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- <TITLE>Netscape Handbook: Heartwarming Introduction</TITLE>
-
- <A NAME="C0">
- <B>
- <FONT SIZE=+3>H</FONT><FONT SIZE=+2>eartwarming introduction</FONT>
- </B></A>
-
- <OL>
- <A HREF="../index.htm">Netscape Handbook: Table of
- Contents</A>
- <LI><a href="intro.htm#C1">Hey, Ma</a>
- <LI><a href="intro.htm#C2">On to Dad</a>
- <LI><a href="intro.htm#C3">Random access page-turner</a>
- <LI><a href="intro.htm#C4">Sister</a>
- <LI><a href="intro.htm#C5">My Sweetie</a>
- <LI><a href="intro.htm#C6">Who calls?</a>
- <LI><a href="intro.htm#C7">Brother</a>
- <LI><a href="intro.htm#C8">Dad discovers bookmarks</a>
- <LI><a href="intro.htm#C9">My sister, my search</a>
- <LI><a href="intro.htm#C10">Ma and ftp</a>
- <LI><a href="intro.htm#C11">Brotherly morass</a>
- <LI><a href="intro.htm#C12">Pages you can write on</a>
- <LI><a href="intro.htm#C13">Speaking of goats</a>
- </OL>
-
- <HR ALIGN="right"WIDTH=85%>
- <A NAME="C1">
- <FONT SIZE=+3>H</FONT><FONT SIZE=+1>ey, </FONT>
- <FONT SIZE=+3>M</FONT><FONT SIZE=+1>a</FONT>
- </A>
- <P>
-
- Hey, Ma. I got a new job. I'm no longer the night manager at
- Lothario's House of Horrors in the Tenderloin. I'm writing a book
- about the Internet.
- <P>
- Good for you, Tooey. Isn't that the same organization James Bond works
- for?
- <P>
- Close, Ma, but no. This is information highway stuff, not a spy
- thriller. This is a manual for a software program called Netscape so
- when you turn on your computer something more intelligent happens
- than flying toasters.
- <P>
- But last visit you were so proud to show us your flying toasters.
- <P>
- I know, Ma, but we've all got to grow. Netscape is real. It brings
- information from computers around the world to your screen.
- <P>
- That's nice.
- <P>
- I mean it, Ma.
- <P>
- Dad and I like the aquarium fish more than the toasters with wings.
- <P>
- Ma, those are screen savers. Netscape brings real information.
- <P>
- Yes, Tooey, I'm sure it does. Why don't you tell your father about it?
- <P>
-
- <HR ALIGN="right"WIDTH=85%>
- <A NAME="C2">
- <FONT SIZE=+3>O</FONT><FONT SIZE=+1>n to </FONT>
- <FONT SIZE=+3>D</FONT><FONT SIZE=+1>ad</FONT>
- </A>
- <P>
-
- Hello, son. Mom told me you're working for the government.
- <P>
- No, not the government, Dad. The Internet got its start in the
- government; now it's a term used to describe a collection of
- computers worldwide that are connected in one way or another. It's a
- network. No one owns the whole thing. It's more a collaboration among
- all kinds of organizations and people to split the cost and
- responsibilities of sharing information.
- <P>
- That reminds me, son. I read the book you gave me by that Toole guy, A
- Confederacy of Dunces. Quite a hoot.
- <P>
- So I think you and Mom ought to try using Netscape. I can get you
- connected to the Internet on your computer at home. Then you can
- browse around to see what interests you.
- <P>
- Don't have much time for the computer these days. Am volunteering at
- the hospital two days a week and the library one day week. Help out
- at the USO Wednesday evenings. Play golf. Keep the house up. Take
- your mother out to dinner. When I need to write something down, I
- find it easier to pick up a pen.
- <P>
- Just try it, Dad. This isn't a crummy word processor that gives you
- empty pages and a thick manual. With Netscape, your pages are filled
- with information on topics you choose. Pages with color pictures and
- nice text and maybe sounds or movies.
