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`FOCUS - 11 of 77 DOCUMENTS
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`Copyright 1995 Chicago Tribune Company
`Chicago Tribune
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`March 26, 1995 Sunday, CHICAGOLAND FINAL EDITION
`
`
`SECTION: TECHNOLOGY AND THE WORKPLACE; Pg. 1; ZONE: C
`
`LENGTH: 2204 words
`
`HEADLINE: THE INTERNET BUSINESS COME HOME;
`A MAILBOX IN CYBERSPACE BRINGS WORLD TO YOUR PC
`
`BYLINE: By James Coates, Tribune Computer Writer.
`
`BODY:
`Harry Anastopoulos, president of a newly hatched Chicago-based Internet consulting company called Telusys Inc.,
`has seen the future of the American workplace in the Information Age, and its name is URL.
`URL stands for Uniform Resource Locator, and Anastopoulos and other entrepreneurs expect it will bring the
`greatest change to the business scene and American home since the personal computer arrived in the early '80s.
`A URL is like an address in cyberspace: On the worldwide network of computer networks known as the Internet, it
`becomes a place where its owner can post or publish anything the owner might wish.
`Having a URL means your business is on the Internet-which also means that whatever you are selling instantly is
`within reach of millions of potential customers.
`Anybody with an Internet-capable computer can find you through your URL. It's as simple as clicking on an icon
`and typing in your name or your business name for a computerized keyword search.
`And once they find you, they can view any material you choose to file on the Internet, such as advertising, custom-
`er-support literature or even products.
`Thus, to growing thousands of businesspeople, whether they work in an office or have a home-based business,
`these initials from the world of the Internet are becoming as much an indicator of success as the initials BMW were a
`decade ago.
`Time-Warner Inc. has a URL where the entertainment/publishing company does things as diverse as tout the latest
`cover story in People magazine and print a few sample chapters of the blockbuster novel "The Celestine Prophecy," by
`James Redfield.
`General Electric Co. runs a URL where it discusses properties of high-technology plastics with customers.
`The Chamber of Commerce in Sedona, Ariz., runs a URL, and local bed-and-breakfast operators post their availa-
`bilities and addresses on it.
`Barry Blue and Thomas Demos are among the first Chicagoans to put their business on URLs. They founded Nets
`to You, which specializes in hooking up individuals and small businesses to the Internet. The company charges $65 to
`make house calls, during which a technician provides the necessary software, then configures clients' computers to use
`the World Wide Web and other Internet features.
`
`Facebook Inc.'s Exhibit 1009
`
`001
`
`Petitioner Microsoft Corporation, Ex. 1009, p. 1
`
`

`
`Page 2
`THE INTERNET BUSINESS COME HOME;A MAILBOX IN CYBERSPACE BRINGS WORLD TO YOUR PC
`Chicago Tribune March 26, 1995 Sunday, CHICAGOLAND FINAL EDITION
`
`Dozens of local enterprises are starting to use URLs, Blue noted. They are as varied as the International Society of
`Exposure Analysis, which publishes its newsletter via a Chicago-based URL, and movie editor Joe Scudiero, who has
`made small samples of several of his films available via his URL.
`On the national level, you can find URLs from Miller Brewing Co., Ameritech, Tribune Co., Microsoft Corp., Intel
`Corp., the University of Chicago, the Louvre, the U.S. Census Bureau, the CIA, Mayor Daley and. . . . An estimated
`20,000 other businesses, institutions and individuals are counted among URL pioneers.
`Many use URLs to publish their resumes, so prospective employers can look at their qualifications in a decidedly
`favorable multimedia light. Such URLs typically include everything a printed resume does, plus a photograph and sam-
`ples of the applicant's work that an employer can peruse or pass up at will.
`Conversely, some companies are posting job openings on their URLs. It's then just a matter of a few key strokes to
`drop a company a note, telling its headhunters where to find your URL.
`Knowing how to use the vast numbers of URLs now offered by businesses, government agencies and academic in-
`stitutions means much more than mere advertising. It means you can exploit the vast resources of the Internet to en-
`hance your business or job.
`Anastopolous, therefore, isn't just thinking of Fortune 1000 clients when he talks with an evangelist's zeal of the
`potential awaiting those in small and medium-size businesses who use URLs to connect to the Internet.
`"The playing field has been leveled, and everyone is in the game," said Anastopolous, who noted that the Internet
`has been swept up in a nationwide wave of popularity because access to it becomes ever easier, thanks to
`fast-developing technologies.
`Thus, as the Internet grows as a nationwide force, the URL becomes a dominant buzzword in the American work-
`place.
`Having one amounts to a giant step beyond having an electronic-mail, or e-mail, address-and remember that e-mail
`has become the most heavily used part of the Internet among Americans at work and at home.
`It takes the e-mail process one step beyond just exchanging information. And that's where the power begins.
`In addition to having your address on-line, it's now possible with only a few clicks of a mouse to reach out to other
`addresses and glean a wealth of information as diverse as sales leads and demographics.
