The Silicon Jungle by David H. Rothman
9. Hammering out a confidentiality agreement, if necessary, to protect
10 words | Chapter 207
company secrets. You don’t want an outsider blabbing to competitors.
Chapters
1. Chapter 1
2. Chapter 7 and Backup VII, you’ll learn (1) the basics, (2) when charts
3. Chapter 12, “How I Found ‘God’ on MCI (and a Few Other Odds and Ends
4. 1. Bigger RAMs can work with more and larger numbers—a handy capability
5. 2. More RAM can accommodate programs more complicated for the computer.
6. 3. You may want the most sophisticated software to thwart computer
7. 1. You can quickly make safety copies of valuable disks—something that’s
8. 2. You can more easily work with long electronic documents.
9. 1. Absence of bugs. The software maker should have gotten all the bugs
10. 2. General ease of use. A program should be easy enough to learn _and_
11. 3. Good documentation. The manual should be clear and logically
12. 4. Usefulness to beginners and old pros alike. You can adjust the best
13. 5. Speed. It lets you do your job fast, especially when you use it with
14. 6. Power. Related to speed. The program can quickly accomplish
15. 7. Fewer chances for botch-ups. Good programs limit the chances for
16. 8. The Jewish-uncle effect. Ideally, your software will slow you down or
17. 10. After-the-goof feedback. After you’ve botched up—and we all do
18. 11. Ability to customize. You or at least a software expert can
19. 12. Availability of “accessory” programs to make your original software
20. 13. Support. Ideally, the software seller will stand behind his product
21. 1. A =cursor= is just the marker on your screen—a blinking line,
22. 2. A =file= is an electronic version of a letter, report, or other
23. 3. A =control key= is what you start holding down to turn a letter or
24. 4. To =scroll= just means to move from place to place in your
25. 5. A =menu= lists commands on your screen. It can tell you how to
26. 6. A =block move= is the ability to move material from one part of
27. 8. A =search and replace= substitutes one word (or group of words) for
28. 1. When you work for a stuffy old bureaucracy that’s rich and afraid
29. 2. When you’re a procurement officer on probation. As they say, no
30. 3. When you want to dump the training problems in the manufacturer’s
31. 4. When you prefer an extra-large, extra-sharp screen and giant
32. 5. When you’re looking for a machine that will run special software
33. 1. It takes all of two or three minutes—maybe less—to copy a disk
34. 3. Computer users want to befriend others with similar machines so
35. 4. Many software companies overprice their wares. Yes, it’s expensive
36. 5. Some people in large companies think software houses don’t give
37. 6. Many software companies don’t offer enough guidance or other help.
38. 2. A file in a data base is the electronic version of a file drawer or
39. 3. A =field= is a category of fact like the amount of money spent on
40. 4. =Structure= is simply the way a record is set up. There are three big
41. 5. The EDIT command changes the contents of a data field. You can type
42. 6. A command to APPEND can add new records to your electronic filing
43. 7. =Sorting= lets you reshuffle records alphabetically, by date or other
44. 8. The LIST command tells dBASE II to flash across the screen the
45. 9. .AND. helps you narrow down the information you’re looking for or
46. 10. .OR. is another way to describe the desired facts. LIST FOR
47. 11. LIST FOR .NOT. SALE:PERSN = ‘BABBITT’ could help weed from view, or
48. 12. =Command files= are programs that tell the machine how to manipulate
49. 1. A large number of rows and columns. A spreadsheet of 254 rows and 65
50. 2. Speed. “Even with a simple spreadsheet,” says Scharf, “someone might
51. 3. General simplicity and ease of use. In tricky places, does the
52. 4. Range of commands. Most spreadsheets nowadays let you easily move or
53. 5. The ability to do what-if tables. The best spreadsheets won’t just
54. 6. Easy consolidation of figures from different spreadsheets. That’s no
55. 7. =Natural order of recalculation.= Cells must influence the numbers in
56. 8. A useful =macro language=. Macros are combinations of commands that
57. 1. Deciding whether to hire a computer consultant. How much in your time
58. 2. Hiring and using a consultant. It isn’t just a matter of asking,
59. 3. Training employees. Don’t clutter your people’s minds with
60. 4. Working with your company’s data-processing people. Know which
61. 1. The computer company’s FORTRAN, according to Stewart, was as badly
62. 2. FORTRAN wasn’t as good as BASIC for micro data bases that stashed
63. 3. Brown was still basically a mainframer. And micro FORTRAN was
64. 3. “What’s the quality of the work?
