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Information Today November 14, 2005 Forest Woody Horton, Jr. |
Libraries--The Information Society in Action Several hot-button issues emerged from the WSIS pre-conference. |
The Motley Fool November 11, 2005 Tom Taulli |
The Browser Wars: Part 2 Google is putting its muscle behind the Firefox browser. But, even if we assume Firefox is better, does this mean it will become mainstream? Internet Explorer 7, coming out in a few months, might close the gap on nearly all the browser features that matter. |
InternetNews November 10, 2005 Susan Kuchinskas |
The Meaning of 'MemoGates' Microsoft was blindsided ten years ago by the rise of the Web and Netscape. Now, it's time to play catch-up again. |
InternetNews November 10, 2005 Roy Mark |
White House Honors Internet Pioneers Internet pioneers Vint Cerf and Robert Kahn are among the latest Presidential Medal of Freedom winners. |
InternetNews November 9, 2005 Jim Wagner |
ICANN Working to Resolve U.N. Issue The board of directors at the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers wants to hold a special meeting with their governmental members to discuss ways to head off the threat of United Nations intervention. |
InternetNews November 9, 2005 Jim Wagner |
Happy Birthday, Firefox 1.0 Will the Mozilla's Firefox 1.0 browser avoid the sophomore slump? |
PC Magazine November 2, 2005 Neil J. Rubenking |
Newsletter Formatting in Thunderbird How to create a "Contents" section at the top of a newsletter with each line hot-linked directly to the corresponding section in the body of the newsletter. |
InternetNews November 7, 2005 Clint Boulton |
Next Leg For W3C, Semantic Web Internet pioneer Tim Berners-Lee and the W3C formed the Rule Interchange Format working group to facilitate heterogeneous data exchange across the Web. |
InternetNews November 2, 2005 Susan Kuchinskas |
Guba Gives Usenet a Modern Shot Guba announced enhancements to its Usenet search service that lets users find multimedia content disguised as text files. |
InternetNews November 1, 2005 Clint Boulton |
Opera With Your In-Flight Meal? The Opera browser is jumping into the wild blue yonder along with in-flight entertainment provider Thales. |
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