- <P>
- Yes, I know. Computers are the future. Show your mother how it works.
- She's better than I am. She can make the toasters swim with the
- colored fish.
- <P>
-
- <HR ALIGN="right"WIDTH=85%>
- <A NAME="C3">
- <FONT SIZE=+3>R</FONT><FONT SIZE=+1>andom access page-turner</FONT>
- </A>
- <P>
-
- Here, Ma. I set everything up for you. You're looking at the Netscape
- home page. To go somewhere, just point the mouse over any colored
- text and click. You can always come back to where you were by
- clicking on the <b> Back </b> button in this toolbar or selecting
- <b>Back</b> from the <b>Go</b> menu. See these words <a
- href="../index.htm">Netscape Handbook</a>? That's the book I'm
- working on. Try clicking on it. Go on. Just point and click. That's
- right. Now see the colors moving on this little indicator image. That
- means the page you clicked on is being transferred from a remote
- computer to your computer. Same thing with this status bar and these
- messages in the status area. They are all feedback to tell you how
- information you requested is coming from a server computer through an
- Internet connection to your computer.
- <P>
- So I'm on the information highway. This is fun. How come your book is
- only one page long?
- <P>
- There's more, Ma. You're just looking at the title and the table of
- contents. Netscape brings you one page at a time. I could have put
- the whole book in one long scrolling page but it's more efficient to
- transport documents in smaller chunks. Maybe some people want to read
- only the fun, folksy part. This way they can click on <a
- href="intro.htm#C0">heartwarming introduction</a> to receive
- just the section they want rather than the whole book.
- <P>
- I can't wait to read it, but I need to get my glasses. Sometimes I get
- a headache trying to read on the screen. You wouldn't have a printed
- copy, would you?
- <P>
- Yeah, I've got a printed copy. Netscape lets you change the size and
- kind of text you see on screen, yet still I don't like reading long
- documents on screen. I just want to show you how you can click on
- certain words that are linked automatically to a new page. Click on
- any of the highlighted words in the table of contents and you'll see
- the page that is linked. Netscape works like a television remote
- control except instead of channels you select pages. It's an
- automatic, random access page-turner.
- <P>
-
- <HR ALIGN="right"WIDTH=85%>
- <A NAME="C4">
- <FONT SIZE=+3>S</FONT><FONT SIZE=+1>ister</FONT>
- </A>
- <P>
-
- Hi Tooey. Ma says you took her for a ride on the information highway.
- <P>
- Yeah, but she wasn't wearing her glasses so she didn't see anything.
- <P>
- She said she had a good time.
- <P>
- I showed her how Netscape software works. It's pretty simple: you run
- the program while connected to the Internet and you look at pages,
- some with pictures and art as colorful as any magazine. Links you see
- on one page can bring related information that's on another page. You
- just click on colored words or pictures and, zoom, another page,
- linked to the one you're seeing, comes flying into your computer from
- the Internet. These interconnected pages are distributed on server
- computers all over the world and Netscape is the software that brings
- them to you.
- <P>
- Who makes the pages and, if they're on servers all over the world,
- who makes the links between the pages?
- <P>
- That's exactly what everyone is trying to figure out. Right now,
- pages are made by a bunch of Internet geeks who know how to get
- information inside these server computers. But that's about to
- change. More and more, pages and their links are going to be
- personalized so that every individual can find the information they
- want and publish information for others.
- <P>
- Do you like the people at your company?
- <P>
- So far. They seem cool: intense programmers, torn jeans and t-shirts,
- working through the night, alternative rock, 3 AM trips to Denny's. I
- doubt we'll have the same problem as when I contracted for the Pagan
- Axle Research Center, you know, where their chief of engineering was
- detained by the county for loudly explaining his proof of Fermat's
- Last Theorem to a barbershop pole..