`But in order to examine what a URL can do, it is necessary to examine what the Internet can do.
`The idea behind the Internet is that roughly 1 million computer networks throughout the world are linked by
`high-speed telecommunications lines, thus giving people on each of the participating networks access to the resulting
`"worldwide web."
`More than 20 million computer users are known to be on the Internet; most analysts predict that this number will
`only increase in the coming months and years.
`Each participating network contributes whatever unique stores of information it might own and, as the price of ad-
`mission, makes that data available to all.
`Over the last decade this inter-network has grown to include rather amazing resources.
`Colleges started posting theses prepared by their graduate students on thousands of topics. Much of the data that
`supported those theses had been gathered from other Internet sites.
`Other schools transformed the entire text of reference works, poetry and literature into computer files and posted
`them on the network. Newspapers and magazines were added, and publications prepared solely for on-line consump-
`tion, called "e-zines," came into being.
`Federal agencies as diverse as the Census Bureau, Patent Office, Library of Congress, Social Security Administra-
`tion and Labor Department began putting reams of statistics, reports, forms and other documents into Internet-connected
`computers.
`Millions of people all over the world created a system of informal computer bulletin boards called newsgroups and
`used them to exchange views and information on subjects as diverse as biophysics and boyfriends.
`
`Facebook Inc.'s Exhibit 1009
`
`002
`
`Petitioner Microsoft Corporation, Ex. 1009, p. 2
`
`

`
`Page 3
`THE INTERNET BUSINESS COME HOME;A MAILBOX IN CYBERSPACE BRINGS WORLD TO YOUR PC
`Chicago Tribune March 26, 1995 Sunday, CHICAGOLAND FINAL EDITION
`
`People with access to one network were able to send e-mail to people with access to any of the other networks on
`the Internet. Soon e-mail became the favored means of exchanging business information in many industries. Plus,
`home-oriented telephone dial-up computer services like America Online, CompuServe and Prodigy made Internet
`e-mail available to their customers.
`Then, as computer sales began to boom in recent years, having access to Internet e-mail became an important busi-
`ness tool not just for top executives and the computer savvy, but for many ordinary workers.
`Growing numbers of experts speculate that having access to the Internet from a desktop computer soon will be as
`commonplace as having access to a telephone or to a U.S. Postal Service letter carrier.
`And much of this optimism stems from the existence of URLs.
`Just as the home-oriented dial-up services have moved e-mail from the realm of high-level Internet sites into the
`public domain, so URLs promise to bring the rest of the Net to the masses.
`The key is that URL technology transforms what have been enormously complex commands in the computer lan-
`guage used by AT&T's Unix operating system into the same sort of drag-and-drop on-screen techniques that computer
`users employ with Microsoft Corp.'s Windows or Apple Computer Inc.'s Macintosh.
`For nearly a decade, those Unix commands have served as the key to the information in the Internet when it was the
`sole domain of computer scientists and the more sophisticated hobbyists. These commands have names like File Trans-
`fer Protocol (FTP), Gopher, Veronica, Usenet, Finger, Archie and Internet Relay Chat.
`Using FTP, you type commands into one computer and are taken via high-speed telecommunications links to a
`second computer, where it's possible to read directories of the files that computer's owners have posted for Internet ac-
`cess. Typing more commands allows you to download any file into the original computer.
`Gopher does the same thing as FTP, but in a slightly different way. Veronica is a method of searching multiple
`computers for files containing keywords. The other Unix commands use other methods, but they all amount to reaching
`out from one computer to another to acquire or offer information.
`In 1993 computer scientists on the campus of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign developed graphical
`software for Windows- and Macintosh-type computers that let users manipulate on-screen icons to do many of the
`things that can be accomplished by using the Unix commands.
`Those computer scientists coined the expression "Internet browser" to describe such software programs and called
`their browser Mosaic.
`At first the browsers simply operated on computers at university and business worksites already connected to the
`Internet via the backbone of high-speed telecommunications lines.
`Each computer on the Internet was given a name by the InterNIC Directory and Database Service, which is sup-
`ported by AT&T and the National Science Foundation in a voluntary effort to maintain order on the Internet.
`The concept of URLs was developed by a consortium of physics departments in European universities called
`CERN. URLs are subsets of the addresses maintained by InterNIC and thus allow individual users of each computer
`network to reserve a small part of that network for their interests. These URLs thus designate what are called home
`pages. For example, http://www.uiuc.edu is the URL for the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.
`One typed a URL into a browser, and the software would make the proper links to the Internet, then call up on the
`screen graphical representations of whatever the host computer was offering, including photographs, text files, even
`multimedia material such as music and movies.
`This amounted to doing the same things that were available via FTP, Gopher, Veronica, etc. But now the infor-
`mation surfaced with the same sort of ease as when using Windows- and Macinosh-style PCs.
`In most cases a user downloaded this material by clicking on underlined text representing the desired file. This
`technique of using text as a jumping-off point for the information behind it is called hypertext.
