Let There be Daybreak

"[My job on Daybreak?] I created it!" -Anne


Various people were recruited, including me, nearing the end of the �96-�97 school year. Anne�s two sisters got involved, along with several people from Eastern Middle: Joe Howley (currently webmaster), Ben Kingsland, and Emily Purcell (both currently reviewers).
Emily became the webmaster originally, mainly because she had a WYSIWYG(What-you-see-is-what-you-get) webpage editor. While Emily put the page together, Anne tried to find a home on the web for the still unborn magazine. The first place she tried was GeoCities.


GeoCities is a World Wide Web server that provides, simply, free space for anyone�s web page. It is setup like a city, with different neighborhoods and adresses. However, when Anne attempted to upload a page to Daybreak�s GeoCities URL, she found she could not. Due to a problem involving server/browser conflict and FTP protocol, GeoCities was not going to work for Daybreak. Fortunately, Geocities was not the only provider of free web space.

Anne then tried FortuneCity, a web server with basically the same concept as GeoCities. Anne registered for a space, uploaded a Daybreak sample, and - it worked! The browser and server were best of friends and the FTP protocol protocoled along contentedly. http://www.fortunecity.com/millenium/paddington/8/index.html was Daybreak�s new home.





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