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"He Who Rides the Wild Elephant . . ."
by Carter Henderson

SUMMARY: Pizza, pornography, and cemetery plots--you'd be hard-pressed to name anything that isn't available on the Internet. Here's a look at what's out there, what it means, and what's next on the wild-elephant ride that is the Internet.

"Whether you sell stock or sell suits, the Internet has changed the world," says Richard A. Grasso, chairman of the New York Stock Exchange, and he couldn’t be more on the money.

Today there’s scarcely an aspect of our national life that isn’t being upended by the torrent of information available on the hundreds of millions of sites crowding the Internet, not to mention its ability to keep us in constant touch with each other via electronic mail. "If the automobile and aerospace technology had exploded at the same pace as computer and information technology," says Microsoft, "a new car would cost about $2 and go 600 miles on a thimble of gas. And you could buy a Boeing 747 for the cost of a pizza."

Probably the biggest payoff, however, is the billions of dollars it’s saving companies in producing goods and serving the needs of their customers. Nothing like it has been seen since the beginning of the Industrial Revolution, when power-driven machines began producing more in a day than men could turn out in nearly a year. "We view the growth of the Internet and e-commerce as a global megatrend," says Merrill Lynch, "along the lines of the printing press, the telephone, the computer and electricity."

You would be hard pressed to name something that isn’t available on the Internet. Consider: books, health care, movie tickets, construction materials, baby clothes, stocks, cattle feed, music, electronics, antiques, tools, real estate, toys, autographs of famous people, wine, pornography, and airline tickets. And even after you’ve moved on to your final resting-place there’s no reason those you love can’t keep in touch. A company called www.FinalThoughts.com offers a place for you to store "after-life e-mails" you can send upstairs with the help of a "guardian angel."

Kids today are so computer savvy that it virtually insures the U.S. will remain the unchallenged leader in cyber space for the foreseeable future. Nearly all children in families with incomes of more than $75,00 a year have home computers, according to a study by the David and Lucile Packard Foundation. Youngsters from 2 to 17 at all income levels have computers with 52% of those connected to the Internet. Most kids use computers to play games (some for 30 hours or more a week), with many teenage girls thinking nothing of rushing home from school to have e-mail chats with friends they had just left.

"Deep Magic"
Before setting out to wander the deep canyons of cyberspace it’s useful to get a grip on its new words and phrases which are de rigueur in our constantly changing technological world. The railroads gave us "getting sidetracked and "full steam ahead," automobiles added "pedal to the metal" and "firing on all cylinders," and the airplane "on a wing and a prayer" and "flying high."

Cyberspace slang, however, is rarely tied to the familiar, with occasional exceptions such as "virus" for destructive programs capable of replicating themselves in computers throughout the land almost instantly or in "real time." There’s "deep magic" meaning a mind-bogglingly complex technology key to a program or system, "plug-and-play" for new employees who are undoubtedly fluent in "geek speak" and ready to earn their keep without any additional training. Then there’re PONAs for "persons of no account" who aren’t online, while printed magazines and newspapers that have been upgraded into "treeware."

As the late Jimmy Durante used to say "Everybody wants to get into da act," and today’s cyber explosion backs him up. "We use a computer-controlled laser," proclaims a company’s ad in Men’s Journal, and we’ve "developed our own digitally enhanced process that uses liquid laser prototypes to maintain the precision that our standards require. And then we left nothing to chance. We used lasers where human hands were too inconsistent. We generated 3D computer models until every last contour was meticulously refined" etc. etc. The product? Sneakers.

What’s clear is that whether we like it or not, the Internet is upending our lives and there is no turning back. "The Internet is just 20% invented," says cyber pioneer Jake Winebaum. "The last 80% is happening now."

It’s not uncommon in cyber hotspots such as Silicon Valley or Seattle to see a half dozen post-teenagers working off wooden doors stretched across two sawhorses in a loft somewhere in the low-rent district. Then deep into the night when their brains start slowing down, they curl up on an old sofa next to a makeshift kitchen to grab a little shut-eye before beginning again. They’re driven by the conviction that writing computer programs is the way to fabulous riches, often dubbed "the young man’s Viagra." So much so that Forbes magazine ran a cover story headlined "Getting Rich at the Speed of Light." It’s all such fun. And is it any wonder that when the management consulting firm KPMG International polled college seniors, 74% of them said they expect to become millionaires. And why not? They’ve seen the way America’s new super-rich live and they want in.

The transformative power of really big money descended on 41-year-old Mark Cuban, who sold Broadcast.com which he co-founded to the mega-portal Yahoo for $5.7 billion. Cuban had been scrapping along selling garbage bags, newspapers, stamps, and milk before the arrival of Broadcast.com growing out of his idea to showcase everything from ball games to business meetings over the Internet.

