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From:                   TipWorld <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject:                New Product Gossip [WEAVING ARACHNE'S WEB - 09/01/2000]
Date sent:              Fri, 01 Sep 2000 09:09:05 -0700
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TipWorld - http://www.tipworld.com              
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Proudly presents:              
New Product Gossip           

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And now for today's tip ...              

WEAVING ARACHNE'S WEB              

By Robin Garr  

I recently proposed Opera (www.opera.com) as an intriguing alternative to
the Big Two commercial browsers, noting that this Norwegian-made
application justifies its price with lean, fast code that makes Explorer
and Netscape look like beached whales. 

But reader John McHugh points out that Opera in its turn looks like a
hefty Wagnerian soprano in contrast to the truly lean and hungry Arachne
browser, a DOS-based freeware product from the Czech Republic (available
in many languages) that's so lightweight that it will fit on a floppy disk
and run on an old 386. 

The Arachne for DOS full screen graphical WWW browser can be used with any
DOS-compatible operating system from MS-DOS 3.3 and above through Windows
98. It requires as little as 475 KB of DOS memory (540 KB if you want a
PPP connection) and an EGA or VGA video card, although even its
"recommended configuration" calls for a 386 or later PC with at least 4 MB
of memory. 

The current version 1.66 for DOS (and version 1.66 beta for Linux) is
available online from Arachne Labs, 

http://www.arachne.cz 

Although the designers say they created Arachne in part to make the 
Web accessible to people around the world who can't afford or don't 
have access to modern computers, they add that "Arachne is not only 
'the web browser for poor'," noting that there are plenty of cases 
where a small, compact, full screen, and highly customizable Web 
browser is useful. They claim more than 100,000 downloads and estimate
that more than 10,000 people use it to surf the Web regularly. 

It's an intriguing alternative, even for those of us who've pretty 
much gone over entirely to Windows apps. It's easy to install, a 
little more persnickety to set up and get running, but once it's on 
your screen, its effective use of DOS colors and graphics gives it a
surprisingly modern look and feel. 

Arachne is definitely worth a look for curiosity's sake alone, 
although in all honesty, assuming you do have a reasonably modern 
computer, Pentium or above, I can't make a particularly compelling 
case for using it in place of the standards. 


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Robin Garr is an early adopter who has a lifelong fascination with 
technology. A journalist and author, he has been associated with the
online scene since the early 1980s. He is an award-winning Web developer;
his own Web site, Wine Lovers' Page (http://www.wineloverspage.com) was
one of the first sites on the Web and has grown into a leader in its
market. You can reach him at [EMAIL PROTECTED] 

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