TidBITS#556/20-Nov-00
=====================

  The Internet is great for watching the U.S. election fuss, but how
  does it fare at 3 AM when trying to lull a newborn to sleep? Tonya
  Engst returns to TidBITS with an article about not only finding
  parenting information on the Net, but also using it as a broader
  resource for raising children. Also, we note the releases of
  Netscape 6 and Palm OS 3.5, look at the demise of several Internet
  grocers, and welcome Blue World Communications as a TidBITS
  sponsor!

Topics:
    MailBITS/20-Nov-00
    Parenting with a Net

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MailBITS/20-Nov-00
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**Blue World Communications Sponsoring TidBITS** -- We're pleased
  to announce a new sponsor for TidBITS, Blue World Communications.
  Based near us in Bellevue, Washington, Blue World's claim to fame
  is the Lasso Web Data Engine, software (or "middleware") which
  enables a Web server to communicate with a database. As the Web
  has moved from static pages to dynamically generated sites served
  from databases, software like Lasso has become increasingly
  important. Blue World has answered this need by extending Lasso to
  support a variety of operating systems and databases and has
  integrated support for Lasso's tags into Macromedia Dreamweaver
  and Adobe GoLive, but Lasso originally made its name back in 1996
  as a flexible and speedy CGI for connecting the popular FileMaker
  Pro to Macintosh Web servers like WebSTAR. FileMaker Pro may not
  be an ideal database for the Web, but it was cheap, easy, and in
  common use. Add Lasso and a database on an inexpensive Mac, and
  you ended up with a sprightly Web site for fractions of what other
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  TidBITS, every post ever made in TidBITS Talk, and all of our
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  poll participants. In short, Lasso has become an integral part of
  how we publish TidBITS on the Web, and so we're especially happy
  to welcome Blue World to our select set of sponsors. [ACE]

<http://www.blueworld.com/>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=04179>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=05012>
<http://www.tidbits.com/about/handheld-edition.html>


**Netscape 6 Arrives on Wobbly Legs** -- With Netscape 6, Netscape
  Communications has released the most significant version of its
  Internet software since Netscape Communicator 4.5, though not
  without some difficulties. Netscape 6 features a customizable
  interface using downloadable skins; a collapsible field in the Web
  browser, called My Sidebar, for accessing search engines, AOL
  buddy lists, news, and other information; and several quick links
  to areas of Netscape's Web site, such as shopping, travel
  information, etc. More significant is the new Netscape Gecko
  rendering engine, which promises improved support for Cascading
  Style Sheets, HTML 4, XML, and more. Unfortunately, Netscape 6's
  release has proved shaky; we've seen reports of problems with
  Netscape 6's installer, or crashes on launch after installation -
  and these reports almost pale in comparison to problems we've
  experienced ourselves. On the upside, unlike recent releases of
  Netscape Communicator 4.x, this new package seems to include
  up-to-date versions of accompanying software such as AOL Instant
  Messenger. The Netscape 6 installer is a free 265K download, which
  then downloads the components you choose; a bare-bones
  installation averages around 10 MB, and a full installation is 29
  MB. [JLC]

<http://home.netscape.com/browsers/6/>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=05144>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=06043>


**Palm Finally Releases Palm OS 3.5** -- Palm, Inc. has finally
  released Palm OS 3.5 as a stand-alone upgrade for owners of Palm
  organizers. Although Palm OS 3.5 has been pre-installed on new
  handhelds for several months, this is the first time the upgrade
  has been available for machines running Palm OS 3.3 and earlier.
  The new operating system offers a few improvements, including an
  Agenda view in the Date Book application for viewing appointments
  and to-do items simultaneously, direct access to menus by tapping
  the menu bar area, and a Command Bar for accessing frequently used
  commands. Other improvements include a way to mask private records
  (instead of simply hiding them), the capability to assign a
  category to items beamed to your device, and support for faster
  synchronization operations. Before upgrading, be sure to back up
  your handheld's data with a utility such as Palm Buddy or
  BackupBuddy; the upgrade overwrites the handheld's memory and ROM,
  and Palm's default Backup conduit isn't guaranteed to restore all
  third-party applications on the Mac. Also, devices such as the
  Palm IIIe and Handspring Visors, which use memory that can't be
  overwritten by this type of modification, cannot be upgraded.
  Confusingly, the Palm OS 3.5 upgrade costs $15 for a 1.3 MB
  downloaded version, or $20 for a version on CD-ROM. However,
  owners of Palm Vx devices are able to upgrade for free, though
  Palm has offered no explanation of why this is so. Once you've
  installed Palm OS 3.5, Palm recommends applying the Palm OS 3.5.2
  update (a 3K download), which corrects a few incompatibilities
  with third-party software. [JLC]

