The Wall Street Journal introduced its "Interactive Edition"
today based on the paper's print edition and reports from Dow
Jones' news service. Among the features not found in the paper:
A seven-day-a-week sports section. The Journal's Interactive
Edition can be found on the Web at http://www.wsj.com (WALL
STREET JOURNAL, 4/29)....Microsoft will dismantle its Microsoft
Network and recreate it on the Internet by early '97 (USA TODAY,
4/29)....Yahoo! has agreed to allow Procter & Gamble to advertise
on the Web search service on a "click-through" rather than an
"eyeball" basis, meaning the company only pays for those who
click on P&G's ad to move over to the company's site (AP/SAN JOSE
MERCURY NEWS, 4/29)....AD AGE reports CompuServe joins AOL and
Prodigy as moving to cost-per-thousand ad pricing. The "top
layers" at CompuServe will cost $10,000 per month (ADVERTISING
AGE, 4/28 issue)....ESPN press releases are available on ESPNET
SportsZone. They can be found at http://espnet.sportszone.com
inside the "ESPN Studios" section (ESPNET)....WLAF fans will be
able to hear live audio feeds from fX's game broadcasts on the
league's Web site, at http://worldleague.com (NFL Enterprises).