World Wide Web

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Reinventing sports on the Web Reinventing sports on the Web
The Sporting News is trying to revive with an innovative method of bringing print design values online.
Where the 20-somethings are Where the 20-somethings are
Forsaken by the networks, the post-college set has turned to the Web for revealing shows (full-frontal coed nudity!) about people just like them.
Mind your manners online Mind your manners online
The Internet is being degraded by rude and self-centered people who smother civil discussions.
Empty thine in-box Empty thine in-box
A spate of e-mail etiquette guides and productivity manuals commands us to clear out our e-mail. Don't we all have better things to do?
News you can abuse News you can abuse
As the man behind Fark.com, Drew Curtis sifts through the wackiest stories online, from sex scandals to freak accidents. Is this master of the bizarro now turning his back on dumb fun?
Delight in disorder Delight in disorder
Now that the Web has made everything miscellaneous, as David Weinberger argues in his new book, we're free to remix the world.
Technology The next Web revolution
The Web celebrates its 10th anniversary and it's still a pain to use -- clunky, slow and unresponsive. But thanks to creative small companies like Chicago's 37 Signals, the Web is finally becoming as fun and flexible as your favorite software.
Howard Dean's fatal system error Howard Dean's fatal system error
The Democratic candidate generated waves of money and enthusiasm via the Net, but his dot-com boom went bust in Iowa.
Filter mojo
The institutions struggling to rid the Internet of porn and spam may have found the one weapon that works: The Net itself.
Where are the Mahirs of yesteryear?
The Web thrill is gone, according to the New York Times, thanks to a critical shortage of flashes in the pan.
Look at this!
Two South African politicians are in trouble for viewing porn at work.
Fear of a Web planet
Author Caleb Carr calls criticism of his proposal for government regulation of the Internet "puerile, naive and rather sophomoric."
Online catfight
A pinup popularity contest heats up as two sites claim the Guinness Book of World Records' "most downloaded" listing.
The medium in the message
If you surf the Web sites of this year's presidential candidates, it's not hard to figure out who has the buzz -- and who's still asleep in the server room. But will it matter come November?
Prescription for change
President Clinton proposes the regulation of online drug sales.
Webmaster Borges
The greatest influence on the Argentine writer was a phenomenon invented after his death.
How the Internet ruined San Francisco
The dot-com invasion -- call them twerps with 'tude -- is destroying everything that made San Francisco weird and wonderful.
The modest inventor
"Weaving the Web" holds the promise of a facinating tell-all book about how Tim Berners-Lee created the Web -- but it just doesn't tell all that much.
Goodbye, Internet poster boy
Marc Andreessen steps down from his CTO job at America Online. Is there anything left of Netscape?
Who owns the New York Times bestseller list?
On the Net, fighting to hang on to every last chunk of intellectual property is a recipe for stagnation and failure.
Web of doom
Post-Littleton, paranoid media pundits seem blind to the line between the computer screen and reality -- just like the killers.
Log: Invasion of the dancing hamsters!
Where the wild things are
Where the wild things are: An archaeologist explores the Galapagos on an expedition run by school kids.
Brief reports and tidbits from the Info-Sphere
Slate rejoins the Web - "Felicity" points to the Web - Blurred lines in Times' Amazon story - Tabloid sues Florida citrus growers over talking ham sandwich! - Gassie: Microsoft's full of Be-S
21st Log: Yahoo buys GeoCities -- pop-up ads and all
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