- <P>
-
- <HR ALIGN="right"WIDTH=85%>
- <A NAME="C5">
- <FONT SIZE=+3>M</FONT><FONT SIZE=+1>y sweetie</FONT>
- </A>
- <P>
-
- Hey, pumpkin-girl. Are you free tonight?
- <P>
- A bit later, yes.
- <P>
- I was thinking of coming home early from work. Say, ten o'clock. You
- want to come over?
- <P>
- How about if you come here?
- <P>
- Certainly.
- <P>
- Are you going to show me what's interesting on the Internet?
- <P>
- I'd rather drown in a bowl of cabbage soup than disappoint you.
- <P>
- You haven't yet. You know, your Mom called this morning. She asked for
- you, but I think she wanted to talk to me. She also wanted to know
- how to find the Internet discussion group about Northern Exposure. I
- told her about news and newsgroups, the Internet's bulletin board
- system. For an example, I had her type <B>news:alt.tv.*</B> in the
- location field. After reminding her to press the return key, she got
- the directory page listing all the <B>alt.tv</B> newsgroups and, sure
- enough, she scrolled down and found the
- <B>alt.tv.northern-exposure</B> link. Apparently, spent the rest of
- the afternoon reading news articles describing the show's plots,
- personalities, and predicted demise in more detail than any tv show
- deserves. She called back an hour ago marveling at the thread that
- analyzed the parallel between Northern Exposure and Green Acres: city
- transplant enveloped in rural lore.
- <P>
- My mom is talking about threads? Where did she pick that up?
- <P>
- She wanted to know why the titles of some articles were indented in
- outline format. I told her the indented items were responses, and
- responses to responses, to mirror a conversation. I told her a thread
- is Internet parlance for a conversation and that you could follow a
- thread by pressing the right arrow key. Or jump to the next thread by
- pressing the down arrow key. Your mom is on the net.
- <P>
-
- <HR ALIGN="right"WIDTH=85%>
- <A NAME="C6">
- <FONT SIZE=+3>W</FONT><FONT SIZE=+1>ho calls?</FONT>
- </A>
- <P>
-
- Ma, Martha told me you called the other morning. You know I'm never
- awake in the mornings.
- <P>
- Maybe I wanted to talk to Martha. She told me about the alternative
- newsgroups. Why do they call them alternative?
- <P>
- You don't want to know, Mom.
- <P>
- Oh, I saw all the newsgroups with the strange names. I would never
- read those.
- <P>
- Me neither. There are plenty of other great <B>alt</B> groups. And
- there
- are tons of other categories besides <B>alt</B>. There's <B>rec</B> for
- recreation, <B>sci</B> for science, <B>biz</B> for business, and
- hundreds more. Martha said you liked the Northern Exposure articles.
- <P>
- I sent one in myself. I pressed the <B>Post Office</B> button and
- mailed
- a letter. It got me wondering: Which newsgroup is your book in? None of
- the pages in the Northern Exposure newsgroup had nice pictures like
- your book.
- <P>
- I think you mean the <B>Post Article</B> button, but hey. My book isn't
- in a newsgroup. When you looked at my book and then looked at a
- newsgroup, you were exploring two different areas of the Internet. My
- book lives in the area that supports excellent pictures and sounds and
- movies. The newsgroups live in an area that supports easy
- back-and-forth communication. Maybe one day the areas will merge, but
- right now the Internet is specialized, not geographically, but
- according to protocols.
- <P>
- Who calls?
- <P>
- Protocols. Oh, never mind. The Internet brings you different kinds of
- pages. Some, like the pages of my book, have the characteristics of
- glossy magazines with clever links. Others, like the newsgroup pages,
- resemble a community bulletin board posted with everybody's news and
- opinions. Netscape brings you pages of either kind. You haven't read
- my manual yet, have you?
