thank you very much guys

It is true that very much of the 6000 book covered many aspects of using the 7000 'traditional' features, particularly the practical examples. In fact it was designed so that if you followed all the practical step by step examples creating composers, pads, sequencing, multitracking, editing etc from beginning to end of the book you would have used virtually every type of editing feature in the 6/6500 and would be in a position to use that knowledge across all the menus. The vast majority of the principles remained the same in the 7000.

Obviously it was not practical or useful to repeat all this information in the 7000 book, since many owners had already obtained the 6000 book anyway, and the remit of the 7000 book was to explain in full detail all the new concepts and features of this product, although in terms of saving, loading and organising technics/midi/mp3 work for example the 7000 book is extremely comprehensive.