Search for
Home > News > Online Archives > Wired > 1999 >

Culture
New! Submit a site
 
whatUseek Directory Site Listings:
 
The 1999 Mac Revival - With cheers for Jobs, jeers for Gates, and thunderous applause for Apple's stock price, Macheads gather in San Francisco to ring in Macworld Expo. By Polly Sprenger. [Wired News]
 
The Artist as Advertiser - Going beyond the traditional gallery show, a photographer experiments with exhibiting his work on the Web -- and letting collectors download it for free. By Reena Jana. [Wired News]
 
The Battle of the X's - As the 1999 Summer X Games wraps up, a big upset in the women's in-line skating competition turns the spotlight on the female athletes. Sort of. Steve Kettmann reports from San Francisco. [Wired News]
 
The BotGames: Made for TV? - A weekend robot competition drew engineers, games enthusiasts, and lots of kids. Is it the next great spectator sport? Andy Patrizio reports from Long Beach. [Wired News]
 
The Brains Behind the Boobs - Danni Ashe's tech savvy made her one of the most successful nude models to ever become a Net entrepreneur. Boob Bowl I is her latest marketing move. By Polly Sprenger. [Wired News]
 
The Brains Behind the Boobs - Danni Ashe's tech savvy made her one of the most successful nude models to ever become a Net entrepreneur. Boob Bowl I is her latest marketing move. By Polly Sprenger. [Wired News]
 
The Brains Behind the Boobs - Danni Ashe's tech savvy made her one of the most successful nude models to ever become a Net entrepreneur. Boob Bowl I is her latest marketing move. By Polly Sprenger. [Wired News]
 
The Crypto Underground Meets RSA - Two days before the opening of the seminal RSA Data Security Conference, the Bay Area's techno anarchists gather to crash the party. James Glave reports from Silicon Valley. [Wired News]
 
The Cyberspace Cartographers - Ever wonder what Usenet traffic looks like? An English geographer compiles maps of cyberspace, creating a kind of road atlas for the ether. By Steven Bodzin. [Wired News]
 
The Dark Force of Licensing - A crackdown on Star Wars licensees hits well-known artist Dave Dorman. Fans are incensed. Dorman doesn't seem bothered. By Heidi Kriz. [Wired News]
 
The Dawn of Digital Movies? - A feature-length film opens simultaneously on the Web and in a New York movie house. See you later, celluloid. By Joe Ashbrook Nickell. [Wired News]
 
The Dead Grateful for MP3 - The surviving members of the legendary band give a gift to their online following -- and get a call from the RIAA. By Steve Silberman. [Wired News]
 
The Death of a Thousand Clicks - A new user has arrived at your e-commerce Web site, her fingers still hovering over her mouse. Will she scroll down or click the back button? By Oscar Cisneros. [Wired News]
 
The Email Read Around the World - One teacher's project aimed to teach her class about geography, but the results were more than she bargained for. Now the school's server is awash in email. By Steve Friess. [Wired News]
 
The Empire Service Online - The BBC -- the world's largest radio network -- says it will air its more than 40 foreign-language services live on the Net. [Wired News]
 
The End of the American Mansion? - Middle-Americans clamor for big houses in the suburbs, but Sarah Susanka says a small, well-designed home is more appealing than a huge house. Frank Jossi interviews the architect in Minneapolis. [Wired News]
 
The Ex-CEO Files - The 'Fox Mulder of Silicon Valley' leaves USWeb/CKS to fulfill his destiny with space aliens. And why not? Joe Firmage has money to burn. [Wired News]
 
The Festival of Digital Delights - Ars Electronica brings artists and musicians from around the world to a less-connected corner of Europe to blur art, industry, and boundaries. Declan McCullagh reports from Linz, Austria. [Wired News]
 
The Final Sale Frontier - Trekkies enjoy the stars and the scene at the annual Star Trek convention. But the marketing types make out like bandits. By Lindsey Arent. [Wired News]
 
The First True Cypherpunk Novel - Two generations of swashbuckling geeks tackle the forces of evil. Call it hip, call it funny. But you can't call it light summer reading. Declan McCullagh reviews Neal Stephenson's Cryptonomicon. [Wired News]
 
 

[ 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 ]
Help build the largest human-edited directory on the web.
  Submit a Site - Open Directory Project - Become an Editor  
About   Help   Content Filter   Terms   Privacy Policy

© 2026 whatUseek