Difference between revisions of "Other Networks Newsletter"

From Wikidelphia
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Line 11: Line 11:
 
[http://ntrweb.org/other-networks-newsletter-archive/ Other Networks Newsletter Archive]  
 
[http://ntrweb.org/other-networks-newsletter-archive/ Other Networks Newsletter Archive]  
  
[[Category:Is-Publication]][[Category:About-Social_Innovations]][[Category:Issue-Technology]][[Category:Issue-Writing]][[Category:Issue-Computers]]
+
[[Category:Is-Publication]][[Category:About-Social_Innovations]][[Category:About-Networks]][[Category:Issue-Computers]][[Category:Issue-Writing]][[Category:Issue-Technology]]

Revision as of 02:29, 16 December 2012

Other Networks Newsletter (1981-1988) was published and edited by Stan Pokras and Seth Horwitz out of the Public Interest Media Project's* office in the Northern Liberties section of Philadelphia. Its tagline was "A Newsletter About Networks of People". The first issues were laid out by hand with paper and scissors; subsequent issues took advantage of then-new desktop publishing technology. This metamorphosis in production was paralleled in the publication's content: E.g., earlier issues mentioned "multilogues", in which social networks were created by people sending snail-mail letters to one person who would then send out copies to all; later issues increasingly described uses of computers for interpersonal interconnection. All of this, of course, went out to the public far in advance of the advent of 21st-century tools like Facebook and Twitter. 


  • The Public Interest Media Project changed its name to Nonprofit Technology Resources (NTR) in 1993. NTR is the sponsoring organization of this Wiki.


External Links

Other Networks Newsletter Archive