[WEB4LIB] Web/'Net Illustrations
P. Michael McCulley
mcculley at best.com
Mon Feb 19 14:23:17 EST 2001
John,
The Atlas of Cyberspaces page on this is a good starting point, has some map
images, and the references inline and at the end should lead you elsewhere,
too.
http://www.cybergeography.org/atlas/historical.html
See also, the geographic portion at
http://www.cybergeography.org/atlas/geographic.html
and note that from the above page, "John Quarterman and colleagues at
Matrix.Net [ http://www.matrix.net/ ]are leaders in the mapping and analysis
of the geography of Internet."
Best regards,
Michael McCulley
mcculley at best.com
Quote of the Moment:
When sign makers go on strike, is anything written on their signs?
>-----Original Message-----
>From: web4lib at webjunction.org
>[mailto:web4lib at webjunction.org]On Behalf Of John Creech
>Sent: Monday, February 19, 2001 09:41 AM
>To: Multiple recipients of list
>Subject: [WEB4LIB] Web/'Net Illustrations
>
>
>I've been looking for something this morning that I should have already
>found in some of the Internet Timelines sites but haven't, and was
>wondering if anyone could help. I'm doing a presentation in our community
>this weekend and want to show some illustrations of net growth from
>ARPANET days to present. I've seen (perhaps in those archaic "books")
>maps of the U.S. showing original ARPA lines running across the country,
>then later maps showing more and more layers of networks. Anyone willing
>to share a URL? Thanks in advance.
>
>John Creech
>Electronic Resources & Systems Librarian
>Central Washington University Library
>creechj at www.lib.cwu.edu
>
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