X-Google-Language: ENGLISH,ASCII-7-bit X-Google-Thread: f996b,d033fd4899b5cac0 X-Google-Attributes: gidf996b,public From: "Frederic Merizen" Subject: Re: The internet, lesson one Date: 2000/04/18 Message-ID: <8di6po$654$1@front1m.grolier.fr>#1/1 X-Deja-AN: 612771739 References: <8d0bp2$ora$1@nnrp1.deja.com> <38F49002.3E5A@hotmail.com> <1e91fm4.j8sjm2d9fgcgN%dougandjaana@mac.com> <38F66213.6EBB@hotmail.com> <1e93kdj.uwbrps0wz8iN%dougandjaana@mac.com> <956055238.23597@perla.rotterdam.luna.net> <38FC867E.2AC2@hotmail.com> X-Priority: 3 X-MimeOLE: Produced By Microsoft MimeOLE V5.00.2314.1300 X-Trace: front1m.grolier.fr 956079736 6308 213.44.69.94 (18 Apr 2000 17:42:16 GMT) Organization: Club-Internet (France) X-MSMail-Priority: Normal Reply-To: "Frederic Merizen" NNTP-Posting-Date: 18 Apr 2000 17:42:16 GMT Newsgroups: alt.ascii-art Veronica Karlsson wrote > Ojosh!ro wrote: > > For all you online Sherlock Holmes', try this one > > (Works for almost anything) > > You hear a word/brand you don't know, say 'kotex'. > > You open a browser and bang in 'www.kotex.com' > > This assumes that one knows it's a product. What if one thinks it's an > English name (or maybe a Latin name?) for some tiny animal? (like an > amoeba or a louse or something) www.amoeba.com actually exists :), and www.louse.net links to a pretty funny page... (search yahoo for louse ;)