This is an unofficial on-going non-inclusive list of interesting document URLs derived from our hotlists accumulated while browsing the Internet. The list is sorted by topic with emphasis on four main areas 1) Biomedical servers, 2) NIH related servers, and 3) documentation of WWW, Web browsers and tools for building servers, 4) miscellaneous useful information sources. This listing is maintained by the Image Processing section of the Laboratory of Experimental and Computational Biology NCI/FCRDC.
In exploring the Web, we saved interesting URLS in our hotlists.
Periodically, the hotlists were then mailed to ourselves using the
Mosaic MAIL command in the FILE menu that converts the
hotlist to formatted HTML before it is mailed. The received mail was
then edited to save high-quality entries (my bias), sorted, and a
"List of main topics" table of contents hypertext entry added to this
document. To save space, entries were put into one category list -
although they might also belong in other lists.
2. Searching for Information and Network Resources
3. WWW Documentation servers
4. NCSA Mosaic Documentation servers
5. Internet Documentation servers
6. JAVA documentation
http://www.sun.com/
http://java.sun.com/JDK-1.0/index.html
7. Some NIH and NLM servers
8. Some Biomedical servers
9. Some Telemedicine servers
10. Special Intergroups SIGWEB, SIGNIDR
11. Some interesting servers
12. Linux Operating System
13. SQL Servers and the Web
14. Corporations
15. Financial
16. Some Libraries
17. Some on-line Journals
18. Some on-line Magazines, Tech. Reports and News sources
19. Multimedia servers
20. Museum servers
21. Some U.S. Government servers
22. Recipes and diet
23. Travel and recreation
24. Recreation
Notes on the derivation of this list
These URLs generally point to a home page and are self documenting as
to author, institution, etc. Note that there is no guarantee that
any URL will be valid forever. Mosaic may not respond because: 1)
the server is overloaded, 2) the server is down, 3) it no longer
exists, or (most often the case - you mis-typed it if you entered it
manually), 4) the server was moved to a different computer, the
computer name was changed (most often to "www."), or the TCP/IP
port number was changed.
$Date: 2000/04/06 13:56:23 $ /
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