ROVIN'
AND RAVIN' WITH MIKE
Copyright
© 2002, 2001 by Michael Segers, All rights
reserved; Brought to you by Peanut.org
Getting
Free in 2001
Always check each website for current details.
Just in the past month, many of the ad-supported free Internet service
providers closed down, some with no warning.
It might be a good idea, if you rely upon free services, to have a
backup. There are so many free
e-mail services that there is a Free E-mail Provider Guide online:
Here
are two of the best-known free e-mail services:
Fax service has become a necessity for many businesses, and I know many families for whom it almost is a necessity. You don't have to obuy a fax machine and add a second telephone line, however, since there are several free fax services available on the Internet. I know that some of these have changed recently, so, again, read the details before you sign on:
The “Internet answering machine” is a free service that I have not
tried, but I have two friends who use it with considerable satisfaction.
Although the service itself is free, you do have to pay the telephone
company a small monthly charge to use it, much less than the cost of a second
telephone line, by the way:
I wrote an article raving about the joys of free long distance, but to
tell you the truth, after the “new” wore off, I quit using it.
I did not feel that the loss of quality was worth the savings, although
there are several services available now, some of which may be better than the
one I tried:
Using the Internet, you can easily avoid long distance information
charges. Again, there are several
choices for each of these, but here are the ones I use most often.
First, here is a good directory for long distance numbers:
A free directory of toll-free numbers is a double blessing:
http://www.whowhere.lycos.com/TollFree/search_tf.html
Even
better than a paper directory is a reverse telephone directory, which returns
the name associated with a telephone number:
http://www.anywho.com/telq.html
For a great many options for free communications services, you can’t
beat the “Free eCommunications Guide:
The Internet began as a research tool, and you can still find an amazing
amount of free information online. Just
to get you started, here is a site that allows you to search shelves of
dictionaries at a time:
The Encyclopedia Britannica sets the standard for encyclopedias on
paper or online. When its resources became available for free last year, the
site was so popular that it was weeks before I could log on.
Now, you shouldn’t have any problems logging on.
I always have difficulty logging off, because there’s always one more
link that I want to follow:
Perhaps the best source of free information on the Internet that you can
use in your daily life and work can be found at the portal site for all the
federal government’s pages. Of
course, again, we know this site isn’t free; it is supported by our tax
dollars, so log on and get your money’s worth
Of course, one of the very best “non-buys” in cyberspace is our own
free-net, and, if I do say so myself, I think that the archives of R&R
columns are worth the price of admission—that is, free.
Here are three articles that will get you started on your search for good
free stuff on the Internet. First,
there’s “Your Free Internet Textbook”:
"Your
Free Internet Textbook."
The article
"Who
Wants to Be a Webmaster?"
is the first of a
three-part series on creating your own web pages.
The three articles include links to a great deal of free programs, web
space, graphics, and other materials so that you can create your own Internet
presence for free:
Free programs to create your own virtual books or “e-books” can
be found in
"Getting
E-Booked for next Christmas."
I need to remind you that there is a great deal of free music available
on the Internet, but I am not going to tell you where to find it, because so
many of the free music sites violate copyright
laws.
If performers/composers want to post their own music on the Internet for
you to access for free, just as many programmers post their own programs, that
is their option.
But, with the music sites, moreso than with any other, there are just too
many problems with copyright.
I know, I’m a cranky old so-and-so, but at least, I’ll admit that
I’m a cranky old so-and-so who does not want anyone to violate the copyright
on his creations, his writings.
I hope that the prospect of freebies motivates you to check out all the
amazing resources that the Internet offers us.
Keep your feet dry, your heart full of noble thoughts, and your browser
pointed to some great new sites.
Rovin' on the Internet: Online Adventures