home
***
CD-ROM
|
disk
|
FTP
|
other
***
search
/
Internet Info 1997 December
/
Internet_Info_CD-ROM_Walnut_Creek_December_1997.iso
/
faqs
/
alt
/
answers
/
hypertext-faq
< prev
next >
Wrap
Internet Message Format
|
1997-10-18
|
28KB
Path: senator-bedfellow.mit.edu!faqserv
From: *jamie@csd.uwo.ca* (J. `send no junk mail' Blustein)
Newsgroups: alt.hypertext,alt.answers,news.answers
Subject: [alt.hypertext] Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ list)
Supersedes: <hypertext-faq_875873914@rtfm.mit.edu>
Followup-To: alt.hypertext
Date: 17 Oct 1997 10:18:38 GMT
Organization: Computer Science Dept., Univ. of Western Ontario, London, Canada
Lines: 612
Approved: news-answers-request@MIT.Edu
Expires: 14 Nov 1997 10:16:41 GMT
Message-ID: <hypertext-faq_877083401@rtfm.mit.edu>
Reply-To: jamie@csd.uwo.ca (J. Blustein)
NNTP-Posting-Host: penguin-lust.mit.edu
Summary: Answers to questions frequently asked in alt.hypertext and references
to other online resources about hypertext and hypermedia.
Keywords: hypertext hypermedia faq
X-Last-Updated: 1997/09/24
X-Copyright: copyright (c) Jamie Blustein 1997. See question 5.1 for details.
Originator: faqserv@penguin-lust.MIT.EDU
Xref: senator-bedfellow.mit.edu alt.hypertext:16370 alt.answers:29664 news.answers:114686
Archive-name: hypertext-faq
Posting-Frequency: every two weeks
Last-modified: 7 August 1997
URL: http://www.csd.uwo.ca/~jamie/hypertext-faq.html
Created: 2 February 1997 by J. Blustein
Maintainer: J. Blustein <jamie@csd.uwo.ca>
Copyright: (c) 1997 Jamie Blustein (see part C of question 5.1 for details)
This document is my personal attempt to answer some of the most
frequently asked questions in alt.hypertext and provide some necessary
background. Although I am solely responsible for its content I've tried to
keep it close to what I think of as the consensus view on all the topics I
discuss. I welcome all constructive criticism (and compliments). Please
send them by e-mail to <jamie@csd.uwo.ca>. Do not send me junk mail!
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Subject: Document format
Each question begins with `Subject:' on a line of its own. If you have a
suitably equipped newsreader then you can automatically skip to the start
of the next section, e.g. trn will display the start of the section when
you press ^G (control-G). Of course if your newsreader won't do that
automatically, you can still use a search command to find the next
question: For example, to find the answer to question X.Y (where X and Y
are numbers) search for a line beginning with `Subject: QX.Y)', there will
be only one. The character sequence `QX.Y)' appears only in the table of
contents and at the beginning of question X.Y.
An HTML document, based on this plain text list, is at
<URL:http://www.csd.uwo.ca/~jamie/hypertext-faq.html>. To find out what
other versions of this document there are see question 5.1.
------------------------------
Subject: Table of Contents
General Questions
Q1.1) What is alt.hypertext about?
Q1.2) What are hypertext and hypermedia? How do they differ?
Q1.3) Is there an archive of alt.hypertext postings?
Q1.4) Where are collections of articles about specific topics?
Link types
Q1.5) What are some historical milestones about hypertext?
Q1.6) Is it okay to post about new hypertext software, titles, etc. here?
Software, Literature, Conference Announcements
Hypertext Models
Q2.1) What hypertext systems I can read about online?
Hyper-G, Microcosm, Storyspace, Webthing, World Wide Web, Xanadu
Q2.2) Are there any hypertext standards?
References to other electronic resources
Q3.1) About hypertext/hypermedia
Q3.2) About electronic publications
Q3.3) About human-computer interaction
I've fallen in with the wrong crowd. Please help me out.
Q4.1) Help! I'm new to this whole Usenet/'net thing
Q4.2) I just want to know about WWW/HTML. Where should I go?
Q4.3) Gosh, this group is noisy. Are there any mailing lists?
