1996-10-08 - Re: Dallas Semiconductor turns on Internet commerce at the touch of a button

Header Data

From: Gary Howland <gary@systemics.com>
To: Anonymous <dustman@athensnet.com>
Message Hash: adedf318ab571a8c4d700783a960f4047c9b2dd13b59eff45f7baaef3fe932c9
Message ID: <325A331C.794BDF32@systemics.com>
Reply To: <199610080719.DAA06785@porky.athensnet.com>
UTC Datetime: 1996-10-08 13:47:50 UTC
Raw Date: Tue, 8 Oct 1996 21:47:50 +0800

Raw message

From: Gary Howland <gary@systemics.com>
Date: Tue, 8 Oct 1996 21:47:50 +0800
To: Anonymous <dustman@athensnet.com>
Subject: Re: Dallas Semiconductor turns on Internet commerce at the touch of a button
In-Reply-To: <199610080719.DAA06785@porky.athensnet.com>
Message-ID: <325A331C.794BDF32@systemics.com>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain


Anonymous wrote:
> 
> On Mon, 7 Oct 1996, Robert Hettinga wrote:
> 
> >     iButton users will have universal access to their World Wide Web
>                                                         ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
> > e-mail at public Internet connections (hotels, airports, kiosks) and
>   ^^^^^^
> 
> I think that says it all.

Someone's not paying attention ...

When WWW browsers are available at hotels and airports, as they surely
will be, then accessing ones email via www will be commonplace.  This
can be called "world wide web e-mail".  And of course you wouldn't want
to carry around a list of s/keys, would you?, so what better way to
authorise the connection than with an iButton?  (Answer: An iButton with
a user interface, perhaps a watch?)

Gary
--
"Of course the US Constitution isn't perfect; but it's a lot better
than what we have now."  -- Unknown.

pub  1024/C001D00D 1996/01/22  Gary Howland <gary@systemics.com>
Key fingerprint =  0C FB 60 61 4D 3B 24 7D  1C 89 1D BE 1F EE 09 06





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