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So, now we're in the middle of the dotcom downturn, can we expect people to be paying for content? Don't bank on it.
Gerald Oskoboiny has created a way of browser initiated editing with Netscape/Unix designed to interoperate with vi and CVS.
As WriteTheWeb has mentioned before, micropayments were a big idea that never got anywhere. Now Roger Ebert has come up with a persuasive argument for their widespread adoption.
A new UK-based portal, Time4.net, commits several horrible crimes of bad web design. But the people who built it are aiming at people who are not online yet, and they don't care what you and I think.
Derek Robinson has developed a Javascript application which allows WYSIWYG editing of any web page, local or remote.
Media owners are starting to realise the potential of combining an online publication with an offline one. They must also consider the perils.
How is it that hyperlinks have become such a cause for controversy? The internet could not have happened without them - so why is it that so many lawyers and business people just don't seem to get it?
Way back when the web was young, we all thought we faced a future where newspapers would go digital and we'd pay a few pennies for every story we wanted. Why hasn't that happened yet?
Should your branding undergo usability testing as well as your content? Roger Parker says it should.
New research claims that as internet content expands, so will internet advertising - to the extent that the average user could be subjected to 950 electronic advertisements each day.
In an article on the O'Reilly Network, Brian King describes Mozilla's editing functionality and explains its target of being an accessible tool for content creation.
SpellChecker.net offers a convenient way to hook spellchecking into an online editing environment. But do people still care about spelling online?
Do you write internet or Internet? E-mail or email? And how do these compare with the way you write TV or television?
The ZopeFish project sets out to hook up Pike, a desktop outline editor, with Zope, the open source web application server.
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