As soon as the windfall arrived it was party time for Mark Cuban. He started out by paying $15 million for a 25,000-square-feet Dallas chateau on seven acres with fountains, pool, tennis court and playground. He then plunked down $40 million for a jet, topped off by $280 million for the lackluster Dallas Mavericks basketball team and half the new coliseum where they play. He also bought his girlfriend a $90,000 Mercedes 560 SL for her 28th birthday.

But Cuban’s spending pales in comparison with Microsoft cofounder Paul Allen who bought basketball’s Portland Trailblazers, football’s Seattle Seahawks, a Boeing 757 jet, a yacht, and estates all over the planet. He then laid out $240 million to build a new museum called the Experience Music Project celebrating music in the Northeast where he got his start and is something of a musician himself having recently recorded a rock album with his band Grown Men.

Oracle Chairman Lawrence J. Ellison is also enjoying his megabucks by purchasing a passel of goodies including an Italian Marchetti fighter jet and starting construction on a $40 million estate modeled on a medieval Japanese palace.

There are those newly big rich who are so busy making money they simply do not have the time to furnish their digs. But not to worry, a new "turnkey mansion" service has emerged to help them out. Whereas Cornelius Vanderbilt had his magnificent Newport mansion designed to his instructions by the same firm that did the façade of New York’s Metropolitan Museum of Art, today’s big rich can have them both built and elegantly furnished.

One firm’s Aspen model, for example, has "the master bed layered with Pratesi sheets and a custom-made silk and Ultrasuede comforter. The children’s beds are done up in red-white-and-blue Ralph Lauren. The kids also get color-coordinated iMacs and computer desks filled with an assortment of video games. Mom and Dad’s media room comes with an RCA Digital Satellite System, a Sharp Data Grade video projector, and a Mitsubishi 40-inch stereo television/VCR.

Town & Country magazine, which chronicles the goings-on of the super rich, devoted the cover story in a recent issue to "The New Age of Affluence" and its "cyberstars," including a pictorial visit to those happily whiling away their days in the new "Valley of the Dollars."

Getting to "Yes Please"
But as with everything else in life, there’s no such thing as a free lunch, which countless young Silicon Valley Lotharios at the peak of their sexual desire are learning to their sorrow. The U.S. free enterprise system, which reaches a frenzy in the Valley, has recognized that the local love boat is taking on water and is rushing in to save the day. Dating services are approaching overload. Seminars and love doctors are teaching gents with stock options worth millions how to find and capture their heart’s desire in this romantic wasteland. And dot-com facilitators such as www.Matchmaker.com are struggling to bring the sexes together online with some wall-climbing nerds offering $10,000 for finding them a girl who will say "Yes, please." Cyberspace, adds Hollywood Madam Heidi Fleiss, is hot since even "Call girls don’t need madams any more, just modems."

One reality losers in this love bazaar must face is that they weren’t picked because they were out of shape. But not to worry since the cyber age has the answer to this one too. Computerized fitness programs with audio, visual and cyber personal trainers are ready to turn your home and treadmill into your own personal health club. Turn on www.iFit.com’s "One-On-One Training" audio workouts and you can bend and stretch to everything from Classic Rock to Country Favorites." Its "Adventure" series video workouts will automatically adjust the speed and incline of your iFit-compatible treadmill as you gaze into your TV screen and experience the "beautiful rock formations of Utah’s Red Rock" or "the tropical paradise of Hawaii."

If you’re eager to cash in on the e-commerce revolution, but haven’t a clue as to what it’s all about, you can still make your fortune by spending a few dollars to register the generic name of something millions of people are looking to buy over the Internet and then wait for the offers to roll in. The domain name Drugs.com fetched $823,000, Loans.com went for $1.25 million, and Business.com brought in an astonishing $7.5 million. www.DomainStats.com estimates that some eight million domain names have been registered so far with thousands more warming up in the bullpen. The very first domain name ever registered was Symbolics.com on March 15, 1985.

People who lock up valuable names in the hopes of selling them later at a turbocharged profit have been dubbed "cybersquatters." One squatter registered the name Warrensapp.com, the name of a Tampa Bay Buccaneer lineman for $5,000. "Only in America could you steal someone’s identity and sell it back to them," Sapp told ESPN. Interesting thing is that Warren Sapp doesn’t have the undisputed right to his name as a dot-com since there are others out there with the same name. So instead of paying the $5,000 ransom, Sapp dreamed up the name www.Big99.com using his football jersey number which gets the ID job done just fine.

