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 November 10, 2000      TIPS to search 200 million Web pages fast!

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Buy a corpse

Lindsay Pereira

If you think your neighbour’s weird just because he collects potato peels, any surfer worth his bandwidth will tell you that you ain’t seen the half of it.

Ask the people at Di Stefano (http://www.distefano.com/), for example. What they offer is – hang on to that chair, and don’t let your mom see this —corpses for sale. Yup. Visa, Mastercard or American Express, if you’ve got money, they’ve got personalised bodies to keep you company on those lonely Saturday nights at home.

How do you like your corpse? Each is hand crafted, they tell you, and durable in construction. Choose the degree of decay, skin or hair colour. Pick Pamela Andersen’s hair colour, Michael Jackson’s skin, and maybe a two-week level of decay. Buy and place in your bedroom. Guaranteed to keep pesky relatives (and just about anyone else on the planet) away for a long time.

Dead bodies not up your alley? How about something on the spiritual side? Like ghosts. And who better to turn to then Rent-A-Ghost (http://www.rent-a-ghost.co.uk/), the world's first and only Ghost Installation Company. Headless monks, moaning chain rattlers, grey ladies, or historical beasts -- you demand, they supply. Simply become a member, pay two months in advance, and start picking. Best of all, there’s a free trial offer. What more could anyone ask for, right?

And hey, we’ve only just begun here. There’s also a place online where people who hate rotten bananas can unite (http://members.tripod.com/~rottenbananas/). "How can you eat a banana that squishes when you look at it?" asks the creator of the site, voicing a common grievance across the planet. What he did to tackle this important issue was set up the page in order to "abolish the world of rotten bananas, and let fresh bananas rule like they were meant to." Visitors and members get a ‘Rotten Banana Site of the Week,’ a discussion forum (no kidding), a section offering alternatives to wasting rotten bananas, and even rotten banana stories. Salman Rushdie, eat your heart out.

Leaving those trivialities aside, it’s time to turn to more important topics. Like missing socks. The Bureau of Missing Socks (http://www.funbureau.com/) is the first organization of its kind devoted solely to solving the question of what happens to missing single socks. It ‘explores all aspects of the phenomena including the occult, conspiracy theories, and extraterrestrial.’

There’s the latest on what’s happening in the world of socks, a monthly cartoon, tales involving single socks, and even Doctor Coconuts new hit single ‘I lost my sock’. Remember what we said about your neighbour’s potato peel fixation being pretty normal? Ditto.

When things start getting really warped, you run to normal, rational people like doctors, scientists and researchers, right? Wrong. The National Library of Medicine's Visible Human Project (http://www.nlm.nih.gov/research/visible/visible_human.html) proves why. It spends all its time on the creation of complete, anatomically detailed, three-dimensional representations of the normal male and female human bodies. Its long-term goal (yes, it has one) is producing a system of knowledge structures that will transparently link visual knowledge forms to symbolic knowledge formats such as the names of body parts. Leaving us all with the simple question, “Huh?”

Deathclock (http://www.deathclock.com/) is another site that fits under the ‘Nice interface, but still scares me to death’ category. It was created merely to remind us just how short life is. Enter your day, month and year of birth, sex, and mode (normal, pessimistic, or sadistic). Click the ‘Check your Death Clock’ icon, and get your personal ‘day of death’ on a pop-up screen, along with the amount of seconds you have to live. Makes you rethink whether or not you ought to waste any more time on Baywatch.

Sites like these could really make someone want to break their computer. Voila! The Illustrated Guide to Breaking your Computer (http://members.aol.com/spoons1000/break/index.html). From using a power drill meticulously on your keyboard, to squeezing the life out of your diskettes, hammers on monitors to a compressed electronic duster on your circuit board. All good, clean fun for kids everywhere, and fully illustrated!

Finally, if you really don’t fit in with us normal folk, try The Weird Site (http://www.theweirdsite.com/). It's home to strange world news, bizarre facts, e-zines, weird downloads, unusual art, books, videos, etc. Where else can you find links to sites like The Mother of All Excuses Place (http://madtbone.tripod.com/), U and UR Toaster Collection (http://www.berksys.com/cafeslack/unur/index.html), The First Presleyterian Church of Elvis the Divine (http://chelsea.ios.com/~hkarlin1/welcome.html), and Home Appliance Shooting (http://www.csn.net/~dcbenton/has.html)?

There’s loads more out there in cyberspace, waiting for the unwary to log in. If I were you, I’d start up a friendship with that neighbour as quickly as possible. He may soon, in all probability, be the only sane guy left around these parts.'