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Author Message
25 new of 187 responses total.
gregb
response 133 of 187: Mark Unseen   Aug 23 18:08 UTC 2003

Gopher still around?
scott
response 134 of 187: Mark Unseen   Aug 23 18:12 UTC 2003

THe box elder bugs are usually a late summer / fall thing.  I'm surprised you
haven't noticed them until this year.
tpryan
response 135 of 187: Mark Unseen   Aug 23 22:29 UTC 2003

        I seen them around, particlularly when they come out in the spring.
But this is the first time I recall seeing so many.   Makes me wonder
if the local birdies are sick or sumpthin'.
gull
response 136 of 187: Mark Unseen   Aug 24 02:41 UTC 2003

They seem to go up and down in cycles.  Every few years there's an 
unusually big crop of them.
slynne
response 137 of 187: Mark Unseen   Aug 24 20:25 UTC 2003

Yeah. This year, I havent had too many box elder bugs but two years 
ago, they were *everywhere*. 
dcat
response 138 of 187: Mark Unseen   Aug 25 23:19 UTC 2003

resp:133 -- SDF (telnet sdf.lonestar.org, www.freeshell.org) has a gopher
client, i believe.  whether that means it's still around, i'm not sure.
polytarp
response 139 of 187: Mark Unseen   Aug 26 21:08 UTC 2003

Hey, pvn, let's teach English in China.  meet you there.
cmcgee
response 140 of 187: Mark Unseen   Aug 27 23:59 UTC 2003

thanks for the wunderground.  I was stuck at my parents using a Powerbook 140
with local shell access.  (You would all get a kick out of my mother signing
the "shell access agreement".  I told her it was one legal document she would
never begin to understand, so don't even read it.  She's 81, and not much of
a hacker.)
polytarp
response 141 of 187: Mark Unseen   Aug 28 15:11 UTC 2003

Hey, cmcgee, let's teach English in China.  meet you there.
albaugh
response 142 of 187: Mark Unseen   Sep 2 04:55 UTC 2003

Do any grexers have any experiences with publishing their own books?
If so, any tips?
tod
response 143 of 187: Mark Unseen   Sep 2 16:22 UTC 2003

This response has been erased.

albaugh
response 144 of 187: Mark Unseen   Sep 3 20:38 UTC 2003

Why not?
tod
response 145 of 187: Mark Unseen   Sep 3 20:45 UTC 2003

This response has been erased.

albaugh
response 146 of 187: Mark Unseen   Sep 3 20:49 UTC 2003

Do you have personal experience with that?  Or on using a publisher?
tod
response 147 of 187: Mark Unseen   Sep 3 21:00 UTC 2003

This response has been erased.

scott
response 148 of 187: Mark Unseen   Sep 4 14:15 UTC 2003

The technology (and the culture) is changing fast, though.  If you want a few
thousand copies made the traditional way, then yeah, it's going to be
expensive and difficult.  On the other hand there's now a machine to print
& bind a book on demand, so it would be easier to have a few dozen copies
made.

Then there's online distribution, which would be even easier.
albaugh
response 149 of 187: Mark Unseen   Sep 4 17:19 UTC 2003

While I can certainly go searching / surfing the web to see what's out there,
I would be appreciative if there were a grexer with specific references based
on experience / knowledge could relate them.
tod
response 150 of 187: Mark Unseen   Sep 4 18:34 UTC 2003

This response has been erased.

tpryan
response 151 of 187: Mark Unseen   Sep 4 19:27 UTC 2003

        I seen one of those print on demand machines (under utilized)
when I was at Borders.  The system IIRC was called Sprite or Sprint.
It uses the same files that would go off to a large press publisher.
Full color, perfect bound trade paperbacks.
        Great for text books that could be revised and published 
low volume each year.  Or that 1967 VW microvan repair manual.
I think the VPs at Borders thought they where going to be printing
Harry Potter paperbacks in a store on demand.
gull
response 152 of 187: Mark Unseen   Sep 4 22:36 UTC 2003

With technology like that, there's no real excuse for anything going
"out of print."
albaugh
response 153 of 187: Mark Unseen   Sep 5 18:24 UTC 2003

The book I have in mind is "what I did on my vacation", with a great many
photographs.
pvn
response 154 of 187: Mark Unseen   Sep 6 07:33 UTC 2003

Put it on a web page.
pvn
response 155 of 187: Mark Unseen   Sep 6 07:34 UTC 2003

Or burn some CDs.
lynne
response 156 of 187: Mark Unseen   Sep 8 17:43 UTC 2003

I changed internet settings on my laptop so as to be able to use the internet
access offered in some hotels on the roadtrip.  Now I can't change it back
because it won't let me type in the IP address/subnet mask/etc--the field
is white and appears writable, but when I click on it with the mouse I don't
get a cursor.  Typing blindly, cut-and-pasting don't work; I've restarted a
few times.  Any suggestions?
jep
response 157 of 187: Mark Unseen   Sep 8 18:10 UTC 2003

When I was a kid, I thought the coolest thing ever would be to get a 
box of 1000 magnets, as advertised in comic books and the like.  I 
never got one myself.

Advance X number of years; other than by going the comic book route, 
where would one go to get a collection of magnets of different shapes 
and sizes for a kid or two?  (I think I know of some kids who might 
like such a gift.)

Something that comes in the form of a kit, labeled "1000 Experiments To 
Do With Magnets", allowing you to create your own electric motor, 
generator, etc., would be just the thing.

Thanks!
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