"Fireflies before the storm"
IBM CEO Louis V. Gerstner Jr. calls the thousands of Internet startups that disappeared soon after their initial capital infusions ran out "fireflies before the storm." Their names are legion, and more have been rushing to join without letup. Garden.com (gardening supplies), Living.com (home furnishings), Toysmart.com (educational playthings), Eve.com (beauty products), Homewarehouse.com (household products), Cyberhomes (where prospective home buyers could access listings of properties for sale), Red Gorilla.com (online billing), Craftshop.com (arts and crafts store), and Babygear.com (discount baby products) are all illustrative of what Gerstner dubs "dot-toast." If you’re interested in what an estimated 125,000 surfers a week think are the next dot-com failures you can log on to "Fu"edCompany.com and compete for points in the site’s dead pool.

These have taken place as the number of online customers has been exploding. It’s believed the Internet was born in 1969 when two computers at the University of California, Los Angeles, were connected by a 15-foot cable with bits of meaningless data flowing between them. Since then the Net has taken off with some 137 million computers online plus another 152 million outside the US, according to the United States Internet Council in Washington, D.C. And while the number of Internet-linked computers is surging, the volume of traffic they’re carrying is increasing even faster. Some projections have it doubling every 100 days.

This is not surprising since a hallmark of the Cyber Age is connectivity and the sharing of that most valuable of resources in today’s economy - information. The assertion that "Information is meant to be free" is an increasing reality since it can be moved from those who have it to those who need it not only in the twinkling of an eye, but unlike other media at virtually no cost. This computer-driven contribution to the vitality of the U.S. economy is immeasurable.

Gov. Angus King of Maine has announced the nation’s first initiative to offer every one of the state’s seventh graders a free laptop computer to use at school or at home. Some 14,000 students a year would receive them with access to the Internet beginning in the fall of 2002. Within six years, every youngster in Maine from the seventh grade on up would be given laptops to keep for their very own. Gov. King says his plan would bridge the "digital divide" between students who already have computers and those who do not at a cost to the state of at least $50 million.

The governor’s plan obviously has a long way to go before it’s approved by state legislators besieged by other claims on Maine’s treasury. But as King puts it, "Eight years ago, I might have wanted to give every kid a chain saw. But now there’s no doubt the people with the highest level of digital competence win."

Auction Mania
Auction sites have been springing up all over the Internet, but the undisputed Big Kahuna is eBay operating out of its sparkling headquarters in San Jose, California, whose close to 13 million registered users on any given day place 1,000 bids a minute on some four million items put up for sale from antiques to sports memorabilia.

You simply go to eBay’s Web site <www.ebay.com>, register, post a description of what you have to sell along with photos and a minimum price if you like. Bids from interested buyers appear on your computer screen, which is instantly updated as better bids come in. Once the auction ends, the highest bidder is obliged to pay for the item, usually with a money order or cashier’s check, before it’s delivered. While most auction sites follow eBay’s lead by starting off with the lowest bid, others such as www.Basement.com and www.OutletZoo.com start prices high and drop them little by little until the item is sold.

There are some things eBay won’t sell, such as guns, ammunition, stock, alcohol and tobacco, and it continually expands the list with new no-no’s such as fake ID’s, police badges, dynamite, bazookas and soiled underwear. One young man sought to auction off his virginity with the top bid coming in at one cent before eBay nixed the sale. It also pulled the plug on someone who placed his kidney up for sale with the bidding hitting $5.7 million before eBay realized that selling human organs is a felony. eBay has also been troubled by would-be sellers who abscond with the dough after receiving, say, $1,000 for rare Beanie Babies, so it now requires them to provide a credit card number before putting their item up for sale.

But most things sellers want to dangle before bidders’ eyes are welcomed on Internet auction sites from George Washington memorabilia, to a video designed just for cats, the world’s only handwritten and postmarked letter mailed from the Titanic, and a copy of the Declaration of Independence printed in 1776. A 65 million-year old dinosaur was recently added to the list along with the necklace worn by Princess Diana at her last public appearance made up of 178 diamonds measuring in excess of 50 carats with five matching cultured pearls. Occasionally bidders get carried away as one high roller did when his winning bid for the first BMW X5 sport utility vehicle to roll off the assembly line totaled $159,100, or three times its sticker price.

The rest of the world is moving into cyberspace more slowly than the US and among the developing nations it’s hardly noticeable at all. UN Secretary Kofi Annan is determined to change this through the United Nations Information Technology Service by training large numbers of people to tap into the income-enhancing power of the Internet. He’s also proposing an Internet health network for 10,000 locations in poor lands to give their clinics and hospitals access to the latest state-of-the-art medical knowledge in the advanced countries of the world.

Americans spend more on entertainment than on clothing or health care, and the convergence of computers and telecommunications is generating new ways to amuse ourselves undreamed of until now.

Bring up the Web site of Computer Gaming World magazine and you suddenly become a stranger in a strange land. Cyber versions of golden oldies such as tiddlywinks are nowhere to be found, and in their place are PC-powered Planescape: Torment; Tomb Raider: The Last Revolution; Final Fantasy VIII; and Abomination.

