101 Must-see Sites - Because It's Not a Small World, After All.
Joseph O. Holmes
Sporting more attractions than Disneyland, Six Flags, and Busch Gardens combined, the World Wide Web is modern technology's most inventive amusement park. Unlike in ordinary fun parks, there are no lines, no height requirements, and no crowds. It never shuts down. And best of all, it's free. Can you hear the kids squealing in anticipation?
But it's easy to get lost on the Web. With so much to see and do, you could wander for hours and still miss the grand parade. So, we gathered together our experts -- the information addicts with season passes who visit the Web daily -- and compiled a list of the 101 hottest sites out there. To ensure your comfort and convenience, we've organized our favorite attractions by theme -- just like at Disney, but sans the talking mice.
Now, we advise you to please remain seated throughout the duration of the ride, keep your hand near the mouse at all times, and remain in your seat until your computer has come to a complete halt. We hope you enjoy browsing through our suggestions and ask you to please enjoy the rest of your stay here at the World Wide Web.
Rik Myslewski, Shelly Brisbin, and Jason Snell are editors at MacUser; Michael Swaine and Christopher Breen are contributing editors; and Geoff Duncan and Joseph O. Holmes are freelance authors.
Smart Browsing
* You're trapped on a page that has no buttons or text to
help you return to the home page. What do you do? Well, you
can try changing the address. Modify the URL to end with
index.html -- often the title of a directory's default
document. For example, if you find yourself at
http://www.netbeep.net/~joholmes/bogus.html,try changing it
to http://www.netbeep.net/~joholmes/ index.html.
* Another tactic for ferreting out the home page is to
delete all the text that follows the final slash in the
* And for really comprehensive searches, check out
SavvySearch
(http://www.cs.colostate.edu/~dreiling/smartform.html). It
plugs your keywords into several of the best search engines
and returns results from all of them.
* Don't forget Yahoo (http://www.yahoo.com), which includes
some search capabilities but is chiefly a hierarchical index
to thousands of sites, arranged by subject. It's terrific for
finding major sites, but it doesn't list every little home
page.
* When you have no idea what a company's URL is, just guess!
Try http://www.XXX.com, substituting the company's name for
the Xs. You can find Radius, for instance, at
http://www.radius.com.
* Make use of your browser's Go menu -- it keeps a
chronological list of all the places you've visited during
the current session. Using it is much faster than repeatedly
clicking on the Back button.
* Remember that you don't have to wait for pictures to
finish loading in order to move on to another page. You can
scroll down to read text at any time.
* A download doesn't have to equal downtime. When
downloading a file in Netscape, you can't simply click on a
pointer to swap pages without ending the download. But you
can scroll around within the page without stopping traffic or
just open a new window from Netscape's File menu and keep
browsing.
World Wide Wonders
Joseph O. Holmes
The Web Finds Its Voice
IT WAS NOT SO terribly long ago that the Internet consisted almost entirely of plain text crawling up the screen. Luckily, times have changed. Perk up your ears to hear how quickly online technology is advancing.
* RealAudio
RealAudio (http://www.realaudio.com) is, in a phrase,
Internet radio. Music and speech get piped live directly into
your Mac -- no more waiting minutes to download sound files.
Tune in to the RealAudio site for pointers to news
broadcasts by ABC Radio and National Public Radio, and
rebroadcasts of archived speeches and music. But don't expect
stereo sound -- version 1.0 is not even up to AM quality, but
it does deliver live voice-quality audio. Version 2.0, soon
to be released, promises to improve the quality to at least
the level of monaural FM. You can get the RealAudio client
software for free
(http://www2.realaudio.com/release/mac.download.html). Once
you've installed the application, check out the chatter on
AudioNet's talk radio (http://www.audionet.com).
* Streamworks
At press time, Xing Technology (http://www.xingtech.com)
was testing a similar application, Streamworks, which
promises to include video as well as audio. Could this
foreshadow the end of network television as we know it? We
hope so. Visit the site to download a free copy.
* NetPhone
Want to even the score with Ma Bell? Electric Magic
Company's NetPhone (http://www.emagic.com) allows you to dial
long-distance at virtually no cost.
NetPhone is a $60 software package that turns your Mac
into a telephone and the Internet into a long-distance
provider. That's right: You can make long-distance phone
calls, even overseas calls, for the cost of a local call and
your normal Internet connection. Any Mac with a microphone
and a direct Internet connection can call any other similarly
equipped Mac running NetPhone.
One drawback is that you'll need to tweak NetPhone to
eliminate sound dropouts, and some Macs, notably Duos, have a
hardware limitation that makes them operate more like
walkie-talkies than like telephones.
The sound isn't quite up to telephone quality, but the
price is right. NetPhone is the first full-duplex telephone
application for the Mac, and several companies are promising
similar tricks in the not too distant future. Check Trel's
Commercial Internet Products site (http://www.lpac
.ac.uk/Trel/1Phone_products.html) for a list of other