Acknowledgements and References

We would like to thank the some of the people and organizations who have been instrumental in our quest to build this webpage.

First, we would like to thank our coach, Danny "Puff Daddy" Peters, for his undying and strongly motivated support of out endeavors. Without his relentless and selfless involvement, this project could not have been done. Thank you, Mr. Peters, for your integral and meaningful contributions to our work. If we could bronze him, we would so history could see this man who has meant so much to so many.

We would also like to thank the New Horizons Governor's School for their support and sponsorship of our team, 24264, so we could compete for such a worthy cause. It's good to know that such organizations exist to help young minds like ours.

We would also like to thank Thinkquest for allowing us the honor of competing in this wonderful contest. Such a competition stimulates young minds, promotes educational ideals, and is a vanguard for the future in are society. We applaud you.

We would also like to thank our classes this summer at the New Horizons Governor's School Summer Computer Camp. The students we taught became our inspiration as we created our website. Their enthusiasm and zeal as they learned HTML provided a thirst in our soul to teach others that could only have quenched by creating this project. Their love of learning is an inspiration to us all.

And last, but certainly not least, we would like to thank the people who we have used as references as we researched for our website. Here are our references:

Electronic Sources-- Webpages

  1. Anonymous. "Perl FAQ 1.1: What is Perl?" 1996. <http://www.mpae.gwdg.de/mpae_RZ/online_doc/perl/FAQ/1.1.html> (July 1998)
  2. Anonymous. "The Java(tm) Developers Kit 1.0.2" 1996. <http://java.sun.com/JDK-1.0/index.html>(July 1998)
  3. Anonymous. "The Java Tutorial" 1996. <http://java.sun.com/tutorial/> (July 1998)
  4. Cailliau, Robert "A Little History of The World Wide Web" W3C - The World Wide Web Consortium. Oct. 3, 1995. <http://www.w3.org/History.html> (Aug. 1998)
  5. Geiken,Cordelia Baron "NCSA-- A Beginner's Guide to HTML" Welcome To NCSA. June 30, 1998. <http://www.ncsa.uiuc.edu/General/Internet/WWW/HTMLPrimerAll.html> (Aug. 1998)
  6. The Java Hermit "The Java Hermit" Aug. 25, 1998. <http://www.celticedge.com/hermit/> (Aug. 1998)
  7. Johnson, T. "Spinning the World-Wide Web" 1994. <http://www.sld.slac.stanford.edu/sldwww/beamline/article.html> (July 1998)
  8. Khudairi, Sally "About The World Wide Web" W3C - The World Wide Web Consortium. Dec. 18, 1997. <http://www.w3.org/WWW/> (Aug. 1998)
  9. Lottor, M. "Breakdown of Hosts by Top-Level Domain" 1995. <http://www.nw.com/zone/WWW/top.html> (June 1998)
  10. Powell, B. "Chapter One" 1996. <http://www.rhythm.com/~bpowell/Atlas/Ch1.htm#Ch1> (June 1998)
  11. Raggett, Dave "HTML 3.2 Reference Specification" W3C - The World Wide Web Consortium. 1997. <http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-html32.html> (Aug. 1998)
  12. Segal, B. "A Short History of Internet Protocols" 1995. <http://wwwcn.cern.ch/pdp/ns/ben/TCPHIST.html> (June 1998)
  13. Zeltser, L. "The World Wide Web: Origins and Beyond" 1995. <http://www.seas.upenn.edu/~lzeltser/WWW/> (June 1998)

Printed Sources-- Part of a Book

  1. Lemay, L. 1996. Web Publishing with HTML 3.0. Indianapolis:Sams.net p. 518.
  2. Lemay, L. and C. Perkins. 1996. Teach Yourself Java in 21 days. Indianapolis:Sams.net p. 448.
  3. Till, D. Teach Yourself Perl 5 in 21 days Indianapolis:Sams.net p.870.
  4. Tittel, Ed and Steve James. HTML For Dummies-- 2nd Edition. California: IDG Books Worldwide, Inc., 1996, pp.383-398.

Printed Sources-- Periodicals

  1. Anonymous. "Signal's Guide to Surfing Savvy." Signal. June 1997: 15.
  2. Belfield, Richard. "The Net." New Statesman. 20 Dec. 1996: 102.
  3. Braun, Joseph A., Jr. "Past, Possibilities, and Potholes on the Information Superhighway." Social Education. Mar. 1997: 149-153.
  4. Breeding, Marshall. "Internet Meltdown?" Library Software Review. Winter 1996: 227.
  5. Cole-Gomolski, Barb. "What Overload?" Computerworld. 8 Dec. 1997: 1, 14.
  6. Cook, David. "The Information Superhighway." The Black Collegian. Feb. 1997: 12, 177.
  7. Donlan, Thomas G. "High-Tech Hysteria." Barron's. 6 Mar. 1995: 54.
  8. Fitzgerald, Mark. "The Effect of the Internet on Print Journalsim." Editor & Publisher. 13 Apr. 1996: 61, 72.
  9. Gillin, Paul. "Viva E-Mail!" Computerworld. 8 Dec. 1997: 2.
  10. Goetz, Thomas. "Cyberstalker, Qu'est-ce-que C'est?" Village Voice. 31 Dec. 1996: 23.
  11. Greene, Marvin V. "The Internet On Every Corner." Black Enterprise. Nov. 1997: 40-42.
  12. Hundt, Reed. "Make Schools Technology-Savvy." Computerworld. 28 Apr. 1997: 37.
  13. King, Julia. "Info Addicts Wreak Havoc on Workplace." Computerworld. 15 Dec. 1997: 1, 106.
  14. Laver, Ross. "Plugging In To Profits." MacLean's. 11 Dec. 1995: 36-37.
  15. Lousig-Nont, Gregory M. "Top 10 Excuses For Ignoring The Internet." USA Today. Jan. 1997: 58- 59.
  16. McChesney, Robert W. "Digital Highway Robbery." The Nation. 21 April 1997. 22-24.
  17. Moschella, David. "The 3% Solution." Computerworld. 26 May 1997: 36.
  18. Nunoo, Mildred. "Blocking the Information Superhighway." Black Enterprise. Jan. 1997: 33-34.
  19. Peterson, Nils S., and Kevin C. Facemeyer. "The Impact of the Internet on Learners and Schools." Bulletin. Oct. 1996: 197-201.
  20. Updegrove, Daniel. "The Landscape." Change. Jan./Feb. 1996: 41-44.