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Web Lab's Weiss on Vision
- New York's Web Lab -- a hothouse of online creativity -- is about to begin its second round of funding promising sites. Director Marc Weiss talks about what the company's learned. By Steve Silberman. [Wired News]
Webmasters, Not Old Masters
- The San Francisco Museum of Modern Art continues to acquire Web sites and is preparing to add a host of Razorfish projects, empasizing the use of Java, to its collection. But is it art? [Wired News]
Webzine Publishers Grapple with Self-Definition
- Web personalities struggle to define themselves at Austin's South by Southwest. The battle over the appropriate metaphor continues. [Wired News]
Weekend to Turn WIMPs into Supermachines
- Experts from the military, education, politics, and interactive art worlds will convene this weekend in New York to consider advances in interfaces and brainstorm the future of human-machine interactivity. [Wired News]
What Comes After Cool on the Web?
- Site of the Day awards are not enough anymore, says a coalition of publishers who want to start a peer-review process to recognize online "Oscar-winners." [Wired News]
Where Women Surf
- Women and investors are flocking to iVillage, a site that has found success letting readers do the talking. By Grace Lichtenstein. [Wired News]
Who Owns Hate on the Net?
- A dispute over the name 'HateWatch' pits an ex-Harvard bigotry watchdog against a conservative 'country boy from the Bible Belt.' By Steve Silberman. [Wired News]
Why Buy the Cow?
- Free downloads of the Starr report aren't doing it for consumers, who are putting out cold cash to get their hot little hands on the hard copy. By Joe Nickell. [Wired News]
Why Girls Dislike Technology
- Girls study the sciences, too, but still aren't pursuing careers in technology like the boys. A new study suggests some reasons why. By Judy DeMocker. [Wired News]
Will Net, Entertainment Ever Mix?
- Cybervisionaries at a California conference say today's technology just can't deliver what it takes to keep audiences happy. Industry money people, though, still see the new medium as a gold mine. [Wired News]
William Gibson to Write X-Files Episode
- Surprised that the show's producers kept the esoteric references he wrote into the dialog, Gibson hails the series' "sublime" humor and weirdness. The icon of cyberpunk fiction hopes his story will have the feel of a David Cronenberg film. [Wired News]
Willie Wonka of the Net
- Former Eurythmics star and current multimedia-Renaissance man Dave Stewart is poised to launch an Internet-only video show and myriad other online events. By John Alderman. [Wired News]
Wired News: Tetris Pressures Game Act-Alikes
- - by Judy DeMocker (December 4, 1998
Wired's Best List
- Great stuff - tested and approved in our top-secret labs. [Wired News]
Wiring the Gay World
- Journalist Rex Wockner is using the Net to change the way gay issues are covered in the media -- and nurturing an emerging global movement in the process. By Steve Silberman. [Wired News]
Word Down: The End of an Era
- As parent company Icon closes down the groundbreaking Web site, Word founding editor Marisa Bowe reflects on the cultural ferment from which it was born. [Wired News]
Working on Wiring the World
- Education activists, political leaders, and high-tech professionals discuss leveling the global playing field at the State of the World Forum. By Judy DeMocker. [Wired News]
World Species Webified
- The Global Biological Information Facility hopes to catalog all the world's known species on the Web. While it may be a great resource, it could also be a poachers' road map. By Ilan Greenberg. [Wired News]
X-Files Wins Invision
- The game inspired by the TV show shares top honors with the multimedia version of the romantic Griffin and Sabine tales. By John Alderman. [Wired News]
Y2K Bug: Older Programmers Ready, Willing, but Stable
- Elder mainframe gurus are eager to work on fixing code to "save the country's ass," but many can't or won't leave their retirement cities. Will financial firms resolve their fears of using off-site contractors and take the work to the workers? [Wired News]
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