Hyper-theory, ht_lit, EJournal/EJRNL
About this document
Q5.1) Where can I get a copy? (and some legal niceties)
Author/Owner, Versions/Availability, Distribution rights
Q5.2) Future Plans
Q5.3) Acknowledgements
Thanks, Citations for quotations
----------------------------------------------------------------------
** Section 1: General Questions **
Subject: Q1.1) What is alt.hypertext about?
alt.hypertext is a Usenet newsgroup intended to support discussion of,
and dissemination of information about hypertext and hypermedia.
alt.hypertext is not a suitable forum for discussion of WWW-specific
issues.
If you would like more information about what a Usenet newsgroup is then
you should read question 4.1. If you are looking for information about the
World Wide Web (WWW) or its associated hypertext markup language (HTML)
then you should read question 4.2.
------------------------------
Subject: Q1.2) What are hypertext and hypermedia? How do they differ?
The OED Additions Series defines hypertext as
Text which does not form a single sequence and which may be read
in various orders; specially text and graphics ... which are
interconnected in such a way that a reader of the material (as
displayed at a computer terminal, etc.) can discontinue reading
one document at certain points in order to consult other related
matter. [See Q5.3 for acknowledgements]
Theodore `Ted' Nelson, who first coined the terms hypertext and
hypermedia, wrote in _Literary Machines_ that `As popularly conceived,
[hypertext] is a series of text chunks connected by links which offer the
reader different pathways.' Neither hypertext nor hypermedia require the
use of links.
Hypermedia is similar to hypertext but includes media other than text,
e.g. a hypermedia document could include text and graphics, or sound and
animation.
Mark Bernstein has pointed out that, in practice, many hypertext
documents have some graphical content (just as texts often include
illustrations). Note that the definition quoted above makes the same
point. The distinction between hypertext and hypermedia is so blurry that
some authors call them both hypertext.
------------------------------
Subject: Q1.3) Is there an archive of alt.hypertext postings?
There is no publicly accessible archive of alt.hypertext postings that I
know about. But there are some small collections of articles about
specific topics. They are listed in question 1.4.
If there was an alt.hypertext archive then I'd expect to be able
to find it in Cameron Laird's List of Usenet Archives at <URL:http://
starbase.neosoft.com/~claird/news.lists/newsgroup_archives.html> or Kevin
Atkinson's Usenet Info Center at <URL:http://sunsite.unc.edu/usenet-i/
home.html>.
To find old articles and discussions you could use a search engine, such
as Deja News <URL:http://www.dejanews.com/> or Alta Vista <URL:
http://altavista.digital.com/cgi-bin/query?text=yes&what=news>. You
might also find something at Infinite Ink's Finding News Groups (use <URL:
http://www.jazzie.com/ii/internet/newsgroups.html> or <URL:http://www.
best.com/~ii/internet/newsgroups.html>) or Yahoo! <URL:http://www.yahoo.
com/text/News/Usenet/> helpful. Cameron Laird provides more suggestions in
his above mentioned List.
If anyone wants to create an archive, please tell me.
------------------------------
Subject: Q1.4) Where are collections of articles about specific topics?
So far I only know of collections of articles about link types. If you
know of anymore then please tell me so that it may also be included here.
A. Link Types (What they are and how many are enough)
Thomas Trickel has compiled and edited a discussion of link types in
various hypertext systems into <URL:http://www.ronan.net/~ttrickel/
hypertext/usentlnk.htm>. He has also written a short related essay
about link properties <URL:http://www.ronan.net/~ttrickel/hypertext/
linkprop.htm>. J. Blustein also has a summary of the discussion at
<URL:http://www.csd.uwo.ca/~jamie/.Refs/LinkTypes/alt.hypertext-link.
type-summary.html>.
------------------------------
Subject: Q1.5) What are some historical milestones about hypertext?
Vannevar Bush is credited with describing the first hypermedia system,
named memex. He wrote about it in his 1945 article _As We May Think_.
There are plain text and HTML versions at <URL:http://www.isg.sfu.ca
/~duchier/misc/vbush/>. Ted Nelson coined the terms hypertext and
hypermedia to describe his proposed system called Xanadu. According to an
article in Vassar College's Miscellany News, he used the term hypertext in
a talk there in 1965 <URL:http://iberia.vassar.edu/~mijoyce/Ted_sed.html>.
