NETSURFER FOCUS SURFS
SPRING INTERNET WORLD 96

Monday, May 20, 1996 - Volume 02, Issue 01


TABLE OF CONTENTS

Everybody's Gone Surfin'
Buzz 'n' Fuzz
Digital Oyster
WebPage Backstage
Mixed Media
Meet Chat Work Play
Money Money
Merry Muddle
Don't Forget the Plumbers
Where Have All the Search Engines Gone
Inky Fingers
And the Winner Is...
Mirror Mirror
A Day Late
The Fine Print

OUR SPONSOR

CONTACT INFORMATION

CREDITS

EVERYBODY'S GONE SURFIN'


Surfin' San Jose

Spring Internet World - the gabfest of Netters: time to leave the mellow glow of our monitors and the comforts of cyberspace to pound the steamy asphalt of San Jose, Calif., in a record heat wave. A world with its own logic where asphalt met astroturf disguised as asphalt, where computer industry leaders and supposed visionaries pranced across the keynote stage hawking applications programs, and where 400 or so exhibitors, 40,000 plus attendees, and miles of wires overflowed the local Convention Center and oozed into the Civic Auditorium, the Tech Museum of Innovation, and a billowing tent/sauna on the sidewalk,

OVERLOAD!

Being intrepid net pioneers, however, the Netsurfer gang ploughed our way through an infinity of booths, demos, literature and press food so that you, dear reader, can just sit back and enjoy the highlights.

BUZZ 'N' FUZZ


Sound bites for the cocktail circuit

Just have a minute? Acquire some choice bon mots to drop at the next party before consigning this issue to the bit bucket. These ten are guaranteed a swarm of interest:

Internet telephony ... web mapping ... NC (or network computer if you please) ... virtual private network ... business objects ... traffic analysis ... digital IDs ... immersive hypermedia ... collaborative computing ... SET compliant commerceware

And then there are the meaningless hypewords that came even thicker and faster at the show. You can pave many a yellow brick road without getting anywhere with these. The top ten for your fuzz filter for any show.

...premier ... complete solution ... innovative ... award-winning ... next level ... set the standard ... easy to use ... unique powerful ... revolutionary ...

DIGITAL OYSTER


The world is your desktop

While Netscape is determined to squeeze the world into the browser, Microsoft is morphing the browser into the the Windows environment. Between them, the digitized world is available on your desktop. Scuttling around the feet of the clashing titans this year are some useful little productivity pearls that makes net exploration easier. But check them out now - they could be gobbled up by the giants by showtime next year.

Track and index links and bookmarks, download and file web pages for viewing at your leisure, and notify yourself of updates, among other features.
http://www.documagix.com/documagx/products/dhotpage.htm
http://www.zoosoft.com/zooworks/
Put little sticky notes onto web pages, documents, and just about anything else on your screen.
http://www.egn.com/jotit.html
Create graphical maps of a website or a topic of interest on the World Wide Web.
http://www.netcarta.com

WEBPAGE BACKSTAGE


Help for the hardworking spiders

The stakes keep getting higher in the web content game. Twelve months ago we were experimenting with text pages with a few GIFs and imagemaps thrown in. How many used server push? Now we have all manner of animation and multimedia flashing, tumbling, and transforming their way across our screen. You don't make it if nothing on your page moves. (Guess we don't make it, guys... -Ed. ) What-you-see-is-what-you-get and drag-and-drop insertion of multimedia elements are de rigueur for authoring software. Of course there are tools to create VRML, animations, and all, and 'nuff's been said about Java. Here's some of the latest cool stuff from the show.