<http://www.palm.com/support/35upgrade/>
<http://perso.wanadoo.fr/fpillet/>
<http://www.backupbuddy.com/>
<http://www.palm.com/support/35upgrade/palmvx_upgrade.html>
<http://www.palm.com/support/downloads/update352.html>


**Internet Grocers Drop Like Flies** -- Could Internet grocery
  shopping be the kind of service that appeals greatly to a few
  while failing to attract the necessary mass market to survive?
  Last week, ShopLink, an Internet grocer serving several states in
  the northeast U.S., shut its site down abruptly, and Streamline,
  another Internet grocer targeting the east coast, announced that
  it too would be closing up shop on 22-Nov-00. These closures
  follow the demise of Priceline.com's WebHouse Club grocery bidding
  site, which at least had the excuse of being a silly idea. The
  remaining big fish are Webvan (which recently bought
  HomeGrocer.com, its next-largest rival), Peapod (which two months
  ago purchased Streamline's operations in Chicago and Washington,
  D.C.), and the Texas-based GroceryWorks (which has investment from
  and an alliance with grocery giant Safeway). There's undoubtedly a
  link between the ills of the Internet grocers and the recent
  performance of the dot-coms, with a number of high-profile
  failures including Pets.com, Furniture.com, and MotherNature.com.
  But if the rise of Internet grocers causes traditional
  supermarkets to offer Internet ordering and home delivery,
  consumers will have won in the end. [ACE]

<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbser=1184>


**Poll Results: To Go Forward, You Must...** Sometimes I get the
  feeling the universe is watching closely, and last week was a
  perfect example. We ran a poll asking how old your most recent
  backup is, and several days later, somewhere in the crashes I
  experienced while trying to install and launch Netscape 6, my Mac
  suffered an odd form of disk corruption that kept reappearing even
  after DiskWarrior and Norton Utilities claimed to have fixed it.
  As usual, Dantz Development's Retrospect, coupled this time with
  an Ecrix VXA-1 tape drive (which can back up 250 MB per minute
  from my G4 to 60 GB tapes) saved my bacon. All I lost was several
  hours of time and my archived copies of deleted mail in Eudora,
  since I'd set Retrospect to avoid backing up Eudora mailboxes with
  Trash in the name several years before I decided I had enough disk
  space to save them. The moral of the story? Don't just verify that
  your backups are good every so often - also make sure any
  selectors you've created are still doing what you want.

  I'm pleased to say that over a quarter of respondents to last
  week's poll would have been able to recover from such a problem
  similarly easily, since their backups are less than 24 hours old.
  From there the percentages dropped more or less regularly, with a
  notable spike at 1 to 3 months. And 6 percent of respondents
  admitted to having no backup at all. Remember folks, as my
  experience last week shows, it's not a matter of if you'll lose
  data, it's a matter of when. If you're ready to start backing up
  more regularly, be sure to read through our "Have You Backed Up
  Today?" article series and the discussions of backup strategies
  and different media in TidBITS Talk.