- <P>
- Not yet, Tooey. But I will. I promise. Did you know a university
- professor wrote in to ask who was the Northern Exposure equivalent of
- Arnold Ziffel? Someone responded the moose, but I think the answer
- goes deeper than that.
- <P>
-
- <HR ALIGN="right"WIDTH=85%>
- <A NAME="C7">
- <FONT SIZE=+3>B</FONT><FONT SIZE=+1>rother</FONT>
- </A>
- <P>
-
- Hey.
- <P>
- Hey.
- <P>
- You're writing again.
- <P>
- Yup. Someone's got to explain every arrogant, assaulting acronym the
- industry has come up with in the last twenty years. Unless you've set
- up your <B>smtp</B> and <B>nntp</B> servers, are comfortable using
- <B>telnet</B>, can <B>ftp</B> <B>binhex</B>, <B>gif</B>, and
- <B>jpeg</B> files, know the <B>url</B> of my <B>http</B> site, and want
- to read my <B>html</B> pages on <B>www</B>.
- <P>
- You're working with a bunch of sick puppies. You know, the hospital
- here has got an Internet connection. Should we be using your
- software?
- <P>
- You bet. I've got Mom reading Web pages and newsgroups. I'm holding
- off telling her about e-mail because I'm afraid she'll expect me to
- write to her.
- <P>
- You're too late. She sent me e-mail last night. She was flaming
- because, though Netscape can send mail, she has to use a separate
- program to receive mail.
- <P>
- What? Mom's complaining about features?
- <P>
- Look, you were the one who bought her the computer. I suggested tai
- chi lessons.
- <P>
- I guess Mom has filled you in then. Netscape software supports a bunch
- of protocols with a single point and click interface. Foremost,
- there's World Wide Web hypertext support for reading multimedia pages
- like my manual. Then there's a built-in Internet newsreader that
- follows threads and allows you to post your own articles. There is,
- as Mom pointed out, a limited e-mail command that lets you compose
- and send e-mail over the net. Plus, there's a bunch more. You can
- transport files. Read gopher menus. Search WAIS databases. Hey,
- Netscape takes virtually everything on the Internet and presents the
- information on a page. To bring more information, you click on a
- link, a button, or a menu item. It's not that simple, but it's
- evolving into the jack-of-all-trades Internet application.
- <P>
-
- <HR ALIGN="right"WIDTH=85%>
- <A NAME="C8">
- <FONT SIZE=+3>D</FONT><FONT SIZE=+1>ad discovers bookmarks</FONT>
- </A>
- <P>
-
- Hey, Dad. Check this out.
- <P>
- Whoa. They let you do that?
- <P>
- This page is from the Museum of Modern Art. There's no single "they"
- in the Internet. The closest thing to a "they" in the Internet is the
- groundswell of users who voice opinions to those who abuse the
- frontier spirit of interconnected computers. These scanned museum art
- pieces are well within the bounds of net etiquette. On the other
- hand, there's utter abhorrence for the huckster who sends unsolicited
- advertising.
- <P>
- How can you tell this is from the museum?
- <P>
- See this code in the location field. It's a URL, short for Uniform
- Resource Locator. Every page has a unique URL that serves as its
- address. You can usually glean some information by interpreting some
- of the letters between slashes and periods. This one has a name and
- organization code <b>org</b> indicating the museum. On other
- locations, the last couple letters refer to a country code.
- <P>
- What's the difference between a person's e-mail address and a page's
- URL address?
- <P>
- Not much. They both designate a location, but are used for different
- purposes. If you ask Netscape to bring an e-mail address, you're
- going to get a message that there's no page to bring. Likewise, if
- you ask Netscape to send mail to a page's URL, the page location has
- no capacity to receive your mail. See these letters <B>http</B>?
- That's a protocol for presenting richly formatted, multimedia pages.
- The protocol <B>news</B> presents pages containing Internet newsgroup
- articles. E-mail uses yet another protocol, <B>smtp</B>, that
- presents information in the context of a personal mailbox rather than
- a published page.