The Heavyweights Take On WSYSIWYG Page Creation

PageMill from Adobe

Besides chewing through the usual tags and multimedia support, Mac-only PageMill converts standard PC file formats, and includes a special "geektionary" of techie terms for its spellchecker. Cookies and Apple support make tasty desserts. Step up to SiteMill and your link managements troubles are taken care of as well. Windows users will have to wait till late summer for both.
http://www.adobe.com/prodindex/pagemill/main.html

Backstage Designer/Studio from Macromedia

Point and click forms construction, a library of templates and customizable Java and Shockwave aplets and the xRes SE imaging editor add sizzle to Macromedia's WYSIWYG package. For the site designer, the Backstage Studio products will provide site management and built-in objects that provide connectivity to desktop databases, forms, threaded discussion groups, automated email, and other features.
http://www-1.macromedia.com/Tools/Backstage/index.html

Multimedia Content Creation

CelAnimator

So far, bit-mapped graphics have ruled the web. Yet streaming, vector-based images and animations can be small and fast to compete. CelAnimator from Future Wave creates graphics scaleable to any size and color depth without blowing up the file size. It can also incorporate interactive buttons linked to a URL. A plug-in viewer is required, though.
http://www.futurewave.com/tindex.html

AnimationNet

The only 3D animation package that dares claim to run on a 486 PC with 8 mb of RAM! Neo Visuals has geared their products for ease of use. A kids' version of the animator is available, presumably for the under-8 set, since by that age most kids are more computer-savvy than dear old dad. Their ADL file format is small enough to send through e-mail, but again, an ADL player is also required. http://www.neovisuals.com/

VRML
Cosmo

Ever feel that you just didn't "get it" about VRML worlds? Well it's time to take another look now that version 2 (aka Moving Worlds) is real real. Build scalable, dynamic worlds with interactive objects, 3D sound, embedded audio and video clips for a rich, immersive environment. SGI's Cosmo suite can do it all with its VRML browser, authoring tools, java development environment, and media management system. Cosmo Player, the browser, made the heat in the show tent bearable, and the good news is that it will even do Windows.
http://webspace.sgi.com/cosmo/

Just the Basics

If you don't have that Unix workstation and just want something that is easy to use, Virtual Home Space Builder from Paragraph or Virtus 3D Website Builder might just do the trick.
http://www.paragraph.com/vhsb/product/
http://www.virtus.com/3dwbmain.html

Liquid Reality

If you like to liven things up with Java, check out Dimension X's Liquid Reality toolkit. It helps you create and view Java-enhanced VRML worlds that support sound, motion, and interaction. And if you want some help creating Java animations without being a real programmer, their Liquid Motion software may be just your cup of tea.
Liquid Reality - http://www.dimensionx.com/products/lr/index.html
Liquid Motion - http://www.dimensionx.com/products/lm/freetea/freetea.html

Java Development Environments

Cafe - The early adopters have weighed in and the Symantec Cafe seems to be the place to be to start your day.
http://cafe.symantec.com/cafe/index.html

Java Workshop - If SGI has Cosmo and everyone is flocking to Cafe, is Sun missing the boat on their own Java sea? Try out Java Workshop 1.0 and let us know what you think.
http://www.sun.com/sunsoft/Developer-products/java/

MIXED MEDIA


Every which way you can

The Internet has won its place in the telecommunications mainstream. Web-browsing and e-mail, the sung and unsung Internet killer-apps, have been joined on the wire (and wireless) by applications from the other communications media. Internet telephony is getting a lot of attention this year, but radio and television are following close behind. After all, once you have the connectivity and the bandwidth, almost anything is fair game.

Email to Fax Gateway
http://www.faxsav.com
Telephone
http://www.voxware.com
Teleconferencing, with pictures
http://www.telescape.com/HTML/products.htm
Videoconferencing
http://www.wpine.com/cuprodinfo.htm
Radio
http://www.netradio.com
Television
http://www.vivo.com/interview/iworld_news.html

MEET CHAT PLAY WORK


Leading the way in social computing

The IRC standard is showing its age and here comes the next generation. 3D worlds are the cool new places to meet. WorldChat led the way with 3D chat and customizable avatars. Their latest creation, the spiffy new Alphaworld, allows you to homestead the cyberfrontier: chat, build houses, and even engage in commerce. OZ bridges work and play with a VRML browser/server combination that lets you set up your own virtual world. Use it for virtual conferencing with text, audio, and video, voting, file sharing, and other group activities. Their virtual worlds are filled with lush graphics and 3D sound and animation. To cap it all off, OZ provides a 3D helper angel that talks to you by text-to-speech conversion.

