During my research into vintage Japanese drawing software, I came across some devices that had built in sketch or handwritten memo functions. I bought a couple of them to see if they did anything cool or interesting. These sorts of devices are pre-internet, so thereâs not much about them online, and they canât be emulated, so the only way to find out what they do is to get first hand experience by
Wide Area Information Servers (WAIS)Thinking Machines Inc. develops a new Internet protocol dubbed WAIS. Users can download a WAIS client to search through an array of distributed servers and access the documents stored there. The protocol supports fuzzy searching, custom tailored results, and decentralized data storage, but ultimately loses out to the web. Information Management, a ProposalWhile
A map of ARPANET, the precursor to the internet, showing the 111 computer terminals connected to the network in 1977. ARPANET was created by the Department of Defense to allow researchers to share information and resources. The network was initially limited to universities and research institutions. By 1983, ARPANET had over 4,000 connected computers and a growing number of e-mail users. The ARPAN
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Using the History API to manage your URLs is awesome and, as it happens, a crucial feature of good web apps. One of its downsides, however, is that scroll positions are stored and then, more importantly, restored whenever you traverse the history. This often means unsightly jumps as the scroll position changes automatically, and especially so if your app does transitions, or changes the contents o
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