Wired in Wyoming Build it and they will come. That was the dream of this small town when they ramped up to the information superhighway.
Dead Men Talking Death-row inmates are getting a voice in cyberspace -- and fueling the debate over capital punishment.
Down and Online Tokyo police evicted 200 homeless people from their refuge near City Hall. Activists took up their cause -- and told the world over the Internet.
An Extended Family Pregnant for the first time and thousands of miles from family and friends, April Andrews found a virtual kitchen table where mothers and grandmothers offered her wisdom and advice.
A Home in Cyberspace Kevin Childs shot heroin, slept in the streets, and attempted suicide. A wasted life? No, a redeemed one, thanks to the Internet.
The Flying Wheelchair Disabled students in Thailand use the Internet to extend themselves far beyond their physical limitations.
Never Alone Ninety years old and nearly blind, Roberta McClintic visits with family and friends through her America Online account.
Woman of the Times Irene Stuber sends her feminist newsletter, "Women of Achievement and Herstory," to 25,000 readers every day. By herself, without licking a single stamp.
Small Town Thinks Big Blacksburg, Virginia: Narrow streets . . . older buildings with red brick and white trim . . . quaint. And the most wired town in America.
Accidental Messenger When rebels cut the phone lines, civilians in the war-torn Republic of Georgia turned to a young man in Istanbul to deliver their cry for help to the United Nations.


Lead photograph by Stan Grossfeld

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