`The "http" in most URLs stands for hypertext transfer protocol as in the http://www.uiuc.edu address for the U. of
`I. The initials "www" stand for the World Wide Web, which is the name given to the Internet.
`
`Facebook Inc.'s Exhibit 1009
`
`003
`
`Petitioner Microsoft Corporation, Ex. 1009, p. 3
`
`

`
`Page 4
`THE INTERNET BUSINESS COME HOME;A MAILBOX IN CYBERSPACE BRINGS WORLD TO YOUR PC
`Chicago Tribune March 26, 1995 Sunday, CHICAGOLAND FINAL EDITION
`
`The ".edu" stands for education, and shows it's a college site. A government site is designated ".gov", while ".com"
`identifies a commercial site.
`The computer scientists who put the whole Internet thing together developed the final key to today's picture when
`they found ways to use ordinary telephone lines to link PCs with the World Wide Web. This was a major change for the
`Web, which, for most of its existence, had been reachable only through major computer installations linked to
`high-speed telecommunications lines leased by colleges, governments and businesses.
`And a new acronym came on the scene: SLIP, for Serial Line Internet Protocol.
`To link a PC to the Internet, a SLIP connection employs the same modems that are used to hook up that PC to an
`America Online-type of service.
`Once that link is made, the most ordinary home PC enjoys the same Internet status as does a $500,000 workstation
`in a scientist's laboratory.
`Currently, most SLIP access is obtained by subscribing to a new class of businesses called Internet service provid-
`ers, which work somewhat like the better known CompuServe-type operations.
`Customers phone in using special SLIP software. Once this software connects the computer with the Internet, the
`user then runs a browser program and begins browsing.
`Karl Denninger owns MacroComputer Solutions Inc., one of Chicago's largest Internet service-provider companies.
`(Nets to You works in cooperation with Macro Computer Solutions.)
`Denninger noted recently that in less than a year, the number of his subscribers has grown from a few hundred to
`about 4,000. Most pay between $10 and $20 a month for access to the Internet, either using traditional Unix commands,
`or SLIP links and URLs.
`But supplying SLIP links may prove to be a short window of opportunity for such small entrepreneurial outfits.
`In recent weeks, Prodigy, a joint venture of Sears, Roebuck and Co. and International Business Machines Corp.,
`has been offering a Web browser to its 1.5 million subscribers.
`Steve Case, president of America Online, says that his service will have a browser up and running in April or May
`for its 2.1 million customers.
`And CompuServe, with 2 million customers in the U.S., also is expected soon to make a browser part of its service.
`As Anastopoulos said, he has seen the future and its name is URL.
`----------
`The e-mail address for Tribune computer writer James Coates is jcoates1@aol.com
`
`
`GRAPHIC: PHOTO GRAPHICPHOTO: Harry Anastopoulos of Telusys Inc., an Internet consulting firm, says that
`URLs help put everyone "in the game." Tribune photo by Walter Kale.; GRAPHIC (color): About the cover. The illus-
`tration and design are by John Bleck.
`
`LOAD-DATE: March 26, 1995
`
`Facebook Inc.'s Exhibit 1009
`
`004
`
`Petitioner Microsoft Corporation, Ex. 1009, p. 4
`
`

`
`Boy set afire over missing food stamps
`
`muuflom
`THE CITY OFCIIIGIED
`along with reporufrum
`aroeuru‘ the region.
`
`extensive bums have “a vary
`high ulorlalily rate." aald Dr.
`Etiaabelli Bcalun. chief resident
`in charge ol' plastic surgery at
`I.heh1:ian1laJ.
`Dnlir his face. part of his
`lower abdomen and the from
`urootl. Boalun said. He is on a
`Bart of his llsiiuha were not
`vomihoor and has been unable
`to talk because ot a Ittuaflalng
`lube down his throat. Beahro
`said.
`‘The out so hours la one
`nurdlo. but he has many ahead
`olhlin.“ Bauhm said.
`
`The bar must undergo |'nu.l-
`IIPH Sltlll y'all: ind. other tro-
`arallons. and recovery could
`take years. Bealtoi said.
`“Ha‘a in for o loiril stay and n
`lorig recuperation.‘ Bealnn said.
`“He is young and has a good
`heart. We rm-.-.ui.me ha'a healuiy.
`'fl|ai's one or lhe best things no
`3“! anlns Mr bin"
`The boy’: relatives and family
`Ilrlenda said 039')‘ were slvoclied.
`‘It's and. How could someone
`loflllll efllnebod-ll‘ like that O\'t‘.‘l'
`W. [ll'!| hcilhilig but a plea of
`see But. Fina 1
`
`aaid Chicago Police Cmdr.
`auuaa Sn:.IIlL ‘lie was lrirlne in
`get the bulb mil 0! ill! -i:lilbll'eo."
`Harris was arrested on
`din-gs if Ininoha ballllry‘ and
`ntlallpled heinous battery. both
`NUMS with penallm M 61)! in
`all year: In prism. Smll-ll Hill.
