The Literary Machine
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    When you are filing notes in a 'paper' office, you may often
    wish that you could file the same note in more than one place
    under different headings.
        You have heard of the 'computer age', and think that at
    long last your problem is solved.
        Then someone 'offers' you the computer 'solution',
    and it turns out to be the relational database, a very hostile
    solution in the worst 'Take no prisoners' mode of computers
    indeed.
    The Literary Machine [The name is a reference to the theme
    of a work of linguistic philosophy] is a program that offers
    a friendlier solution.
        It is written by Gunnar Sommestad, an ordinary writer
    on philosophical and other topics who happens also to be
    a programmer; firmly not the other way about.
    To assist himself--and in turn other writers like himself--,
    Gunnar has taken the Paradox 5.0 relational database 'engine'
    [which Borland has generously released as freeware], and
    supplied it with a purpose-designed 'front end' that enables
    the writer to file notes (and recover them) under as many
    separate headings for each note as he or she chooses.
        The front end deliberately conceals the inner workings
    of Paradox entirely from the user.
    The computer-literate--or ordinary ingenious--user can
    of course make the Literary Machine do more than organise
    a writer's notes.
        They can turn it to other, more sophisticated, purposes.
        But even they are likely to appreciate a front end that
    enables them, free from distraction, to concentrate entirely
    upon the task in hand.
    By way of special features:
    (a) Headings can be designed with great flexibility.
    (b) Notes are presented on the desktop as cards. The cards
        can be laid out and manipulated in a number of different
        ways.
        As a new feature of The Literary Machine version 2000,
        the cards can in particular be spread out, yet conveniently
        viewed, over a 'desktop' that is of greater area than
        the screen itself.
    By way of limitations:
    (a) The corollary of the presentation of notes as cards
        is that practically--Even given the refinements of Version
        2000--there is a limit on the number of notes that can be
        displayed on the screen at any one time.
    (b) As a Stage 1: 'Assembly of material' writer's tool,
        the focus of The Literary Machine is upon the convenient
        classification of notes under multiple headings, and
        their speedy retrieval; not their further sorting and
        ordering.
           [Ie, in the usual way, for Stage 2: 'Sorting &
        Ordering', the user is expected to employ an outliner;
        for Stage 3: 'Editing', a text editor or word processor;
        or for Stage 4: 'Layout & Presentation', a word processor or
        desktop publishing program.]
            So, whilst notes can be automatically date-stamped as
        they are entered (and if so later found and recovered by
        date), they cannot be automatically presented in date order.
            Equally they cannot be automatically presented in
        alphabetical order of the first word or words of the note.
        However, for the purposes of assisting the writer's
        transition from Stage 1 to Stage 2, Gunnar has provided
        the facility that an 'ad hoc' group of notes can be
        manually ordered under a special title, and re-presented 
        (or as needs be, converted into a textfile for export)
        in the same order.
            And the non-writer may also exploit the facility, as
        he or she chooses, for his own less specialised purposes.
        
    Gunnar Sommestad has released The Literary Machine as freeware.
        Since 1997 he has gradually refined the original 16-bit
    version, improving its features and manner of operation.
        This year he has written, and released in Beta, a new
    32-bit version, The Literary Machine 2000.
        The Literary Machine 2000 is stable, and now undergoing
    debugging and improvement in detail before its release in
    final form.
 
 
    Stephen Prower
    18 September 2000
    101714.2736@compuserve.com

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