TidBITS#534/12-Jun-00
=====================

  Who decides what should appear online? Two articles tackle
  different aspects of that question. First, Adam weighs in on
  Adobe's lawsuit against MacNN over publication of Photoshop 6
  pre-release information. Then, Kirk McElhearn looks at the
  hyperlink and wonders if there's any content behind it. We also
  note the Microsoft breakup ruling, Apple's QuickTime deal with
  RealNetworks, and releases of QuicKeys 5.0 and Illustrator 9.0.

Topics:
    MailBITS/12-Jun-00
    MacNN Sued by Adobe, News at 11
    Click Me (or, The Ubiquity of Hypertext)

<http://www.tidbits.com/tb-issues/TidBITS-534.html>
<ftp://ftp.tidbits.com/issues/2000/TidBITS#534_12-Jun-00.etx>

Copyright 2000 TidBITS Electronic Publishing. All rights reserved.
   Information: <info@tidbits.com> Comments: <editors@tidbits.com>
   ---------------------------------------------------------------

This issue of TidBITS sponsored in part by:
* READERS LIKE YOU! You can help support TidBITS via our voluntary <- NEW!
   contribution program. Special thanks this week to Scott Tilden,
   Andrew Watson, and Ed Miron for their financial support!
   <http://www.tidbits.com/about/support/contributors.html>

* APS Technologies -- 800/443-4199 -- <sales@apstech.com>
   How do you back up your APS hard disks? Try APS tape,
   removable, and CD-R drives! <http://www.apstech.com/>

* WinStar Northwest Nexus. Visit us at <http://www.nwnexus.com/>.
   Internet business solutions throughout the Pacific Northwest.

* Small Dog Electronics: KDS VS-21e 21" Monitor (demo): $599! <------ NEW!
   Buy any new iMac DV and get a FREE 128 MB RAM Upgrade: $1,299!
   PowerLogix G3 400/200/1MB Daughter Card Upgrade: $269!
   For Details: <http://www.smalldog.com/> -- 802/496-7171

* Aladdin Systems: NEW Spring Cleaning 3.5 now shipping! Now 13 <---- NEW!
   powerful cleaning utilities! New iClean tosses out Internet-
   related clutter like cookies, histories, caches files and more.
   <http://www.aladdinsys.com/springcleaning/>

* WORLD-CLASS DATA CENTER! Send your server to digital.forest's <---- NEW!
   data center with multiple high-speed connections, earthquake
   hardened racks, 24-hour monitoring and security, daily backups,
   filtered back-up power, and more...    <http://www.forest.net/>

* GIGABIT SPEEDS for big file transfers. Turn your network into an <- NEW!
   ULTIMATE high speed network with Farallon's Gigabit Switches &
   a PCI card for 10/100/1000 Mbps connectivity. Free technical
   support & 3 YR. WARRANTY! <http://www.farallon.com/tb/gigabit/>
   ---------------------------------------------------------------

MailBITS/12-Jun-00
------------------

**Judge Orders Microsoft Breakup; Company to Appeal** -- U.S.
  District Court Judge Thomas Penfield Jackson last week ordered
  Microsoft be split into two separate enterprises, one focusing on
  operating system software, and the other encompassing Microsoft's
  other business interests, ranging from office applications and
  hardware to games and online services. This ruling comes during
  the penalty phase of the Microsoft antitrust trial; Microsoft has
  repeatedly claimed it will appeal any decision against it, and
  also says it would resist any government action to bypass the
  appeals process via an expedited hearing before the U.S. Supreme
  Court. In his final judgment, Judge Jackson requires Microsoft to
  submit a divestiture plan within four months and to adhere to a
  series of interim restrictions on its business practices until
  three years after the divestiture is complete. Microsoft's spin-
  off businesses would have to remain separate for at least ten
  years. Despite the definitive tone of the order, however, don't
  expect anything to change soon. Microsoft has filed a motion
  seeking a stay of the interim measures, pending appeal, and the
  appeals process for the entire case may drag out two or more years
  before any breakup goes into effect. [GD]