`“II the cli.Lld abottlid M98. natu-
`rally were going to noel: Iourder
`cha1'oeI." Smith said.
`Han-La doused the lit?!‘ and bile
`lsyaar-old. mler with rubbing
`alcohol and charcoal lighter
`fluItl\vlli.|£|l'.'l'll|8Ingellol:l:ie
`bolloin ol‘ the mining Iood.
`
`claropa. pol.|.|2 sail.
`Mar trumlonina flan diildrui.
`
`ooul.dri‘t gt away.
`no Ill-yum-old. Blllllllrlld sac-
`ro paroe
`malnco In crltlul condition In
`Wyitlr Children's Hnollllll at tho
`l.I'riiveral.tiroi’€lIiuao.
`'l‘iI‘p1fll-I)‘. victims with well
`
`
`
`They Walk line
`between graffiti,
`art, many say
`B]
`Van Mill!
`and
`Iilllt
`‘nature; slur! ‘mums
`an olghtvfool-high aaaalte wearing a
`wold diam ooiis omtooualy on the back
`wall cl’ I garage near downtown Aurora
`A law olodca away. a iriaaalve Grim
`Ricaperr painted on the side or I acaall.
`atarltat slower: over the image ot a
`young man with a gun. with messages at‘
`peace scrawled lo the baclrgroia-id.
`La this outlaw gnngbahger gral‘l'il.l or
`an artistic expression of community
`pride‘!
`111al’soriaori.heq1ieat.ioiosbe1.n3 raced.
`oonaitiur on
`by Aurora oiriidaiaas they
`ordlrianoo ibat would l.im.iI
`the star of
`outdoor Iourala ln residential
`neifltborliollla. loading in a debate om
`touches on wider HIIEHDIIB 0|'¢Il1lll.l'o.
`micsiiieechandarl.
`‘It's a complex issue,‘ obsan-ad Jennie
`Kieaalina. director or ownmuaioioaaed
`orogracas flor the School oi‘ the an Initi-
`lute In Chicago.
`Munl.a—lncliiding soon that aaluallor
`inourpurata 3-ramti—"can be really
`Eltbuloua aestlietlcally when the color:
`are magnificent and their are well
`ltiouynt our." Kiasaaing arulod. “Flue! re-
`late to the columtmily kida are living
`mu
`Eul
`in many people‘: minds.
`the
`boundaries between cilllural and artistic
`euqaresston and gang-misled gramti can
`be blurry. resulting in such roeaauaea as
`the Aurora proposal.
`Supporters or the ord.1.na.nt:o. which
`would Limit murals in roaldtlltlal oroaa
`tosixaounreiieet and realrlctaiurah on
`ooanrnercial buildings to orietuvlh of the
`wia1L say it wiouldhriocurbwliatun be
`perceived as gang izaaeery.
`Viraasdiaibavamurnlatrnidtoliave
`more gong pimblelllsi.“ said Ald. Kellmill
`Hlnlerloofi, Ilvll prbvosala lltalrl hacker.
`"That may not be a oauaeoridemct rela-
`tloriahln. but there is a cnrrtiialioli.”
`Bltl some arllsls poinl out Lhal there
`usually are stgnilicanl dinemicra Ln the
`intent or niurata and gndriii. gang-relab
`ecloirolliznrlse
`‘Jib me. lllc tllfferenioe between nuinala
`onzl ii:riul'lti aocrosi relatleay clear.‘ said
`Jon Pounds. director of Chicago Public
`Art Group, a nonorolil Ilrgaaiafiflmi that
`has been involved in Cltllrnmo mumla
`ainiz Ila inception in l9'.'fl. "lJIall1ll
`la
`aemrrnili‘ scan as an mlllali‘ not. some-
`ihina tbone oovorlly. A mural is done
`ollfirlly and Lrles to engage the ooIo|ru|n|-
`tjf.
`llut Poiunis iinrecci llill for most neo-
`Dle.
`the line beta-i.-co the two is much
`rtiuler. And. almost
`invarlanly. nmy
`boundaries spawn rv.1:.aI.ive aasumpilntia.
`"People ml mnmseil because they be-
`llei-a that murals rlthair mnri: an eco-
`noanlc tlowntum in a nelwiborlsood an‘
`encounter orrlmu." Pounds said.
`Once onnsidi.-av.-d Ute "poor sl.epch.|.ld."
`at line art world. murals Lnrmarlngly
`
`
`
`have come into their own in recent
`roars.
`i.n 1;inrL Pounds noted. "because
`tlio on world lulil decided mat [on art
`works] r1.-Littionahii;
`to community Ls
`ltliD0fi.il.til."
`
`ii-ouaaaravngur
`I-loclorBai1llas.iT.Drouc|1v5i'iciusofl
`Ihemuralhelialped point [above] in
`A.i.roIa.AI'io1l1einiui‘aIglaofial1aleli'
`gdI'8genoza'l‘1lovi‘i'oriiStIeetlle‘|'t‘i.
