Last modified April 4, 1996
As a frequent user of the Internet as well as an employee of Internet Montana, I have come across many sites of interest on the World Wide Web. I started posting some of these sites as I uncovered them with the intent of making a monthly page of cool and interesting sites.. Now that I am on the fourth month, I decided it would be easier to combine all these pages onto one master site that I would update periodically.
I have also written a number of Internet support pages in response to frequently asked questions that I have answered while working for Internet Montana's technical support group. Those pages include links to sites for software as well as software support. I am currently working on Windows95 after posting several pages related to software links, support, and upgrades for Windows 3.1 and the Macintosh operating systems.
Although I usually avoid counters on my pages, two pages receive heavy use. The Internet support guide provides information to Internet Montana users. Another site, the Environmental Scientist's Guide to Internet Resources, receives about fifty visits a day and is featured in Yahoo's Internet directory. This page is a tribute to my other occupation as an environmental chemist and consultant that I do on a freelance basis since being laid off from an environmental consulting firm last year.
The table below provides links to my other webpages. Some of these are a reflection of the collecting of links for my original "Cool Sites of the Web" whereas the Internet button will take you to another index of my Internet support pages that comprise the Internet Montana support guide.
Environmental Science Resources
Weirdness on the Web My original entry on the Web, this page has now been improved. Initially a "Bad Site of the Month" page, it now features updated lists of lame sites. Instead on one monthly site, it will now be updated more frequently (hopefully weekly) and completely changed every month.
Web Site Designs I do webpages as a sideline business. This web page also represents my first foray into advanced HTML writing. With a Netscape browser that supports HTML 3.0, you will see a background color that I would call "puke green."
Please feel free to send in comments. That way I know that someone actually reads these pages. Suggestions on other sites are appreciated.
David Councill
April 1996