You may be addicted to the Internet, if …
You wake up at 2 a.m. to go to the bathroom and stop and check your e-mail on the way back to bed.
You get a tattoo that reads “This body best viewed with Netscape 4.0 or higher.”
You name your children Mosaic, Java and Eudora.
You turn off your modem and get this awful empty feeling, like you just pulled the plug on a loved one.
You spend half of the plane trip with your laptop on your lap … and your child in the overhead compartment.
You decide to stay in college for an additional year or two, just for the free Internet access.
You laugh at people with 9600-baud modems.
You start using smileys in your snail mail.
The last girl you picked up was a JPEG.
Only communication in your household is through email.
You refuse to go to a vacation spot with no electricity and no phone lines.
All your daydreaming is preoccupied with getting a faster connection to the net: 28.8…ISDN…cable modem…T1…T3.
And even your night dreams are in HTML.
You refer to going to the bathroom as downloading.
Your heart races faster and beats irregularly each time you see a new WWW site address in print or on TV, even though you’ve never had heart problems before.
All of your friends have an @ in their names.
You chat several times a day with a stranger from South Africa but haven’t spoken to your next-door neighbor yet this year.
You refer to your age as 3.x.
You code your homework in HTML and give your instructor the URL.
You move into a new house and decide to Netscape before you landscape.
You really did ask a plumber how much it would cost to replace the chair in front of your computer with a toilet.
I.V. stand next to your mini tower.
Choice between paying Compuserve bill and paying for kids education is easy — if a little painful for your kids.
AT&T names you Customer of the Month for the third consecutive time.
Your phone bill comes to your doorstep in a box.
You have to install a second phone line just so you can call Pizza Hut.
You hide the bill from the spouse because you may have to sell the family car to pay it.
Your wife drapes a wig over your monitor to remind you of what she looks like.
Batteries in the TV remote now last for months.
You hire a housekeeper for your home page.
Your dog has its own home page too.
New mail alarm on your palmtop annoys other churchgoers.
Your mouse-clicking forearm rivals Popeye’s.
Your household pets mimic the soundblaster card for attention.
You unsuccessfully try to download a pizza from www.dominos.com.
You try to order a movie from Blockbuster video by downloading it at 28,800 BPS.
You check your mail. It says “no new messages.” So you check it again.
You can’t call your mother … she doesn’t have a modem.
You tell the taxi driver you live at http://1100.sunset.ave/mansion/brick.html
You’re upset because an obituary fails to mention the deceased’s new E-Mail address.
You try to pay the babysitter via electronic transfer.
You start tilting your head sideways to smile.
When your car is crashing through the guardrail on a mountain road, your first instinct is to search for the Back button.
You want to meet someone new and your first impulse is to turn on your computer.
You double click your TV remote
You try to enter your password on the microwave.
Three words: Carpal Tunnel Syndrome
You come back and check this list every half-hour.