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Street Cred: Sugar and Spice
- Purple Moon's CD-ROMs are more than a stage on which girl gamers can act in real-life situations. They're also entertaining adventures. [Wired News]
Study Is a Bummer
- A report from Carnegie-Mellon University says Net use damages social ties. The Well's Gail Williams looks at online life from the trenches. By Steve Silberman. [Wired News]
Suck: Technicolor Yawn
- Hollywood rarely gets it right when entering the world of Washington, DC. So the advance buzz surrounding the screen version of Primary Colors - that it doesn't live up to the novel penned by "Kleinonymous" - is hardly surprising. [Wired News]
Surely, You Jest
- If laughter is the best medicine, then it stands to reason that this is one of the best sites on the Web. Or might become one, after it has the chance to grow a little. By David Pescovitz. [Wired News]
Surfing to a Different Drum
- Net users are not all alike in their habits. A new study suggests clear differences in the surfing habits of Net newbies and the Net savvy. By Judy DeMocker. [Wired News]
Symantec Spam Sparks Furor
- The prominent computing-tools developer claims that an unsolicited advertisement, sent to thousands of netsurfers, was a "mistake." [Wired News]
Take a Sip of Salon
- The online magazine known for breaking several important stories in the Clinton-Lewinsky scandal opens an online store. Starbucks beware. By Joe Nickell. [Wired News]
Takin' It to the ... Screen
- A coalition of micropower radio broadcasters and pro-Zapatista activists will stage an "online sit-in" at the FCC later this year to protest what it calls the agency's stifling of the freedom of the airwaves. [Wired News]
Taking It to the Streets
- Hey, good buddy, is that a monitor on your dashboard, or are you just happy to see me? Forget double-clutching, truckers are learning how to double-click. By Judy DeMocker. [Wired News]
Taking On Lara Croft
- In Lara's Book, Douglas Coupland, the author of Generation X and Microserfs, deconstructs the cult heroine of the videogame universe. By John Alderman. [Wired News]
Taking a Global Snapshot Online
- The editors at the National Geographic Society want to get a picture of human migration patterns, and they're focusing their instruments online. By Lauren Fielder. [Wired News]
Talk-Back TV
- EMNetwork and EchoStar are partnering to offer PC users interactive content via satellite. By Joe Nickell. [Wired News]
Teachers Turning Tech
- Texas teachers are finding it easy to leave the public schools for better pay in the burgeoning high-tech sector. By Kevin Fullerton. [Wired News]
Techno Toddlers
- New "lapware" gives babies a head start on the computer learning curve, while giving their parents another way to bond with the kids. By Susan Kuchinskas. [Wired News]
Techno-Destructo Show a Dud
- Maybe it was because San Francisco's fire and police chiefs were looking on. Whatever the reason, a Survival Research Laboratories show Thursday lacked the magic -- and fire -- of past performances. By Judy DeMocker. [Wired News]
Teen SWAT Team for Y2K
- While Y2K survivalists prepare to run for the hills, Mick Winter found a way to stave off the millennium bug in his own community. He recruited an army of sharp high-schoolers. By Spencer E. Ante. [Wired News]
Teens Enter Virgin Territory
- In August, a couple of 18-year-olds are scheduled to have sex for the first time, not in a car or a hotel, but on the Internet. The Web site creator says his intentions are strictly honorable. By Joe Nickell and Judy Bryan. [Wired News]
Teens Enter Virgin Territory
- In August, a couple of 18-year-olds are scheduled to have sex for the first time, not in a car or a hotel, but on the Internet. The Web site creator says his intentions are strictly honorable. By Joe Nickell and Judy Bryan. [Wired News]
Thanks, Mozilla
- With the news that Netscape may become another logo in AOL's cyber-mall, a love letter to the software that opened a window on a new world. By Steve Silberman. [Wired News]
The Amazon of Antiquaries
- Rare and out-of-print books are the latest hot e-commerce item. One new site aims to be the primary nexus of buyers and sellers. By Dan Brekke. [Wired News]
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