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Untitled

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Introduction
an interview with Harry Forsdick
by Kate Bernhardt
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Know how to do a Boolean search without clicking for help? Put up your own Web page years ago? Used streaming media months before the guy in the next cube even figured out how to send an e-mail attachment? If you answered yes to any of the above, you're an Internet pioneer…right?
Meet Harry Forsdick. He was developing Internet applications before any of the rest of us even heard about personal computers. He's a true Internet pioneer, who with a band of other visionaries working at MIT and Bolt Beranek Newman (BBN) in the 1970s, figured out how to make one computer link to another, and what you could do once you got them talking. What made those early days so special-and what's in store in the future-was on Forsdick's mind when he talked to ZineZone.
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Meet Harry Forsdick
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