The editors who run Computer Gaming World, CGW for short, carefully select the best games of the year and are upfront about who they are and how they do it. "Through a process more shrouded in secrecy than a Masonic ritual," they proclaim, "the cabal of misfits and gentle psychopaths that are the CGW editors engaged in their annual orgy of self-important opinions, personal insult, and ritualistic ‘Amok Time’ combat to determine…" the best games.

One way that working stiffs amuse themselves is by using the e-mail feature on their computers to send and receive personal messages. It has reached the point where the American Management Association believes 30% of major US companies regularly snoop on their employees’ messages. The privately owned MicroData Group in Topsfield, Massachusetts, offers to help out with its Cameo monitoring program which allows corporations to scan their employees’ e-mail messages searching for inappropriate activity. Cameo can sift through up to 50,000 emails an hour looking for specific tip-off words which when found are passed along to a designated manager for action. The list includes "resume," "job offer," "signing bonus," "pipe bombs," "anarchy," "reefer" and "fondle."

An Unexpected Gift from the Gods
Every now and then an industry will get an unexpected gift from the gods, which in the case of the convenience business has been the surge of women out of the home and into the paid labor force. This puts a premium on anything that can save working women time from ready-to-serve meals to dry cleaning delivered directly to their front doors.

Women now work in nearly three-quarters of the 35 million US households containing married couples aged 25 to 54. They also hold more than 55% of both bachelor’s and master’s degrees awarded by US colleges and are rapidly closing the gender gap between recipients of PhDs. Any woman looking for a role model in the executive ranks of business doesn’t have to look far.

Nearly one out of three working wives today is paid more than her husband, up from fewer than one in five in 1980, and according to the IRS, about 41% of the 3.3 million Americans reporting incomes of $500,000 or more are women They are also moving into positions of power in corporate America such as Carleton Fiorina, president and CEO of the high-tech wunderkind Hewlett-Packard, the 11th largest corporation in America; Meg Whitman, CEO of eBay; Charlotte Beers, chairman of the huge J. Walter Thompson advertising agency, or Susan Bostrom, the hard-driving senior vice president of the Silicon Valley darling, Cisco.

During the past decade, women have been launching their own businesses at nearly twice the national average and now own 38% of all U.S. firms. Since 1987, the number of female-owned ventures has doubled from 4.5 million to 9.1 million, according to the National Foundation for Women Business Owners. This may help explain why today there are more than 90 cash-rich women’s foundations, up from about five 20 years ago.

Is it any wonder then that today’s hard-working women’s interest in homemaking, according to Takeout Business magazine, "is transitioning to a point where preparing food in this country will have the same status as building our own furniture or sewing our own clothes. It won’t be too many more generations before this happens. People are already beginning to look at preparing food as an avocation or a hobby, like woodworking."

From time to time we all reach the point where we can’t deal with a situation and need expert advice. In the old days authorities were near at hand. The village seamstress on how to make a button hole, the blacksmith on how to take care of a horse’s hooves, or the apothecary on what to do about warts. But with the coming of the Internet, expert advice has suddenly gone 3-D, with sites popping up all over the place with self-proclaimed experts at the ready.

Exp.com <www.exp.com> claims to have "tens of thousands of experts who can help you," while the more restrained www.abuzz.com owned by the New York Times limits itself to "Ask Anything! Real People. Real Answers." It’s said expert sites or knowledge networks represent the latest stage in the Internet’s evolution, a "democratization of expertise" if you will. More likely, however, if the question is about something other than "Who invented the light bulb?" the answers are likely to be a wild potpourri of personal opinions. But it can be fun.

In the Land of the Free
Cyberspace is a veritable heaven for those looking for something for nothing - or nearly nothing. Log on to www.Free-Stuff-Net.com and you’ll be introduced to sites eagerly visited by a gaggle of surfers entranced by the idea of grabbing handouts. There’s "Just Free Stuff," " Freebie Land," "It’s Free 4U," "Planet Freebie," "Free Love," "Free Samples" and www.Free.com, which alone offers 8,000-plus "links and growing" to sites from "money and prizes" to "software" and "almost free," all designed to get your name and address.

Bring up "Free.com’s "Merchandise/Apparel & Accessories" site and you’ll be regaled with a chance to get free goodies, including:

  • "Register monthly to be entered in this drawing for sterling silver jewelry."
  • "Sign up for ("Asimba’s") Active Lifestyle newsletters. Sign up ten friends to do the same and receive a free vest."
  • "Seventy-percent of women wear the wrong size bra. Get your correct size by entering your measurements here."

Magazine lovers might think they’ve stumbled into paradise after logging on to www.Find-articles.com, where they can roam through the latest from more than 300 magazines. There’s Oil Daily, Internet World, Seventeen and Golf Digest not to mention insider magazines from Repair Shop Product News to the World Logistics Distribution Report.