`
`lilliih rnurala were prominent ln Mex-
`ican art
`In the aims and loans and
`III-wed an lollloid-anl role Ln i1.rrieriaI'5
`Deprueiiori-era WM art projects.
`the
`maul uiuml uawenient was timed by
`polilloal and social conoii-ms in the
`lflh.
`Today. mibllc murals are likely In
`trtimpet Iliaroa ol‘ community empower-
`ment. In Chlcaao‘s larsllif Latino Piiseri
`nelmiborliood. ma iuoample. oiiurala ollert
`riel'lectasenaenl'cultu.ra1i1rtdeandtia-
`Sat Mniroua. hour I
`
`There’s no
`
`time to lose
`
`for Burris
`Short campaign adds
`to sense of urgency
`Bjtllsvlpilllrby
`'la:|:ivi-it 5MP? w'iu1-at
`It
`is lll:1S a.n1.. and Roland
`Burris I5 short on limo.
`The Independent candidate tor
`mayor or Chicago is Inning a
`rodin allow. and the w|lm'8lI'I's
`lies! has llulrbcct his introduc-
`Ilon.
`"rm sorl')‘.' he tells Burns ‘I
`know you're-i.n a hurry.”
`Burris ofiera no aniiic. no
`words.
`No wonder. At It am. Bums
`must be at mother radio stnidin
`lo moon: anulliiir slaw. ‘men he
`will be whisked to an mils a.rrI.
`Loop fundraiser. and at 1111.5
`
`Calllpaign '95
`p.rn.. no is scheduled to tour the
`Chicago Board Options Ex-
`cluinge.
`[lack in tlie studio.Burri.1 still
`is waiting. Stall‘ members paoe
`outside the sound booth. The
`clock is llcklne
`II has been tlcliing dime I-‘eh.
`EB. wlicn I-l-war Richard Baler
`deraatad Democratic primary
`dpporlenl Joseph Gardner. a
`omniaissioner with the Metro-
`politan Wm Reclamation Dis-
`trict. And the clodc will remain
`Burris‘ enemy until the April -I
`genaralalccllon.
`llurrls. who out at‘ rlerercnoa
`to Gardner did mt activmy cam-
`paign or raise funds before Feb.
`28.
`is running the political
`equivalent of a iiuyard. ussti.
`ll
`Wflllld he dilllcull for any politi-
`rJ.an. Irul wooclally mi: Burris.
`whose deliberate. conservative
`style is reflected by his
`trademark dark three-niece
`suits
`-‘we're doing soanefltlrig [hill I
`don‘: Lllink has mm done on
`this level before; ninnirig a 31-
`day campaign against the mayor
`or the city or Chicago." eald
`lirurrls. 51'.
`I'I.i|l‘l€l18'
`former aller-
`ney general rind comptroller.
`‘K it were i1lI}'Ol'ie utllrrr Ihao
`Roland Burris.“ he said, "I
`would say it would be an Impos-
`sible ta-iii."
`Al tLon:s.
`lt aunefira an it Bill‘-
`r|.s revels in the clintieuge. In
`lhrl. at several campaign alooa.
`Burris men has wrrdncaed audi-
`encw liow oianlr Java remained
`II-lllil
`the oloction.
`It will be lo
`on Sunday.
`Dfipiitl
`llil.‘ Oll\l'l.I'llI5 i1LEeren1:-
`es Ialrtillievm Burris and Gardner.
`much or Burris‘ camnolmi is al-
`most a mirror outage oi‘ Gard-
`ner's. Porliaris trio! is Int di.-slim,
`slnoe Burris has still repeatedly
`thal Gardner has "passed him
`the bolon."
`lzlurrla. tor el(B|'|IDlE. advocates
`n-during iho c-:3-‘s head lax on
`businesses. as did Garrtncr. its
`also supports oooilior Gardiner
`plnironn flldllk‘. improving ar-
`ronialilz buusing. Sim llarly. Eur-
`rls says iiniarovlng public
`scllools will decrease in-i:i:rie and
`increase ccoiiiolnic dsevelogonionl.
`.i\nil Burris.
`lu<e Ganlncr. has
`u.nsuc.ocsaliit|ly Itliallziriged Daley
`to
`one dtcrercnce has been Bur-
`ris‘ uaIt1|'lli|,'.lt sl')'lc. Unlike the
`low-key Gardner. who flzcused
`on issues. Burris has adori-led a
`new spiifirc ooraoiia.
`He nursed ihar Daley nos lied
`about the number ol clly pohou
`officers. Hr: ncciiacd name of
`puitins: a colleague up to of-
`ierlng lliirru two liiirh-1Jal'lI|.B
`govcnuiicnt jobs to stay oul of
`the raoe. Mid llil rrialtes provoca-
`iire rerriafltr.
