Posted on January 27, 2016
This enhancement increases accessibility and improves usability of the product so that it’s easy for users to navigate on any device. The change happened within the product and no action is required for libraries.
| By Holly Hibner | Here in Michigan, we take our automobiles pretty seriously; it is very common for laypeople to perform routine maintenance and basic repairs on their own vehicles. My husband wouldn’t dream of paying for an oil change or a tire rotation! But when both got new vehicles in 2016, general maintenance wasn’t as easy …Read more
Posted on January 27, 2016
This enhancement increases accessibility and improves usability of the product so that it’s easy for users to navigate on any device. The change happened within the product and no action is required for libraries.
发表于2016年1月4
By Ryan Lee Price
In an era when character development and plot structure took a backseat to technological ideas and dystopian/utopian predictions, Frank Herbert deliberately suppressed technology in theDune世界saga so he could focus on the future of humanity rather than what technology humanity could create. What resulted was a series of books that earned widespread acclaim, Nebula and Hugo awards, and what some consider the greatest and most profitable science fiction novel ever written.
但它几乎是并非如此。
Herbert had been a moderately successful science fiction short story writer, having his work appear in several magazines, starting with “Looking for Something” in the April 1952 issue ofStartling Stories. He followed that with several stories in a variety of magazines and a novel,在压力之下, serialized inAstoundingmagazine (which changed its name toAnalogin 1960), all the while working as a reporter for various northeast regional newspapers.