<http://usvms.gpo.gov/ms-final.html>
<http://usvms.gpo.gov/ms-final2.html>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbser=1152>


**RealNetworks Supports QuickTime** -- Apple Computer and
  RealNetworks have announced that RealNetworks has licensed
  QuickTime technology and that RealServer 8 will support streaming
  QuickTime content to Apple's QuickTime Player. Being able to serve
  QuickTime content is a plus for RealNetworks, whose love-hate
  relationship with Microsoft has fueled much of the industry battle
  over streaming media technologies. By licensing and supporting
  QuickTime, RealNetworks strengthens its hand by gaining access to
  the more than 50 million copies of the QuickTime 4 Player
  installed on Macintosh and Windows systems worldwide. Apple
  benefits by QuickTime becoming a fully supported media type on
  RealNetworks' media servers, which are widely deployed and used
  for a variety of online broadcasting applications. The agreement
  supports streaming QuickTime content to Apple's QuickTime Player -
  RealNetworks' RealPlayer client itself will not support QuickTime
  content. A preview of RealServer 8 with QuickTime support is
  available now; RealNetworks says the final version should ship in
  the second half of 2000. [GD]

<http://www.apple.com/pr/library/2000/june/12realnetworks.html>


**Adobe Draws Up Illustrator 9.0** -- With the release of Adobe
  Illustrator 9.0, Adobe Systems is working to draw more Web
  designers to the vector illustration program by providing
  additional drawing and exporting options. The new version includes
  features for creating transparent objects, beefed up layer
  controls, a pixel preview mode for working on Web graphics, and
  the capability to export into Macromedia Flash and SVG (Scalable
  Vector Graphics) formats. Illustrator 9.0 requires Mac OS 8.5 or
  later with at least 64 MB of RAM. The full Illustrator 9.0 package
  costs $400; current Illustrator users can upgrade for $150.
  Registered users of Photoshop, InDesign, PageMaker, and
  competitive products can get Illustrator 9.0 for $250. [JLC]

<http://www.adobe.com/products/illustrator/>
<http://www.macromedia.com/software/flash/>
<http://www.w3.org/Graphics/SVG/>


**QuicKeys 5.0 Adds Speech Triggers and More** -- CE Software has
  released QuicKeys 5.0, a major upgrade to the company's long-
  standing macro utility (see "QuicKeys Pushes My Buttons" in
  TidBITS-492_ for a review of QuicKeys 4). New features in QuicKeys
  5.0 include speech triggers for macros, support for Multiple Users
  in Mac OS 9, new day-of-the-week triggers for performing actions
  at specified times, pop-out toolbars that save screen real estate,
  a screen lock function for privacy, and tabbed toolbars. Two
  important limitations have also been lifted - you can now name
  shortcuts with 250 characters of text instead of 13, and the text
  tool can hold 8 times as much text as before. QuicKeys 5.0
  requires Mac OS 8.5 or higher (with 8.5.1 recommended), and a
  PowerPC-based Macintosh with 32 MB of RAM. QuicKeys 5.0 costs
  $100, with upgrades from 4.0 at $40, and a free 30-day demo
  available. [ACE]

<http://www.cesoft.com/quickeys/qkhome.html>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=05500>


**Poll Results: On the Road Again** -- Last week's poll asking
  which computing and communications gear people find most useful
  while travelling came up with a somewhat surprising winner: while
  respondents were able to choose among high-tech items like
  cellular phones, PDAs, laptop computers, and pagers, old-fashioned
  pen and paper was cited by nearly 70 percent of the respondents.
  Mobile phones, PDAs, and laptop computers were in a tight heat,
  being cited by 51 to 57 percent of respondents, while other
  options like GPS devices and pagers were far behind with only 4
  and 8 percent response. Only seven people thought none of these
  devices were useful. [GD]

