A directory of resources inthe field of technical communication.

ISTC

10 found.

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1.
#30788

AECMA Simplified English   (PDF)

ASD-STE100 Simplified Technical English (formerly AECMA Simplified English) is a specification for writing aircraft documentation. The principles can be applied to all industry sectors. ASD-STE100 provides a set of writing rules and a dictionary of words and their meanings. It has a limited number of words; a limited number of clearly defined meanings for each word; a limited number of parts of speech for each word; a set of rules for writing text. This article outlines the standard, and shows how it helps to prevent ambiguity in text.

Unwalla, Mike. ISTC (2004). Articles>Writing>Minimalism>Controlled Vocabulary

2.
#23219

The Bumper Book of Technical Boobs   (PDF)

Humorous examples of accidental (and humorous) errors in technical descriptions. Most of the gems on the following pages were, thankfully, picked up at the editing stage. One or two slipped through into printed books; some didnÕt even get as far as first draft stage. We have wondered for a long time about the mentality of the people who write this sort of thing; now you, too, can sit at your desk and try to figure out what these technical authors (yes, they actually get paid for this!) and engineers are on, where they got it from and whether they will give you some.

Watson, Sophie. ISTC (2004). Humor>Writing>Technical Writing

3.
#23221

The Documentation Scene

Funny thing, documentation. Ought to be easy enough, surely? So why the disappointing results? What IS the elusive spark which distinguishes the professional author from others who put their hand to the pen (keyboard)?

Mobbs, John. ISTC (2002). Articles>Documentation>Writing>Technical Writing

4.
#10129

Institute of Scientific and Technical Communicators

A UK organization (member of Intecom) that allows members to exchange views and information with other technical communicators. Offers book reviews on various subjects (e.g. editing, writing, indexing, web design, user interface design, and programming and mark-up languages). It also offers information on training and education for technical communicators.

ISTC. Organizations>TC>Regional>United Kingdom

5.
#23224

Technical Communication

A description of the profession of scientific and technical communication.

Wright, Iain. ISTC. Presentations>TC

6.
#23222

Technical Writer Career Information   (PDF)

What does a technical writer do? A technical writer prepares information that helps users.

Farbey, David. ISTC (2002). Careers>Writing>Technical Writing

7.
#23223

What is a Technical Communicator?   (PowerPoint)

Why use technical communicators? Why join the ISTC? How to become a technical communicator? This presentation should take approximately 40 minutes to complete and is designed for an audience who are not aware of the existence of the profession.

Wright, Iain. ISTC. Presentations>TC

8.
#11761

Whoops: Aircraft Maintenance

A list of problems allegedly noted by U. S. Air Force pilots and left for maintenance crews to fix before the next flight, plus the replies from the maintenance crews.

ISTC. Humor>Documentation

9.
#11760

Whoops: Questionable Advice

Questionable warnings and instructions from all over the world.

ISTC. Humor>Documentation

10.
#11763

Whoops: Translation Trouble

Quotations of translated material from all over the world.

ISTC. Humor>Language>Translation>Localization

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