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...President may protest too much. The evidence of his marginalization is as much a matter of presumption as fact, but that is no less of a problem for him. The Ottawa exchange highlighted Clinton's re-election quandary: his first opponent is not a Republican, not even an upstart Demo-crat; it is the perception of his own irrelevance. Though Clinton's job-approval ratings have hovered near respectability in recent months, a large chunk of the electorate doesn't think he can win in 1996; almost half, in one poll, believes the country would be better...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: NOW FOR THE LAST CAMPAIGN | 3/13/1995 | See Source »

This was the holy grail of interactive television: true video on demand. What you want to see, when you want to see it, delivered to your TV and only your TV. And it was real. Not a "proof of concept" demo, but a working system being used in at least a handful of customers' homes...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Ready for Prime Time? | 12/26/1994 | See Source »

Software giant Microsoft today announced it would test its "Tiger" interactive TV software in Europe by early 1996 -- a several-city experiment well beyond the scope of its demo early next year in Seattle. The video server technology -- like similar highway efforts from Time Warner, Viacom, Bell Atlantic and others -- lets viewers retrieve programs, concerts and, for instance, watch a music video before buying CDs and concert tickets. TIME senior writer Philip Elmer-DeWitt says Microsoft's $8 billion capo, Bill Gates, is well positioned to repeat his software success in the next info revolution, and other giants want...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THE INFO HIGHWAY LEADS MICROSOFT TO . . . EUROPE | 10/19/1994 | See Source »

CS50 also teaches students how to use the Internet system, which was a drawing point for Ferrell. The Internet "gives you access to an incredible amount of information: computer programs, demo programs, the menu for dinner, the weather report," says Ferrell...

Author: By Stephanie P. Wexler, | Title: COMPUTER SCIENCE 50 | 2/2/1994 | See Source »

...Palo Alto Research Center in California (which put the ideas to work in a language called Smalltalk and a machine called the Alto). Levy re-creates in vivid detail the December 1979 "daylight raid," when the scrappy engineers from Apple, invited to see the Alto, walked into a Xerox demo room and walked out with something more valuable than Federal Reserve notes or gold bullion: a working paradigm for what a computer should...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: How Mac Changed the World | 1/31/1994 | See Source »

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