<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbpoll=43>


**Quiz Preview: Out of Your Misery**-- Years ago, both Tonya and I
  struggled with painful and debilitating repetitive stress injuries
  (RSI): carpal tunnel syndrome for me and tendonitis for her. After
  several years of adjusting how we live and work, we've both
  recovered completely, though we still avoid certain activities
  like fast-paced computer games and bowling. RSI may be far more
  accepted as a serious medical condition now than in the early
  1990s, but a vast number of computer users still suffer pain
  related to typing or using a mouse, and that pain can spill over
  into other parts of life. So whether you're currently suffering
  from RSI or just want to make sure it doesn't screw up your life,
  visit our home page and test your knowledge with this week's quiz,
  which asks which of a variety of things can prove effective in
  helping to prevent or reduce the severity of repetitive stress
  injuries. The quiz results explain each of the answers, provide
  links to useful articles related to RSI we've published in the
  past along with relevant TidBITS Talk threads, and link to a
  poster (now converted to HTML format too) you can put up near your
  computer to remind you about RSI-reducing behaviors. [ACE]

<http://www.tidbits.com/>


MacNN Sued by Adobe, News at 11
-------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>

  Thanks to an article in the legal newspaper The Recorder forwarded
  by a colleague, we've learned that graphics powerhouse Adobe has
  filed suit against the Macintosh News Network (MacNN) based on
  MacNN's AppleInsider Web site's 30-May-00 publication of details
  from a confidential document about the forthcoming versions of
  Photoshop 6.0 and ImageReady 3.0. Adobe is trying to prevent MacNN
  from disclosing Adobe's trade secrets - which Adobe considers to
  be both the existence of those versions and their specific
  features - and is also seeking damages based on reduced current
  sales and lost competitive advantage.

<http://www.law.com/cgi-bin/gx.cgi/AppLogic+FTContentServer?pagename=law/
View&c=Article&cid=ZZZHLJ8I79C&live=true&cst=4>

  It's an unusual situation. Although the rumor sites frequently
  post potentially damaging confidential information that has been
  leaked, conflicts seldom escalate past requests to remove the
  offending information or legal threats. In this case, Adobe
  contacted Monish Bhatia, MacNN's publisher, and asked that the
  information be removed within 20 minutes or it would file suit.
  Bhatia merely said he'd look into it, and Adobe filed suit the
  following day.


**Why MacNN?** Although Adobe is concentrating its efforts on
  MacNN, which eventually removed the offending material from its
  AppleInsider Web site, we were able to find information about
  Photoshop 6.0 also published by MacUser UK, plus shorter stories
  at MacPublishing Inc.'s MacWEEK.com and MacCentral, both of which
  referenced the MacUser story.

<http://www.macuser.co.uk/macjournal/news/32870.html>
<http://macweek.zdnet.com/2000/05/28/0530pshop.html>
<http://www.maccentral.com/news/0006/01.photoshop.shtml>

  There's no telling if MacNN and MacUser came upon the leaked
  information independently or if one copied the other; neither
  credits the other in their stories, although MacNN's article was
  significantly longer and, according to Adobe, includes portions of
  the leaked document verbatim. The fact that Adobe chose to sue
  MacNN may also indicate a belief that the leak originated with
  MacNN, which, like many rumor sites, actively solicits inside
  information and rumors. However, it also raises the possibility
  that Adobe felt that it could push the MacNN around more easily
  than the larger MacPublishing or the UK-based MacUser, which is
  backed by the large publishing firm Dennis Interactive.


**The View from Mountain View** -- From Adobe's viewpoint, the
  lawsuit makes sense, since having features of a forthcoming
  product revealed to competitors could be problematic. Plus,
  details of a forthcoming product can cut into current sales as
  customers decide to hold off on buying until the new product is
  available.

  According to Henry Perritt, Jr.'s "Law and the Information
  Superhighway" textbook, liability for trade secret
  misappropriation can fall both on someone who learns of a trade
  secret as the result of a special relationship (such as being an
  employee or signing an non-disclosure agreement to receive
  confidential information) and on a third party "who discovers the
  trade secret by accident or through the wrongful conduct of
  another and uses it with knowledge of its trade secret status."
  MacNN would seem to fall into this second category, but for one
  fact: MacNN is a publisher and is thus protected by the First
  Amendment.

