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- THE ILLUSTRATED READER--SOME IDEAS FOR APPLICATIONS
-
- The Illustrated Reader offers a new tool
- for PC enthusiasts. It is a program that
- has the potential to open a segment of the
- world of small computer applications to a
- largely non-technical audience. As you
- saw if you examined the AUTHOR.DOC file,
- preparing illustrated documents for the
- Illustrated Reader (IR) is really very easy.
- So what are some of the possible uses for a
- program like the IR? First, remember that
- computers are information machines--people
- use computers primarily to access information.
- Second, they use them for entertainment--because they're fun.
- (Of course, there is a huge segment of business that uses them
- for word processing and other tasks, but I'm talking about how
- people PREFER to use them.)
-
- What follows is a series of uses that I have thought of for
- the IR. These applications are by no means exhaustive, they
- represent just a few ideas that came to me while I was finishing
- the programming phase of this project. The purpose of this article
- is to offer some examples that will stimulate your own ideas.
-
- Electronic Books
-
- The most obvious application for the IR is electronic books.
- There are a number of electronic books on the shareware market, but
- most are not illustrated. Those that have illustrations tend to be
- dedicated programs, that is, actual computer programs written in
- BASIC, Pascal, etc., that present mostly text with illustrations.
- They are painstakingly programmed, then compiled and linked into
- an executable (an .EXE file), which means it's static--it can't be
- changed without reprogramming and recompiling. This, of course,
- requires someone who can program. The IR makes it possible for
- people with no programming background whatsoever to create electronic
- books with full-color illustrations. And these books need can be
- easily revised or updated without touching the Illustrated Reader
- program!
-
- Traditional books either entertain or inform. Electronic
- books fall into …ÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÀÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕª
- these same cate- ∫ ENTERTAINMENT ∫ INFORMATION ∫
- gories, so many ÃÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕ—ÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕŒÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕ—ÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕπ
- of the same ideas ∫ Adults ≥ Kids ∫ Adults ≥ Kids ∫
- apply. Next, «ƒƒƒƒƒƒƒƒƒƒƒ≈ƒƒƒƒƒƒƒƒƒƒƒ◊ƒƒƒƒƒƒƒƒƒƒƒ≈ƒƒƒƒƒƒƒƒƒƒƒ∂
- books tend to ∫ novels ≥ novels ∫ career ≥ hobbies ∫
- break down into ∫ biography ≥ biography ∫ home ≥ pets ∫
- groups of readers ∫ history ≥ history ∫ hobbies ≥ music ∫
- like adults/kids. ∫ poetry ≥ poetry ∫ pets ≥ humor ∫
- While adults and ∫ mass media≥ mass media∫ relation- ≥ relation- ∫
- kids like many ∫ humor ≥ humor ∫ ships ≥ ships ∫
- of the same types ∫ ≥ ∫ reference ≥ reference ∫
- of books, these »ÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕœÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕ ÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕœÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕÕº
- will vary according to level, background, topics, and so on.
-
- The ideal type of electronic book for use by the IR is one that
- makes frequent use of illustrations: pictures, figures, maps, charts,
- graphs, diagrams, schematics, musical notation, architectural and
- other technical symbols, plots, models, timelines, etc. More and
- more PC owners are upgrading to monitors and cards that support high-
- resolution graphics, while new PC buyers are insisting on full-color
- graphics systems for both home and business use. So the IR's time
- has come--the readership is there and growing every day.
-
- Novels and Short Stories
-
- Why not? There is no reason why this
- genre shouldn't be popular in on a video
- screen as well as on paper. Think about
- the phenomenal growth of notebook and
- handbook computers--now they have color
- screens as well as large hard drives, and
- fit easily into a briefcase. And prices
- are steadily falling. Business travelers
- often buy paperbacks to while away the
- lonely hours in hotel rooms. Now their
- portable PCs can whisk them away to the
- high seas, outer space, or another period
- of history to experience adventure or
- romance!
-
- Non-fiction and Reference Books
-
- As large as the market is for fiction, non-fiction and reference
- books comprise the largest portion of the hardcopy market. The IR
- is perfect for books and manuals that deal with technical or "how-to"
- topics. It's a natural for education and training materials as well.
-
- When it comes to technical
- materials, a picture really is worth
- a thousand words! Many people have
- no idea what an ISA card is, or how
- easily they can be installed. The
- illustrations are an indispensible
- part of any technical or "how-to"
- document.
-
- Besides making it easy to keep a reference work up to date, the
- real advantage of an electronic reference book is the ability to
- do rapid word/phrase searches so users can quickly find needed in-
- formation. By dividing a reference book into .DOC files that deal
- with different topics, the LOAD A NEW FILE screen in effect becomes
- a table of contents, where readers can narrow their search from the
- very start.
-
- Personalized Children's Books
-
- No doubt you've seen these ads to start Miranda was
- your own personalized children's book jumping for joy!
- business. Parents order from a small set
- of titles, then fill out a form with their
- child's name and names of siblings, pets
- and friends. The publisher then feeds the
- names into a computer that substitutes
- these names for the names of the characters
- in the books.
-
- I saw three of these ads in the November
- 1992 issue of COMPUTE magazine. One offered
- to set you up for only $1000--imagine that!
- Are you ahead of me yet? Believe me, these stories are not great
- works of children's literature. They are novelties that kids find
- exciting mainly because they get to see their names and other
- familiar names in print, and in the context of a story. The IR
- would be perfect for such a business. Once the story and pictures
- were prepared, all you would have to do is get the form from the
- parents, then, because the story is just a text file, do a simple
- search-and-replace operation to replace the stock names with those
- of the customer's. Mail it back and it's done! In fact, parents
- could even do it themselves. Teachers could do it for their students
- or show older students how to use the IR. It could make some great
- class reports!
-
- Manuals for Computer Programs (Registration Incentives)
-
- For those of you who might be shareware programmers and have
- applications on the market, having an illustrated program manual
- might make a powerful registration incentive. I've seen any number
- of reader-type programs that enable a user to read a program's
- documentation without requiring LIST or some other such program.
- Why spend your valuable time creating these readers when the IR can
- do this for you, while providing the ability to include helpful
- illustrations?
-
- Of course, not all programs have a need for an illustrated manual,
- but for those that do (one example might be CAD or paint programs),
- it just might be the one additional benefit that gets them to write
- that registration check.
-
- Other Ideas
-
- The number of applications for the IR are only limited by the
- imagination. What do you know? Do you have
- a really wild collection of card games you
- want to share? Recipes with techniques that
- might require illustrations? Gardening hints?
- How about an on-line guide
- for the handyman? A PC repair book? How about an
- electronic newsletter? Got any other ideas yet?
- Here's one: if you haven't read the AUTHOR.DOC
- file, you might want to do that now. It'll tell you how to prepare
- your own IR documents. And don't forget MONEY.DOC, it spells out
- registration and licensing details.
- <<END OF ARTICLE>>
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