The experts keep saying that Net surfing is distracting us from television. But in my son Vermel's case, Net surfing has given him a new reason to stick with the boob tube: TV shows about the Net.
Wired is having a tough time
cracking
the TV nut. I've written about problems at Netizen TV before. Now,
the Wired
folks are thinking about canning another show, called Futura.
Recounting the discord plaguing Wired's TV efforts, New York
magazine last
week wrote that MSNBC execs were
initially turned off by Netizen TV but that the show may be
resuscitated by
the end of the year.
Speaking of resuscitation, I'm going to resurrect a previous topic from the Rumor Mill one last time. Readers urged me to point out that Microsoft has intervened in the tiff over the AutoSearch feature in Internet Explorer 3.0. The Redmondians offer a tool called TweakUI that lets users pick IE's default search engine from a list of the top sites, including AltaVista and Infoseek. Normally, IE's default engine is Yahoo, though at least two chagrined search companies (Excite and Lycos) offer programs that make them the primo search tools in IE.
The personal systems product division of IBM is searching for its budget. Even as the
company prepares to launch OS/2 Warp 4.0, IBM is apparently so disappointed
with the progress of its operating system that it's slashing the PSP budget
to $170 million next year. That figure is down from about $250 million this
year and $450 million in 1995.
I'll be slashing Vermel's TV time if he doesn't start doing his homework pronto. You, however, can watch as much TV as you like as long as you send me a rumor now.