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Where there is no doctor...?
Over on alt.binaries.e-book.technical newsgroup, here on usenet, someone
has posted two books in pdf format cruisers may find interesting. I haven't seen anything of them but the title, so can't form an opinion of their usefulness. They were posted yesterday so just look at the last files. The subject line starts with Where so they should be easy to find in the huge list of books. The two books are "Where There Is No Doctor" and "Where There Is No Dentist", the implications of which are obvious to a cruiser who got a toothache 280 miles from land. Just a heads up to let you know they're there. I felt bad not posting to this group when the book posters were in "diesel mode", even though I didn't see any boat-specific diesel books in the lists. Keep an eye on this e-book newsgroup. There's an amazing array of most interesting books, manuals and other technical literature I don't think you'd ever see in one place elsewhere. I must have a million dollars in electronic service manuals from there, alone, even if you don't count my nuclear or weapons library...(c; If you like guns, they've been posting the manuals for nearly ever gun ever produced on the planet for the last few months....look back and find all yours. Back there a while someone went crazy posting wood shop manuals, too. Oh, and I have the maintenance, operations and flight manuals for your big jet airliners, in case you broke yours. Worry your flight attendant to death. Sit there reading the flight manual for the jet you're riding in on your laptop. Ask the captain if he used "this" checklist before takeoff when he comes back through. alt.binaries.e-book has all the novels for your next around-the-world cruise, too. And you thought the boat's notebook was only for navigation.... |
Where there is no doctor...?
I can't find the NG you mentioned on Google groups... maybe they just
don't have it?? Larry wrote: Over on alt.binaries.e-book.technical newsgroup, here on usenet, someone has posted two books in pdf format cruisers may find interesting. I haven't seen anything of them but the title, so can't form an opinion of their usefulness. |
Where there is no doctor...?
"Keith" wrote in
oups.com: I can't find the NG you mentioned on Google groups... maybe they just don't have it?? Google doesn't do binaries. Download Xnews from http://xnews.newsguy.com for free. Go to http://www.usenetserver.com and BUY real usenet service for $15/month or $39/quarter. Tell Xnews your server is news.usenetserver.com and enter your username and password in the wizard the first time you boot it. There's around 70,000 newsgroups on Terabytes of amazing disk drives in downtown Atlanta you can access from anywhere on the planet....10 ports simultaneously, no GB limits, as fast as your internet service lets you go. Also, check your own ISP website to see what usenet server you're already paying for in your monthly access bill. Comcrap Cable limits theirs to 2GB/month, a travesty tryin to sell more and trying to block ports so you can't use something more reasonable, but UNS has multiple ports to access bypassing this denial of service. I'm lucky, Knology Cable INCLUDES direct access to UNS' server stack with no limits...(c; Yahoo and Google aren't usenet services....more like tiny windows into our world....no binaries. Cable internet downloads more in a day than you can play with in a month.... Oh, another carrot? The same newsgroup also has several hundred magazines posted on it every month, including sailing, boating, cruising mags!...(c; Try not to block my view standing in line....(c; |
Where there is no doctor...?
Sailaway wrote in :
I am sure there is something I should know about to read these, but I haven't a clue... Any suggestions? Thanks Your new client doesn't decode Yenc encoding. Usenet only uses 7 bits, not 8, so encoding schemes were invented to convert 8 bit binary data into 7 bit text which could be posted. Yenc is the latest, most popular code being used. Go get Xnews from http://xnews.newsguy.com It's free. The instructions are on the website. It downloads the message list (limit that to around 200,000 messages which is almost too many files to look through). Then, click the Q column to mark the files you want to download. (Xnews groups all the messages in a file into a single line on the message list for you.) You can click more while it's downloading others. You just have the wrong client.....like Outlook Express which sucks. |
Where there is no doctor...?
Larry writes:
I haven't seen anything of them but the title, so can't form an opinion of their usefulness. These books are not what you think. They are written by liberals for high school dropouts in the Peace Corps working to help third world countries. They contain little information on diagnosis and treatment, especially in regard to what a boater at sea might encounter. The emphasis is on things like malnutrition, child immunizations, AIDS, jungle childbirth, etc. If you have any brains, you'd be much better off with the Merck Manual, and a suture kit from eBay, and a Dent-Temp kit for the drugstore. |
Where there is no doctor...?
Larry writes:
The pdf Merck manual floats a LOT easier and takes up a lot LESS cabin space than the printed version, I'd guess. Except it's not a PDF file, it's a clumsy application of its own. Bah. |
Where there is no doctor...?
Richard J Kinch wrote in
: Except it's not a PDF file, it's a clumsy application of its own. Bah. I believe it's an ISO file, a disk image of the original setup disk, like my Physician's Desk Reference, which also came as a bunch of WinRAR files off that newsgroup. Boot your disk burner, like Nero, and pick "disk image file" and let Nero burn the image file to the CDR in the drive. It installs just like the original disk, giving you full access to its important data and a fantastic engine to search it with.... |
Where there is no doctor...?
Try reading the post flameboy: "I haven't seen anything of them but the
title, so can't form an opinion of their usefulness." "Richard J Kinch" wrote in message . .. Larry writes: I haven't seen anything of them but the title, so can't form an opinion of their usefulness. These books are not what you think. They are written by liberals for high school dropouts in the Peace Corps working to help third world countries. They contain little information on diagnosis and treatment, especially in regard to what a boater at sea might encounter. The emphasis is on things like malnutrition, child immunizations, AIDS, jungle childbirth, etc. If you have any brains, you'd be much better off with the Merck Manual, and a suture kit from eBay, and a Dent-Temp kit for the drugstore. |
Where there is no doctor...?
Larry writes:
It installs just like the original disk, giving you full access to its important data and a fantastic engine to search it with.... Right, a bloated poorly-written application you have to study carefully to search what would be much easier with a PDF file with index and Acrobat. _Machinery's Handbook_ used to be like that, and happily they have now gone to PDF. I don't like that Adobe owns the document format and reader, but any standard is better than the awkward stuff unique to each book. |
Where there is no doctor...?
Richard J Kinch wrote in
: Right, a bloated poorly-written application you have to study carefully to search what would be much easier with a PDF file with index and Acrobat. Whoa! Hang on! Now you're talkin about my operating system, Windoze XP Pro...(c; Acrobat is bloatware for the bloatware.....with the on-screen adware at the top. |
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