On 8/24/2011 8:54 AM, Bodoh John Robert wrote:
It's hard for me to believe that trees are intentionally
being destroyed so reference manuals can be printed.  Have
you not heard of Adobe reader or BookManager?  These tools
make looking up information so much easier and quicker over
looking in a printed book that I can't understand why anyone
would ever need a printed reference book.  With sophisticated
search engines, the "size" of the book no longer matters.

It's too bad you didn't read my post completely before getting
on your soap box. I do use digital versions of the manuals for
quick reference, but frequently doing so can take longer than
finding information in multiple manuals concurrently, as well as
retrieving frequently used information.  And you seem to be
unaware that trees, at least in this neck of the woods, are a
renewable resource, and have been for many millions of years.



[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Gerhard
Postpischil Sent: Tuesday, August 23, 2011 3:29 PM To:
[email protected] Subject: Re: Is the PoOP too
big? (was Assembler manuals)

The printed manual is getting to be unwieldy. I could see
having it split into two, or possibly three, volumes: the
basic hardware design and features, the privileged
instructions, and the unprivileged (and semi-privileged) one,
with Appendix A split (and expanded) accordingly. The digital
version is just fine, except for the skimpy Appendix A.


Gerhard Postpischil
Bradford, VT

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