[3]Lesson 13
Lesson
14
Lesson
15
Lesson 16
[4]Mac versions can be downloaded here.
[5]The article is a bit dated (statistics through July 1994) but it is a decent overview of how the Web developed and where it is headed.
[6]Yes, there are alternatives, yes we could argue over which is best, but that would be silly. Netscape sets the standards all the others are trying to keep up with or surpass.
[7]Ditto above. WYSIWYG's (What You See Is What You Get, or Whizzywigs) offer some attractions, but BBedit is the workhorse perferred by the pros and students who use it understand html much better than students who use a WYSIWIG. You can download a copy here
[8]A few basic html sources are: for a "Quick Reference Guide" go here.
For a comprehensive html guide go here
For a well designed instructional guide go here.
For a well oganized comprehensive guide to HTML resources go to the pros.
For a disorganized always changing hodgepodge of html resources, go to my personal bookmarks and find the HTML section.
Obtain a list of lists maintained by various mail servers with the following commands: Listproc: LISTS LISTSERV: LISTS (to obtain a list of all known LISTSERV lists, send the command LISTS GLOBAL; to search for LISTSERV lists with a given keyword or character string in the description, send the command LISTS GLOBAL /[keyword], e.g., LISTS GLOBAL /LAW.) Mailbase: LISTS Mailserv: DIRECTORY/LIST Majordomo: LISTS See: http://www.brandonu.ca/~ennsnr/Resources/Roadmap/map06.html