                      THE ONLINE WORLD MONITOR
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The Online World Monitor newsletter (ISSN: 0805-6315) is a bi-monthly, 
online publication. Initially meant as a free, optional offering for 
supporters of The Online World resources handbook, it is also open for 
subscription by others. 

The book and the newsletter are companions. While the book describes the 
online world as it is, the newsletter tracks changes. It can more freely 
focus on selected offerings or phenomena than can be done within the strict 
framework of the book. 

The newsletter contains tales about discoveries that never made it to the 
handbook, glimpses of what goes on, trends, tests, spotlights on important 
new developments around the world. 
 
Volume 4 Number 3 (August 1997): 
 
   1. Stay away from my mailbox!  
   2. Practical hints: The new Lynx   
   3. Mailing list software   
   4. Privacy & Safety  
   5. Update Internet Trends  
   6. About the newsletter and The Online World shareware book  
 
Volume 4 Number 2 (April 1997): 
 
   1. Privacy & Safety: Don't exaggerate!.  
   2. Update Internet Trends  
   3. Practical hints: Email from your Browser  
   4. Internet's languages  
   5. One day on the Internet.  
   6. Web Watch   
 
Volume 4 Number 1 (January 1997):

   1. Kidlink (Managing a large virtual organization)
   2. Update Internet Trends 
   3. Practical hints (Cache, Html Post-processing)
   4. Web Watch

Volume 3 Number 5 (November 1996):

   1. European focus on communication  
   2. Update Internet Trends 
   3. Slipr (replacement for The Internet Adapter) 
   4. Web Watch  

Volume 3 Number 4 (August 1996):

   1. Have Netscape lost its momentum? 
   2. Update Internet Trends 
   3. Finding information about communication
   4. Web Watch

Volume 3 Number 3 (June 1996):

   1. Indexing the Web
   2. Internet Trends
   3. Best in Test
   4. Web Watch

Volume 3 Number 2 (April 1996):

   1. Will Internet collapse?  
   2. Exploiting the FAQ resource  
   3. Alta Vista by email
   4. Finding mailing lists 
   5. Web Watch

Volume 3 Number 1 (February 1996):

   1. Searching the handbook online. 
   2. Be prepared to pay for the good things.
   3. World Wide Web by email. Applications and tricks.
   4. Update on Internet trends.
   5. Web Watch.

Volume 2 Number 5 (December 1995):

   1. The Alta Vista search engine.
   2. The travelling modem.
   3. Update on Internet trends.
   4. Web Watch.

Volume 2 Number 4 (October 1995):

   1. Update on Internet trends.
   2. Netscape hints.

Volume 2 Number 2 (July 1995):

   Special issue: Internet trends.

Volume 2 Number 2 (April 1995):

   1. Online India  
   2. Tests, practical hints
      - The SlipKnot Web browser
      - The Free Agent news reader
      - To CompuServe by OzWin
      - Telnet to CompuServe
      - Telnet "back home" from CompuServe
      - Automated monitoring of news
   3. Important developments

Volume 2 Number 1 (February 1995):

   1. Focus on China
   2. Test, practical hints
      About: File transfers, finding files, efficient netnews, 
      information finding strategies, email software. . .
   3. Spotlight on important developments.
   4. Interesting conferences, newsgroups, discoveries.
   5. Important changes.

Volume 1 Number 4 (December 1994): 

   1. Focus on Africa (File: TOW SAMPLE4)
   2. Update: Europe
   3. Spotlight on important developments:
      - Patent searches on the Internet
      - Trend: commercial services on the Internet
   4. Pointers
   5. Interesting conferences, newsgroups, discoveries.
   6. Important changes

Volume 1 Number 3 (October 1994):

   1. Accessing the Web from a Unix shell account (File: TOW SAMPLE2)
   2. Test result: Mosaic out, Netscape in?
   3. Spotlight on important developments. 
   4. Pointers to Interesting conferences, newsgroups, and resources
   5. Tracking Changes, - or sic transit gloria mundi.  