  Unfortunately for Adobe, it would seem unlikely that the company
  could win much, if anything, in court. In a recent case that
  addressed similar issues of a Web site posting confidential
  internal information, the actions of the publisher ended up being
  protected by the First Amendment, despite having misappropriated
  trade secrets. In Ford v. Lane, decided in September of 1999,
  Judge Nancy Edmunds of the U.S. District Court for the Eastern
  District of Michigan ruled that although Robert Lane had violated
  Michigan's Uniform Trade Secrets Act in posting confidential Ford
  Motor Company documents on his Web site, BlueOvalNews, Ford's
  request that Lane be forced by injunction to remove Ford's
  documents from his Web site would "constitute an invalid prior
  restraint of free speech in violation of the First Amendment."

<http://www.eff.org/pub/Legal/Cases/ford_v_lane_decision.html>
<http://www.blueovalnews.com/>

  Moreover, it's not clear what Adobe hopes to accomplish with this
  lawsuit. Adobe claims in the Recorder article that damages "could
  conservatively amount to tens of millions of dollars," but there's
  no way that MacNN has that kind of money. And even if Adobe
  manages to put the fear of litigation into the gonzo rumor sites,
  reporters for publications with large legal staffs certainly won't
  shrink from publishing leaked documents if it means a news scoop.
  We've even heard rumblings from journalists threatening not to
  review Adobe software in the future, and no matter what, by suing
  a member of the press, Adobe may have poisoned the well with many
  writers.

  The ruling in Ford v. Lane was not entirely a victory for Lane and
  BlueOvalNews. Judge Edmunds upheld two other portions of the
  temporary restraining order that Ford was attempting to have
  turned into a preliminary injunction. First, "Lane is still
  obligated to comply with that part of the August 25, 1999
  Temporary Restraining Order which required him to file with the
  Court, and serve upon Ford, within ten days, a sworn statement (1)
  identifying with particularity all documents within his
  possession, custody or control which were originated by or for
  Ford, (2) identifying the source (by name or description) of each
  document, and (3) providing details as to how Lane acquired each
  document." And second, "Lane is restrained from (1) committing any
  acts of infringement of Ford's copyrights, including unpublished
  works known by Lane to have been prepared by a Ford employee
  within the scope of his or her employment, or specially ordered or
  commissioned by Ford, if not an employee."

  Think about those requirements for a moment. They say that:

  A) Lane must identify all the Ford documents in his possession,
  identify the source of each document, and provide details as to
  how he acquired each document. Lane claimed that he received the
  documents from anonymous sources.

  B) Lane cannot infringe upon Ford's copyrights, including
  unpublished documents.

  Item A gives Ford as much information as is available about the
  source of the document leaks. If I had passed confidential
  information on to Lane, even anonymously, I would still be
  worried. Item B says, at least to me, that Lane can no longer post
  Ford's confidential information verbatim without being liable for
  copyright infringement.

  Now turn back to the Adobe v. MacNN case. As noted previously, it
  seems unlikely that Adobe can overturn federal First Amendment
  protections with an appeal to the California laws regarding trade
  secrets. (Trade secrets protections generally fall under the
  purview of the states, not the federal government.) However, it
  would seem possible that MacNN could be required to disclose
  information about how it came by the Adobe documents, which could
  help Adobe identify the source of the leaked document. Adobe, like
  many other companies, considers revealing confidential information
  a firing offense, so it's possible that Adobe is looking to make
  an example of someone. Plus, although the Recorder article didn't
  talk about Adobe suing on copyright infringement grounds, the fact
  that Adobe claimed that MacNN reproduced some of the text verbatim
  could be relevant. MacNN's article neither differentiated between
  original and copied content nor referenced the Adobe document
  directly. Adobe's lawyers might be able to make a case for MacNN's
  copying not falling into the fair use exception to copyright.


