You won't find the
instruction "turn on the
computer" anywhere in
Computer Life, the new
"digital lifestyle" magazine
published by hip-to-be-square
Ziff-Davis. Why? In a fit of
"Just Say No" hysteria,
editor-in-chief John
Dickinson has banned the
phrase, according to Flux
friends inside Ziff. "He
thinks it's drug slang," one
source says, "and he doesn't
want any drug slang in the
magazine." But Dickinson's
Nancy Reagan-ish familiarity
with 60s-era drug lingo is
limited. When Ziff's
marketing force ordered t-
shirts to promote a
department in his new mag,
the crusading editor was,
oddly, silent. The slogan
printed on the shirts? "Get a
'Buzz' from Computer
Life."
According to a lightly
edited press release run by
New York Times reporter
Deirdre Carmody in her
October 17 "Magazine Notes"
column, high-profile magazine
art director Roger Black has
made a major discovery: Mosaic
and the Internet. Or is it
just a chance for a quick buck?
In his comments to the
Times, the shameless
Black managed simultaneously
to acknowledge that "We art
directors have only a dim
understanding of technology,"
and to announce the formation
of a new firm that will
advise clients on the design
of interactive technology
products. Hopefully, his advice
won't extend to the use of
Mosaic itself, a program he
has apparently never used.
"For a publication to appear
on the Internet without its
own typeface is like going on TV
naked," Black pontificated
to the Times. Call Flux
when you manage to impose a
Century Schoolbook headline
on your users, Roger.
Venture capital money flows
like water through Multimedia
Gulch these days, and
apparently some people can't
resist the urge to divert the
stream in very personal
directions. One fast-growing
Gulch start-up, renowned for
its multimedia tools,
received a seven-figure VC
investment in late 1993; by
early this summer a healthy
percentage of it had,
mysteriously, disappeared
from the books. Fingers were
pointed at a senior manager
as the chief suspect, as
observers whispered "graft"
and "embezzlement," but the
suspect's partners did
nothing -- perhaps because
the bad publicity would scare
off other venture money. The
company's reputation has been
preserved, but at the expense
of morale among staff members
who exposed the scandal;
meanwhile, the alleged thief
has taken a prominent
position at another firm.
Don't let Bellcore's denial-
spewing flacks spin you wrong -
Flux is absolutely certain
that the US$1 billion research
laboratory, jointly owned by
the seven Baby Bells, is on
the selling block. After the
Wall Street Journal reported
that a sale was imminent, the
flacks issued a murky-yet-
carefully-worded public statement
that said, "It is Bellcore's
policy that it would disclose
any formal action by its seven
owners or senior management
affecting Bellcore's future."
The rest of the mainstream
press then scrambled without
success to get confirmation
from the usual suspects:
"industry observers," "sources
close to the research lab,"
and other non-experts. But the
source who told Flux the sale
is a "go" carries a bit more
weight - after all, he's a
member of the Bellcore board.
The Electronic Frontier
Foundation may know privacy,
but its attorneys need to
bone up on trademark law.
Publishing giant IDG recently
leaned on the cyber-rights
group, demanding that it
change the name of its
electronic Big Dummies
Guide to the Internet
because it infringed on IDG's
highly successful series of
trademarked "... for Dummies"
books. EFF backed down and
chose a new name: Net
Guide -- which is owned
by the authors of yet another
highly successful book
series. What's next for EFF?
The Ronald McDonald Guide
to the Internet?
By Ned Brainard
Have a tip for Flux? Send mail to: flux@hotwired.com.
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