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...search for their husbands on the Web," says Trish McDermott of Match.com an Internet dating service that boasts about 100,000 active members. Like similar services, Match.com attempts to rationalize and organize that messiest of human endeavors--finding love, or its closest substitute. Users, who pay $100 a year, fill out a questionnaire listing their height and weight and personal interests. Like brokerage customers screening mutual funds according to their desire for current income or long-term capital appreciation, users also specify their romantic goals. Are they seeking an e-mail pen pal? A life partner? Finally, users receive...
...evening news program and thereby receive separate, incisive and differing reports on topical subjects. Shortly, you will read TIME, watch CNN and be able to browse AOL's sites. But you will undoubtedly get the feeling you are digesting the same rehashed, bland and insipid "content." The rush to fill Internet bandwidth has dumbed down our media fare. The "new media" have made everything equal to one (and the same). How boring! FRANK KUBICEK New York City...
...your dead dog's name or your Uncle Bob's street address as the password for yet another website that requires you to register before using it? Now katmango.com will automatically register and log you on to as many as 1,000 sites from CDNow to Webvan. First you fill out a form with the data most commonly needed to register at a website (including your name and e-mail address), then you pick the sites you want to register for. Katmango will automatically select a unique user name and password for each site. If additional info is required...
Baker's newest concept is the "Interest Matcher," a survey users can fill out to find compatible people who fit certain criteria...
...lecturers and preceptors, now have unlimited access to Annenberg and House dining halls when accompanied by students. With this change, brought about after lobbying by Undergraduate Council members John Paul Rollert '00 and Michael D. Shumsky '01, undergraduates starved for meaningful student-Faculty interaction will finally be able to fill their plates. The new policy, which eliminates the hassle of having to obtain meal vouchers in order to dine with professors, will go into effect immediately and will run on a trial basis for the rest of the semester. It is a welcome act from an administration all too frequently...