Another Personal Perspective
Ah, the Internet: Something I really knew very
little about in 1990 (of course I knew of several UNIX jocks that could be heard at work
talking about the Internet and connecting to something they called USNET), but in 1993,
once I found out that I could possible access this system from my home PC, I began
to readily study this medium and got an early start on the so-called public information
super-highway.
There were but a handful of books on the subject,
so I purchased the first Internet for Dummies, then several more publications came out. I
signed up with a national provider that offered very limited access and no access tools
except ftp; I had to download most of the shareware software using FTP and it was not very
simple to configure these. A gopher based piece of shareware for Windows was all I could
get working. I eventually gave up and no longer signed on.
Of all the tools that were cropping up (FTP,
gopher, News, Archie) the World Wide Web had the most abstruse impact of any Internet
access tool I had ever discovered. Here was this GUI based, not unlike a Windows help
file, global connective system of graphics and multimedia that I knew had almost unlimited
potential! (I am fond of that term). I was one of the first consumer surfers of the
net and I feel I was absolutely right on target here...I told many colleagues at work
about the WWW, and some were fascinated enough to make the leap. Some of them including
myself are now designing Intranet applications!
At work in November 1993, I loaded
Mosaic for
Windows NT, one of the first WWW browsers. I had seen this software demonstrated earlier
at the 1993 Microsoft TECH-ED conference in New Orleans and my think-tank brain went into
extrapolation mode. I imagined the possibilities like I had done when CD-ROM was first
developed. Education, commerce, books, travel, catalogs and data bases: the possibilities
were mind-boggling.
In late 1993, I read about NETCOM and NetCruiser software, available from a book.
This provided the first truly integrated, albeit proprietary system written in Visual
Basic. it included most and eventually all the tools of the trade from e-mail to
newsgroups to finger to gopher to ftp and to the WWW! So most of all 1994 was spent mostly
surfing the net using the WWW and newsgroups. O.K., I admit it, I was hooked.
Newer versions of NetCruiser provided IRC chat as
well. In 1995, most all of the big on line services realized as I did that the
Internet/WWW was the wave of the future and Prodigy, AOL and CompuServe
now provide both WWW and newsgroup access to the net via their dial-up system. I did more
research and upgraded my modem from 14.4 to 28.8...
I eventually wanted faster access and more
services so I looked to a local provider. IAG (Internet
Access Group) in Altamonte Springs, Florida which provided all the services of NETCOM, but
more hours for the same money, and soon I would be able to create my own WWW pages. I
purchased the Internet In a Box, one of the highest rated non-service specific software
available. This software uses PPP/SLIP and Winsock to communicate. At the same time I
discovered Netscape, a new entry that became the darling browser of the industry and now a
leader and maker of browser HTML standards. When I went to Windows '95 (Beta) in March of
1995, I could now use the 32-bit capability to communicate to the Internet.
I still use NETCOM when IAG is busy and with NETCOMs 2.0 version, and now with the new 3.0
NETCOMplete I can use other software and dial in outside of their proprietary dialup
software NetCruiser if I want. This with the 32-bit versions recently released give me
more power and flexibility than Ive ever had before. Finally being a beta test site
for Microsoft and MSN, I signed up with MSN, which now
has a very nice Windows 95 browser, IE 3.0. AT&T
introduced WorldNet which I got in 1996.
In 1995 I made the plunge and created my first WWW
pages. I knew local content would be big some day so I created my Graphic City Guides. This was a serious
attempt to experiment with this new media. I used Netscape Navigator Gold 2.0 and
Vermeer's FrontPage (now Microsoft's) to create and maintain the pages. Local content,
just as I had anticipated is becoming BIG: CityNet, Lycos City Guides, Microsoft's
SIDEWALK, CitySearch, AOL's Digital City are all vowing for local content based community
sites.
As competition intensifies, we are seeing a battle
of these services over features content and price. Content providers in many cases are
publishing free access via the Web, their wares, while others still charge for access via
traditional on line services. This could change very soon though... that which is free
today may cost tomorrow...Still, the Web gives the best all-around access to a plethora of
information and entertainment.
Well today the Internet and the WWW has become
undeniably one of the most remarkable forces in the computer and communications industry
in a very long time. Today you see many company URLs on TV ads. Tomorrow you will see Web
pages on TV's, TV programs on PC's, Radio and TV broadcasts on PC's, make telephone calls
on the PC, and...well you get the picture.