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Let's Get This Straight: Free the Windows source code?

Scott Rosenberg
Let's Get This Straight: By Scott Rosenberg. Why Microsoft should think about freeing the source code to Windows.

21st: Popcorn with your operating system?

Scott Rosenberg
Microsoft beams its vision of computing's future into dark movie theaters across the continent.

21st: Let's Get This Straight: Media genuflect before Intel's royal-succession pageant

Scott Rosenberg
Let's Get This Straight: By Scott Rosenberg. Media genuflect before Intel's royal-succession pageant as Andrew Grove steps down.

The Quicken and the deadbeat

Andrew Leonard
How Intuit and Microsoft are saving us all from bankruptcy and crushing personal debt. Or not.

21st:Please, Mr. Postman?

Andrew Leonard
Netscape's and Microsoft's software just don't get along -- and God anyone who tries to get them to make up and be nice.

Insider's guide to Amsterdam

David Downie
David Downie reveals the best places to eat, stay and play in the Netherlands' most vibrant city.

Living by The Book

Julie Caniglia
Inside the cult of the Franklin Planner -- where organization equals salvation.

21st: To Be or not to Be

Greg Lindsay
It's fast, it's fresh and it already has a cult following. But will the new high-end operating system find a market?

Online ticketing, Part 2

Jenn Shreve
Online ticketing, Part 2: Jenn Shreve compares the features and bugs of the four main online travel services.

I booked it online

Jenn Shreve
Is online travel booking really the way of the future? Jenn Shreve assesses the advantages of online travel services.

Let a hundred modems bloom

Andrew Leonard
Let a hundred modems bloom: By Andrew Leonard. As the Net grows in China, the authorities keep looking for ways to control it.

Parental advisory warning

Cynthia Joyce
Parental advisory warning. By Cynthia Joyce. Do's and don'ts of getting mom and dad online

21st: Are we ready for the library of the future?

Cate T. Corcoran
Librarians have promised to put the world of information at the public's fingertips. Now they're stuck fixing bugs and teaching people how to use a mouse.

The littlest harlot

Tracy Quan
A working girl pays tribute to her role model.

Media Circus: Standing room only

Catherine Seipp
To all those friends I have unfairly skewered in print, I can say only one thing from the humble bottom of my heart: get over it!

21st: Apache’s free-software warriors

Andrew Leonard
The most popular Web server software on the Net isn't made by Microsoft. Or Netscape. It isn't made by any traditional company at all. How'd that happen?

21st

Scott Rosenberg
The Net becomes WorldCom's fiefdom

21st: Elegance and Entropy

Scott Rosenberg
Ellen Ullman talks about what makes programmers tick.

21st: Spam bombers

Andrew Leonard
Remove, filter or delete -- whatever you do with junk e-mail, there's more on the way.

Clicking for Godot

Scott Rosenberg
Salon 21st: Clicking for Godot: By Scott Rosenberg. In the world of interactive art, everyone's waiting for the next Shakespeare -- or at least hoping that computers can deliver a good time.

21st: Reality check

Scott Rosenberg
The digital-money revolutionaries who are giddily predicting a "friction-free" economic utopia need to sober up.

21st: Apple apostates

Jenn Shreve
Veteran Mac software developers are working for Microsoft. Do they feel they've "gone over to the dark side"? No way.

Someone to watch over you

Andrew Leonard
Your boss thinks you're using the Net to goof off. With programs like LittleBrother, he can track your every click -- and block sites that make you "unproductive."

Sexing the Machine

Laura Miller
Three digital women debate gender, technology and the Net. An e-mail roundtable with authors Ellen Ullman and Sadie Plant.
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