| Magazine |
MIPS* |
Outline/Quotes |
| Web Marketing Today |
Ralph F. Wilson
|
... even when sites are treated with massive doses of
cold medicine, visitors quickly see symptoms
that make them want to back away. Most of these problems are design
flaws: not mediocre graphics, but basic flaws in the planning and
execution of the site itself. Here are some diseases
I (Ralph F. Wilson) detect as I browse hundreds of
business websites each month. |
| Web Developer |
David Fiedler, Scott Clark DR. WEBSITE: Beating the '404 File Not Found' Message; Formats for FTP Files
|
How do you edit what the "404 file not
found" document says? You can force the server to return any
file you want. This is good, because the infamous 404
display is a bit obscure for most Web
surfers...
... how to FTP files in a format that ensures that they
are read from my HTML...The most important thing is to always
access files from a fixed location.
... |
| WebMaster Magazine |
Scott Kirsner The Ultimate Webmaster |
Tim Berners-Lee, the man who gave away
the Web, talks about how it is changing
business. |
| Web Week |
AT&T
Targets Web-Averse Companies By Elizabeth Gardner |
AT&T Chairman Robert Allen compared the Web's potential with
that of toll-free numbers, launched 30 years ago and now generating 40
percent of AT&T's network traffic and $100 billion in sales per year.
"It took 15 years for 800 service to take off," Allen said.
"We expect digital commerce to happen more quickly." |
| Win95 Magazine |
Vironix's NetFerret
Suite: A Ferret for Every Occasion By Jon Lipp |
Find utility that is located in the Windows 95 and Windows NT 4.0 Start
menu often comes in handy, whether you are looking for a file on your Windows 95 PC or a
workstation on your company's Windows NT 4.0 network. Wouldn't it be nice if you could
find a World-Wide Web (WWW) page or an e-mail address on the Internet as easily as you can
find that lost file or computer using Microsoft's Find utility? Now, thanks to the new
NetFerret suite of utilities from Vironix, you can... |
| Windows Magazine |
Optimizing
Windows:The Perfect Cover-Up By John Woram |
Hide your documents from prying eyes.
Even honest, diligent Windows 95 users occasionally want to cover up their digital
document trail so snoopers can't trace their recent PC activities... |
| Windows NT Magazine |
Brad Cooper
Pathworks
and NT |
...PATHWORKS has long been aligned
with Microsoft networking, so it is a perfect environment for
integrating with or migrating to Windows NT. I
didn't decide to add PATHWORKS to my clients' networks because of foresight, though.
PATHWORKS made sense at the time. |
| Windows Sources |
A
Foundation for Growing Web Sites By Brian C. Wilson |
A webmaster's worst nightmare is having to update one item, such as a
logo, on each and every HTML page on a site. But a new product called WebMate/Foundation
automates such updates, thereby simplifying site management... Foundation keeps all of
your HTML images, data, and scripts in a single SQL database, assembling HTML-based
modules, called templates, on the fly... You create, manage, and maintain a Foundation Web
site entirely through a Web browser, and you access the Foundation database through HTML
forms that WebMate provides with the product. |
| WordPerfect Magazine |
Instant Web
Publishing With WP 7 by Gordon McComb |
If you used the Internet Publisher add-on available with WPWin 6.1,
you'll be impressed with the new tools and features added for WP 7. It can display
images in the document, convert graphics to .GIF format and convert documents to and from
HTML format. In 6.1 conversion was just one-way: from WP to HTML. Best of all, the
Internet Publisher tool is an integral part of the program. You don't need to download and
install a separate program to use WP 7 as a Web page publisher. |
| WorldVillage |
BRIDGING
THE GAP BETWEEN FANTASY AND REALITY by Tina Velgos |
An Interview with Doug Whatley, creator of Microprose's
Ultimate Football '95 |
| WWiz Magazine |
Plugging in to Ma Bell:
A Real Net Experience by Thomas More |
I'd have to give Ma Bell an A+ in customer service. I [ Thomas More]
suppose those friendly, competent folks will probably soon be replaced by an automaton
like we get on directory assistance calls nowadays. "Say your problem in plain
English, or wait for the next available operator." |