| |
|
While the Original JSP Computer Consultants Website is finally brought into the 21st Century with a much needed update, reminisce below and then preview our New Home and watch our progress:
Home | About Us | Contact Us | Site Map
Preview | What's New at JSP | Search Engine Rankings
Portfolio | Marketing Solutions | JSPCC Advises | Services | Help Center
|
| |
|

|
What's News
Please Note:
Some services require you to sign-in
the first time you visit their site.
All links from JSP site are free services
|
| |
|
|
|






Remember the good old days when ARPANET computers were as big as refrigerators and you
could fit the Net on a sheet of paper?
Every young Internet millionaire owes a debt to Tim Berners-Lee,
the creator of the World Wide Web.
Think instant messages are already too
intrusive? Get ready for instant voice
messaging.
New interactive language technology lets
surfers talk with their PCs and navigate the
Web using natural speech.
Databases of Genetic Code Are Moving to the Web
By LAWRENCE M. FISHER
Users will soon be relying on
the Web for anti-virus technology.
And it will be free. So
what's a PC security firm such as Symantec to do?
|
Yesterday's News, Today
By JOHN SCHWARTZ

More Year 2000
News
AltaVista offers free
Net service
The cost of unlimited Internet
access and e-mail is a window
that runs ads constantly.
CompUSA
CompUSA will reduce its 3,600-member commercial sales organization by 50 percent as
part of a previously announced reorganization.
Splash Pages
By DAVID KIRBY
Working Waterfront Association
www.workingwaterfront.org
OR
Brought to you by:
|

Users will soon be relying on the Web for anti-virus technology. And it will be free.
So
what's a PC security firm such as Symantec to do?
And these aren't just fossil remains.
It found the system still at work --
Computer virus promoted to the ranks of
Melissa, ExplorerZip and CIH after infecting
eight financial institutions.
Upstart in the instant messenger
war
As AOL and Microsoft slug it out over chat and messaging, Odigo
tries to slip in with its muscled-up software
By Elliot Zaret, MSNBC
Another
Twist in Skirmish
Over Instant Messaging
Microsoft Moves Against America Online
By MATT RICHTEL
Wal-Mart, Kmart to sell
Windows-less PCs on the cheap
Israeli
Scientist Reports Discovery of Advance in Code Breaking
By JOHN MARKOFF
Animation
Sees Hi-Tech Future
By JOHN CANEMAKER
Join
the Peace Corps, Go Online
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Web's Ugliest Sites Exposed
at Mud Brick Awards
|
|
CYBER LAW JOURNAL
Surprise in Domain Name Suit
By CARL S. KAPLAN
A lawsuit over the domain name "clue.com" has pitted Hasbro, makers of the
"Clue" board game, against Clue Computing, which has one full-time employee. A
law professor who has studied domain name disputes says the judge's decision which favors
the computer company runs counter to a recent trend -- the big guys usually win.
In CyberTimes
|
IN SCIENCE - PERSONAL HEALTH
Risks
in Medical Web Sites By JANE E. BRODY
This year some 25.5 million Americans are expected to turn to computers for answers to
their health questions. But chances are that much of the information they glean from them
will be biased, inaccurate and, in some cases, downright dangerous.
|
An
Internet Beauty World By NANCY HASS
This fall, more than a dozen well-financed Internet start-ups will begin selling
cosmetics directly to consumers on the Web. Most of those sites will be shaped by former
editors from the top fashion and beauty magazines: places like Vogue, Elle and Mirabella.
|
Healing force: The
first Comdex Israel
saw former-PM Shimon Peres emphasizing
the necessity of getting the Palestinians
on board with the digital revolution. In
the past, Palestinians have largely done
manual labor for Israelis -- and that's a
wasted resource in terms of brain power,
both sides agreed.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|