**The Point of Publishing** -- I find myself of several minds in
  this case. With the Ford v. Lane decision appearing quite similar
  to the untrained eye, Adobe v. MacNN would seem to be a clear-cut
  case of First Amendment protection. As a publisher, I hold the
  First Amendment in the highest regard.

  And yet, I'm disturbed by MacNN's decision to publish this
  information, however they came by it. Certainly Adobe believes
  publication of the Photoshop 6.0 and ImageReady 3.0 features is
  damaging, although in the case of a market leader like Photoshop,
  it's difficult to swallow Adobe's claims of "tens of millions of
  dollars" in damages. But who was MacNN serving by publishing the
  information? The standard argument for publishing rumored
  information in this kind of situation is that it helps users make
  more informed buying or upgrade decisions. Perhaps I'm not
  sufficiently steeped in the graphics world, but I can't see how
  leaking these details directly benefits most users.

  In the hardware world, this argument is easier to make, since
  there's little worse than the feeling of buying a new Mac a week
  before Apple comes out with an improved and cheaper model. With
  software, particularly with a program that has as little serious
  competition as Photoshop, it's harder to justify needing to know
  about forthcoming features. Discounted or even free upgrades are
  almost always available for these programs if you've purchased a
  previous version, especially right before the release, and it's
  unlikely that anyone would put off a purchase of the current
  version of Photoshop or buy another product based on the kind of
  information MacNN published.

  So if users reap no benefit and Adobe stands to suffer, publishing
  this information merely has the effect of helping MacNN make a
  buck off the ads placed on the five Web pages of the story.
  Nothing wrong with that, but I still find it depressing that a
  Macintosh publication would publish information that - for little
  tangible benefit to readers - could have a negative effect on the
  Mac community by damaging one of the industry's primary software
  developers.


  If you're not sure that this lawsuit is a big deal, consider where
  the entire Mac industry might be if the release of the iMac had
  been leaked. What was a huge surprise announcement that catapulted
  Apple back into the center of attention could have been yet
  another product announcement that everyone already knew about. The
  iMac release was primarily about marketing, and Apple couldn't
  afford to have its big news diluted by a leak. Since then, Apple
  has commented in analyst calls reported on by MWJ's Matt
  Deatherage that rumors of constantly impending PowerBooks caused
  significant drops in then-current sales. A majority of those
  rumors - promulgated by highly visible rumor sites - turned out to
  be false, but they meant that Apple was left sitting on inventory
  as everyone waited for the next PowerBook that was supposedly due
  any day.

  Remember, in the Macintosh ecosystem a bit of altruism can go a
  long way.

<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=05237>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=04217>


Click Me (or, The Ubiquity of Hypertext)
----------------------------------------
  by Kirk McElhearn <kirk@mcelhearn.com>

  Links. They're everywhere. All over the Web. Millions of them.
  It's hardly surprising; after all, links make the Web what it is.
  The Web is nothing more than an agreement, or a protocol, called
  HyperText Transfer Protocol (HTTP), that provides a common
  language. This agreement gives us the capability to travel from
  one page to another in the blink of an eye (at least in theory).

  It's generally assumed that these links are what make the Web so
  powerful and useful; you can jump from one idea or thought to
  another. But are these links really powerful and useful? When
  looking up information on Henry David Thoreau, for example, how do
  we know that the information found on the Internet about his life
  and writings represents the meat you're searching for? Much of the
  time, we jump from factoid to factoid, entrusting often anonymous
  link creators with the sagacity to sort the wheat from the chaff.

  The Web is said to be the library of the future thanks to this
  system of links and the vast amounts of information that can be
  made available. But how is the Web of today qualitatively
  different from an old fashioned paper library? When I look
  something up in a card catalog, I follow a "link" to a book. The
  only difference is that I must move my physical body to get to it.
  In that book, I may see a word, a phrase, a name, or an idea that
  I want to explore further. If the book is well-organized I may use
  notes, references, or even an index to do so. To see what others
  have said on the same subject, I can go back to the card catalog
  and search for another link, or look on the shelves at the books
  near the one I have been reading. These links are just an arm's
  length away.