`
`Hofer acquittal yew from unusual tactics
`lflllli EL! loll-N15
`Dylfllflfllalliull
`?anun¢9rurw'a-rrlcl
`‘It never l|u.rt_-I lo suwst tliol
`abadxuirorabuncnolbad
`Hllllllut Cm-alen 1-iofar. who no
`guys lurk soinewlidra in tho
`oordinx to Interpol oolico ro-
`shadows." observed David
`coma "l:a.ino to notice" of Mun-
`Pmlasa. a journalism Professor
`Ii:lI 901.102 in the lolrl-ifllb lior
`at Northwestern University who
`sveciellaos Ln lveal aoairs
`mieairina in urosutulion. aays M
`wants to study to become a
`The jury is still out on
`ariroinal ltrinl lawyer as a msull
`wlicthcr that strategy will work
`nl hls latest brush with Lhe law:
`all the time, or. say. in the mega
`his exjoarlenite as a murder do-
`trial of 0...]. S|.I'|'l]JSill'l.. But in
`ilrrirlanl.
`Hofera case,
`the bad-guy-Ln-Hie
`Hofer. or ooiiraii. vrfll have I
`lndows
`eory 3
`lily saved '
`comoieic hiuh school. lost. it
`fie
`ace G0
`
`Attorney worked to raise doubts
`If he ever osaltoa it
`to low
`Suaarmc Dlda. Kllnar. who wore-
`seniecl
`the 36-year-old Gernian.
`Bchlnl. one of the flrat princi-
`ules be is nicely to t!nooI|nlt:r Ln
`was holding oourt outside oourl
`l.l| Simkie.
`an ellrlu class may oomc from
`“R Ellis of his current mentor
`"1.lm\-eaao-ongsenseihattr
`you Bl! Iiisllonesl willt 8 .1|1l'?I'. it
`“Id MID. ‘Professor Richard
`Kllnfl. lvho leeches at the China-
`will come back In haunt your
`E0-KEII-l College onaw.
`cliail.” tiling sald.
`\'i‘l‘iL|.e that geuemilir
`ls trur.-,
`Shofila before I-lolcr. afi. was
`aolltiitted. in a jury
`llie nii;h court or reality diictaies
`a iallbac-Jr doctrine when the
`s"“l°£‘3<‘l‘l“ll:9°“l'i-‘3-5-’ll®’{l9
`o( murdering Wuuietie Q
`Petitioner Microsoft Corporation, Ex. 1009, p. 5
`
` '
`
`be
`
`Ravages of AIDS
`'
`!
`.
`.
`.
`Just can I; destroy
`this family umi;
`nadanianoiclliarlaiailyhava
`goneiocatllhrrii-artow.Chiuabo
`lIadlI5co|riel.oolian‘l.'iharawaa
`Ilbodlobill.r.IlI:vIvunhnt‘oIl.ii
`toony.aodlliayJuatoaoldn't
`oialneitatllraiore.
`llnicaloiel
`seearalinonthsam.
`alnwaalfionn
`einllltblldlvnbommlfl
`your-iiiioarrtot1ieriiilltal.lanlierlI:Igiaa:nda
`i7ai:bero¢Me:doandaacenL
`Buuithairiva:'omaliaddiado(AlIJs.arid
`annlaaridbaraixyouninslblltizswete
`]i.v|.ng Ina lllspanic naiahborliood on the
`North Side with an Afrimnatmerloao eat-
`Marlnanal-ned.Rol1erlHar.e.
`llwassuchaaoanaataleuiatldldnr
`iriavwa-nattodowitiiitsoldidnoihilig
`wbonitrnlgbtlnat-e:'iooeso||~iegiood.Il2ell.tt
`new s'o-nolyaapimotoifona mo-illyhfleroc
`Ilaiilloabvgrongauuriallieboeotawlnl
`On Iliecbllly autumn orenlns that] lirat
`viaitadtlicniaztaiuil Angelaaatatilue
`dlnlogluomlahla
`l.al.li.alIbaulllIl||iB
`lsofliishoitidnothaveloloxvw.
`“My-d.ad.heuaedloalIoolupIIaadlas,"
`aaid.“liiii'riioioigoli\mn*omltlat.
`dladhlarcltn.159n.lrumeinbad-because
`oome home from acliml I III! ray
`wail
`niaJtebisiood.l
`doalldaeoookiagluaodlobea
`slave. .A.nyway.al\erIl'.iad brobflll Into the
`i'ood.lieatat1odtoliavcaelaunsal-IcuIsl.i1
`areclirierandtoamwaacoioilagoutoifhla
`Ioouui.“
`Slieretaalledberoiothorsdeatltililiie
`sunedcdaildasmb
`ttiawayher
`looibersttockhair
`aridlhenllall
`ouI.liowtiersliLoamieyosrornedyr-llmr.
`'li1yIaoro.abe].o-vadwlllgtollie
`luiaspilal.“ Allaelaaald. 'shaaald.tliehod
`wasdelldouaandlguessalnllioedflic
`oirltacv-"
`Grainnlaadladntlioiirieoliodalflnitlett
`aIllieaoenl‘B1,leali.ngaavenorpharislri
`
`‘boiledliie
`Hetbrewoulllie
`toiiotsflewaalaad
`l'.‘-kill!!!‘
`iheuoamm i:liLLclron'shair
`
`paroclad out to relatives and lesser home:
`When Grace Dias died. Haze teaart
`proceedings lo adool lhe cbildn.-IL A new
`vroblem arose
`Because at her illness. Grace Dlar. IHII
`been ellgllzle {or various ltinos cl’ nuliiic
`and private oaaimnoc. when she died. that
`money d.riod. up.
