T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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3189.1 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Tue Jun 21 1994 12:00 | 4 |
| Lots more good things like this to read in the SOFBAS::INTERNET_TOOLS
conference. We really are a leader in this space.
Steve
|
3189.2 | CRL get's my vote for our internet momentum | CSSE::FAHERTY | | Tue Jun 21 1994 13:38 | 7 |
| Let us not forget Digital's CRL (Cambridge Research Lab) for their many
contributions both to our internet momentum and capabilities (internal and
external, web, mosaic, DECathena, expertise, ...).
I became an internet expert and advocate solely through influence by CRL.
I wasn't even cognizant of Palo Alto's involvement until after I had poked
around for a while on the web.
|
3189.4 | Compuserve, too | ICS::BEAN | Attila the Hun was a LIBERAL! | Tue Jun 21 1994 16:47 | 5 |
| i was surfing around in Compuserve's DECPCI forum last night, and found
three consecutive memos, also very positive, about DEC's response to
customer needs.
tony
|
3189.5 | Digital's Internet Advantages! | PHONE::OUYANG | | Tue Jun 21 1994 23:06 | 6 |
| Thanks for posting .0.
Yes, let's take Digital's Internet Advantages!
Regards,
Edwin
|
3189.6 | | PLAYER::BROWNL | A-mazed on the info Highway! | Wed Jun 22 1994 05:50 | 4 |
| Don't forget the Paris Research Lab (which is being closed). They've
done their fair share of the stuff...
Laurie.
|
3189.7 | Great! | GLDOA::CUTLER | Car Topin' On The Cumberland | Wed Jun 22 1994 08:20 | 7 |
|
Yeah!!!!! Something Positive For A Change!!!!!!!!!!!! Good
Work! No......"Great Work"! Customers saying "positive things"!
Rick
|
3189.8 | | PERLE::glantz | Mike, Paris Research Lab, 776-2836 | Thu Jun 23 1994 07:15 | 9 |
| There are a lot of people to whom thanks is due for bringing IP
awareness to Digital. Happily for Digital, there are more than could be
named in a short reply. Unhappily, some of these have chosen to leave
or have found themselves caught in the faceless squeeze.
But rather than applaud or lay blame, I'd like to repeat Steve Lionel's
suggestion to check out the conference at SOFBAS::INTERNET_TOOLS. Get
yourself a Mosaic Web browser and see what all the excitement is about
(there's excitement a-plenty, and it's well-justified).
|
3189.9 | and another thing ... just do it! | PERLE::glantz | Mike, Paris Research Lab, 776-2836 | Thu Jun 23 1994 07:30 | 16 |
| While we may be making an effort to be an active player on the
Internet, it would be very risky to assume that the hard/fun work has
been done, or that Digital's Internet work is being handled by someone.
It behooves *every* Digital employee to become Internet-aware.
I believe we should all consider this to be a part of our job, whether
it's in your "official job description" or not. Not everyone has to
(nor should) become a "guru", but, at a minimum, you should know how to
send mail to an Internet address, and how to use one or more of the
more potent tools, such as a World-Wide Web browser (e.g., Mosaic).
Many of us will face hurdles in trying to do this. Ignore them. Push
past them. Spend some time. Find a way around them. It can be done! You
weren't hired into this company because you give up at the first sign
of difficulty! Only this level of effort, awareness and competence will
truly make Digital *the* Internet company.
|
3189.10 | One proof that Digital is *the* Internet company | MIMS::BEKELE_D | When indoubt THINK! | Tue Oct 25 1994 22:18 | 28 |
|
The following should be worth a few marketing mile$...
dan
Wall Street Journal
Oct 25, 1994
page A8
(reprint without permission)
SACRAMENTO, Calif. - In what is being billed as the largest live,
on-line project ever undertaken, California's general-election returns
Nov. 8 will be posted on the Internet network.
Tony Miller, acting secretary of state, said that California will
work with Digital Equipment Corp. to broadcast up-to-the-minute returns
on the Internet's World Wide Web. Anyone with Internet access will be
able to see returns in a multimedia format, including graphs, tables,
photos and links to other data.
Digital will provide the software and systems for the project,
which, beginning today, will offer pre-election information on ballot
questions, campaign spending, direct maps and more.
In an earlier pilot project during the June primaries, a text-only
system was used by some 400,000 people on the Internet. To reach the
new system, computer users with Internet access must enter the
following string of letters and symbols: http://www.election.ca.gov.
|