<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbpoll=65>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbser=1041>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tlkthrd=1229+892+880>


**Poll Preview: Putting the "I" in Internet** -- We hear a great
  deal about how the Internet is changing the face of commerce and
  publishing and all sorts of important professional and technical
  pursuits. But what about our personal lives? Tonya has been off
  being a mother for a couple years now, and she relates below how
  she's used the Internet to learn a great deal about parenting,
  which is, not surprisingly, a highly complex topic with lots of
  information and opinions related to every decision. So for this
  week, we'd like to ask, "In your personal life, to what extent do
  you find the Internet a worthwhile source for information,
  community, learning, or support?" Please do register your opinion
  on our home page today - I think the results will be quite
  interesting. [ACE]

<http://www.tidbits.com/>


Parenting with a Net
--------------------
  by Tonya Engst <tonya@tidbits.com>

  It's been about two and a half years since I've written for
  TidBITS, and that lapse corresponds to my pregnancy and then the
  birth of Tristan - Adam's and my first child. As a "stay-at-home"
  mom, I've slipped easily into the role of a normal Macintosh user
  with my iBook and an indispensable AirPort wireless network. I
  continue to use the Internet extensively, though I'm no longer
  exploring the ins and outs of Macintosh software; instead I'm
  researching the facts and opinions underlying parenting decisions.
  In this article, I aim to tell how I got hooked on using the
  Internet in my role as Mom Lady, share my favorite sites, and show
  how the Internet is changing the way people cope with parenthood.

<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=05244>


**Begin with Birth** -- My first forays in finding parenting
  information online began with researching some of the more
  intimate aspects of childbirth, details I was embarrassed to ask
  about and which few books covered in depth. With just a little
  looking, I stumbled on huge repositories of birth stories.

  A birth story tells how a woman experienced birth, usually with
  personal details of how labor progressed. I began reading these a
  few at a time. This raw material, not at all edited or summarized,
  allowed me to understand better why people chose different
  birthing locations (home, birth center, or hospital) and to
  realize the range of different strategies (hypnotism, water
  birthing, medication, cesarean, and so on). I read about births
  that went as planned, births that became terribly difficult, and
  births that ended tragically. I synthesized these primary sources
  into a powerful understanding of how I wanted my labor to go and
  what I could do (and when I should do nothing) to help it happen.
  Without realizing it, I began parenting with intention, that is,
  making parenting choices for carefully considered reasons.

<http://www.birthstories.com/>
<http://www.tidbits.com/tonya/tristanbirth.html>

  If I'd realized the importance of intention, I wouldn't have put
  off researching parenting styles until my 37th week of pregnancy
  (in the U.S., we consider 40 weeks to be the normal length of
  pregnancy; some other countries don't count the first 2 to 4
  weeks). Tristan was born in my 37th week, so Adam and I came home
  from the Puget Sound Birth Center with an almost-six-pound baby, a
  box of diapers, and roughly one-tenth of a clue between us. After
  solving the basic input/output problems associated with successful
  breastfeeding and diapering, we realized that we weren't sleeping
  much.

<http://www.birthcenter.com/>


**Taming the Sleep Crisis** -- The full extent of our sleep crisis
  hit hard one morning. Tristan woke at 3 AM, I took him downstairs
  to nurse, and - after nursing for a while - Tristan fell asleep in
  my arms. To test whether he would sleep without me touching him, I
  set him in a padded baby seat and watched intently. He looked
  restless, so I figured there was no point in returning to bed;
  instead I hopped on the Internet and looked for information about
  if babies ever slept through the night. Two hours later, I had a
  head full of ideas, and Tristan was still asleep. So much for my
  good night's rest!

  But I discovered a huge range of approaches to how, when, and
  where babies should sleep, several of which I hadn't previously
  understood or seriously considered. I have yet to find a book
  about baby sleeping that so thoroughly offers up the pros and cons
  of the different possibilities as I found in surfing a handful of
  Web sites.