`Ha-an worlo.-d. N’-lllll on. but it was ltanl
`with seven lilila. one orihi.-m a o-year-old
`willi AIDS. The children reii.-med in him a
`ilielrilithar. bulirrllieeyeeottbeatalube
`was ust anollnr urrerrinlnyad alngh male,
`cliiii is [or only a ringer amount ofpublii:
`y.
`:li‘I. Nevertheless. l'lI- o wlilin. Illa IhinL1y ml
`Several vuaelta atler my first visit. I spent
`another arienloon at the Dlaaia’ around-
`noor aoari.ment—i.aei.r sew.-ntn boon: Ln
`siwiai years
`The kids rushed III Iron: school. Illlmw
`Hazearldsal dowonimolblhtlotio llielr
`luuneworii. one 0(ROIit!t‘l's Rum or Order
`No'i'\" or radio lutlll lltflmliolrk was done
`and mom were cleaned.
`Haze was a conuinial. quiet. well-spolocn
`man in his ans. both patient and stern wltn
`tiiecnlldreri. Aalted uiiyliewould laliron
`the task orralslng someone cIse's chtldmn.
`he said simply trial they plovldcd him with
`De: iamily he lllld. never had.
`‘Sobtctbrirs ltainlt lies was kind of
`magi" Am;-J.a saui. "sirinelirrice I think he's
`sent by God.‘
`Tba opnflmmil aas shabby but bat and
`filled vuth ll:i:.e"s second-hand boolia.
`mundlrig I.‘nl:;yi'J.oped.ia sela. the ooionlaie
`worlca ol' Mark ‘hvain and several Bible-_-L
`Andria snowed otrlier two lavuriles One.
`Btzlflfrmnher l!!|lthH.was"F‘am|.Lil'Cl.rdB
`WU:‘ilil.‘nt‘l C|a.I'I.L' The other was Rlloli
`'\-‘iJ'IIaet.“
`Anmla slid Ehll. unlllic her DBIEIIIB.
`Robert eoipiaslud college
`“Robert fella in eduixllan is l.‘|'el1i'l.ltl.ng
`He will tolarala on dulnlrilea ‘in our house."
`lritlio poet caunleotyaraslacsnld. lier
`EL;|d5l1l'ldfl|3i'l£1'f\)flll:lSaDd.FSb0ntllllit‘I
`By now. the {atolls was desperate. For
`rwslorlmis bureaucratic reasons. their loud
`stamps had been repeatedly col. Now our
`reoi.-itvad ml ll
`lumlflg ln stamps iloir Ill:
`83 Sm-nclr. Paoa -i
`
`Facebook Inc.'s Exhibit 1009
`
`005
`
`Petitioner Microsoft Corporation, Ex. 1009, p. 5
`
`

`
`
`
`-1 OECTIONISDOIJNURV. Iunou 29.1995 D-
`
`.'
`
`5 I" I-3 (.1 1 _-\'1;
`
`
`
` Amanboxm cyberspace
`
`
`
`oworl
`Chicagoans to uni uni: tlllalaeu on URLs. Thar
`Wllllmmsh s'IruzlIIl:.lI'saus1.IIInle-nauucklnlonan
`tuanandtfninxlnflonrnmneorymmmlslnuamuua
`|bundaaNatslnYnu.wh1chrpeu:in1Ln=sLnIwolLiItgun
`M a nnanpularlaai keyword south.
`Jn<t|vIdnaLaan|da:naJ1bus1.ne=salnllIe1ni1enseL'l1:u '
`And once Ilia!‘ llud you. line)! can vlzuv any nulwill
`youdnonmmammemmmetmkhsaadvuflung
`mm?» amgassasl male
`::
`;oa11s.d
`n
`whit:
`nyted:n1n|nnpru\|I"ld.esfl':e:$ogo‘.:3anrysufl‘:r:a:n2':
`lheaaonnflsulta Ilaillfunmpbu
`Ihewrid
`cusIomer~¢uwnrI llleralum crown
`Thus. to pun-Lug thousands or Imslnmipeonle.
`\i'IMWdIxndoIi:!rlnlzr:!t5B“a.|I:é.D “H
`0
`whulm-flaaymrkmanufllceurhawnlwnteizasui
`Down 1:] local
`are nun-IJ.n¢ to use URIA.
`huslneaaliheseinllillaltnmlliewurtdnffllalninmd
`Bluemoad.11nynmaavnrk:d.aaflaelnmrnaI|oa:al
`Sm:l.e'hI' or momma msalssla. which nubaislus Lls
`Lnlllnls BM were a domain am.