America Online sticks to 2D in Virtual Places with avatars equipped with gestures. (Goodbye, smileys?) Keeping it flat has its rewards - a phone line works well and you can easily throw a party at your own URL. But hurry, the spring social calendar is filling up fast. Other participants in the chat game include ichat, and ChatPlus, both help you set up your own chat servers on the Web.

ChatPlus
http://www.imtworld.com/chat
ichat
http://www.ichat.com/ichat2/products.html
OZ
http://www.oz-inc.com
Virtual Places (America Online)
http://www.vplaces.com/index.htm
WorldChat
http://www.worlds.net/products/wchat

MONEY, MONEY


Meet me in the Cyber-Casbah

Move aside, innovators. You know the playground of the geeks is changing when big iron like IBM S/390 mainframes becomes web servers. From Federal Express to buying tickets for the Olympics on the web, Net Biz is now serious Big Biz.

After a few dalliances and reconciliations, Mastercard and Visa finally got together and proposed a unified protocol to secure online credit card transactions in February. Though Netscape's SSL enabled the early transactions on the net, the Secure Electronic Transaction (SET) protocol put the stamp of respectability on online commerce, and software vendors are rushing to support it by the end of the summer.

On another front, information, long freely exchanged on the Net, can now be doled out at a price. Cryptolopes sound like shy ungulates on the digital savannah, but they are really digital envelopes that bill you when you open them. And the tick-ticking you hear is not the return of the Unibomber, it's simply the meter running inside the new digital content. News, books, multimedia, or software, they are all ready to meter your usage, ane send you a bill. If you prefer the advertising-funded model used in radio and television for collecting your silver, there are organizations to help you from ad creation, media placement, and to site visitor traffic analysis and audit.

Consumers: come on down!

Secure Electronic Transaction protocol
http://www.visa.com/cgi-bin/vee/sf/set/intro.html?2+0
Secured envelopes (Cryptolopes)
http://vinegar-bend.infomkt.ibm.com/ht2/crypto.htm
Metering Digital Goods
http://www.interval.net/www/Products/digissues.html
Traffic Analysis
http://www.interse.com/
http://www.ipro.com/

MERRY MUDDLE


It's the Intranet, stupid!

You've seen it on the front cover of major business and computer magazines. A simple, consistent interface to all of an organization's data and applications. The Intranet is the hottest trend to hit MIS, and may even bail out a few failed client-server projects. The goldrush is on and the shovel- and pick- sellers are out in droves. Enabling software for the corporate environment blurs in a muddle of buzzwords and hyperbolic press-release speak. Now what does package XYZ do again and how is it different from FGH and PQR? Here are a few that actually made it through the haze.

Cold Fusion - Database access for websites
http://206.10.245.5/cgi-shl/dbml.exe?template=/Allaire/products/products.dbm
Sapphire Web - Visual web /database application builder
http://www.bluestone.com/products/sapphire/
Crew - Groupware scheduling
http://www.thuridion.com/products/crew/
NetFlow - Workflow management
http://www.enterworks.com/netflow/netflowtop.html

DON'T FORGET THE DATA PLUMBERS


and now, Speeding-Bullet Fast, Bullet-Proof Pipes!

The connectivity providers were out in force. There were hardware vendors for modems wired and wireless, routers and switches, and even uninterruptible power supplies. ISDN seems to have shed its "I Still Don't kNow" rags to become a choice option for super-surfers ready to ditch 28.8 kbps for the satisfaction of 112 kbps from two bonded B channels (sounds racy!).

And as if fast isn't enough, the roads are also getting safer on the digital frontier through new products combining authentication and content encryption. Be the center of your own (virtual) private network using the Internet and any old Internet service provider. Or double-wrap your inter-office communications in kevlar and send'em out.