65. 1. Who’s teaching? Can he or she communicate well with the students, and
66. 3. Why is the material taught? To make your people computer literate in
67. 4. When do the students learn? On their time or yours? Will you reward
68. 5. Where is the learning happening? Ideally, your students can take the
69. 6. How do the students learn? Through instruction manuals, mainly, or
70. 1. Even the best-intentioned companies may fail miserably in easing some
71. 2. The traits which make somebody valuable to his company _may_ be the
72. 3. At the same time you can’t stereotype anyone—by age, folksiness, or
73. 4. An important part of training is simple salesmanship—persuading the
74. 5. Don’t make computerization seem more threatening than it has to be.
75. 6. As early as possible start people on real projects. The first day at
76. 2. Helped them with some learning aids like color-coded keys showing
77. 3. Motivated them by explaining how their new computer skills would make
78. 1. Before approaching Data Processing, ask who-how questions about the
79. 2. Ask your informal Data-Processing contact about possible technical
80. 3. When you’re ready to deal with the Data-Processing manager, tell
81. 4. Make it clear you’re aware of your project’s complications.
82. 1. =The canary-in-the-mine= theory of labor relations. Ergonomics is
83. 3. =“Terminal” happiness.= Detachable keyboards are just a start,
84. 7. =Air conditioning, heating, and ventilation=—basics neglected by a
85. 8. Honest assurances to your people that you’re exposing them to the
86. 9. A willingness to consider alternatives to the TV-like CRTs that
87. 10. Sensible use of wrinkles like the mouse—the hand-sized gizmo you use
88. 11. A related ingredient, good software—the topic of earlier chapters.
89. 2. How far the keyboard platform protrudes from the platform on which
90. 4. The angle at which the screen faces you. You can swivel away to your
91. 5. The height of your chair. You don’t of course need high-tech
92. 1. Removing half the tubes from existing fluorescent fixtures. You’ll
93. 2. Parabolic fluorescent fixtures with baffles to keep the light out of
94. 3. Parawedge louvers, which, according to Eisen, “have been particularly
95. 4. Desk and floor lamps. You might buy rheostats you can plug in between
96. 5. Indirect lighting. The disadvantage is the expense. You may have to
97. 1. Coatings or etching applied during manufacture of the video displays.
98. 2. Coatings put on after manufacture. Generally, but not always, they
99. 3. “Colored plastic panels and etched faceplates,” which, says Eisen,
100. 4. Micromesh filters, favored by German ergonomists. Eisen says U.S.
101. 5. Polarizing filters. They may reduce brightness and shorten tube life,
102. 1. There is a possibility, extra-slim, but still there, that
103. 2. More minor physical and mental problems from computers definitely do
104. 6. The possibility of a detached retina
105. 3. Guarding your electronic files
106. 1. Burden programmers and others with electronic versions of heavy
107. 2. Keep their computer systems easy to use—and vulnerable. (“Then you’re
108. 3. Compromise. (“You get half raped.”)
109. 1. How hard, exactly, would it be to puzzle out? Just how many
110. 2. How compatible is the program with your computer? If security is so
111. 3. Is the security program easy to use? If it’s too hard, it’ll be
112. 4. Are you certain the program won’t jeopardize the accuracy and
113. 5. Should you expand your system, will the security software be able to
114. 6. Do you want a =public key= encryption system? It works this way. You
115. 7. Will your code be based on the =Data Encryption Standard= (=DES=),
116. 1. See if your disk has a file at least 500 or 600 words long. If so,
117. 3. Erase A.
