Doctor Evil was an original (well, sort of original) idea, formulated on a tedious drunken evening at Reading University (So I guess we've got th union to thank for that) by two Science students, Stewart Tootill and Ben Collier. The page was written using the most advanced HTML editor ever created (WINDOWS NOTEPAD) and it is possibly one of the best web home pages ever.
At the moment, only Stewart Tootill and Ben Collier contribute to Doctor Evils replies. As the site grows in size, and more people start to send their questions to him, we intend to recruit more students to communicate Doctor Evil's gigantic universal wisdom to the masses.
Well, the best way you can help Doctor Evil is to put a link to our site on your page. We need as many letters as possible, so that we can get more input into the site and make it one of the coolest pages around.
Short of that, send us as many letters as you can, and tell all of your freinds. We think that everyone will find Doctor Evil's knowledge so useful, that they will want to pick his brains, nibble his hypothalamus, and tickle his frontal lobes over and over again.
The first credit has to be Fortune City for hosting this page. If you want your own free ten megs of space go to http://www.fortunecity.com and set it up.
Secondly, link exchange have to get a mention for providing us with free advertising on loads of sites, everywhere. Find them at http://www.linkexchange.com/
We also have to thank Personal Connections for their excellent E-Mail service without which Doctor Evil would not have a channel to the masses. Get your free email at http://www.pconnections.net
Next, we must thank the bloke whose site we took the midi file from. I would love to give him more credit, but I genuinely can't remember where it came from, so if it was you, email Doctor Evil and let us know your address.
Lastly, we have to thank all of the unseen masses who taught us how to do HTML. From the little sites we stole code from, to the big Microsoft tutorials. Without them, this page would look shit. (You probably think it does anyway)