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SELF-PUBLISHING COMPANY

BRAINY BEGINNER'S GUIDE

199 SELF-PUBLISHING TIPS

WORST MISTEAKS

STINKERS! Worst self-pub

SELF-PUB BUSINESS BASICS

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INTERNET HARASSMENT book

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PHONE book

PHONE SYSTEM book

TELECOM REFERENCE EBOOK

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STORIES book

FLUNK book

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Blue-Collar Basketball

D-I-Y phone installation

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D-I-Y lawyering

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Silver Sands Books

 

MICHAEL N. MARCUS is the founder and president of AbleComm, Inc. (“the telecom department store"), and a journalist, advertising copywriter and blogger. Michael is the author of more than a dozen books, and is contributing editor to "Newton's Telecom Dictionary." He has been  an editor at Rolling Stone magazine; and has written for many science, music, business, electronics, automotive and general interest magazines, as well as newspapers. He's also an award-winning advertising copywriter who has worked on such brands as Pioneer, AR, Columbia Records, Maxell, Volvo, Castrol, and Perdue chicken.
Michael has long been a successful and popular explainer. Before the Internet, he was an online advisor on CompuServe, and later on MSN. He is a contributor to the online Telecom Digest, and wrote a column and product reviews for Teleconnect magazine. He writes six blogs and answers questions on Internet forums.
 
At the urging of a misguided guidance counselor, he went to Lehigh University to become an electrical engineer, and was disappointed to learn that engineering was mostly math— and slide rules were not as much fun as soldering irons. He quickly switched to journalism.
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Michael has written professionally for over 40 years. He was one of the first writers to humanize electronic hardware, describing equipment with emotion, not math. At Rolling Stone, his popular reviews of hi-fi equipment departed from the traditional laboratory tedium, and used humor and slices-of-life to describe the components. His novel approach came from necessity, because he didn't have a testing laboratory.
 
Michael lives in Connecticut with his wife Marilyn, Hunter the Golden Retriever, indoor and outdoor telephone booths, a "Lily Tomlin" switchboard, lots of books, CDs and DVDs, and many black boxes with flashing lights. Marilyn is very tolerant.