<http://www.parentsplace.com/health/babycare/gen/0,3375,15340,00.html>
<http://www.iparenting.com/sears/columns/co-sleep.htm>
<http://www.pediatricservices.com/parents/pc-13.htm>


**Is This Normal?** In the first few months, Tristan spent a lot
  of time nursing and snoozing in my arms. To pass the time, I began
  catching up with email and tuning into what I call the "January
  List." Pregnancy Today runs numerous mailing lists for parents
  (usually a mother) corresponding to the month of the baby's due
  date. I joined my list around my third month of pregnancy and
  found it a source of support - I didn't know many pregnant women,
  so I found it helpful to read about what others experienced.
  However, the list volume was high; it had long, inflammatory
  debates; and a number of the participants were email newbies.

<http://www.pregnancytoday.com/interact/>

  But, as I began catching up after Tristan's birth, I found that
  the list had mellowed and matured, and people were writing about
  dealing with parenthood. For me, first-time parenthood was like
  sailing out to sea, only to realize that I was lost and I didn't
  know how to navigate. The instructions I had read didn't work, my
  boat had minor leaks, and provisions were running low. The people
  on the January List helped me keep my courage high and sort out
  how to live at sea. The women were frank about all sorts of
  personal details, and loaded with advice and anecdotes.

  So, the January List became a place where I go to receive and give
  empathy and advice, and I hope to meet some of the hundred-or-so
  women on the list. Over the months there have been a number of
  meetings, but none in my area. The list also helps me see what is
  normal. With so many mothers on the list (representing a wide
  range of ages and socioeconomic backgrounds), I can obtain a
  better sense both of what the range of normal is for any given
  topic and what the kids on the edges of those ranges are like. For
  me, knowing what is normal (or at least common) has proven
  extremely comforting.


**The Doctor Isn't In** -- Adam and I are lucky enough to have a
  relationship with a family practitioner who we like, and who knows
  how to use email. This proved useful when we were in Florida last
  spring - Tristan developed a rash on his wrist that quickly turned
  into purple blisters. Although Tristan wasn't bothered by it, we
  sent a digital photo of his wrist to our doctor, who suggested
  something related to playing in the ocean and told us to keep it
  clean and not worry about it if he wasn't scratching.

  Still, when I found a nursing-related hard spot in my breast on
  the morning of Christmas Eve, I didn't call our doctor; instead,
  I visited the La Leche League Web site and ParentsPlace, which
  recommended hot showers and massage. And, just this evening when
  a friend called to say Tristan might have been exposed to hand,
  foot, and mouth disease, I checked out my two favorite
  pediatrician sites to determine if he should go to play
  group tomorrow.

<http://www.lalecheleague.org/>
<http://www.parentsplace.com/>
<http://www.drgreene.com/>
<http://www.drreddy.com/>


**The Inevitable Shopping** -- What I like best about using the
  Internet as a parent is finding support and primary-source
  information. Those benefits don't come into play when shopping as
  often as I would like, but there are exceptions. For instance,
  although we bought Tristan's toddler car seat locally, we used the
  Internet, and particularly a Web site created by SafetyBeltSafe
  USA to figure out how to balance the contradictions between what
  Consumer Reports recommended, our car's physical constraints, and
  which seats we could test locally.

<http://www.carseat.org/>

  Other attempts at research - particularly with toys - have
  provided variable results. Popular toy sites like eToys and
  Amazon.com include product reviews, but my experience is that not
  enough parents have participated, so marketing people have written
  most of the reviews. Moving slightly away from the mainstream,
  I've enjoyed Lakeshore Learning Materials, a site based on a chain
  of brick-and-mortar stores that sell toys and educational
  materials, sometimes with a multi-cultural emphasis, and with
  little in the way of commercial characters. Another fun toy site,
  SmarterKids.com, offers a test you can take to determine your
  child's learning style and then shows toys geared to that style.
  Finally, Hedgehog Farms has a lovely collection of toys for dress
  up and imaginative play.