Kegel's ISDN Information Resource
http://www.alumni.caltech.edu/~dank/isdn/isdn_ai.html
ISDN Equipment Vendors
http://www.farallon.com/www/catalog/catnetimodem.html
http://www.usr.com/home/spisdnds.html
ISDN Service Providers
http://www.alumni.caltech.edu/~dank/isdn/isdn_ip.html
http://www.cybertoday.com/cybertoday/ISPs/Products.html#ISDN
Affordable Virtual Private Network
http://www.v-one.com/products.html
No-Nonsense Bullet-Proofing
http://www.dsnt.com/nf1.html

WHERE HAVE ALL THE SEARCH ENGINES GONE


Strength in numbers

With the notable exception of Excite, they were actually all there at the show, each touting its own strengths: in supporting different national languages, indexing images, distributed searching, etc. Almost matching the search engines in representation was a flock of directory providers. Nothing truly new and exciting, just lots of them. We lost count at 17 engines/spiders and 10 directories. In the name of bandwidth conservation we're just naming a few of the new, intriguing, or vaporous.

This search site distinguished itself by finding a partial copy of "Guide to Cracking Unix" where Alta Vista, Excite, Infoseek, and Yahoo led to dead ends. Just lucky?
http://www.nlightn.com

Another search page that makes a point of searching for people references. We could not find the publishers of Netsurfer on the net with this one, but heck, it had no match for "Marc Andreessen" either.
http://www.linkstar.com

A directory with minimalist elegance when image loading is turned off.
http://www.athand.com

This directory crashed the publisher's two browsers repeatedly.
http://www.bigfoot.com

INKY FINGERS


Curl up with a few good atoms

While everyone is eagerly batting bits across the web, paper is not disappearing anytime soon. Publishers were also out in full force at the show with their gazillions of Internet titles. Here are a few distinguishable new entries that made us info-resource-hounds happy.

tele.com - Monthly magazine covering the business and technology of the public networks market.
http://www.teledotcom.com

The Java Series ...from the Source - Java books written by the staff of Javasoft. Starting with an introductory book on the programming language, we can expect detailed specs on language, virtual machine specification, and APIs throughout the summer.
http://www.aw.com/cp/javaseries.html

Internet Underground - Appropriately-named magazine and not entirely new. Still, any publication that would run a contest on creative uses for freebie discs from online services, AND name the EFF as the top "site that revolutionized the Internet" in one issue has a few interesting tidbits to offer.
http://www.underground-online.com

AND THE WINNER IS...


Netsurfer picks 'em

Not Your Dad's PC Award:

It's a screensaver, it's television, it's your personal newspaper. PointCast delivers a customized electronic billboard of news, weather, stock quotes, sports, entertainment, and more while your computer idles. All for free thanks to MTV-style animated advertising flashing across the screen. Another good reason not to touch that keyboard.
http://pioneer.pointcast.com/product_fact.html

Rube Goldberg-Star Trek Award:

Lean back, put your feet on the table, point, and click. Couch potato, meet the web, courtesy of Gyropoint, the flying mouse. Roll it around on the mouse pad and it works exactly as expected. Once airborne, the mouse ball locks in, a tiny of gyroscope inside take over, and you continue to zoom over the screen. A tailless version connecting via radio is also available. This baby will win more awards.
http://www.gyration.com

Vive la Difference Award:

English is the lingua franca of the Net in the great globalization wave. A positive step in the opposite direction is a browser that supports content in other languages. Here are two of them.
http://www.accentsoft.com
http://www.alis.com

Man Behind the Curtain Award:

A friendly face in the booth of news service DBC Online that spotted the red badge of friendliness (aka press pass) and offered a weary Netsurfer respite from the hustle and bustle by showing him some impressive personal home pages.
Scott Wamsley - http://www.wamzle.com
DBC OnLine - http://www.dbc.com

Wardrobe Award:

The scanty jungle outfits worn by young women promoting Zooworks suited the steamy tent that passed for a convention hall. Auto-show cheescake meets Net Biz: a great statement on the maturity of the Internet market. You won't find the ladies at the Zooworks home page, though, so there's no URL for this one.