- <P>
- So how do you remember every address?
- <P>
- Some pages I've got memorized, but Netscape has a bookmark feature
- that makes memorization unnecessary. Whenever you're looking at a
- page, you can choose <B>Add Bookmark</B> from the <B>Bookmarks</B>
- menu to append the title of the page to the <B>Bookmarks</B> menu.
- Later, you can choose the title to bring the page. At its simplest,
- the bookmark feature is a menu listing of page titles associated with
- page URLs. You can choose the <B>View Bookmarks</B> option to
- elaborate on your list of bookmarks in a window. In the window you
- can group bookmarks under menu headings, create multiple lists, share
- lists with other people, and otherwise help you keep track of a large
- number of your favorite pages.
- <P>
-
- <HR ALIGN="right"WIDTH=85%>
- <A NAME="C9">
- <FONT SIZE=+3>M</FONT><FONT SIZE=+1>y sister, my search</FONT>
- </A>
- <P>
-
- How long is the manual?
- <P>
- Too long. People have better things to do than read nonfiction. The
- holier-than-thou voice of those who believe they are imparting truths
- gives me the creeps. Man, there are some places in this universe
- where nothing is the truth. Manuals writers need to recognize that
- even nouns can drip like Salvador Dali's watch.
- <P>
- Are you doing okay, Tooey? You sound a little tired
- <P>
- The Internet is big, but big unto itself is no worthy grail. Bigness
- is only an asset if you have proper filters to extract matters of
- personal importance. Netscape can bring you more pages then you can
- assimilate in a lifetime. How are you going to spend your hours
- productively if the lyrics and harmony that enrich your life are
- obscured with litter and noise? I crave more from my technology than
- a heartless reference to a mind-numbing expanse.
- <P>
- Maybe you need a little time off. When was the last time you and
- Martha went away?
- <P>
- We're making plans. I've been searching the net for a sign, an omen,
- clues to nirvana. I checked under Netscape's <B>Directory</B> and
- <B>Help</B> menus. That's what people need: a direction to go and
- roadside attractions.
- <P>
- Links to spirituality? I've looked at all of Netscape's menu items.
- There's <B>File</B>, <B>Edit</B>, <B>View</B>, <B>Go</B>,
- <B>Bookmarks</B>, <B>Options</B>, <B>Directory</B>, and <B>Help</B>.
- They and their button counterparts are tools to interact with the
- Internet's resources. But tools are only tools. And the links you find
- in the <B>Directory</B> and <B>Help</B> menus simply bring pages of
- information supplied by indexers and writers such as yourself. The
- Internet may become a reservoir of knowledge more profound and
- nurturing than any modern day library, but get real, Tooey. The net,
- like many of its nerdish contributors, remains crude and raw and
- speckle-complected.
- <P>
- I must remember to restrain my dueling enthusiasm and vitriol. Choosing
- an item from the <B>Directory</B> or <B>Help</B> menu brings a page of
- information from the Internet. These are only starting points designed
- to open my eyes to possibilities and opportunities. Sculpting beauty
- from the mountains of digital detritus will come with time. I think for
- now I should take your suggestion and call upon Martha to walk with me
- in the twilight to the ice cream shoppe around the corner where the
- youthful scoopers know us well and serve us double scoops for the price
- of singles.
- <P>
-
- <HR ALIGN="right"WIDTH=85%>
- <A NAME="C10">
- <FONT SIZE=+3>M</FONT><FONT SIZE=+1>a and ftp</FONT>
- </A>
- <P>
-
- I talked to your sister today. She said you sounded a little sad.
- <P>
- I've always been a little sad, Ma. I've had this wistful look since I
- was eight years old.
- <P>
- She says you worry too much.
- <P>
- It's what I do best.
- <P>
- You need to have more fun.