`newilzner Id: 3: Chionnlbhaaed IIIIL. and matte edilor
`ambmwmilvalmunhnnmflmlnrufnlmauuthz
`'nma-Wmser inc has a URL what! the E!I.I£l'l3i11-
`-Joe Soudiaro. who has made man samnles or several
`snetnupnhliahlug cunlpnny does thin
`I! diverse as
`of h.|.a mrnn urnilnnia v|.a ILL! URL
`Ohthe l|.ntJcI!1-B11!VéL)N1u canflsld. lJ'R[.sIhm MLIJOP
`tout the Isles! cove: slory in Punt? madwzlno and
`prinl a raw sample Izhaplers of Una blodtbnuler novel
`Brown: Co. Amerilach. T1-loam Co.. Mkmsorn Com-.
`‘The Celeiliue Prnphv.-v:r." by James neafleld.
`lrm.-I Cum. the University or Chhztco. llu bounrre. U1!
`G-emrau 1-‘Sloan-Ic 00. runs a URL whore II dtwasws
`U3. census Bu:-eau. Lhe CIA. Mayor Daley anal. . .. An
`pmperllea ol'hlail-technology pkutln with cuslonlere.
`animated mam olher bltslrlzsaai. lllafltutbnus mm in-
`The Cnaanber ol Commerce in Sedona. MI:-. runs 1
`dividuals are counned allmug URL plmanors.
`UN. and local bed-and-hrealcrasl operators pool their
`nv‘nJJIlILL||.h:s and uddrussos on il.
`Many use URL! Lo publish I.hI.'|.r rt.-Julnfl.
`-90 Drug-
`Dcwuaumom lane 9
`l3arI1|'BlII¢:!\nd.'TtIoaI|asl'.|I! usarualnunnlllmflrst
`
`-
`
`Bar Jams than
`Tnnnmnfluvwrn Winn
`Harry Juanstopouloe. onea|.denl or n Iwwur hatched
`Cauicagonased Internal oonsulllng company named
`'l'n1unyn In1:.. has seen the mun: (If the Amcntlll
`worlmlaace ln flue Inionunlinn Ag. and Ils name In
`URI...
`URI. slannts tor Uniform Resource Lonalnr. and
`Anasiovoulos and mm cnlrenmneurs earned it urn:
`bring Ih: peels! change no me bosmeaa mm and
`American Mm since the personal oonunular amved
`tn the earl)‘ ‘Do:
`A URL I:
`likv an address Ln cyberspace: on the
`warldwidu mtwurk at mmpmzer netwoms known as
`um Inlunurl. II bmuules 11 place where Ila owner can
`host or publish anyllllng L132 ovrmr rn|.gh‘I.' wlah,
`Having ll URI. Inonns your Imsinus Is on In: Inher-
`lU.‘l--wlnich ahso Imnlvs Ulal whaluver you are selling
`IIWB.
`flslmltly is w-Ilun reach at Inilnons ul polmlial cu;
`Anylxxty will: an Inrermralpahle onlnpuler can I'|.nd
`
`
`
`Firlgottip multilnefia
`The game is markeflng.
`Ina modicum Is
`CD-RIJM. the tool is yum PC. Paga 2.
`
`—~———w—»——
`Ilsy-bitsy computers
`They're called wbnolenooks. but they
`speak volunes for prommlwty. Pass 4.
`
`Dash it off digitally
`In n runny to communioale? #506-I may be
`me Inrorrnaflon loan ror.ILe1. Page 6.
`
`9 6
`
`Facebook |nc.'s Exhibit 100
`71
`1
`7
`*.
`
`Facebook Inc.'s Exhibit 1009
`
`006
`
`Petitioner Microsoft Corporation, Ex. 1009, p. 6
`
`

`
`Chicago Tribu
`
`spnaay. Maren
`
`995
`
`1!!
`
`Tuna
`
`
`Why PC is
`out before
`
`it’s even in
`Court.-<tJa3 vttmt Pan: 5
`lbs itnpIlcalIons-—lllawletI-Paelnand
`Co’: printer dlvisiml. tor exam-
`Dls-Alolltlltltlod the lnarlreL 'I"ha
`first H-P Ioster ptrlnteaa sold [or al-
`a_1osl I-i.fl'.lll, but t‘.-och new genera-
`llofll coat 1953-—axtd was smaller,
`weighed less and offered more.
`That‘: a case mm said. who-re ll
`company used its now-arotiucl
`ittr-lites)‘ lit at coltltlelitlre weapon.
`“no make r.-uih sttoor.-.sslt-e porter-
`ation: cheaper and cheaper. you're
`gniltgloplulaloloflltressumnn
`profit margins,“ he said. "A com-
`pulet‘ txlmpatty has to Ialhe c-very
`advantage awtILt'bI.e to It.‘
`Sowltaidoges this meantn us.
`llnlmnlesaooltatmtersanflteend
`or no whip?
`More than any1.hi'lIfi else, It
`to-
`Iluires us to be well Lrttorutud
`ahoutuhatnenecdaPCIod.o
`and less onttoer

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