Loompanics Unlimited

                                  PRESENTS

                            Our Featured Author
   
                                Dennis Fiery
   
                Author helps consumers fight back, get even
                                      
        Loompanics Unlimited is proud to present author Dennis Fiery, an
   expert in helping regular people take control of their lives, whether
   it be teaching them to use computers like the experts, wield their
   power as consumers, or turn temps jobs into lucrative and productive
   positions. He is the author of several Loompanics books: Out of
   Business (1999), The Temp Workers Guide to Self-Fulfillment (1997),
   How to Hide Things in Public Places (1996) and Secrets of a Super
   Hacker
   (1994).

        His most recent release, Out of Business, is the incarnation of
   knowledge gained from working at several crummy corporations that
   plummeted down the toilet and out of business, leaving him jobless.
   From those experiences he learned what makes companies fail - and
   succeed!

        He was born in 1972 to semi-hippie parents. After crisscrossing
   the country he settled down on the East Coast where he enjoys the
   close proximity of many bustling cities. He is currently at peace with
   the world, except for the IRS and insurance companies, and enjoys
   fudge brownies, inline skating, museums, bicycling, jet skiing, and
   drunken revelry.

                       An Interview with Dennis Fiery

   Loompanics Unlimited: It looks like youve made a career out of being a
   sneak. Whats behind that?

   Dennis Fiery: I wouldnt call this a career.

   L.U.:: Were you a sneaky kid when you grew up? Did you bend the rules?

   D.F.: Sure, I always try to bend the rules. My parents showed me what
   fun that can be. Thats how you learn. People who dont try to take
   risks arent happy. Theyre trapped in a safe and boring little box.
   They never grow, never better themselves, hardly even know that they
   could, if they tried.

   L.U.: Have you ever gotten in trouble for bending the rules?

   D.F.: You dont get in trouble for bending the rules. You get in
   trouble when people in power have a different perception of what the
   rules are than you do. Like, I think the rules say I can do basically
   whatever I want to that will make me happy, as long as I dont harm
   other people. Other people sometimes take offense at this
   interpretation.

   L.U.: Lets talk about the Temp Workers Guide. Did you go into temp
   working with a different vision than when you came out of it? Did you
   realize you could have so much fun?

   D.F.: No, I didnt. It was just a way to of getting money when I wasnt
   in school, then it was a way of doing something when I didnt have a
   regular job. I didnt have any preconceived ideas. As a younger version
   of myself, before I had experienced the world of work, it was a way to
   see all the corporate drones stuck in an environment, or they felt
   that they were stuck there. I knew that I would never want to be stuck
   like that.

   L.U.: Do you feel like your books help people get out of their stuck
   situations?

   D.F.: I hope so. I heard from one woman who read Super Hacker who said
   it gave her the confidence to explore different parts of her computer
   system and she found out something that she shouldnt have found out.
   She learned, essentially, what was going on in her department, and it
   helped her get ahead. Ive gotten other feedback like that.

   L.U.: Lets talk about Out of Business. Did something ever happen to
   you in a business situation that gave you a grudge, or made you swear
   youd wreak vengeance against a business?

   D.F.: No, I dont have a grudge. I respect anybody who builds up a
   business. That takes a lot of creativity, perseverance, a lot of good
   character traits. What I dont like is people who dont try to think for
   themselves, who just go to work blindly following the motions.

   L.U.: Who are you aiming Out of Business at?

   D.F.: Anybody that has a business, they would certainly want to read
   it to get a lot of ideas about things that can go on to hurt their
   business. Then, of course, anybody who wants to hurt a rival business.

   L.U.: What are your plans for the future? Anything in the hopper?

   D.F.: Ive been working on the updated edition of Super Hacker, so Ive
   been doing a lot of hacking and exploring computer systems.

   L.U.: Does anybody in your real job know who you are? 

   D.F.: Ive tried that at previous jobs and it didnt work out. I dont
   feel like talking to anybody about it really, people always ask dumb
   questions and its annoying, they expect things from you. It just makes
   it simpler to keep it a separate part of my life.

   L.U.: What kind of advice can you offer to someone who is frustrated
   with their job and their life, someone whos realizing theyre working
   for The Man and theyre not getting much out of it?

   D.F.: You have to act in ways that promote your best interest. People
   sometimes think they're acting in their best interest, when really
   theyre hurting themselves. For instance sometimes a worker tries to
   make himself or herself seem more important, more essential, by not
   sharing what they know with co-workers. They may know how to get the
   job done faster, or have access to certain systems or paperwork that
   others dont have. They think by keeping that to themselves it gives
   them more power. But it doesnt, it just gives them more work to do and
   other people resent them for it. I say, share your knowledge, share
   your powers, then other people will share with you, and everyone is
   happier. Thats how you get ahead.

   L.U.: An example would be?

   D.F.: I recently got a promotion and other people didnt, and the
   reason I got it was because all along I had been writing documents and
   programs to make the job easier for myself. When I found one of my
   documents or programs was helpful to me, I shared it with other
   co-workers. That makes less work for me and everyone else, and gets
   everyone rooting for me, because I helped them. They wanted me to get
   promoted, because they knew if I got promoted I could do more to make
   their jobs easier. Thats the way to get ahead. But losers think in
   reverse. They dont share what they know, or worse, they dont know
   anything because they dont try to learn. They sit around and goof off.
   When I sit down and write something thats going to help, its fun, it
   is like goofing off but its part of my job. If you really want to get
   ahead, you can direct that energy to something that will help you. If
   you have a lot of time to play solitaire or watch TV, then you
   probably have a lot of time to do other stuff to help yourself, your
   family, your co-workers, and your position in life.