Volume 1 Number 2 (August 1994):

   1. The World Wide Web resource: Tests of the Lycos WWW search engine.  
      Other "find your way through the maze" services. 
   2. The World Wide Web by email. (File: TOW SAMPLE1)
   3. on important developments 
   4. Pointers: Interesting conferences, newsgroups, and resources
   5. Changes 

Volume 1 Number 1 (June 1994) had the following contents:

   1. The batch approach to networking. (File: TOW SAMPLE3)
   2. Spotlight on important developments: Telnet to CompuServe. SimTel. 
      Live voice conversations over the Internet. 
   3. Pointers to Interesting conferences, newsgroups, and resources
   4. Changes - sic transit gloria mundi
      Services come and go, change names, move to other "homes". 
      What the heck is going on?

Supporters of The Online World book gets one free copy of the newsletter. 
Those registering for six updates per year, gets a one year subscription 
to the newsletter. 

For information about the book, send email to LISTSERV@LISTSERV.NODAK.EDU 
with the following command in the text of your mail: 

    GET TOW.MASTER
                                                                 
Information is also available on the World Wide Web. For a list of links to 
mirror sites, check

  http://login.eunet.no/~presno/bok/mirrors.html             [Source - Norway]
  http://www.simtel.net/simtel.net/presno/bok/mirrors.html   [U.S.A.]

Gopher: the gopher at login.eunet.no (URL: gopher://login.eunet.no/11/1).

Subscription form:

Yes, I would like to subscribe to The Online World Monitor newsletter. 
Please fill in the following information: 
Name  ___________________________________________
Company _______________________________
Address__________________________________________
City ___________________ State or Province ________ ZIP or Postal Code ________
Country __________     
Email Address: __________________

Delivered by electronic mail (only). Mark of your choice of format with an 
(x) below: 

    (  )  Ascii text format
    (  )  Html format (text with hypertext codes)
    (  )  Both formats.

Newsletter Subscription rate:                   NOK 175/year (around US$25)

Payment (mark off your choice with (x) below): 

    (  )  Check or money order payable to Odd de Presno in U.S. funds enclosed
    (  )  Bank transfer (SWIFT) to 6311.05.27189 
          (Kredittkassen 4800 Arendal, Norway)   
    (  )  VISA    (  )  MasterCard    ( ) American Express


    Credit card number __________________________________ Exp date _______

    Note: You should not send your credit card number by email, unless
          the data is sent in PGP encrypted form. For information about
          how to do this, read the instruction at the end of this 
          appendix. If PGP is not available, use fax, or ordinary mail. 


The Online World Monitor newsletter
Odd de Presno
4815 Saltrod, Norway.

Email: presno@login.eunet.no
Fax  : +47-370-27111

--------------------------------------------------
How to send your registration using PGP encryption 
--------------------------------------------------

To use this method, you must have a copy of the freeware program PGP 
(Pretty Good Privacy) by Philip Zimmermann. It is available for MS-DOS, 
VAX/VMS, Unix, and other computers. 
 
Various versions of this program can be retrieved from online services all 
over the world. If you have access to the Internet, use Archie to locate a 
recent version. I am currently using version 2.6. You can get a copy from
the following Web address:

   http://login.eunet.no/~presno/sw/pgp26.zip

Follow these steps to encrypt your registration form (you may be able
to do this _without_ reading the documentation): 

Step 1
------
Store your completed registration form on your disk using the file name
ORDER.FRM. 

Cut out the text below, and store it using the file name ONLINE.ASC.

*-----BEGIN PGP PUBLIC KEY BLOCK-----
Version: 2.3a

mQBNAi0jCjcAAAECAKBK1u0JZHZSEh50P3TdgSApuZCEWQh2Nsxw1pYrC4bgy/md
bAN3UFrkgwShtnpPIjm+GcXFBiKpZ5kDuT9T9x0ABRG0FW9wcmVzbm9AZXh0ZXJu
LnVpby5ubw==
=AXgT
*-----END PGP PUBLIC KEY BLOCK-----

Remove the asterisk ()* character at the beginning of the first and last 
lines of the PGP Public Key before adding it to your keyring. For example,
the line

   *-----BEGIN PGP PUBLIC KEY BLOCK-----

should be changed to

   -----BEGIN PGP PUBLIC KEY BLOCK-----

Do the same with the last line to make it

   -----END PGP PUBLIC KEY BLOCK-----

Step 2
------
Add ONLINE.ASC to your public keyring using the command:

  pgp -ka online.asc

Step 3
------
Encrypt ORDER.FRM using the command

  pgp -ea order.frm presno@login.eunet.no

The resulting file will be called ORDER.ASC.

Step 4
------
Send ORDER.ASC by email to presno@login.eunet.no , or presno@grida.no .


