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Director and writer Alexander Rosler, who based the film on his own childhood experiences, shares Mendel's point of view with the audience by revealing only what Mendel knows. Conversations stop abruptly for the camera as well as for Mendel. Mendel has a habit of shouting "Click!" as he gazes on a place for the last time; Rosler prolongs his shot of the scene as Mendel makes his mental picture...

Author: By Elizabeth A. Murphy, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Finally, a Festival Worth Seeing | 11/14/1997 | See Source »

...That process is always different. Any one of us might come in with an idea and all three of us will start working on it. If it starts to click we'll keep it. Obviously Ben, being the main songwriter, presents most of the music, and it's mine and Robert's job to try and take it as far as it can go. We all have our hands...

Author: By Sumeet Garg, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: The Southern Comfort of Lunatic Showmen: Feeling the' Five | 11/14/1997 | See Source »

...latest business news, click on Money Daily

Author: /time Magazine | Title: MCI: It Ain't Over | 11/11/1997 | See Source »

...today, except at the level of HTML." The Web's original markup language made it easy for humans to read Websites; XML makes it easy for machines to read them. Think of XML as doing for the Web what Windows and the Mac did for personal computers. When you click on a document on a Windows-based PC, the operating system is smart enough to recognize that you've selected a word-processing document or a spreadsheet or a piece of E-mail, and to launch the appropriate application. XML makes Websites smart enough to tell other machines whether they...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: KEEPING TABS ONLINE | 11/10/1997 | See Source »

...browser, as anyone who's visited the Net knows, is the software you use to navigate the Web. You fire it up, click your mouse and "go" to a site. Simple. But the newest version of Microsoft's browser--the one that for other reasons got Gates in such hot water with Janet Reno--reverses the relationship: the Web comes to you. After you subscribe to various Web publications by clicking on a box in the new browser, a software robot employed by Microsoft scurries around gathering the latest version of those Web pages and then, periodically, "pushes" the information...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: BILL GATES' GIFT TO THE WEB | 11/10/1997 | See Source »

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