In 1994, as "a staff of one" and encouraged by the owner of
The Examiner,
William Randolph Hearst III, Gulker came to run a pilot project called
The Electric Examiner, which routed wire-service stories to the Web. Gulker wanted to expand this "prototype of a future Web site" to distribute the actual reporting produced at the
Examiner but was frustrated in this ambition, as the
Examiner was bound by a joint operating agreement with its local rival, the
San Francisco Chronicle, Gulker did not join them. He sided with management and set to work launching The Gate ahead of its scheduled debut in late November For the duration of the strike, Gulker's operation, which remained "heavily dependent on wire-service stories" for lack of contributing journalists and editors, was the official online version of San Francisco's two largest newspapers. On one day during the strike, according to Gulker, "the
Examiner delivered 80,000 print editions, while its Web site recorded 93,038 accesses." and competed with
The Gate as "the soul of the Examiner and the Chronicle." Led by the
Examiner's associate editor Bruce Koon and former
SF Weekly editor Marcelo Rodriguez, they operated from a makeshift newsroom using their own hardware and a local ISP for rented server space. The strike lasted 11 days and its competition between two online newspapers has been hailed as "a milestone for online news." ==Apple==