"In the real world, the right thing never happens
in the right place and the right time. It is the job of
journalists and historians to make it appear that it has."
-- Mark Twain. [EFF Quotes Collection 9.0, comp.org.eff.talk,
9/19/95.]
If you'd like to be a technology reporter,
check out . [<72621.2222@compuserve.com>,
net-hap, 12/18/95.]
UniScience News Net publishes science and research news
from American universities and freelance writers. Headlines
and summaries are free; the full articles are for sale.
. [Don Radler
, new-jour, 11/21/95.]
Technical writers should get Janet Van Wicklen's
"The Tech Writing Game" (Facts on File Books, 1992, $22.95
hardcover). For a style guide, Strunk and White's 92-page
treatise "can change your life." Also useful: "The Elements
of Style" (Macmillan) and William Zinsser's "On Writing Well"
(Harper and Row, 1988). For reference, get "The Chicago Manual
of Style," 14th edition (UChicago Press, $40). (It's 200 pages
longer than the previous edition.) [M. Barnard ,
misc.writing, 6/22/95.]
Be wary of magazines such as The Writer and Writer's Digest
for wanna-be's rather than professional writers. You can
judge the intended audience by the advertising. [Ibid.]
For online reference works, try
: English and other
language dictionaries, acronym guides, thesauri, quotations,
encyclopedias, maps, fact books, phone books, biographies,
and Internet resources. [WEBster, 10/31/95.]
Need the help of a professional writer?
Check out .
[Sandra Bernstein, freelance, 8/14/95.]
The Write Byte is a monthly computer newsletter for fiction
and non-fiction writers. "Written by professionals who are
writers first and computists second so there's no technobabble."
Free sample issues. . [T. Bruce
Tober , alt.journalism, 10/20/95.]
(Tober was exposed to my .signature on the freelance
discussion list; I guess he liked "computists."
It's been used by a defunct "Hardcore Computists" magazine
-- for software pirates, I think -- and in a few other mentions
that Lycos can find. Is it technobabble?)