  So while the idea behind links is not new, the implementation is.
  Using the Web is much easier than trudging through the links in a
  physical library. Or at least, it was supposed to be when the
  people who laid the conceptual grounds for hypertext - Vannevar
  Bush, Ted Nelson, Douglas Engelbart - formulated their ideas for
  linking vast amounts of information. They felt that the human mind
  operates by association, and thus the best way to navigate through
  large quantities of information is by linking related documents.
  That's probably true, but none of these hypertext pioneers could
  have envisioned where we've ended up after a few short years of
  the World Wide Web.

<http://www.iberia.vassar.edu/~mijoyce/What_s_hypertext.html>


**Where Have All the Editors Gone?** We have entered the culture
  of the link - a culture where the links themselves are seen as
  more valuable than the information to which the links are supposed
  to lead. The very concept behind portals points this out - portals
  are designed to be gateways to other content, to lead you to other
  places through links. Some portals provide their own content as
  well, but many merely add lists of links to outside sources.

  How many times have you surfed the Web, looking for some
  particular nugget of information, only to find yourself going from
  page to page, each containing nothing but links? And sometimes,
  after going through a circle of reciprocal links, you find
  yourself right back where you started. Yet one could argue that
  the most useful Web pages are just long lists of links with no
  inherent content. After all, what do search engines provide? They
  just spit out a tailor-made list of links.

  One problem may be that as the Web has become more commercial,
  many companies are finding it more commercially viable to provide
  links than to provide content. After all, links are easier to
  generate than content, particularly quality content. It is worth
  considering whether or not this practice merely meets the demands
  of users. Do people value a long list of links more than a long
  article? In many cases, yes, because a list of links offers
  unlimited promise without the immediate responsibility of reading
  and comprehending text. People are seldom interested in reading
  long texts online, so maybe lists of links are the only thing that
  meet the requirement that content be both copious and free.

  Writers often complain there are no more editors - and they may be
  right, in many cases. This is exactly what pages of links show us.
  Sure, someone has chosen those links, but since the goal is
  usually more quantitative than qualitative, it is still up to you
  to weed out the good from the bad.

  There are some sites that go to the extra effort of editing their
  lists of links. One that comes to mind is About.com, which even
  puts human faces on their "expert guides." There are also Web
  catalogs, such as Yahoo and even Apple's iReview that not only
  categorize the content they find, they also choose what to include
  and in some cases mention why it was chosen.

<http://www.about.com/>
<http://www.yahoo.com/>
<http://ireview.mac.com/>

  This is not to imply links are inherently bad. In many Internet
  publications, they are used sparingly and for informational
  purposes. Good links can take you to background information,
  provide product specifications, or show related articles, if they
  are used intelligently. In large part, venues that use links
  sparingly and appropriately have editors who focus on original
  content. Although anyone can be a publisher on the Internet, it
  seems that all too few people can be editors on the Internet.


**Don't Link, Think!** Sometimes I wish I could find some dead
  ends - the kinds of pages that are sufficiently confident in the
  quality of their content that they don't feel the need to send you
  off somewhere else. These are the pages that provide information
  you can use to think for yourself rather than incessantly clicking
  yet another promising link.

  For this is one of the problems with links - they tempt you to
  avoid thinking, to put it off until later. While surfing the Web,
  you're like someone on a treasure-hunt trying to put together all
  the clues so you can grab the gold at the end of the tunnel. But
  the tunnel has many exits, all of which lead more or less the same
  way. There is no guarantee that the ideas to which you are
  directed are objective, or that they present a balanced view of
  the subject you are examining. In fact, it's more likely that they
  do not offer a balanced, objective view, instead concentrating on
  a single aspect of the topic with a specific bias firmly in place.
  Instead of seeking information on your own, you are just being led
  to the next pasture, where the grass must be greener. It takes
  force of will to stop, to look at things and make a clear-headed,
  in-depth assessment of the materials you've encountered.