118. 1. Zealously enforce a no-drinking, no-eating policy around disks, at
119. 2. Remember the Rothman Dirt Domino Theory. Dirt, dust, and grease often
120. 3. Realize that floppies don’t always mix well with office materials
121. 4. Know about other natural enemies of floppies or at least of the data
122. 5. Don’t even let your floppies rest against your computer’s screen,
123. 6. Remember that the more information you can pack on a floppy, the more
124. 7. Clean your disk heads. Don’t use rubbing alcohol. “Try something like
125. 8. Have head alignment checked, to reduce disk errors. With heads out of
126. 9. Buy quality disks. Of course, the more you spend on disks, the more
127. 1. Every five minutes or so, type out the “KS” or an equivalent and dump
128. 2. Every half an hour make a printout of your recent work. With a fast
129. 3. Every day make your backup floppy. You might forget about the scratch
130. 1. Dumping to floppies. It’s cheap but slow. Then again, you can speed
131. 2. Transferring the Winchester’s contents to a special tape drive large
132. 3. Dumping to an ordinary videocassette recorder. Although slow, it’s
133. 1. How much time or money does it take to enter your data or set up your
134. 3. How much time or money do you have for copying, cleaning,
135. 1984. Many more companies might be. They might have kept quiet, however,
136. 1. The cottage keyers are paying more than $2,600 a year to rent their
137. 3. Likewise, the cottage keyers lack the normal fringe benefits. The
138. 4. The keyers may not be sharing the experiment’s rewards fifty-fifty.
139. 1. Ease and speed of use. You needn’t be a computer expert or wrestle
140. 2. Friendliness. A good system isn’t just easy to use; it’s also boy
141. 4. Confidentiality. Clerks aren’t privy to the same information as the
142. 1985. They’d be able to place mutual-fund orders for clients, conduct
143. 1. Lower phone bills. In a Midwestern office of the H. J. Heinz Company,
144. 2. Elimination of telephone tag. “We can type a memo at the end of our
145. 3. An end to garbled messages. Errors and misunderstandings decline when
146. 4. More efficient sharing of ideas. =Computer conferencing= is an
147. 1. How long a Kaypro took to sort dBASE II files electronically while
148. 3. How long a second Kaypro needed to sort the dBASE files in the first
149. 1. How extensive do you want your network’s file-sharing capabilities to
150. 2. Who’ll manage the network? Who’ll determine who can see what
151. 3. Do you want to assign special network-related duties to other people?
152. 4. Who will work at what =node=? That’s jargon for a location or =work
153. 5. Will some people share work stations? If so, you’d better decide
154. 7. How many printers and other gizmos will people share, and where will
155. 8. What kinds of computers are you planning to hook up? The WEB as of
156. chapter 11, but subject to court approval, would be bought by a Swedish
157. 1. If your computer messes up, remember the very last thing you did,
158. 2. See if that isn’t the answer to your problem.
159. 1. Know your prices. Study the want ads of the local papers. There’s
160. 2. Pay attention to the machine’s physical condition. A banged-up
161. 3. Find out how your pet programs run. If you don’t have any available
162. 5. Find out what generation of equipment it is. Does it include all
163. 6. Learn where you stand legally if you’re buying software with the
164. 7. Call up commercial auctioneers and find out if they’re holding any
165. 8. Obviously you’ll want to consider a maintenance agreement with a
166. 1. Another daisy wheel machine. The daisy wheel is plastic or metal and
167. 2. A =laser printer=. Typically, it works a bit like some copying
168. 3. A =thermal-transfer printer=. This uses patterns of heat to arrange
169. 4. An =ink-jet printer=. This kind literally squirts ink against the
170. 1. =Draft quality.= The letters are too dotty for anything but drafts
171. 2. =Correspondence quality.= It’ll do for a letter to a forgiving friend
172. 3. =Near-letter quality.= You can get away with it for book manuscripts,
173. 4. =Letter quality.= That’s typewriter quality.
174. 1. Does the printer offer them no matter what computer or program you
175. 3. For free, will the store modify your computer system to make the
176. 4. Will your desired combinations of features work simultaneously?
177. 2. If not, can the store make one up for you? At what cost?
