TIME IN PRINT
Subscribe
TIME Asia
International Editions

Customer Service
FAQs
Contact Us

TIME Asia
TIME Asia Home
Current Issue
  Asia News
  Pacific News
  Technology
  Business
  Arts
  Travel
Photos
Special Features
Magazine Archive

Subscribe to TIME
Customer Service
About Us
Write to TIME Asia

TIME.com
TIME Canada
TIME Europe
TIME Pacific
Latest CNN News


Other News
TIME Digest
FORTUNE.com
FORTUNE China
MONEY.com
Bookmark TIME
TIME Media Kit

Get TIME's WorldWatch email newsletter FREE!

TIME Asia Asiaweek Asia Now TIME Asia story

DECEMBER 18, 2000 VOL. 156 NO. 24

  ALSO IN TIME
COVER: The Best (and Worst) of 2000
When we look back, we'll remember Tiger Woods, Harry Potter and Sydney's Olympic gala

BURMA: Commander-in-Waiting
General Maung Aye stands ready to take over as hard-liner-in-chief, though he may have to beat out the country's top spy
Bringing the House Down: Suu Kyi and her brother face off

CHINA: The System Isn't Working
Premier Zhu Rongji's involvement in a business dispute in Shenyang epitomizes the nation's struggle with the rule of law

INNOVATORS: New Lights of the Spirit
From a multimedia bishop to the Chinese master of Fa Lun Gong, meet Time's religious visionaries for the millennium

CINEMA: Off the Rails in Angkor Wat
TIME goes tomb raiding with Angelina Jolie in Cambodia

TRAVEL WATCH: For Every Paradise, There's a Parasite

Cybertech

ALSO
The Best (and Worst) of 2000: Year in Review

When we look back, we'll remember Tiger Woods, Harry Potter and Sydney's Olympic gala

It was a boom year for tech toys. That meant lots of people were buying lots of expensive stuff they didn't really need. If it wasn't electronic, we made it electronic. If it was already electronic, we combined it with something else electronic, made it smaller and taught it how to play Edelweiss. And along the way we managed to build technologies that will change the way we live, work and relate to one another. It was a great year to be a geek.

THE BEST
1. WWW.NAPSTER.COM Any song. Anytime. Free. That's the beauty of Napster, the simple computer program written by college dropout Shawn Fanning that sparked a global frenzy of music sharing. With 38 million converts, even Metallica and its legions of lawyers won't get this genie back into its bottle.

2. NIKON COOLPIX990 Digital photography finally became cheap enough, easy enough and good enough for the rest of us. This Nikon takes pictures that look as good as film, and its preview function—you can erase the flops—does film one better. No wonder 5 million people bought digital cameras in 2000.

3. THE SIMS It's the Game of Life for the millennium. You control a family of suburbanites. You go to work, you cook dinner, you mow the lawn—no aliens, no spaceships, no rocket launchers. How do you win? You don't—you just try to stay happy. Kind of like real life.

4. THE HUNGER SITE Every time you click on this website's home page (www.hungersite.com), a donation goes to the needy, paid for by the site's advertisers. It's a welcome antidote to the feeding frenzy of get-rich-quick dotcommies.

5. KOZMO.COM How do you measure the worth of a website that delivers videos, munchies, toiletries and electronics to your door within an hour of your clicking to order? If the ever plummeting NASDAQ is a guide, Kozmo.com may not be around much longer. But we'll sure miss it when it's gone.

6. F—KEDCOMPANY .COM Garden.com, Eve.com, Pets.com—this was the year their bright and shiny dotcom promises turned to bitter ashes. This website with its unprintable name suggesting an unseemly demise has become essential reading for its gleeful tracking of the Internet industry's dot bombs, layoff by layoff.

THE WORST
THE MICROSOFT ANTI-TRUST TRIAL In a post-PC, non-Windows world of cell phones, Palms and MP3 players, the marketplace is settling the monopoly issue well before the courts achieve closure. Following Judge Jackson's ruling in June, the judicial process was last seen galloping on the swift steed of appellate law into the sunset of total irrelevance.

7. VISORPHONE Just clamp the VisorPhone onto your Handspring Visor (a cheaper clone of the Palm), tap a number in your address book and—bang!—look who's talking. This will be remembered as the year the cell phone and the pda finally got married.

8. PAYPAL At last, a simple and easy way to "wire" money—even tiny amounts of it—online. You can use it to send your deadbeat brother five bucks via e-mail, or to pay $200 for those vintage Care Bears you bought on eBay. It's quickly becoming the medium of choice for small-scale e-commerce.

9. THE SONY MUSIC CLIP The first portable digital music player that really showed us why they're so cool: they're tiny, they're light, they don't skip even when you jog and they look like something Q would issue to Agent 007. Nobody does it better.

10. THE RIM 957 WIRELESS HANDHELD E-mail is still the Internet's killer app, and RIM's 957 is the wireless gadget of choice for on-the-go e-mail addicts. A large, readable screen has been grafted onto the teensy keyboard, giving pda features to the seriously info-obsessed.

Write to TIME at mail@web.timeasia.com

This edition's table of contents
TIME Asia home




Quick Scroll: More stories from TIME, Asiaweek and CNN

   LATEST HEADLINES:

   Click Here for the latest regional analysis from TIME Asia



SEARCH FOR :  

Back to the top   Copyright © 2002 Time Inc. All rights reserved.
Reproduction in whole or in part without permission is prohibited.

Subscribe to TIME | FAQ | About TIME Asia | Search | Write to Us | Privacy Policy | Terms & Conditions | Press Releases