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Internet Deux: Not Your Father's Net - Technology and politics are keeping the next Internet from being an, uh, internet. [Wired News]
 
Internet Explorer Snags Lotus Notes - With competing technology bundled into Netscape's Communicator, Lotus closes the door on the browser maker and clears the way for another, Microsoft, to stroll right in. [Wired News]
 
Internet Explorer: First look - Would you trust this software? Jeffrey Veen would. [Wired News]
 
Internet Telephony: Calling All Packets - Routing voice calls across IP networks - whether public or private - is predicted to be the big thing for 1998. [Wired News]
 
Interpreter Helps Basic Speak Java - Tools to make programming accessible to mere mortals are on their way. Soon, you may speak Java in a Basic fashion. [Wired News]
 
Interpreting the Java Earthquake - What's most important in the Sun Microsystems Java lawsuit against Microsoft isn't the back-and-forth over who did what, but its impact on the future of computing. [Wired News]
 
Iomega Primes Bite-Sized Storage Solution - The company's new low-priced, portable technology is being prepared for release next year. But by the time it arrives, its 20 megs may not be enough. [Wired News]
 
Is Big Brother - or His Server - Watching You? - New PC monitoring software gives employers a way to watch users' daily activities - and limit computer misuse - by capturing screenshots throughout the day. [Wired News]
 
Is Michelangelo Finally Dead? - Dwindling use of 5.25-inch floppies is helping to stamp out the virus. [Wired News]
 
Is the Web Set for SET? - The industry is busily developing electronic-transaction technology that nobody needs. [Wired News]
 
It's My World and Welcome to It - Marc Laidlaw adds the powerful level-design shareware Worldcraft to Quake and invites his friends to share his nightmare. [Wired News]
 
Java Drips into Chips - While several major-name manufacturers are working on "Java chip" programs, several are leaving the door open should things go awry. [Wired News]
 
Java Gets into a Musical Headspace - The language of the moment is cool, but it can't handle music well. Which is why Thomas Dolby Robertson is getting with the program, and licensing his tool for making soundtracks for Web sites. [Wired News]
 
Java May Perk Up Smartcards in US - The programming language of the moment pops up in an unlikely arena: the tangled world of smartcards. [Wired News]
 
Java Pours from Many Pots - Despite Microsoft and Sun pulling the language in different directions, everyone's busy with Java enhancements. [Wired News]
 
Java's Suite Salvation? - Bigger wasn't better. Now, second-generation Java apps are shaping up as thin-client suites. Word is, a certain software behemoth's thinking of squeezing in. [Wired News]
 
Java, VRML Find Cosmo Convergence - As part of its continued movement into the software biz, Silicon Graphics is giving Windows Web developers a cheap and easy environment for cranking out Java and VRML. [Wired News]
 
Java: The Flavor Middleware-Makers Love - Java may only just now be maturing as an application language, but for vendors who need to run pipes between distributed systems, the language was born to plumb. And as this Java-based "middleware" matures, the applications at the end of it could get thinner faster. [Wired News]
 
Joke-in-a-Box - AI doctorate Kim Binsted has created a computer program that automatically generates jokes. [Wired News]
 
Joysticks Abuzz with Game Vibrations - Next-generation devices put some real feeling into the game. But you may feel it most in the wallet. [Wired News]
 
 

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