  What if you wanted to find out about China's policies in Tibet, or
  issues surrounding prominent political candidates, or the health
  risks of second-hand tobacco smoke? If you stumble on a Web page
  set up by, say, the tobacco industry about smoking, you're
  virtually guaranteed to see only one side of the issue. Plus, any
  links that you would follow from there would most likely lead you
  to other pages that express the same point of view, or support it.

  And even if you're trying to do research, how did you get to that
  page? Probably via a link from a search engine. After all, it's
  easy to find information using a search engine. You enter a few
  keywords, and the search engine spits back a collection of
  supposedly relevant links. But the search engines' results aren't
  always as relevant as they might be - prominent placement is
  sometimes sold to the highest bidder and there are a variety of
  techniques for making some pages more likely to turn up than
  others (which is why seemingly innocent searches often turn up
  pornography sites). You never know whether the pages you've found
  even cover the spectrum of possible opinions. But there are a lot
  of links beckoning you to click, and the context supplied with
  each link is minimal at best.

  Of course, propaganda has existed for a long time in the real
  world too, and no one is any more excused from evaluating the bias
  of an Internet source than a real world source. But the
  preponderance of links on a Web page can actually deceive by
  offering what would seem to be supporting material and external
  opinions. In fact, they're just links, nothing more.


**Link Me** -- What happens when you follow these links? You react
  with an itchy mouse finger, but not with your mind. Instead of
  finishing the paragraph you are reading, you're already off to
  another server to get more information. Your eyes are attracted by
  underlined text because it stands out - it's different, and must
  somehow be more important than the plain text that surrounds it.
  Not only do you not take the necessary time to reflect upon and
  internalize what you are reading, but sometimes you find yourself
  following link after link, on a wild spider chase after a
  completely different subject. Our minds are becoming more and more
  dispersed by these reflexes, and our attention spans, already
  shortened by television, are shrinking even more.

  I remember how I reacted when I first got Internet access. I have
  always been a book-lover, and libraries are, for me, places of
  great enjoyment. I started by searching on the Web for a few
  authors, composers, and other subjects that interested me. I was
  awake until very late following link after link, looking to find
  still more information about my interests. That lasted a week or
  so before I realized that all I was going to get was the journey
  itself, and in this case, the journey was a poor reward.

  What worries me most is how this clicking reflex has become one of
  our dominant modes of information retrieval. First we scanned the
  car radio, then we used the remote control to surf the TV, and now
  we click links on the Web. We are not taking time to think about
  what we do; we are just using gut reactions. And our children are
  being trained to do this through computer games, where they click
  on hot spots to see something happen. About a year ago, I remember
  sitting in the kitchen eating lunch with my son, who was then four
  years old. He had played a game on the computer that morning and
  was entranced by all the neat things that popped up as he clicked
  in different places. He asked me what would happen if he clicked
  on the radiator. I laughed then. I am not laughing now.

  Click. Click. Click...

  [Kirk McElhearn is a freelance translator and technical writer who
  lives in a village in the French Alps.]


$$

 Non-profit, non-commercial publications may reprint articles if
 full credit is given. Others please contact us. We don't guarantee
 accuracy of articles. Caveat lector. Publication, product, and
 company names may be registered trademarks of their companies.

 This file is formatted as setext. For more information send email
 to <setext@tidbits.com>. A file will be returned shortly.

 For information: how to subscribe, where to find back issues,
 and more, email <info@tidbits.com>. TidBITS ISSN 1090-7017.
 Send comments and editorial submissions to: <editors@tidbits.com>
 Back issues available at: <http://www.tidbits.com/tb-issues/>
 And: <ftp://ftp.tidbits.com/issues/>
 Full text searching available at: <http://www.tidbits.com/search/>
 -------------------------------------------------------------------