PC World magazine publishes an "Annual Best Free Stuff Online" report, but cautions its readers that "to find giveaways, you often have to waste time rummaging through hours of ill-conceived, poorly executed, and just plain useless stuff." The magazine notes that "advertising supports most of these services," but then goes on to highlight some it feels are worth a visit, e.g.:

  • AllHealth: "will store your medical history online for retrieval from anywhere in the world.
  • Legaldocs: "offers free forms, indexed by category, to help you with such tasks as creating a living will, renting property, or authorizing child care." Other documents such as real estate deeds and partnership agreements are available for a fee.
  • FastWeb: provides college applicants with "notices about scholarships and discounts tailored to their geographic location, interests, and background."
  • Productopia: "offers a plethora of straight talk from consumers who have road-tested the electronics, software, and appliances you’re thinking about buying."

All of these sites support themselves through advertising from the ShopPlusBoutique for "the fuller figured woman" to St. Johns Wort, "the herbal antidepressant without side-effects."

It would be downright unfair to leave the wonderful world of free stuff without mentioning Blue Mountain Arts Publishing started by two former hippies to be a "spiritual and emotional center for the Web." Their stroke of genius was to give billions of online greeting cards in nine different languages away absolutely free year in and year out. This concept was so exciting to owners of the Excite@Home Website <www.Excite@Home.com> that they agreed to pay about $1 billion for the company if it met certain sales targets during the holidays when most greeting cards are sold.

Which raises the question of why anyone, let alone a hard-nosed outfit like Excite@Home would agree to give the time of day to a business that gives its product away at no charge to all comers. The answer is that the www.bluemountain.com site gets some one million hits a day from people ordering free cards for dozens of occasions with most of them calling for flowers, candy and gifts which is where Excite@Home sees a potential gold mine. It’s even introduced a new high tech card that can be used to send loved ones Electronic Flowers.

Let’s say someone’s upset you and you want to get even. Happens every day. But you’re a God-fearing person and don’t want to get physical. What to do? Send the doofus who’s bothering you a virtual www.PinStuck.com voodoo doll riddled with pins and no return address. You’ll have your choice of 19 voodoo insults, and can read the barrage of replies that are sure to follow with complete anonymity including the ever popular "Shove your voodoo message up you ass."

"How to get kissable TOES!"
The Internet is a land of endless amusements and among the wildest is the Sims, which is about creating, managing, and controlling the lives of tiny computerized people. If you leave the Sims alone they might settle down in front of the TV in their miniature homes, dance to radio music, laugh out loud, tell jokes, insult each other, you name it all against a background of easy-listening music.

The Sims have five personality attributes (neat, outgoing, active, playful, and nice), and six learnable skills (cooking, mechanical, charisma, body, logic, and creativity), leading to ten available career paths. It’s important for your Sims to get a job so they’ll have money to buy things to enhance one of their six skills. A new stove will help them cook more appetizing meals, a new mirror their charisma, with fresh products constantly being added to enrich their lives. And as a Sims family’s first house becomes filled from floor to ceiling with stuff you can build a bigger one for them online so they can buy more. This is obviously a game for our times where the winner is the one who accumulates the most stuff. Imelda Marcos would be proud.

The surge of women into the labor force has not been lost on the doll-making industry, which is suddenly celebrating a whole new genre of playthings for girls. Mattel’s Barbie was an astronaut in 1964 and an airline pilot in 1999, but now the gloves are off and Barbie and her sisters can be whatever they want to be. Mattel has formed a partnership with Working Woman magazine and brought out Working Woman Barbie. Her exact job is unclear, yet she comes equipped with a miniature computer, cell phone and CD-ROHM loaded with information on how to understand high finance.

Los Angeles-based Smartees Inc., a newcomer to the industry, has introduced "Destiny the Doctor" plus a storybook in which she has to draw blood with a syringe, along with "Alexis The Artist," "Ashley the Attorney," "Taylor the Teacher" and its top-selling "Vicky the Veterinarian." The company launched "Sarah the Senator," but girls said fugedaboutit. Smartees provides its professional dolls with evening gowns so they, in the words of their creator, can attend charity balls and raise money for worthy causes. Mattel was obviously not scared off by the failure of Smartees’ "Sarah the Senator" and introduced "Barbie for President" packaged with a "Girls’ Bill of Rights." "Emily the Entrepreneur" who runs a teddy bear company has not sold well and is targeted for retirement while "Ashley the Attorney" is on her last legs.

Girls are hot, and nobody knows it better than the publishers of Girl, Teen, Jump, Girltalk, Twist, Seventeen, YM (Young & Modern) and CosmoGirl among others. The "Big Three" subjects gracing the pages of these magazines are appearance, romance and "bfs" which is girl talk for boyfriends. A typical Girltalk cover is ablaze with come-ons such as "Freddie Prinze Jr. has a crush on YOU," "Fabulous Flirty FINGERNAILS,’ "How to get kissable TOES," "Quiz: Is your hottie your soulmate?" and "Navel Ins & Outs: Beautify your bellybutton!"