MIRROR, MIRROR


Famous last words

Mirror, mirror, on the Net
On what trends and technologies shall we bet?
Mirror, mirror, crystal ball,
Who's the best prognosticator of us all?

Philippe Kahn, Starfish Software:
1997 will see the first wave of real java applications.
(Push harder on your engineering schedules, Philippe. -Ed.)

Larry Ellison, Oracle:
NC in September.

Iain Woolward, Woolward & Parners:
The market is ready for full screen ad pages that last for 5 to 10 seconds as you navigate from one page to another on the Web.

Steve Jobs, Next:
ACT I - Static websites were the beginning... ACT II - Dynamic websites do things, know things.
(We were hoping you'd talk about Act III, Steve. -Ed.)

Linda Sanford, IBM:
The IBM S/390 has never been affected by viruses, worms, or trojan horses.

Netsurfer:
We'll see super-surfer rewards from ISPs to build customer loyalty in the next 12 months.

A DAY LATE


and we'll see about the dollar

Can't make the Internet World schedule? Or is there an advantage to making your announcements away from the maddening crowd? What did Adobe have in mind when they laid out their strategy for bringing more visual communication to the web (by driving Internet standards based on Adobe technologies) the week after Internet World? Armed with an alliance with Javasoft for Adobe's new 2D image model, Microsoft for Universal Font Format, and AT&T (probably for AT&T's bandwidth), the plan is to slam and jam all those Adobe desktop publishing products into Net authoring. Slow is beautiful.
http://www.adobe.com/events/netexpect/

And speaking of the NC, Lucent Technologies, Ma Bell's newest orphan, announced in that same post-show week that they will be marketing Inferno, their network operating system for anything from high-end workstations to consumer electronics. Positioned as the "glue to hold the network infrastructure together", it's aimed where quite a few big players have been gunning for a while. And unlike their previous success such as Unix, C, and C++, this one won't be free. Making history again? Or just marketing it?
http://www.lucent.com says "Website coming soon."

THE FINE PRINT


Margin of Error

Well, we can't be absolutely sure there were 400 booths. In fact, a couple of the sites we've named here might not even have exhibited in the show. But they were kind enough to provide some interesting press kits or briefings for us weary show-surfers, and so we included them anyway. For the authoritative listing of exhibitors, check out

http://events.iworld.com/spring96/iw/exhibitors.html"

OUR SPONSOR


This issue of Netsurfer Focus is sponsored by the month    May 1996

Can you be sure we gave it our most honest shot if someone paid us to do this? Okay, okay, we ate at a few press conferences, but they were handing out chocolate bars to everyone at the show, honest!

CONTACT INFORMATION


Netsurfer Focus Home Page: http://www.netsurf.com/nsf/index.html

Flames, flowers, and flip remarks to: focus@netsurf.com
We appreciate hearing from you even if we do not manage to respond to every message that is sent to us. We reserve the right to quote you in future issues of Netsurfer publications or on our website, so don't say anything stupid, OK?

To subscribe to Netsurfer publications:

By WWW form: http://www.netsurf.com/subscribe.html
By e-mail: nsdigest-request@netsurf.com
Body:

     subscribe nsdigest-text
     subscribe nsdigest-html

CREDITS


Publisher: S. M. Lieu
Contributors: Arthur Bebak, Lawrence Nyveen
Production Manager: Bill Woodcock

Netsurfer Communications, Inc.,
President: Arthur Bebak
Vice President: S. M. Lieu


(c) S. M. Lieu. All rights reserved.
NETSURFER DIGEST is a trademark of Netsurfer Communications, Inc. Other publication, product, and company names may be trademarks of their companies.

"Surfin' U.S.A.", - Chuck Berry/Brian Wilson uncredited lyricist.
Full lyrics at http://gladstone.uoregon.edu/~mwheeler/lyrics/surfin_usa.html#1