My grandad kept this photo on his desk, and called it "The Three Wise Men".

I've always suspected it was a tongue-in-cheek title, suggesting we didn't have sense enough to come in outa the cold.



"....and now for something completely different."


There are a few strange and wonderous places out there, that don't fall into a neat list of categories. High on the list has to be my favorite cartoon strip, Dilbert, by Scott Adams. What a great way to start the morning! Check the archive for the strips over a several week period.

For the TV crowd there's Comedy Central's South Park, or, for the more serious minded, the Computer Chronicles site.

A somewhat offbeat but tuned-in knowledable websource is over at MSG's from the 40's and the WWWWorld news.

A relatively new one on the scene for downloads (marketed as the worlds best) is TUCOWS, or 2 cows.

One of the handiest locators around is Switchboard. It boasts millions of entries, and uses local phone books as it's data base. Then again, maybe you *don't want* to find that old school chum.

If you're not sure where you are or where you're going, take a trip over to MapQuest. Just plugging in the address (ie. follow the directions) and it will locate it on a map for you.

You really don't need a link here to find places like USA Today, CNN or Discovery.

One of the newest, and more exciting uses of "new technology" is in the area of locating missing or abducted children. Take a run over to TRAK's page, and see one of the most fantastic anti-crime uses of the computer era. Most, if not all, of the San Francisco Bay Area law enforcement departments are now on the TRAK system, and it's being accepted favorably nation-wide.


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