- <P>
- Okay, tomorrow I'll have fun. I'll ignore my genetic predisposition
- to carry the weight of the world on my shoulders and let nary an
- anxious thought trouble me. How's your tv newsgroup doing?
- <P>
- Enough is enough with that Alaska town. I started looking at some
- different pages. Sometimes when I click on a link, I get this message
- about a file transfer something.
- <P>
- I can tell you've spent considerable time not reading my manual, Ma.
- That's okay, I understand. Manuals induce catatonia.
- <P>
- I'm sure yours is good.
- <P>
- Don't bet the inheritance on it. Anyway, Netscape supports lots of
- protocols which, ultimately, means different things happen when you
- click on a link. The protocol for graphical pages, known as World
- Wide Web pages, is different than the protocol for newsgroup pages.
- Not only do the pages look a little different, you can see the
- different protocol name in the location field. Web pages start with
- the URL code <B>http:</B> whereas news pages start with <B>news:</B>.
- The protocol for e-mail is different yet. But there's even more.
- Another protocol that starts with <B>ftp:</B> is designed to let you
- transfer files from remote computers to your computer. When you click
- on a <B>ftp</B> link, Netscape brings a file to your computer's hard
- disk. Whereas some protocols bring pages for viewing in Netscape;
- <B>ftp</B> brings computer software files that reside independently
- of the Netscape application. You've heard the phrase "downloading."
- Well, links to <B>ftp</B> sites perform downloading automatically.
- It's the way servers on the Internet distribute software.
- <P>
-
- <HR ALIGN="right"WIDTH=85%>
- <A NAME="C11">
- <FONT SIZE=+3>B</FONT><FONT SIZE=+1>rotherly morass</FONT>
- </A>
- <P>
-
- Ma says you lost her trying to describe <B>ftp</B>. She knows it stands
- for file transport protocol, but whenever she hears about protocols she
- thinks she's supposed to curtsy the queen of England.
- <P>
- That's why I never bothered to mention Telnet, Gopher, Lynx,
- Veronica, Archie, and WAIS. Eventually, I'll get around to proxies,
- socks, and the helper applications.
- <P>
- What are those?
- <P>
- Just more peripheral stuff to learn if you want to enter the Internet
- geekdom. Telnet is an application that lets you access a remote
- computer and conduct an interactive session. You exchange information
- by sitting and typing UNIX commands into a blank field. Netscape lets
- you run Telnet easily, but you have to know what to type to achieve
- any results.
- <P>
- And it goes down hill from there?
- <P>
- Gopher's another protocol that Netscape supports. Gopher servers
- offer pages with menus, but they aren't as rich as Web pages. Lynx is
- a program for browsing among servers but, unlike Netscape, supports
- only text. Veronica is a program that searches Gopher sites. Archie
- is a program that searches ftp sites. WAIS is server system
- specialized for searching databases. Proxies, socks, and the helper
- applications supplement the Netscape application: they are options
- that let users adapt to particular computer configurations and
- software requirements.
- <P>
- Netscape knows how to display most of the information on the
- Internet, but not everything.
- <P>
- Yeah, for example, viewing software built into Netscape displays
- images stored in the GIF and JPEG formats. But pages may contain
- sounds or movies or compressed information that needs to be
- interpreted by separate applications. Netscape maintains a directory
- of helper applications that you ought to have on your disk drive.
- When you click on a link that requires outside help, Netscape makes
- the helper application automatically run.
- <P>
-
- <HR ALIGN="right"WIDTH=85%>
- <A NAME="C12">
- <FONT SIZE=+3>P</FONT><FONT SIZE=+1>ages you can write on</FONT>
- </A>
- <P>
-
- I noticed some pages have blanks for you to fill in.
- <P>
- That's right, Dad. Pages can contain forms. Forms can accept input
- and, with the press of a button, transmit the input to an electronic
- address.
- <P>
- So what you have is a page with a place inside for the user to write
- e-mail.
