K A I R O S: A Journal of Rhetoric, Technology, and Pedagogy Call for Hypertexts
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ISSN 1521-2300
Editorial Staff

Staff


Q:What is Kairos ?

Q:How can I contribute?

Q:Peer reviewed? Really?

Q:What are your Editorial Policies?

Q:How can I subscribe?

Q:Who works on this journal?

Q:What else can you tell me about?



Kairos  FAQ: How can I subscribe?

How can I subscribe to Kairos ?

Kairos  is a free-access web journal. You do not need to subscribe; simply point your browser to http://english.ttu.edu/kairos. However, you may choose to subscribe to our announcement list by filling out our subscription form. -Mick Doherty and Douglas Eyman

How do I know if there's something new at the Kairos  site?

Whenever a new issue of Kairos  is posted to the Web, a thumbnail version of the cover is posted on the Kairos  Homepage under the title "Current Issue."-Jason Cranford Teague

By 'subscribing' to Kairos (using our subscription form), you will be alerted when each new issue comes out and when special Kairos events take place. -Douglas Eyman

Where can I get a printed copy of your journal?

You cannot. The very nature of hypertext and of Kairos  defies the linearity of the printed page. The closest a person could come to getting a printed version of Kairos  would be to print out each page of a hypertext and figure out a way to follow all the links between pages... and at that point the individual would go insane and just go back and read it online as it was intended. -Greg Siering

I wanted to download the files and read them later, but found that there was no one file with ALL the text in. Staying online to read them all is time consuming and $$$. Is it possible to provide all the small html files into one big one. or am I missing the point of it all?

In issue 2.1, Doug Brent provided a zipped file that contained all the files within his hypertext, in part because he personally sees off-line viewing as an important alternative for those using dial-up service providers. In the future, we might encourage more authors to offer similar options. In the meantime, readers who want this off-line option might consider getting a program like WebWhacker that allows readers to grab entire hypertexts for off-line reading. -Greg Siering

We are considering the possibility of releasing Kairos  on CD-Rom on an annual basis--feel free to let us know that you would support such an effort, and how much you feel such a service should cost. -Douglas Eyman

How do I access back issues of Kairos ?

Just go to the Kairos  home page at http://english.ttu.edu/kairos/. There you will see a list of the past and current issues. -Greg Siering

In addition, Kairos  has a search engine that will search the current and back issues of the journal. -Jason Cranford Teague