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R. General Góis Monteiro 8 - F1801
22298-900 Rio de Janeiro, RJ, Brazil
+55 21 295-8512 542-5387
davidlw@pobox.com
http://geocities.datacellar.net/SiliconValley/Park/9054/
Since first visiting Brazil in 1970 we've found it hard to let go of one another.
As much now as then Brazil offers:
That said, my business hours are limitless 24 x 7 x 365. Try me.
The prices and service are identical to when you buy direct at http://www.amazon.com so help Dave make an honest dime buying Books, Music & More using above Amazon.com link.
Amazon.com is pleased to have David Lee-Warner in the family of Amazon.com associates. We've agreed to ship books and music and provide customer service for orders we receive through special links on David Lee-Warner's Welcome page.
Amazon.com associates list selected books in an editorial context that helps you choose the right books. We encourage you to visit David Lee-Warner's Welcome often to see what new books he's selected for you. His book selection follows below. Thank you for shopping with an Amazon.com associate.
Sincerely,
Jeff Bezos – President, Amazon.com
Secure online ordering – tasteful gift-wrapping with a personal gift note – fast, reliable worldwide delivery
Click here! items will bring you the book for browsing or purchase when you click on underlined author(s) and title.
Click here for all Online Store Links mentioned on this pageAlways bear in mind your friendly Sam's Club may offer special offers for books on the WSJ and NYT best seller lists, as experienced Stateside mid-1997.
Jon Krakauer, Into Thin Air. Click here! A Personal Account of the Mt. Everest Disaster.
For
What Really Happened In The Thin Air
. In the wake of the May 10, 1996 tragedy on Mount Everest, in which guides Scott Fischer and Rob Hall died, emotions have run high. All told, eight people perished in the descent from the summit, making it one of the deadliest days in the mountain's history.
Since then, two more of those in the book have lost their lives climbing, yet there is still no let up in the acrimonious debate raging about Coming Down from the summit of Everest on that fateful May 10.
Read this gripping tale about a real episode so you can keep up with the exchange as it unfolds.
Recent shots of summit of Mt. Everest – 29,028 ft. The videocam is positioned at Hotel Everest View in Shamboche at 13,000 feet in Khumbu Nepal. This daily interface to the Internet is made possible by the Everest Live Project, a voluntary base for the people and trekkers of Nepal Himalaya.
Click here for the Everest IMAX movie now showing in IMAX theaters. The IMAX film crew was filming this movie on Mt. Everest in 1996 and played a critical role in the May 10 and 11 rescue efforts.
Katie Hafner & Matthew Lyon, Where Lizards Stay Up Late. The origins of the Internet. Click here! Here are the facts. The rest is folklore.
James Bamford, The Puzzle Palace. Click here! Inside The National Security Agency. The Cold War may be over but ELINT - electronics intelligence gathering - certainly isn't.
Rafael Yglesias, Dr.Neruda's Cure for Evil. Click here! A disturbingly compelling novel.
John le Carré, The Tailor of Panama. Click here! A novel set in the tiny country that regains control of the Panama Canal at midnight on December 31, 1999.
John Grisham, The Partner. Click here! A thrilling new twist on who holds the trump card, David or Goliath?
Tom Clancy, Executive Orders. Click here! Clancy has that knack of preempting one of the next sort of big events caused by rogue nations and wild-eyed groups we'd rather pretend don't exist. Unfortunately they do.
Elizabeth George, Deception on his Mind. Click here! Anyone exposed to ethnic tensions in Britain will readily admire George's skill in weaving this whodunit.
Patricia Cornwell, Unnatural Exposure. Click here! A cyberage Dr. Jekyll and Dr. Hyde. Modern technology facilitates the crime, just as it does those who can catch the culprit. Perhaps "the perfect crime" no longer exists with the audit trail technology affords today.
Jean-Dominique Bauby, The Diving Bell and the Butterfly. Click here! An indescribably moving, autobiographic tale by an unusually intelligent man imprisoned within his own body. His mental activity shames those of us who claim to enjoy perfect health.
