Famspear wrote:[
Oh, but wait. I have bound paper copies of Package X -- does anyone here remember Package X? I have those from the year 1979 to whichever year the IRS stopped printing them. They're in a box somewhere in my garage.
Oops, that puts my "geek factor" right back up into the red!
Yes, I certainly remember Package X. When I started in tax, the CCH paperback version of the regs was 3 comparatively thin volumes. During my well over 30 years of practice, I accumulated quite a collection. I had an original Bulletin F. I had Blue Books going back to 1978. Lots and lots of stuff. When I retired my colleagues implored me to leave it behind because much of it was near impossible to find (the firm had ditched its law library years ago.) So I left it as the basis of a departmental library at my old office. I am told by my friends that they still use my trove regularly.
Which gets me to the ditching of law libraries. Yes, computer research is great. Yes, computers are fast and accurate. But there are still some things you cannot do accurately or conveniently on a computer screen. For example, it is hard to compare various versions of texts. Not everyone uses key words correctly and as such some things are hard as hell to find. I used to thumb thru the bound volume of Tax Court Reports when it showed up. And for some things just being able to thumb thru materials is invaluable. Not to mention how hard it is to read computers for long periods. Yes, I know it is very expensive to keep up to date paper libraries, both for the materials and the personnel. But without paper libraries a great deal is lost and only those old enough to have used paper libraries realize how much has been lost.
Yes, I am a very old fart. I was in the tax business before there were computers on everyone's desk. I was there before copiers were common, although they did have one enormous (the size of a small car) one in the office. I was there when secretaries actually typed letters and memos and used (horror of horrors) carbon paper. No email, no texts, no mobile phones, no faxes, no voicemail. But the key fact is that back then we did exactly the same job they do today. We filed returns. We wrote memos. We defended clients. And as far as I can tell I don't think much, if any, of it is done better or even faster, today.
My choice early in life was to either be a piano player in a whorehouse or a politican. And to tell the truth there's hardly any difference.
Harry S Truman