The Xanadu homepage is at <URL:http://www.xanadu.com.au/xanadu/>. His book
_Literary Machines_ is largely about Xanadu. Douglas Englebart
demonstrated the first computerized hypertext system, called NLS/Augment
circa 1968. He also invented the computer mouse and graphical user
interface. Randy Trigg wrote the first PhD dissertation based on hypertext
circa 1986. The first hypertext conference was held in 1987. The
alt.hypertext newsgroup was created in 1992.
_Memex and Beyond_ is a major research, educational, and collaborative
web site integrating the historical record of and current research in
hypermedia: <URL:http://www.cs.brown.edu/memex/>.
Jorn Barger's hypertext timeline is at <URL:http://www.mcs.net/~jorn/html
/net/timeline.html>.
------------------------------
Subject: Q1.6) Is it okay to post about new hypertext software, titles,
etc. here?
A. New software
Announcements about new hypertext products are welcome in
alt.hypertext. If hypertext is only a minor part of the product then
please consider setting the Follow-up header to point elsewhere. If
you are unfamiliar with that way of working then we'd all benefit from
you reading some of the postings in the news.announce.newusers
newsgroup.
B. New hypertext literature (fiction and non-fiction)
Announcements and discussion of works in hypertext and about
hypertext are both appropriate in alt.hypertext.
C. Conference announcements
Many conferences have some hypertext components. If you have a
conference announcement that you think will be of interest to the
hypertext/hypermedia community then please post a copy of it to
alt.hypertext. The news.announce.conferences group is another good
place for such postings.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
** Section 2: Hypertext Models **
Subject: Q2.1) What hypertext systems I can read about online?
It seems impractical to list all of the myriad of hypertext/hypermedia
systems available today. I've included some major systems here. If you
feel that some other system has been unfairly excluded then please write
me. If this list grows too long then it might become a separate posting or
removed altogether. See also HyTime in question 2.1 below.
* HyperWave (formerly Hyper-G) <URL:http://www.hyperwave.com>
HyperWave is a sophisticated Web document management system
for large information spaces. The project began under the name
Hyper-G in 1990. Among other things, it features hierarchical
structuring, link management, attribute and full text search,
access control, and interactive link and document editing.
See also the comp.infosystems.hyperg newsgroup.
* Microcosm <URL:http://wwwcosm.ecs.soton.ac.uk/>
An open and extensible hypermedia system designed for managing
and disseminating unstructured digitally encoded files.
* Storyspace <URL:http://www.eastgate.com/Storyspace.html>
A commercial product described as a `writing environment designed
for the process of writing. Storyspace is especially well suited
to working with large, complex, and challenging hypertexts.'
* Webthing <URL:http://pobox.com/~webthing/>
Webthing's Holistic Hypertext is an object-oriented hypertext system
designed for collaborative authoring and implemented on the
WWW. Documents in Webthing generate HTML links from other documents
on-the-fly, releiving authors of the need to manage HTML links, and
eliminating the problem of outdated or uncoordinated references.
* World Wide Web <URL:http://www.w3.org/pub/WWW/WWW/>
A very popular link-based hypertext system based on a client-server
architecture running on the Internet.
See also question 4.2 for some other resources.
* Xanadu <URL:http://www.xanadu.com.au/xanadu/>
The system Ted Nelson wrote about in his ground breaking book
_Literary Machines_.
See also the Xanadu FAQ list (posted to several newsgroups, including
alt.hypertext, and available: (a) in text form from <URL:ftp://rtfm.
mit.edu/pub/usenet/news.answers/xanadu-faq>; (b) and HTML form from
<URL:http://xanadu.com.au/xanadu/faq.html>).
------------------------------
Subject: Q2.2) Are there any hypertext standards?
Yes, the ISO standard is called HyTime. The full name is _Information
Technology - Hypermedia/Time-based Structuring Language (HyTime)_ (ISO/IEC
10744:1992). It is an international standard for describing hypermedia.
The original standard (not including the Technical Corrigendum) was edited
by Charles F. Goldfarb (with assistance from Steven R. Newcomb). The
standard was published in Geneva by the International Organization for
Standardization/International Electrotechnical Commission in 1992.
Many pointers to HyTime information are available in Robin Cover's
_General SGML Applications_ webpage <URL:http://www.sil.org/sgml/gen-apps
.html#hytime>. Both the comp.text.sgml and alt.hypertext newsgroups host
HyTime discussions.
