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Strategies & Market Trends : Tech Stock Options

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To: David Weis who wrote (42589)5/7/1998 5:25:00 PM
From: ViperChick Secret Agent 006.9  Read Replies (2) of 58727
 
David

my memory is as bad as yours...but i know I was on the net in 1993 because I can relate it back to certain things going on in my life...

here is a little history of the net

now I am turning off my computer and going to go talk to some rational people...because I just cant get over someone thinking valuations dont matter.....(although why should that surprise me after watching the stock of KTEL)

+Robert Pope (5922 )
From: +James Sinclair
Thursday, May 7 1998 5:14PM ET
Reply # of 5927

No problem. BTW used our good old SEEK search engine this
afternoon to refresh my memory on net history. Good article at:

boardwatch.com

Relevant passage to recent discussion:
<<
To many people coming online today, the Internet looks like the World Wide Web.
WWW was started by Tim Berners-Lee at CERN in Switzer-land in 1989 to facilitate
the sharing of information among researchers in high-energy particle physics. It extended
the concept of "hypertext" not only within a document, and between documents, but
also between different computer sites accessible to each other via the Internet. But while
some demonstration servers quickly came up, clients were a little unavailable for the
dialup crowd. You could TELNET into a site that sported WWW, and then use that to
get on the web - but it was all text. And really it was mostly a backwater on the Internet
- another interesting thing.

In 1993, a small group at the University of Illinois and Champaign/ Urbana had
developed an Xwindows interface to the World Wide Web they called Mosaic. The
NSF actually funded further development of a Macintosh and Microsoft Windows
version of Mosaic through a grant to the University. The first Microsoft Windows
version appeared about November of 1993. We actually covered Mosaic in our March
1994 issue.
>>
Less than 5 years since the Windows release of Mosaic. Does make
your head spin, doesn't it.
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