Teens are also being courted by Web sites such as www.agirllikeu.com and www.bolt.com, which says it understands their language and what’s important in their lives. "Howdy," says a smiling girl, "I’m coming to you straight from Ohio. My fave things to do are play tennis, snowboard, read horoscopes and hang out with friends." A "Sex & Dating Feature" is headlined "Ever been busted while you’re getting it on?," and one on "Jobs and Money" asks "Would you get naked for money?" Then there’s "Bolt Boards Quote of the Day" which reads "In November, Kid Rock, the sexiest piece of white trash, came to Austin. I was working and won backstage passes and tickets. I was so excited to meet him! He was bad-ass and so hot! I got him to sign my ticket!"

Paddles, Slappers, Gags and Hoods
Today’s near runaway fascination with sex, mirrored in the more than 40,000 lurid sites competing for business on the Internet, has thrown a spotlight on something that until recently was confined to the shadows. In the early to mid-1990s, up to 80% of all Internet traffic was adult-related, and even today the adult entertainment industry still drives the Internet with profit margins of 30% or more even though they have no off-line revenue stream generated by magazines, books, video cassettes etc. But in the past couple of years something interesting has happened. Cybersex has moved uptown.

What Cosmopolitan gloried in with articles such as "Sex Tricks Only Cosmo Would Know: 20 Earth-Quaking Moves That Will Make Him Plead for Mercy - and Beg for More," can now be found in the buttoned-up Ladies Home Journal. It has added articles promising "Grown-Up Sexxx: He Needs It, You’ll Love It’ to its usual fare of recipes, child rearing and home decoration.

Among the Four-Star sex sites is www.Blowfish.com that pretty much has it all. There’re toys, books, videos, supplies, comix, magazines and "Objects d’Art" designed for "your erotic enjoyment" with the best qualifying for its "Coveted Blowfish Recommends Label," such as its "teeny, tiny, fits-over-your-fingertip, watch-battery-powered Fukuoku 9000 vibrator."

Blowfish toys include "Hellcats Rabbit Fur Flogger, Metal Painstick and Texas TwoStrap Harness" along with "Paddles and Slappers, Gags, Hoods, Blindfolds, Muzzles, Handcuffs and Collars. It also offers a wide array of "Shiny, freakish, gloriously gorgeous videos," and among its "Objects d’Art" is a Devilfish Condom Holder made of red velour with black vinyl horns guaranteed to add "class and humor to the finest ensemble, in the bedroom or out."

While it’s possible for parents to control what their children watch on the Web, it’s far more difficult to keep them from glomming onto today’s abundance of raunchy television shows. The venerable New York Times recently ran a story on the new prime-time hit "Boston Public" about high school life where "a girl is shown getting up from her knees after administering oral sex to a boy" on camera. The girl, it seems, was running in a school election and "was simply campaigning for his vote."

Three Cheers for the "Napster"
One of the Internet’s truly great features is that anybody can be a player who has an idea for a Website and a few dollars to get it up and running. Possibly the most notorious site of all is the one dreamed up by an 18-year-old dropout from Northeastern University in Boston, Shawn Fanning, nicknamed the "Napster" for his unruly red hair. What he did was create the world’s biggest online free-music community that allows 38 million popular music lovers to swap hundreds of recordings, from Metallica to Hootie & the Blowfish, using the Napster system as a search engine to find exactly what they want.

This, needless to say, outraged everyone connected with the record business, from artists whose creative work was being hijacked to the Recording Industry Association of America which brought a law suit seeking an injunction aimed at ending Napster’s brief, if notorious life. It now appears, incredible as it seems, that this deadlock may actually be resolved to almost everyone’s satisfaction. Napster users may pay a modest monthly fee which will be divided up among those creating, producing and delivering the music, with financial backing from the German media giant Bertelsmann which is getting a piece of Napster in return. There is a sticking point, however, since it’s now unclear how to put a user name and price on every digital music file being downloaded. It’s also unclear if Napster users will pay even a few bucks a month for the service.

Online Education
The US is blessed with a higher educational system second to none, with the great names from Harvard and MIT in the East to Stanford and the University of California at Berkeley in the West merely the tip of the iceberg. Today the nation’s top colleges and universities are rushing into online education, but the big news is the proliferation of a new breed of for-profit online institutions bringing Internet education to the masses. "The Internet will probably be the single most democratizing force in education," says Columbia Business School Dean Meyer Feldberg, who sees its being routed through the Net "to hundreds of millions of people."

