HyTelnet (sometimes rendered Hytelnet or HYTELNET) was an early attempt to create a universal or at least simpler interface for the various Telnet-based information resources available before the World Wide Web. It was first developed in 1990 by Peter Scott, then at the University of Saskatchewan in Saskatoon, Canada. Using a client written by Earl Fogel, HyTelnet offered its users a primitive terminal-based GUI that allowed them to browse a directory of Telnet-based resources and then access them in a relatively standardized manner. On-line help was available, and there were frequent updates made available to its database which sites could download.
HyTelnet's chief inadequacy was that it was not centralized, i.e., every HyTelnet installation used its own separate copy of the master directory. While beneficial early-on, as it ensured no dependence on a central server, HyTelnet's user experience could vary widely as local installations might not have the same version of the client or might have obsolete information. This became a greater liability as more institutions had reliable, "always-on" Internet access. Finally, when the World Wide Web gained pre-eminence, many of the services that HyTelnet pointed to were gradually retired, increasingly limiting its relevance. HyTelnet's final database update was in 1997.
Could you see how i've sold my blood?
Gonna spill my seed all over the world
Shake a stick at the rule o' the world
Gonna shave myself a little closer
What i want to do is insane
I'm the sheriff and i'm back again
The reason that you're covered in dirt
I'm a monster in a shirt
Cos there the same wot social?
Gonna abuse myself all over the world
Jimmy D in the dead sundown
And the reason i'll say a little no no
You were the ones that settled in my arms
You were our sons
You were the ones we fought for and died
You were our sons
What i want to do is insane
I'm the sheriff and i'm back again
The reason that you're covered in dirt