178. 1. The general logic of the manual. The author should have written it
179. 2. The quality of the index. I’ll charitably assume it’s there to begin
180. 3. Simplicity of vocabulary and sentence structure. A manual shouldn’t
181. 1. The field may only contain certain numbers and/or letters—for
182. 2. The field will _enter itself_ based on your previous entries. For
183. 3. The field can be a constant. For example, if your data record
184. 4. The field can automatically shift cases for you. For example, you
185. 5. The field can insist that whatever you type in is identical two
186. 6. The field can be required—something that you _have_ to enter, or
187. 1. Does the program help you come up with pies, bars, or whatever kind
188. 2. Can it do so as quickly as possible?
189. 3. Does the program fit in well with your other software?
190. 4. How much memory space does the program—and the electronic files of
191. 5. What about the program’s color capabilities—both on screen and on
192. 6. Does the program coexist okay with the printer or plotter you own or
193. 7. How easy is the program to learn? What about the other general traits
194. 1. “Who?” Who from the contracting firm is doing the work? A junior
195. 2. “What?” Describe the task as clearly and precisely as possible. And
196. 3. “When?” Can you negotiate a penalty if the firm misses a deadline?
197. 4. “Where?” Will the consultants do the work in your office? Theirs? On
198. 5. “How much?” Obvious.
199. 1. Thinking small. Don’t bargain over the Who-How simply for the whole
200. 2. Making the consultant give you the source code of the new software.
201. 3. Insisting that any manuals for his software be complete and in plain
202. 4. Bargaining if possible for a software warranty. Then, if you discover
203. 5. Possibly requiring the consultant to give you a discount on
204. 6. Negotiating for full or part ownership of the software he may develop
205. 7. Forbidding the consultant from selling the new software to your
206. 8. Making the consultant pledge that he won’t violate any trade-secret
207. 9. Hammering out a confidentiality agreement, if necessary, to protect
208. 10. Making the consultant agree in writing that he is working as your
209. 11. Trying to write into the contract your right to a full explanation
210. 12. Remembering that there’s only so much protection the law can give,
211. 13. Choosing the right lawyer, if you can afford one, for the contract.
212. 1. Is the convenience worth the extra several hundred dollars you’ll be
213. 3. How do the windows look alongside each other? Do they =overlap=, just
214. 4. How about =data transfer=? If you move information from one
215. 5. What kind of graphics—=bit mapped= or =character based=? The bit
216. 6. Will the window program work with ordinary software or just products
217. 7. Will the windows at least slightly slow down some programs? A word
218. 8. Is the program picky about the computers it’ll work with? A window
219. 9. Does the program require a mouse—the gadget you roll on your disk to
220. 1. Communicate teletype-fashion with the other person. You can keep
221. 2. Call up electronic bulletin-board systems (BBSs) or plug into The
222. 3. Get copies of other programs that altruistic computer buffs have
223. 1. Start out with the other person’s modem set on ORIGINATE and yours on
224. 3. Hit your carriage-return key.
225. 6. Assuming you’re using a manual modem, flick the switch to “data.”
226. 3. Hit your return.
227. 1. From MODEM7’s main menu, you select =T= and again hit the return a
228. 2. Find out if the other person can read words you type. (Don’t worry if
229. 3. Tell him (or her) to set up his computer so that, on paper or on a
230. 4. Once the other person is ready—while you’re still in the =T= mode—hit
231. 5. Now you type =B:[name of file]=. Here and elsewhere don’t type the
232. 6. Next hit your return. The disk should start spinning, and both you
233. 2. Again, select your trusty =T= from the main menu. But don’t hit your
234. 4. Type =B:[the name of the file you’re creating on the data disk to
235. 6. Then hit the letter =Y= with your finger on the control key
236. 8. Then, to preserve the file, “writing” to your disk, you must type out
237. 2. From MODEM7’s main menu, type =S B:[name of the data disk file you
238. 3. Hit the return.
239. 3. Hit your return.
240. 2. Type the word TYPE, then a space, then the name of the file—preceded
241. 3. Then hit your return.
242. 4. Hit your return.
243. 3. Tap =Control-B=.
244. 4. Type the right number (300 for 300 baud, 1200 for 1,200; do not use
245. 5. Hit your return.
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