<http://www.amazon.com/>
<http://www.etoys.com/>
<http://www.lakeshorelearning.com/>
<http://www.smarterkids.com/>
<http://www.hedgehogfarms.com/>

  As a parent, I use our local library more than ever. When Tristan
  shows interest in a topic, I use the Web to connect to the online
  catalog and request books about it (our local library is small,
  but we have access to a huge library system through the catalog).
  We had a brief dinosaur stage, then trains, and - for a number of
  months now - the hot topic has been airplanes. Recently, we
  narrowly avoided a domestic crisis in which a pair of books, The
  Airplane Alphabet Book and The Jet Alphabet Book (both by Jerry
  Pallotta) had been renewed once and needed to be returned.
  Amazon.com claimed they were out-of-print, so I located the
  publisher on the Web and ordered the books, and they arrived
  before the library's copies were due.

<http://www.charlesbridge.com/jerry.htm>

  If I lived in a more rural area, I'm sure I would use the Internet
  even more for buying baby gear. However, as a first-time parent,
  I've found trips to real stores important for getting a better
  idea of what I want, and also for evaluating quality. For
  clothing, I tend to frequent local sales and used-clothing stores
  - I've yet to find an online clothing store that consistently
  offers inexpensive, colorful cotton clothing, and I can walk out
  of a used clothing store with maybe ten one-piece outfits for $30.

  If I used online auctions, I'd write about them here. In fact, I
  have a closet full of items that I hope to someday sell on eBay,
  but I have yet to start auctioning. I have heard many stories
  about mothers who buy baby gear at great prices using auctions. Of
  course, eBay isn't the only auction site, and my mother wrote this
  about a recent success: "One site I have used somewhat gleefully
  is eWanted, where I managed to obtain a Big Boggle set [a word
  game]. I had tried eBay and found that this game has turned into
  a collector's item with bids going way beyond what I consider
  acceptable. At eWanted, you list what you want and people
  actually bid lower and lower prices to satisfy your longing."

<http://www.ebay.com/>
<http://www.ewanted.com/>

  Finally, not all the shopping I've done online has been
  specifically for Tristan. La Leche League's Web site is a must for
  nursing mothers - on top of answering nursing-related questions
  and linking to local La Leche League resources, its gift shop has
  reference books, breast pumps, and even children's books that show
  nursing in a positive light. Nursing mothers might also get an
  energy boost from a visit to One Hot Mama, a Web site that dishes
  out attitude along with sales of maternity and nursing clothing.

<http://www.lalecheleague.org/>
<http://www.onehotmama.com/>


**Toddlers Online?** I suppose I should take a brief side trip to
  answer a question some of you may be wondering about - does
  Tristan use the Internet? Have I stumbled on any great sites for
  toddlers? Frankly, I have mixed feelings about kids (and adults,
  actually) and the immersive qualities of Web sites, computer
  games, and television. The American Academy of Pediatrics, a
  generally recognized mainstream authority for American
  pediatricians and parents, recently came out against television
  for kids under the age of two, so I put off seriously thinking
  about the subject until Tristan is at least two. Further, an
  article I stumbled on recently (while surfing links on the Web
  site of a local Waldorf school) lends further weight to my still-
  amorphous concerns.

<http://www.aap.org/policy/re9911.html>
<http://www.allianceforchildhood.net/projects/computers/
computers_articles_call_for_action.htm>
<http://www.threecedars.org/>

  That said, although Tristan has had extremely limited exposure to
  television, he will often toddle downstairs to Adam's office and
  ask to see airplane pictures on the Web. He also likes to sit in
  a desk chair, pound on a spare keyboard, and announce that he's
  "working." It's cute, but scary. One site that I have surfed
  briefly and that has been recommended on the January List is
  Sesame Workshop. It features activities based on Sesame Street
  characters, along with advice and ideas for parents.

<http://www.sesameworkshop.org/>


**Parents Who Think** -- My musings over the appropriateness of
  electronic media for young children may give you some insight into
  the kind of Internet information that fascinates me. In those
  first few months of parenthood when I had hours to surf the net
  while Tristan slumbered in my arms, I discovered several parenting
  Web sites worth bookmarking. Along with sites I've already
  mentioned, I happily recommend Breastfeeding.com for everything
  you never knew you needed to know about nursing; the Natural Child
  Project for thoughts about kinder, gentler parenting techniques;
  and the Northwest Attachment Parenting site for an introduction
  to the attachment parenting style of raising children.