The largest online institution is the University of Phoenix with some 6,000 students today that hopes to have 200,000 in ten years. The University offers bachelors, masters, and doctoral degrees in Business Management, Technology, Education and Nursing and prides itself on the fact that if you’re a student "you can earn your degree via the Internet whenever and wherever you want - at home in the evenings, at work during lunch, or while traveling on business. No commuting. No lines. No wasted effort. You just click into class and start learning. While the cost of attending a private college today is over $20,000 a year at many schools," it says, "the cost of attending the University of Phoenix Online is less than half that. Best of all, most of our students complete their degrees in just two or three years."

Having said that, it’s worth noting that a Business Week survey of 247 companies found that only a handful would consider hiring applicants who earned their Master of Business Administration degrees online. Whether that will change in view of today’s boiling economy, and the rise of for-profit online universities on the learning curve, is anyone’s guess.

Newspapers Embrace the Cyber Age
Newspapers make money from the readers who buy them and the sellers who advertise in them. It’s been that way for centuries. But in the last few years an important new income stream has opened up for newspapers and among its pioneers is The Gazette Co. in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, which since 1993 has been providing information to its readers delivered by both paper and increasingly via the Internet’s World Wide Web. "If a newspaper views itself as ink on paper," says its new Vice President of Information Technology Steve Hannah, "I don’t think it will survive."

Hannah realizes its foray into online journalism rests on the continued success of the newspaper whose readership held steady at 85,000 subscribers throughout the ‘90s while others have seen their circulations decimated by the one/two punch of television and the Internet. Online newspapers are a look into the future, and just pondering it raises the question of whether it isn’t nicer getting your daily news curled up in your favorite chair with your ballpoint pen handy to circle items of interest, or scissors ready to snip out articles you want to save? The Gazette Co. is betting its subscribers want both and so far it seems to be right.

Hannah’s mission is to make The Gazette newspaper "a cross-media information provider" according to an analysis in CIO which describes itself as "The Magazine for Information Providers" and is fat with ads for the likes of Sun Microsystems, Xerox, Microsoft, Hitachi, Dell and IBM. The Gazette’s Web site contains a more in-depth analysis of much of the information readers can find in the newspaper. But it also has Web-only features which are illustrative of the way this new income stream is moving. Technology VP Hannah plans to structure the Web "site so that registered users can enter their preferences and choose which kinds of stories they’ll see every time they log on."

Hannah is also working on linking The Gazette’s Web site to a database of all the audio, video and text clips The Gazette Co. has in its files. Visitors to its site will be able to purchase stories in any of the three formats by using their credit or debit cars, and researchers will be able to buy blocks of time in which to search the paper’s archives. Hannah even sees the day when the paper’s newsroom staff will be able to incorporate breaking news on its online service such as suggesting alternative routes following a traffic jam. The Gazette’s new page-insertion machines also allow it to call up information from its Market/Info database and arrange the advertising inserts into subscribers’ papers according to their buying histories. Subscribers with young children might see ads for Toys "R" Us, while for seniors they’ll be cruise vacations.

GE’s Top Gun Speaks Up
Corporations have suddenly awakened to the fact that the Internet can save them billions in conducting their everyday affairs, with some of it showing up in lower prices for the consumer. And it’s only the beginning. "Where do you think we are as an economy as far as e-business goes?" Fortune magazine recently asked General Electric’s legendary CEO Jack Welch who immediately replied "First inning."

How right he is can be seen in a two-story brick building on Chicago’s industrial south Side, home to the Corrugated Supplies Corporation that turns out corrugated sheets used in making boxes and other products. Nothing to get excited about here, until you realize that Rick Van Horne who owns the place may have moved e-business into a second inning and then some.

What he’s done is built a computerized production system by hand at a cost of $5 million that can fill customers’ orders in record time. Over 50% of the orders it receives originate through its Web site with an equal number or more produced to customers’ exact specifications and delivered to their box-making factories in less than 24 hours while cutting waste by 35%. This resulted in Van Horne being voted one of 1990’s 10 top innovators by InfoWorld magazine, along with being named the Grand Winner of the Inc./Cisco Growing with Technology in the Customer Service award.

This success hiked Corrugated Supplies’ sales from $40 million in 1997 to $100 million in 2000. Not bad for a company that makes the innards of boxes, but it’s not the end. Rick Van Horne is now offering to teach other companies everything he knows about building high-tech factories, and he’s certainly not doing it because he needs the money. In 1998 he sold 11 paper plants he owned with Georgia-Pacific for $285 million.

The billions a year American companies are saving thanks to the Internet’s ability to slash their cost of doing business is making them even more successful competitors on world markets. This is reflected in better prices for their customers and increased profits for themselves with much of it coming from greatly improved ways of cutting costs.

