February 14, 2000
9:25 AM   Subscribe

An interesting article over at Slashdot on the 9 continents of the Internet. I've always had a sense that there were these different "circles" that people ran in, but I never could quite pin them down. Of course, I'm not sure that they can be pinned down precisely to 9, but I can appreciate the attempt.
posted by jkottke (8 comments total)
 
So Jon Katz is saying that this site is part of the "UnderNet?" I'd say weblogs are more pop-culture-y, putting them squarely in his "CultureNet."
posted by mathowie at 9:51 AM on February 14, 2000


Well, I thought Katz's previous coverage of the weblog scene demonstrated a certain misunderstanding of what they're all about. I doubt he's had time since to revisit the subject in depth to see what's really going on.

His "continents" aren't all that "distinctly separate", really, and seem pretty arbitary to me anyway.
posted by jjg at 10:26 AM on February 14, 2000


So where does that leave us?
I think Jon Katz is almost always offbase. In fact, the reason I don't participate in Slashdot is because Robin and I don't see eye to eye about him.
posted by tdecius at 11:38 AM on February 14, 2000


It'd be interesting to see one of the search engines map the web -- some kind of 3D network with pages as nodes, connected by links. The large-scale structure would be fun to see. Anybody know of anything like this.
posted by lbergstr at 3:28 PM on February 14, 2000


. -> ?

i want previewing to save me from myself
posted by lbergstr at 3:28 PM on February 14, 2000


How can any attempt to define and organize the net be complete? Not at this time and perhaps never. Right now it's the nature of the medium.

I'd also like to add my 2 cents. I think that net-based art (and there's a lot of interesting things being done) should be listed in the CultureNet section. Although, placing it in the same category with movie studios is a bit problematic.
posted by Taken Outtacontext at 5:55 AM on February 15, 2000


These network maps of the web are interesting and strangely beautiful.
posted by echelon at 7:51 AM on February 15, 2000


Theres an exhibit in the Millennium Dome Here in the UK that tracks your progress through the web graphically in real time on a large screen. Unfortunately it's constantly overrun by hordes of button bashing 10-year-olds so thats about all I saw.
posted by Markb at 3:40 AM on February 16, 2000


« Older   |   AOL jumps on the get-rich-quick bandwagon. Newer »


This thread has been archived and is closed to new comments