[This entry last updated on 10 Feb 1997 with information from Robin Cover's
_SGML Bibliography: Part 4, I - L_ (last modified February 07, 1997) at
<URL:http://www.sil.org/sgml/bib-il.html#iso10744>.]
----------------------------------------------------------------------
** Section 3: References to other electronic resources **
Subject: Q3.1) About hypertext/hypermedia
There are far too many online resources about hypertext to list here so
only the most major ones are included here. As with all sections of this
list, your suggestions for additions are welcome.
* SIGLINK (the Association for Computing Machinery's Special Interest
Group on Hypertext/Hypermedia) has a WWW homepage at
<URL:http://www.acm.org/siglink/>.
* LINKBase is a bibliographic reference system for hypertext-related
publications at
<URL:http://www.njit.edu/njIT/Professional_Society/SIGLINK.html>.
* The Hypertext/-media Resources at the University of Konstanz are
quite good:
<URL:http://www.inf-wiss.uni-konstanz.de/Res/hypertext_e.html>.
* Eastgate Systems's Selected Hypertext Resources on the Web includes a
broad survey of hypertext literature at
<URL:http://www.eastgate.com/Hypertext.html>.
* Collections of previous alt.hypertext discussions are listed in
question 1.4.
------------------------------
Subject: Q3.2) About electronic publications
There are so many documents about electronic publications that it is very
difficult to list even one that is of particular interest for hypertext.
The description of alt.etext in the Usenet Info Center at <URL:http://
sunsite.unc.edu/usenet-i/groups-html/alt.etext.html> contains references to
some sites.
EJournal (which is discussed in question 4.3) is particularly occupied
with electronic text.
------------------------------
Subject: Q3.3) About human-computer interaction
There is much information and opinion about HCI available electronically.
I expect that from what is listed here you will be able to find what you
want.
Keith Instone maintains the ACM's guide to HCI issues on the WWW at <URL:
http://www.acm.org/sigchi/webhci/>.
Gary Perlman's _what's happening_ column in _interactions_ magazine is a
great place to find out about HCI resources on the 'net <URL:http://www.
acm.org/~perlman/interactions/resources.html>. He suggested the following
newsgroups are relevant for HCI researchers: comp.human-factors,
comp.cog-eng, sci.cognitive, sci.psychology, and comp.groupware. The
human-factors group has a FAQ list at <URL:ftp://archive.cis.ohio-state.
edu/pub/hci/hci.faq>.
The WWW Virtual Library has sections for HCI and Cognitive Science (at
<URL:http://hydra.bgsu.edu/HCI/> and <URL:http://www.cog.brown.edu
/pointers/cognitive.html> respectively).
Noted hypermedia expert Jakob Nielsen writes a monthly column, called
Alertbox, about HCI with a particular focus on the WWW. Articles are
available at <URL:http://www.useit.com/alertbox/>.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
** Section 4: I've fallen in with the wrong crowd. Please help me out. **
Subject: Q4.1) Help! I'm new to this whole Usenet/'net thing
The following two newsgroups contain some excellent introductory
postings: news.announce.newusers and news.newusers.questions.
Whoever is providing you with access to Usenet should be able to give you
some basic introduction or instruction. This isn't because they are
necessarily nice, but because if they don't at least attempt to tell you
the basics then they can't blame you when you do something awful. If they
haven't offered you any advice or instruction then ask someone responsible
for some pointers to useful information. I advise you not to ask another
newcomer -- that is a great way to propagate misconceptions.
There are many introductory books about the global Internet and Usenet.
If you learn well from books then you might consider buying one or
borrowing it from a library. Some books are available for free, others are
available for sampling online as an enticement to get you to buy them. For
a fuller discussion of such books see: (a) the misc.books.technical
newsgroup; (b) the Unofficial Internet Book List at the rtfm.mit.edu FTP
site <URL:ftp://rtfm.mit.edu/pub/usenet/news.answers/internet-services/
book-list>.
------------------------------
Subject: Q4.2) I just want to know about WWW/HTML. Where should I go?
There are several newsgroups devoted exclusively to discussion of the
WWW. For an overview of those groups see Thomas Boutell's FAQ list at
<URL:http://www.boutell.com/faq/> or in one of the comp.infosystems.www
newsgroups or in an archive of news.answers postings such as at <URL:ftp:
//rtfm.mit.edu/pub/usenet/news.answers/www/faq/intro>.