+ Courtney Weaver's plain text light-hearted column Wednesdays in salonmagazine.
Prior to first online purchase on the Internet, using a credit card in October 1996, the only English-language reading options for the past 25 years for this expatriate bookworm had been:
Purchasing on the Internet is a lot safer, and infinitely more convenient, than visiting the giant RioSul shopping mall across the street, or any other bricks-and-mortar establishment. And when it comes to giving gift-wrapped books overseas, well, online bookstores' service is just plain unmatched by any real world, in person book-buying experience.
Averaging almost a purchase a month read how each online store performed on both Rio delivery, as well as overseas delivery of the gifts we ordered. Standard international air mail s&h typically adds $10.00-13.00 to the price of each single-book order for Brazil. This is a factual analysis of 14 purchase transactions Oct'96 thru Jun'98 which speaks legions more than all those banner ads on the Web:
Barnes and Noble.com immediately credited full amount of undelivered purchase to my credit card once I alerted them 7/13/97. They also told me to keep the book with their compliments when it arrived! There were a couple of earlier problems with B&N too. All attempts to track their shipping number online were rejected. Also, their 5/29/97 shipping email mentioned they were debiting my card twice the authorized total amount.
They readily admitted error in their system, which had mistakenly doubled all invoice amounts for shipments on that particular day, when I challenged this -- whew!
Coincidentally, a similar delay in receipt of goods had occurred with my very first order to Amazon.com but their reaction couldn't have been more different.
Amazon.com rushed a free second copy of the order by express courier within 48 hours of my email complaint (a shipping expense alone in excess of $55 according to the gratis DHL AWB), merely requesting that I return the original shipment to the mailman when it arrived. The first book did indeed arrive -- some three weeks later, and I returned it to the Brazilian Post Office. Amazon.com had addressed it correctly and Amazon.com had notified me of fulfillment matching the package frank. Even so, we all know snail mail is subject to the vagaries of high-speed Post Office electronic sorters which route snail mail to Rio over the fastest possible route -- via Bolivia & Paraguay in this particular instance :-( )
Sierra On-Line was a different experience altogether. First they said they had no record of the order two months after charging it to my credit card. Then they said it had been shipped. When I threatened a hullabaloo they said they'd credit back total purchase amount and would ship a complimentary second order. Freebie was received 21 days later. Their first shipment never arrived. Sierra On-Line refunded full purchase amount to my credit card same day they made the follow-up, complimentary shipment.
Firsthand experience is unbeatable. The Internet is a wunderzeug for civilization. But it isn't going to change time-honoured business basics. PQS - Price, Quality and Service will continue to be the hallmark of all successful companies, large and small, on and off the Web.
I predict with critical emphasis the You-can-always-count-on-us-to-go-the-extra-mile-to-serve-you mindshare of Customer Service plus "Innovation with Value Added for the Customer" will be the key differentiator to displace the primary price & quality duopoly now that, from a cost viewpoint, the Web has leveled the playing field for almost any size enterprise.
Try tracking an order first time out on the Barnes and Noble.com home page, or your Account. Frustrated, huh? Well, no sweat, it's only a mouse-click to the We're-waiting-to-serve-you competition. And, the last few times I checked, the competition had better prices too.
Hey, why not let a free, quick, AI shopping agent like Jango® do all the legwork and sift the best-buy options for you unaided? We're living in the Age of the Web, remember? No time nor need to weigh subjective, distorted opinions like mine, right ;-)
Click on my comment to browse right inside that store:
Amazon.com
Book Stacks Unlimited
BarnesandNoble.com
Sierra On-Line
This HTML was originally hand-coded using NotePad+ 1.11, an excellent Windows 95/NT 4.0 Notepad replacement, available as freeware copyrighted by Rogier Meurs.
In October 1998 I switched to what is proclaimed by its author, Jan Goyvaerts, as "The Best Postcardware Text Editor on Earth", namely EditPad version 3.4.0
Also use HTMLtool (2.5) extensively, created by Lorenz Graf. Read more about HTMLtool further down.