Ford, General Motors and Daimler-Chrysler among others have created Covisint, a $300 billion megamarket for buying auto parts in order to squeeze the last dime out of vendors’ prices on everything from engines to windshield wipers. It’s a new world out there with companies both large and small banding together to force suppliers to trim their prices or lose the business. Still others are doing this on their own such as the big air-conditioner parts manufacturer Trane Company which was aggressively wooed by numerous construction industry buying groups all of which it turned down. Trane set up its own private online exchange forcing its 5,000 dealers to continually bid against each other for its business.

Questions for Our Time
The on-rushing Cyber Age has given newfound power to us all as seen in Jody Williams’ one-woman organization of a global ban on land mines using e-mail. Yet this is but a glimpse of what’s ahead in the minds of those immersed in this great transformation which, if anything, is inexorably gathering speed.

Bill Gates over at Microsoft predicts that by 2018 major newspapers will "publish their last paper editions and move solely to electronic distribution," and that two years later in 2020 Webster will alter its "definition of the word ‘book’ to refer to eBook titles read on screen."

The workaday world of materials technology is developing totally new structures growing out of tearing down the walls between organic and inorganic chemistry to create what one researcher calls "boutique materials." Substances that, like living things, can adapt to changing conditions such as metal-composite car-body panels that actually pop back into shape following minor fender benders.

At the Massachusetts Institute of Technology’s Artificial Intelligence Laboratory they’re working to build robots with social skills and humanlike expressions that we can relate to. One named Cog resembles a human infant, and another called Kismet is designed to interact with us through its body posture and facial expressions. This raises some interesting questions which Dr. Anne Foerst, director of MIT’s God and Computers project, has courage enough to raise. She wonders, for example, if a robot with human attributes should be treated with dignity even though it’s just "a mechanistic thing?"

Silicon Valley’s Dr. Larry Smarr is one of the world’s top computer technologists, having contributed to the development of the Internet and then going on to invent the graphical browser which makes it riches accessible to millions. His latest, and possibly greatest move, has been to convince California governor Gray Davis to put him in charge of the new $300 million California Institute of Telecommunications and Information Technology, being built with the help of funding from, among others, IBM, Microsoft, Boeing, Broadcom, and Sun Microsystems. The new project’s goal, Smarr says, is to speed the emergence of the information grid he believes will have a far greater impact on our daily lives than the all-pervasive electric power grid does today.

Smarr sees the emergence of "an enchanted world" of networked microprocessors during the coming decade that will see the power of individual computer processors grow at an exponential rate as the number of interconnected computers and computing devices explodes. This kind of turbocharged computing power might allow California to build a grid to more effectively control its massively complex traffic system, says Smarr, since it will know where the fast-rising number of cars with onboard computers are planning to go.

Computers have metamorphosed from the University of Pennsylvania’s 1946 Eniac with its 18,000 vacuum tubes that had less number-crunching power than today’s laptop, into thumbnail-size computer chips containing 42 million transistors. Yet even this is only a stopover on the road to devices the size of a single atom packed with data on their orbiting electrons whose negligible cost virtually turns information, and accessibility to it, into what economists call a "free good." Ready to do whatever work there is to be done in a world where "cyberspace will merge with physical space and disappear," according to Michael Dertouzos, director of the MIT Laboratory for Computer Science.

In a provocative article in Wired magazine, Bill Joy, chief scientist at the high-tech juggernaut Sun Microsystems, asserts that "Eventually, a stage may be reached at which the decisions necessary to keep the system running will be so complex that human beings will be incapable of making them intelligently. At that stage the machines will be in effective control. And we won’t be able to turn them off because," he concludes, "we will be so dependent upon them that turning them off would amount to suicide. With the prospect of human-level computing power in about 30 years," Joy concludes, we may be "working to create tools which will enable the construction of the technology that may replace our species."

While William Van Dusen Wishard, President of World Trends Research is not quite so dispirited, he is nevertheless concerned. In a speech to the Issue Management Council in Washington, D.C., he noted that "Researchers at Carnegie Mellon University cite a two-year study showing depression and loneliness appearing at greater levels in people using the Internet than in others not using it, or not using it as much. Extensive exposure to the wider world via the Net appears to make people less satisfied with their personal lives.

"Talk of an emerging issue," Wishard continues. "In my view, this is the most basic issue America faces today. Computer scientists are making ever-faster computers, which accelerate the tempo of life beyond what the human metabolism is designed by nature to take. Faster technology is de-linking humans from nature’s normal rhythm. Increasingly, the question corporations will face is not only how to deal with stress, but how to maintain the structural psychological integrity of the individual."

As we are confronted with questions of this magnitude, it is worth remembering what pre-World War One social critic Randolph Bourne had to say about it all. "He who rides the wild elephant, goes where the wild elephant goes."

About the Author
Carter Henderson is completing a book on the impact of the cyber revolution on our daily lives. His address is 260 Crane's Lake Drive, Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida 32082. E-mail Chauthor@aol.com.
   

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