There are many online resources about HTML. I think Library of Congress
HTML resource page <URL:http://lcweb.loc.gov/global/internet/html.html> is
excellent.
------------------------------
Subject: Q4.3) Gosh, this group is noisy. Are there any mailing lists?
Yes, there are some mailing lists about the issues which are also
appropriate for alt.hypertext. Specifically, there are the HYPER-THEORY
and HT_LIT lists. EJournal (an electronic journal) has discussion of
hypertext issues, but it is not a discussion list. Details of all of those
mailing lists are below.
For a more complete list of mailing lists see _Publicly Accessible
Mailing Lists_ and _Mailing Lists Available in Usenet_. Both are available
through Usenet and are archived at many sites. Details about all of those
lists are also below.
A. HYPER-THEORY
The hyper-theory mailing list was created to serve as a medium for
discussion on hypermedia theory, to help researchers, developers, and
users pursue their interests in the field of hypermedia theory and
implementation details, this list was created to serve as a high
signal to noise ratio resource.
The list owner, Art Pollard, reserves the right to move the mailing
list into a moderated format if it is necessary to maintain the list's
focus.
TO SUBSCRIBE:
Send an e-mail message to majordomo@math.byu.edu containing:
subscribe hyper-theory <your e-mail address>
in the *body* of the message.
After subscribing, you will receive this description of the
list as well as additional instructions for unsubscribing.
B. HT_LIT
The ht_lit mailing list is for the discussion of hypertext fiction,
hypertext theory, and hypertext and literary studies. There is an
archive at <URL:ftp://consecol.org/pub/ht_lit/>. Kia Mennie
<kmm@aaln.org> is the list owner. Feel free to contact her for more
information before subscribing.
TO SUBSCRIBE:
Send an e-mail message to subscribe@journal.biology.carleton.ca
containing:
subscribe ht_lit
in the *body* of the message.
C. EJournal (aka EJRNL)
From the homepage:
EJournal is an all-electronic, e-mail delivered, peer-reviewed,
academic periodical. We are particularly interested in theory
and practice surrounding the creation, transmission, storage,
interpretation, alteration and replication of electronic `text'
-- including `display' -- broadly defined. We are also
interested in the broader social, psychological, literary,
economic and pedagogical implications of computer-mediated
networks. The journal's essays are delivered free to Internet
addressees.
TO SUBSCRIBE:
Send an e-mail message to listserv@albany.edu with the following as
the first (and only) line of text:
SUB EJRNL Your Name
.
Further details about the journal and its archives can be found on its
homepage at <URL:http://www.hanover.edu/philos/ejournal/>.
Publicly Accessible Mailing Lists
Posted to news.lists, and news.answers by Stephanie da Silva.
Archived at <URL:http://www.neosoft.com/internet/paml>,
<URL:ftp://rtfm.mit.edu/pub/usenet-by-group/news.
answers/mail/mailing-lists> (and mirror sites).
Mailing Lists Available in Usenet
Posted to the following newsgroups: news.lists, news.groups,
news.announce.newgroups, bit.admin, and news.answers by Dave
Lawrence.
Archived at <URL:ftp://rtfm.mit.edu/pub/usenet-by-group/news.answers/
mail/news-gateways> (and mirror sites).
----------------------------------------------------------------------
** Section 5: About this document **
Subject: Q5.1) Where can I get a copy? (and some legal niceties)
A. Author/Owner
This document was written by J. Blustein. Please send constructive
criticism (and compliments) by e-mail to <jamie@csd.uwo.ca>. The
author is a Computer Science doctoral candidate at the University of
Western Ontario and has been studying hypertext since 1991.
B. Versions/Availability
It is posted every two weeks to alt.hypertext, alt.answers and
news.answers by the MIT faqserver.
