NCIEO Home Page (Map): Introductory Information:

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ABOUT THE NITPICKER CENTRAL INTERNET EXTENTION OFFICE (NCIEO)

NCIEO is maintained by me (Phil Farrand) as a service to the nitpicking community at large. To help you find your way among the information, I've added several features. Every week I'll keep a This Week at NitCentral file current so you can go straight to the action. The name of this file remains the same from week to week. If you bookmark it, you'll be able to check the status of uploads to NCIEO very easily. (Bear in mind that you may need to hit the reload button on your browser to get the very latest version. Servers often cache frequently accessed files. If you are reading from your server's or your brower's cache you won't be looking at the latest version.)

Also, the top of each file contains a directory history to give you a clue where you are in NCIEO. For instance, the top of this file reads:

NCIEO Home Page (Map): Introductory Information:

You are currently one level down from the home page in the area "Introductory Information." Clicking on either "NCIEO Home Page" or "Introductory Information" will take you to those pages. Clicking on "(Map)" will take you to a graphical overview of the entire site.

On more example, the top of each Voyager Brash Reflection reads:

NCIEO Home Page (Map): Continuing Communications: Brash Reflections: Voyager Episode List:

In other words, when you are reading a Brash Reflection on Voyager you are actually three levels down from the home page in the subsection "Voyager Episode List." As before clicking on any piece of this directory history will take you directly to that page.

Please feel free to leave suggestions for improvements to NCIEO (chief@nitcentral.com). Be sure to include "Suggestions" in the Subject line. However, please bear in mind a few important facts.

First, this is a one-horse show. I do it all. I read the mail. I answer the mail--when possible. I design the pages. I managed the pages. Since NCIEO is non revenue-generating (a fancy way of saying, "it don't make no money"), I do have a limit on the amount of time I can spend on it. I do need to make a living to keep this going! Second, HTML--the language of these documents--was never intended to be a page description language. In fact, if you read the 2.0 Specification you will realize that HTML was designed for the parsing of text files. Because of this HTML is limited and is not implemented uniformly across all broswers. The actual appearance of the web pages on your computer will vary greater from what I design.