & Butcher, 1993) is available from gwuvm.gwu.edu:
- /WRITERS.RESOURC. Compilation of resources for writers and for
- writing teachers on the national network services, part 1. Part 2,
- virtual classrooms and tools for collaborative writing projects.
- Part 3, `a new breed of literatary magazines that are written,
- published, and read exclusively by network users...finding a
- readership beyond the best hopes of many professional and academic
- literatary magazines' editors.' Part 4, copyrights, what constitutes
- publication in the electronic realm, antidotes to `remarkable
- examples of misinformation'.
-
-
- \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ | / / / / / / / / / /
- _______ ________ _____ _____ _____
- /// \\\ ||| \\\ /// \\\ |||\\\///|||
- ||| ~~ ||| /// ||| ||| ||| \\// |||
- ||| __ |||~~~\\\ |||~~~||| ||| ~~ |||
- \\\ /// ||| \\\ ||| ||| ||| |||
- ~~~~~~~ ~~~ ~~~ ~~~ ~~~ ~~~ ~~~
- / / / / / / / / / | \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \
-
- C y b e r s p a t i a l R e a l i t y A d v a n c e m e n t M o v e m e n t
-
-
- In an effort to bring valuable information to the masses, and as a
- service to motivated information compilers, a member of CRAM can help
- others unfamiliar with Usenet `publish' their documents for widespread
- dissemination via the FAQ structure, and act as a `sponsor' knowledgable
- in the submissions process. This document is being distributed under
- this arrangement.
-
- We have found these compilations tend to appear on various mailing lists
- and are valuable enough to deserve wider distribution. If you know of an
- existing compilation of Internet information that is not currently a
- FAQ, please contact us and we may `sponsor' it. The benefits to the
- author include:
-
- - use of the existing FAQ infrastructure for distribution:
- - automated mail server service
- - FTP archival
- - automated posting
-
- - a far wider audience that can improve the quality, accuracy,
- and coverage of the document enormously through email
- feedback
-
- - potential professional inquiries for the use of your
- document in other settings, such as newsletters, books,
- etc.
-
- - with us as your sponsor, we will also take care of the
- technicalities in the proper format of the posted version
- and updating procedures, leaving you free of the `overhead'
- to focus on the basic updates alone
-
- The choice of who we `sponsor' is entirely arbitrary. You always
- have the option of handling the submission process yourself.
- See the FAQ submission guidelines FAQ in news.answers.
-
- For information, send mail to <ldetweil@csn.org>.
-
-
- Most Wanted List
- ================
-
- This list can grow and prosper if you help keep it updated, use the
- information herein wisely, and help recruit new sources. Please do
- NOT send random editor email addresses unless those editors specifically
- approve of advertising them. Currently most wanted:
-
- - More popular newstand magazines, esp. paying ones. Asimov's, Analog,
- etc.
- - Old discussion on MAGAZINE email list about email submission
- addresses.
- - More HTML magazines like GNN and Trincoll.
- - FTP sites.
- - any elaboration on places with `(?)'
- - More Web pointers
- - Update on newsgroups not listed
- - Update on mailing lists not listed
-
- When submitting updates to the list, PLEASE include all known
- information in the categories recorded. That is: email address,
- description of the general content of the outlet, remuneration policies,
- and the rights involved. The editor of this list prefers outlets that
- are `well established' and are not likely to disappear. Also, another
- list by J. Labovitz better tracks electronic `zines'. See `Other
- Resources' above.
-
- Send comments to <ldetweil@csn.org>.
-
-
- Credits
- =======
-
- Special thanks to the following people for contributing especially
- valuable information to this list:
-
- L.Detweiler <ldetweil@csn.org>
- Kyle Conway <kconway@nyx.cs.du.edu>
- Ed Stastny <ed@cwis.unomaha.edu>
- Cecilia M Tan <ctan@world.std.com>
- David Abrahamson <ABRAHAMSON@ACFcluster.NYU.EDU>
- Laura Packard <lpackard@umich.edu> -- http://www.umich.edu/~lpackard
- John Bowers <JBOWERS@gwuvm.gwu.edu>
- Chuq Von Rospach <chuq@apple.com>
-
- Special thanks to the forward-seeing editors who have the patience,
- vision, and expertise to support email submissions.