HTML versions should be available at:
* The Internet FAQ Consortium
<URL:http://www.faq.org>
specifically as single part <URL:http://www.faqs.org/faqs/
hypertext-faq/> or as a
multi-part <URL:http://www.faqs.org/faqs/hypertext-faq/
preamble.html>
* Utrecht Univ. (in the Netherlands)
<URL:http://www.cs.ruu.nl/cgi-bin/faqwais>
specifically <URL:http://www.cs.ruu.nl/wais/html/na-dir/
hypertext-faq.html>
* Ohio State Univ. (in the USA)
<URL:http://www.cis.ohio-state.edu/hypertext/faq/usenet/top.html>
specifically <URL:http://www.cis.ohio-state.edu/hypertext/faq/
usenet/hypertext-faq/faq.html>
* Univ. of Michigan (in the USA)
<URL:http://faq.sph.umich.edu/cgi-bin/faqsrch>
specifically <URL:http://faq.sph.umich.edu/faq/files/
hypertext-faq>
* Oxford Univ. (in the UK)
<URL:http://www.lib.ox.ac.uk/internet/news/faq/by_group.index.html>
specifically <URL:http://www.lib.ox.ac.uk/internet/news/faq/archive
/hypertext-faq.html>
and perhaps other locations too.
I've prepared a HTML version of this list at <URL:http://www.csd.uwo.
ca/~jamie/hypertext-faq.html>. I'll try to update the versions in
sync but I can't promise that I will.
C. Distribution rights
You are free to use this document for your own personal use. You
are free to distribute it in its entirety. If you wish to distribute
an incomplete version of the document you must include the following
information:
* A note to the effect that the version you have is excerpted from
the entire list;
* The entire list is a creation of J. Blustein <jamie@csd.uwo.ca>;
* The entire list is copyright by J. Blustein;
* The entire list is posted every two weeks to the alt.hypertext
Usenet newsgroup and is intended for free distribution;
* The location where and date when you obtained a copy of the entire
list.
I would also appreciate receiving a note (by e-mail) that you are
using an excerpt from the list.
If you want to distribute a modified version of the list, not just
excerpts from the list, then you must obtain permission from
J. Blustein in advance.
------------------------------
Subject: Q5.2) Future Plans
I'd like to have some discussion of hypertext models (such as Dexter) and
an explanation of what open hypertext is. Since those questions aren't
answered much I guess those sections can wait. I'm interested in either
creating my own HyTime version of the list or seeing someone else's.
------------------------------
Subject: Q5.3) Acknowledgements
A. Thanks
I am grateful to Mark Bernstein and Kia Mennie for their helpful
comments. I am solely responsible for the content of this list.
Question 1.6 was included at Thomas Boutell's suggestion.
Kivi Shapiro caught some typos that I'd missed.
B. Citations for quotations
Document Format
was adapted from similar text in the alt.backrubs FAQ list, with
the author's permission.
Question 1.2
The definition of hypertext is quoted from Oxford English
Dictionary Additions Series (volume 2), edited by John Simpson and
Edmund Weiner. It was published in 1993 by Clarendon Press.
The quote from Ted Nelson is from page 0/2 of _Literary Machines_
(edition 90.1) published by Mindful Press in 1990. The earliest
copyright date in my copy is 1980. According to the definition of
hypertext in the OED Additions series (see previous reference), he
first introduced the term in 1965 at the 20th National Conference of
the ACM. Question 1.5 lists some other historical milestones about
hypertext including an (earlier) 1965 publication of the term
`hyper-text'.
Question 2.1
The description of Hyper-G and Hyperwave was supplied by Keith
Andrews.
The description of Storyspace was quoted from the web page on 2
February 1997.
The description of Webthing was adapted from a submission by Nick
Kew.
Question 3.3
The newsgroups and FAQ lists in the Usenet section come from the
what's happening column in interactions vol. I no. 4 (Oct. 1994) by
Gary Perlman.
Question 4.1 (about Usenet)
was taken from an almost identical question in the alt.backrubs
FAQ list (with the author's permission). Actually, the alt.backrubs
FAQ maintainer and I are quite close. :)
Question 4.3 (about mailing lists)
The description of the HYPER-THEORY list is taken from an
announcement about the list posted by Art Pollard to alt.hypertext,
comp.infosystems.hyperg, comp.infosystems, comp.infosystems.harvest,
comp.text.sgml on 17 May 1996 with Message-ID:
<DrJ6EM.Aqv@news.hawaii.edu>
The description of the HT_LIT list was taken from the entry in
PAML (see question 4.3) and updated by Kia Mennie.
The description of EJournal was quoted from the 2 February 1997
version of the EJournal homepage.
--
J. Blustein http://www.csd.uwo.ca/~jamie <jamie@csd.uwo.ca>
`We are all in the gutter, but some of us are looking at the stars'
-- Oscar Wilde