None of these tools (English version free, or almost) have revealed any serious conflict with Brazilian Portuguese Windows 95 nor Microsoft Internet Explorer 4.01 SP1 using Active Desktop unlike much of the more widely-distributed commercial software.
Why go to all this effort when there are so many good Tag Editors available? Well, here's a live example of the sort of browser discrepancy in the handling of cutting-edge HTML code.
In Internet Explorer 4.0 or higher, my email address appears in yellow on a black background as soon as you move your mouse over the line below
Dynamic HTML Demo
Move mouse cursor anywhere over this line of text for my e-mail address
whereas nothing changes if using a Netscape Navigator browser.
(Press Reload button to revert to page-opening status if you want to re-test these Internet Explorer 4.0 or higher special HTML extensions)
For those who don't contemplate wasting time with the arcane niceties of HTML code yet want to put up pages on the Web, whether entry-level stuff like this or fancy and complex ones, I suggest evaluating these HTML Editors:
or,
Lest anyone think shareware or freeware HTML editors offer less than their commercial counterparts, think again. Sure, they are element-level tools, demanding a basic knowledge of HTML beforehand and requiring some ability to tinker with your PC software which the two major commercial distributions above do not. Hands on trial-and-error is probably the only realistic way to grasp a markup language. Serious web authoring demands mastering HTML, especially if you plan to venture into SMIL (pronounced "smile", for Synchronized Media Integration Language) — used for streaming media delivery — and other XML-type new generation languages.
From one year's experience in this field I can't recommend HTMLtool highly enough from a young German student. Hard to beat what HTMLtool 2.5 has to offer for its tiny $15.00 shareware licensing fee.
Before doing so, I'd still recommend grasping a handle on what the W3C HTML 3.2 or 4.0 spec is before you crack open any HTML Editor, to avoid becoming discouraged. The power of the Web phenomenon is its instantaneous, almost-zero-cost display of content, not the flashy features amok on too many sites that obscure the content. It may surprise many the humongous Yahoo! site is entirely optimized for, in Webtime years, ancient Netscape Navigator version 2.0. Yahoo! is one of the few to recognize Web users are no different to those who browse books and magazines in bookstores and libraries. Any set of eyes can flip through pages in a book, and no special plug-in or browser is required to get usefulness out of a Yahoo! experience.
Any one of us with the time and patience, tenacity, and meticulous attention to detail, can master how to code in a markup language - it is not computer programming. Programming in Cobol, Perl, Java, C++ and so forth is only for those endowed with a very special set of logic skills. We don't compare nurses with doctors, nor should we compare HTML/Web authors -- professional graphics artists excluded -- with programmers. Even though, and I think explained by the novelty of the Web profession, a competent HTML coder may be earning equal to, or even more than an experienced programmer. This incongruity may not last more than five years if today's HTML authors fail to blend skills for successful marketing on the Web into the products and services they present.
Web commerce, E-commerce, E-business, whatever, is the way the world is headed. Remarkably, even as 1998 draws to a close, how it will get there remains an elusive and unknown science. In my view, 90% of the funds corporations are throwing into their E-commerce solutions will prove to be money thrown out of the window. It may take the most successful companies another five years to implement the fact E-commerce is not just a way of processing orders cheaply and more efficiently. Any organization that does not re-configure itself around its revolutionary, fully-integrated E-commerce core, and then conduct its business better than the competition, will be history. I'm as dogmatic as that, even while Amazon.com proves this with its soaring market value!
So, enough on this. Until reasonable compatibility is re-established between the two leading browsers I'll probably continue this laborious coding process, even though the HTML Editors mentioned above would reduce the effort involved to a fraction with far better results. Notwithstanding, much as ancient scribes toiled at their copperplate, I'll do utmost so any reader can, at the click of a mouse, read whatever it is I'm trying to produce -- regardless of browser.
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