Larry Sommers: Again, my sense is that the first is the most widely accepted, but I would gladly compound and lowercase it if that seemed to be a growing usage.

Dr. Mary Ellen Guffey: It's still a proper noun and two words in my book. I equate it with Internet, which also deserves a capital letter.

Alicia Rosov: I prefer C. Most of my clients' style guides prefer A.

Yocheved Golani: I prefer the [website] form because it involves fewer keystrokes, and is simply less fussy than the other forms. I am annoyed when my Email program cites it as an error.

Elayne Cree : I use website when it's an adjective, such as website design.

Christi: I think the only reason why these terms (website, email, etc.) were capped in the first place was because they were created by techies who didn't think much about the style they were using. Techies are, by nature, non-English folks ... and in early technical reports probably capped the new terms to highlight them, and the trend stuck. It would be an interesting article for us style junkies, if someone wanted to do the research.

Jodi Lipson: I just couldn't resist when I updated our organization's style guide. We know it will be one day--and at the rate things change, that day will come fast--so why not now?

Charlotte Fox Luttrell: No need for capital letters in the middle of a sentence. Web site should be two words. Web is an adjective that modifies site.

Lori Seng: We capitalize Web when used as an adjective, lower when used by itself.

Paul Mulligan: We are still fighting over this one.