Projects and sites published under the Hotwired banner from 1994 to 1999 include: • Adrenaline (1994–1996)-Daily Magazine of Alternative Sports developed and edited by Caitlin Pulleyblank. Magazine linked to an Interactive database of play spots on a graphical interface [realtime surf data, climbing data located (latitude/longitude), ultimate teams, mountain bike trails, rafting locations with posted CFS data]. • Animation Express (1998–2002) - Curated collection of animated short films presented in Flash, Shockwave, and QuickTime formats. • Ask Dr. Weil (1996-1997) - Steven Petrow was the founding editor of
Dr. Andrew Weil's integrative medicine site. • Beta Lounge (1997–1999) - Live DJ channel • Brain Tennis (1996–1997) - Debate as a spectator's sport • Cocktail (1996–1997) - Recipes for, history of, and variations on cocktails • DaveNet (1995–1996) -
Dave Winer's developer musings • Dream Jobs (1995–1998) - Inspiring people & company profiles • Geek of the Week (1997–1998) - Weekly featured member page of HotWired members around the world •
HotBot (1996–Present) - Search Engine (partnered with
Inktomi) • Intelligent Agent (1995) - Travel through the minds of Rudy Rucker, Randy Shilts, Joshua Quittner, and others. • Member Pages (1997–1998) - Template-based do-it-yourself homepage profiles of users • Muckraker (1995–1996) -
Brock N. Meeks follows the Net from Washington, DC. • Netizen (1996–1997) - The first website to cover a presidential election, featuring daily writing from
John Heilemann and
Jon Katz, edited by
David Weir. Where politics, digital culture, and the high-tech industry intersect; • Net Soup (1995–1996) - Listservs and newsgroup postings. • Net Surf (1997) - Events of the Net industry. • Net Surf Central (1995–1996) - An interactive database of the cool Web sites of 1996 • Packet (1997–1998) - Intelligence from the technological frontier, featuring Michael Schrage, Brooke Shelby Biggs,
Simson Garfinkel, Steve Silberman, and
Mark Frauenfelder) • Piazza (1994–1995) - the first communication forum within HotWired, including "Threads" (conferencing system) and "Club Wired" - (a live, Telnet-based chat system customized by Laura La Gassa - hosted by Will Kreth and Susanna Camp) • Pop (1995–1996) - Michael Small oversaw arts coverage (articles, reviews, interviews, streaming audio, chats) featuring editors/writers John Alderman, Rob Levine,
Ian Christe, and Sarah Borruso. • Renaissance 2.0 (1994–1995) - HotWired's original art and literary channel, managed by Gary Wolf with illustrations by Sabine Messner • RGB Gallery - Electronic art collection • Signal (1994–1996) - What did e-commerce, e-politics, and e-culture look like in 1995? •
Suck (1995–2001) - Web and media commentary redefining the word 'sarcastic' • Synapse (1997–1998) - Colorful, interactive viewpoints on technology and culture, featuring Jon Katz • Talk.com (1996–1998) - Live chats and interviews • Test Patterns (1996) - What HotWired employees did in their spare time • The Rough Guide (1995—1998) - Online travel library in partnership with Rough Guides • Web 101 (1997–1999) - Your smart introduction to the Net. •
Webmonkey (1996–2002) - Web programming tips and techniques • World Beat (1994–1995) - Travel ==See also==