-
-
- Change History
- ==============
-
- v2.8 (10/95)
-
- WRITE added. Obsolete Fortune MCI address removed. Intermix added. Victory
- Crane's W3 site details added. Blue Heron added. The Garret added.
-
- v2.7 (06/95)
-
- AMFM, BOOKNEWS, BOOK-TALK, MEDIA-LIST, SFnF-Writers, online-news,
- online-newspapers, RW-L and SPJ-Online mailing lists added. World Wide Web
- section created. alt.journalism.freelance and misc.writing.screenplays
- newsgroup details added. Telnet session data added.
-
-
- v2.6 (04/95)
-
- The Writing Workshop title changed. Internet Bulletin for CPAs and
- Stoneground added.
-
-
- v2.5 (03/95)
-
- WRITER'S list LISTSERV address changed. misc.writing files added.
- bricolage pointers added.
-
- v2.4 (01/95)
-
- HTML format created. nwu-chat/queer added, PARADIGM, CLIPTEXT,
- Writer's Workshop Review added. FAQ-oriented WWW site added.
-
- v2.3 (10/94)
-
- WWW newsgroups. OtherRealms nuked at request of Chuqie.
- "Hum" Canadian Government Computer added.
-
- v2.2 (9/94)
-
- New address (sigh). WWW Press section added. Internet Informer,
- Millenium Magazine added.
-
- v2.1 (6/94)
-
- New address for updates. (Apologies to all who sent revisions
- that bounced over this period. Please resubmit.)
-
- v2.0 (1/94)
-
- `A Vision of the Future' inspired partly by Chuq Von Rospach
- hostility in email. `CRAM' and `FAQ of the Future' added. Alternate
- Hilarities (Tales Twice Told), OtherRealms, Intertext, Trincoll
- Journal, Writer's Nook News added. Mailing list entries modified to
- indicate list address vs. subscription addresses (apologies for
- inconvenience, but blame J.B. :).
-
- v1.3 (11/93)
-
- Grist addition. Fix of the Lansing vs. Ann Arbor (thanks many
- people!) Fringware Review. Fiction & Writing lists. Bowers papers
- on cyberspatial writing resources FTP pointers (highly recommended).
- Poetry list. Screen Writing list. Creative Writing Pedagogy list.
- Megabyte University. Composition Digest list. Purdue Rhetoric list.
- Writing Intensive Online Learning Environment list. Writing Center
- list. (New mailing lists added are from Bowers paper, thanks!)
-
- v1.2 (9/93)
-
- MCI Mail magazine addresses included. Posting frequency changed.
- Glitch that posted to `misc.writers' oblivion instead of
- `misc.writing'.
-
- v1.1 (8/93)
-
- Writer's Workshop list, Cyberspace Vanguard added.
-
- v1.0 (8/93)
-
- Wilde Oakes, Lighthouse added. Posted to *.answers groups &
- archived at rtfm.mit.edu.
-
- v0.6 (8/93)
-
- Added `rights,' `comments,' `type' categories. Reordered
- list categories. Added small-press list. Paladin and Circlet added.
-
- v0.5 (7/93)
-
- Basics of email address, newsgroup list, editor & writer notices,
- submission protocol, etc. in place after initial query on
- misc.writing.
-
-
- Distribution
- ============
-
- FTP
- ---
- This FAQ is available from the standard FAQ server rtfm.mit.edu via
- FTP in the file /pub/usenet/news.answers/writing/resources and also from
- bel.avonibp.co.uk in the file /pub/bricolage/IWRG
-
- Email
- -----
- Email requests for FAQs go to mail-server@rtfm.mit.edu with commands
- on lines in the message body, e.g. `help' and `index'.
-
- Usenet
- ------
- This FAQ is posted every 21 days to the groups misc.writing,
- rec.arts.prose,rec.arts.sf.written,misc.answers,rec.answers,
- news.answers.
-