The newsletter is also available on the World Wide Web and has used a fixed-width
ASCII text-based layout since its inception. It was sent to subscribers in
plain text email. Since 2004, the website has offered readers the ability to use their own
style sheet. Each newsletter comprised (at least some of) the following sections: • An
ASCII art representation of the letters "NTKnow", along with the strapline and date. • An ironic or amusing quote of the week, not seen since April 2005, when NTK was weekly. •
HARD NEWS: Important, but not necessarily mainstream, news stories from the IT world during that week. Each story is accompanied by
URLs for further reading. •
ANTI-NEWS, later
ANTI-MEMES: A collection of "D'Oh!"s; errors in mainstream news articles such as using the wrong image for a story, typos, inappropriate web adverts, meta-information for editors or page filler that was accidentally published unedited, or even outright nonsense like "
Columbia: shuttle travelling nearly 18 times the speed of light". This section was later spun off into a separate site, ''D'Oh! the humanity!'' (now defunct). From 2002 onwards, the section also intermittently included themed lists of "google goofs":
Google results for searches using misspellings such as "
first aid tit" or "
penny farting". •
EVENT QUEUE: Events to attend that may be of interest to technologically minded people. This included visits to the UK by
open source leaders,
sci-fi conventions and blogging conferences, as well as talks and seminars by the NTK writers and their friends. The selections were frequently
London-centric, attracting criticism from readership living
north of Watford Gap, although with O'Brien's move to California, the geographical range of events covered widened;
Burning Man usually merited an annual mention. •
TRACKING: Focussed on interesting, useful, or just plain esoteric software. The selection was not limited to any particular platform; software for
Linux,
Microsoft Windows and
Mac OS X all features regularly, and occasionally software for the
C64 and
ZX Spectrum, such as a mini TCP/IP stack, was included if it was particularly interesting or could be mocked in an amusing fashion. The section also sometimes included reviews of web-services like
BugMeNot rather than conventional software. •
MEMEPOOL: like
Memepool, a collection of the week's best
Internet memes. •
GEEK MEDIA: short synopses of
television programmes or
films that are of interest to a geek audience. Films also include
BBFC ratings for added irony. • After the geek media section, there was a schedule of rotating extra items, including "Confectionery Theory" (reviewing new
sweets upon their arrival in the UK, later outsourced to snackspot.org.uk), "feebdack" (as a form of letters page; the title referring to a coinage in
Rudy Rucker's
The Hacker and the Ants), "boners" (correction of errors in NTK itself), and an occasional music review section. •
SMALL PRINT: Other than containing the basic meta-information that NTK is a newsletter, published every week, etc., this section always included the motto "THEY STOLE OUR REVOLUTION. NOW WE'RE STEALING IT BACK" and the phrase "Registered at the Post Office as", which is usually completed by an oblique reference to another website or publication that has itself referenced NTK, Danny or Dave. For example, it linked to their Wikipedia article in October 2004. ==Significant events==