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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.
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Dead Men Talking
Death-row inmates are getting a voice in cyberspace -- and fueling the debate over capital punishment.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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The Flying Wheelchair
Disabled students in Thailand use the Internet to extend themselves far beyond their physical limitations.
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Never Alone
Ninety years old and nearly blind, Roberta McClintic visits with family and friends through her America Online account.
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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.
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Small Town Thinks Big
Blacksburg, Virginia: Narrow streets . . . older buildings with red brick and white trim . . . quaint. And the most wired town in America.
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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.
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