<http://www.breastfeeding.com/>
<http://www.naturalchild.org/>
<http://www.nw-ap.org/>

  Another site of note is Salon's Mothers Who Think, which posts new
  essays about parenting topics most days. You won't find facile
  advice about diagnosing rashes, nor will you find chirpy
  suggestions for surviving a family vacation. You will see some
  light essays, but for the most part, you'll encounter provocative
  topics like drug addiction and date rape. Often Mothers Who Think
  did make me think, though my criticism of the site - and the
  reason I stopped frequenting it - was that all too often the
  writers spent a lot time thinking and not much time concluding,
  and for me, being a parent is more about making decisions than
  wallowing in confusion.

<http://www.salon.com/mwt/>

  Making concrete decisions feels especially important since there
  are so many to make: Toy guns allowed in the house? How explicitly
  should we teach body part names? Child-led weaning? Vaccinations?
  The list has no end. I have found wonderful real-life people and
  programs that mean a great deal to me as a parent, but nothing
  else equals the Internet for its historically unprecedented
  panoply of support, advice, and information. The Internet helps me
  identify my options, figure out what I want to do, and then have
  the courage and know-how to do it.


**Internet Parenting for Everyone** -- Although history paints the
  late 1960s as a time of rebellion and returning to nature, my
  mother - who was twenty years old and pregnant with me during the
  summer of 1967 - tells me that she could find almost no help for
  learning how to breastfeed that fall. She also described a world
  where parenting resources were few and far between, and where
  parents relied much more on intuition and the advice of close
  family and friends, plus maybe a few books that spoke to them.
  I imagine that in earlier times, before the rise of mass
  communication and printing, friends and family - plus perhaps the
  local midwife, teacher, religious leader, or doctor - represented
  parents' only sources of advice.

  What mass communication and speedy travel started in terms of
  allowing people to exchange parenting ideas and customs, the
  Internet is completing with style. Combine that with a growing
  body of scientific research and many minds interpreting that
  research, and you have a completely revolutionary system for
  generating and disseminating parenting ideas. That said, the
  Internet's rich information and communication resources in part
  create their own need for them. Now that information is so readily
  available, it seems reasonable to research topics that in the past
  might have remained unknown or been taken for granted. Even so,
  our society is growing increasingly complex and time-sensitive,
  and as much as the Internet contributes to that, for this
  generation of parents, I believe the Internet is more a help than
  a hindrance.

  The rate of change on the Internet is speeding the evolution of
  our culture's parenting techniques - suggested changes that might
  previously have taken generations to be assimilated can now be
  evaluated by many parents within a matter of weeks. Further, I
  believe that these resources serve to make the current generation
  of parents more confident and more effective (even parents who
  don't use the Internet themselves benefit from the knowledge of
  other parents, plus experts, like doctors and teachers who do).

  Also, parenting resources on the Internet are maturing - in the
  last two years, the sites have become better edited and organized,
  with increasingly detailed, varied, and thoughtful content. I hope
  that parents ten years from now will use the Internet less to
  research mundane topics (since that data will have been distilled
  into must-have FAQ lists and easily searched databases), and
  instead use it more as a tool to answer the questions behind the
  questions: Am I fully adult now? Where does patience come from?
  How do I parent my children to be ready for soul-shaking events
  like birth, love, and death? However, despite all the successes
  of the Internet, I'm guessing that in ten years it still won't
  offer the holy grail of parenting: a universal technique for -
  intentionally, kindly, and with no regrets - helping babies sleep
  through the night.

  [Tonya Engst's schedule is usually packed with play dates, library
  outings, and jaunts to look for pine cones. She occasionally
  replies to email, but since it took two months to write this
  article, she asks that readers not expect a timely or lengthy
  reply, though she will eventually read everyone's comments.]


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