- <P>
- Essentially, yes, though forms can take different kinds of input.
- Forms may contain check boxes, radio buttons, pull-down menus, or
- selection lists. Sometimes you'll find fields already filled in with
- suggested text. When you are finished filling out a form, you send
- it. Usually you just have to press a button because the e-mail
- address of the recipient is predetermined by the form.
- <P>
- What happens to the form after you send it out to the Internet?
- <P>
- The input gets sent, not the form. The information you entered is
- transmitted to a mailbox for a person to read or to a computer
- capable of interpreting, and perhaps responding to, your input. A
- form that produces an immediate response is common. Such a form
- requests information that goes back to a server computer, the server
- interprets the information you've entered on the form, then sends
- back to you a page with information responding to your request. But
- not all forms send back mail. Sometimes when you send a form, no
- response is generated; the page with the form stays on your screen
- and the fields may revert to their original state.
- <P>
- This whole business of forms sounds like an easy way for an
- organization to take orders or get customer feedback or disseminate
- information.
- <P>
- Just like paper forms, electronic forms provide a structure and
- context for communicating information. When you're communicating to a
- computer, this can translate to fast and expansive responses. Forms
- are definitely cool.
- <P>
- I'd like to see a real estate form where you enter in the address of
- a property for sale and you get back county clerk's records for the
- house. You know how the realtors alway use flowery language to make a
- house sound better than it is. Like cute instead of tiny. Like near
- transportation instead of abutting a truck stop. The glossy brochure
- that says "located atop a gently sloping hill" might appeal less
- after an Internet search reveals that the previous occupant's Andean
- goat plummeted following a faulty misstep.
- <P>
-
- <HR ALIGN="right"WIDTH=85%>
- <A NAME="C13">
- <FONT SIZE=+3>S</FONT><FONT SIZE=+1>peaking of goats</FONT>
- </A>
- <P>
-
- Do you think Netscape and the Internet are important in the grand
- scheme of things?
- <P>
- Martha. You know what happens when we start talking existentially.
- <P>
- The same as when we play crazy eights. An uncanny hunger for a
- mushroom pizza.
- <P>
- Knowledge transfers more deliberately than computer bits. My fondness
- of
- the Internet is strongest when I get the sense I've entered someone
- else's mind. Institutionalized information doesn't appeal to me like
- the clever, intimate home pages of people expressing a small part of
- themselves. The Internet lets you publish a portrait of yourself as you
- choose, a freedom that printed pages or broadcast media can't grant
- efficiently. Netscape makes the Internet less daunting: mostly by
- consolidating the different protocols of electronic information, but
- also by offering built-in "school supplies" like bookmark links that
- let you organize your own repository. The combination of heartfelt
- content and personalized tools makes a worthwhile contribution. I
- certainly find the work more rewarding than my primary task in the
- Tenderloin: coercing intoxicated patrons to refrain from fondling the
- florescent appendages of a fourteen-foot ceramic Lizzie Borden.
- <P>
- Remember when we visited the little farm in Tilden park and you
- talked to the Saint Albans goat?
- <P>
- Everyone needs on occasion to look to a higher power for guidance.
- Scholarly minutia doesn't excite me and the spiritual path seems
- incomplete without weekly TV listings. Youth provided me with artful
- distractions until my liver cried uncle. I still see eidetic wisps
- fluid in the blue of sky. Over-torqued visionaries spout Internet
- glories, but only the lonely write sensible instructions on the use
- of the heart. That goat studied me unblinkingly. She knew all she
- needed.
- <P>
- You asked her, "How shall I proceed?"
- <P>
- She requested that I first feed her a choice morsel of corn, which I
- did. Then her wise eyes answered, "I am goat who knows what I need to
- know. You are something much uglier and should proceed with modesty."
- <P>
- We fed her more corn and walked among the live oak.
- <P>
- <BR>
-
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- Contents</A>
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