Zeldman, Mozilla, DSL & Fox

Zeldman preaches the nightmare of backward compatibility: Though their owners and managers may not know it yet, 99.9% of all web sites are obsolete. These sites may look and work all right in mainstream, desktop browsers whose names end in the numbers 4 or 5. But outside these fault-tolerant environments, the symptoms of disease and decay have already started to appear.

Netscape won't dislodge Internet Explorer from its hegemony over browser space. But its open-source sibling, Mozilla, is aiming at even bigger game: Windows.

Industry figures have confirmed that Digital Subscriber Line (DSL) technologies are rapidly overtaking cable as the Australian broadband connection of choice, but corporations are cautious about using broadband Internet services in essential areas of their business.

A fox snapped up two balls hit from the seventh tee on to the fairway by players in a tournament at Gronhogen golf course on the island of Oland off Sweden's south-eastern coast.