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Department
of Geography and Meteorology, Valparaiso University
Geography of Cyberspace GEO/COM 280X Virtual Field Trip: Exploring Community Networks |
| In this assignment
we will be looking at community networks online to see what they're actually
all about. This is a collective research project in which the whole class
will be engaged. In fact, the information we glean from doing this might
actually be valuable to someone, so we'll be posting it on the web.
The first step is to find two communitiy networks. Each person in the class should focus on two unique networks. This is so that we cover a wide swath of the community networking movement, and so that each person gets a taste of more than one. Once you find your networks get approval from your professor. Because community networks use place names, and because the words "community" and "network" are so common, finding them can somtimes be difficult. I have provided my own list of community networks accurate as of 2000, as well as links to three other lists that have about the same degree of accuracy. Since these lists were initally compiled many community networks have dissappeared, emerged, or changed addresses. At one time community networks were often the only "local" thing going on. Now they're often one of many locally focused sites. If you find a network that you want to work on and it is no longer at the address, try searching on Google for the network. It may just have relocated to a new address. Community Networks (Longan 2000) Community Computer Networks, Free-Nets and City-Regional Guides VTN United States Community Computer Networks After identifying two networks, get approval to proceed from your professor. Then browse through them and collect as much of the following information as possible. You may find that some of this information is not present online. Note this fact! It is significant. It may be that the network you choose really does not have much at all online. If so choose another network. You will want to record this information in an HTML document called comnets.html saved in your www-docs directory and linked to your homepage. There are two ways you can do this easily. First you could use Microsoft Word and save the document as HTML in your www-docs directory. Alternately you can use Dreamweaver to create your document. You will have more control over how things look if you use Dreamweaver. (Of course you could do the HTML by hand.) Be sure to save often. To create your document do the following: 1. Give your document a title, copy the following questions for each network into your document, and answer them. In answering the questions, where appropriate create a link to the page where you found the information. I have started an example for the Seattle Community Network. This is only a start and I expect that you will do much better.
2. When you are done, save your document to your www-docs directory and name it comnets.html. Let me know that you are done and I will create a link to it from a document on the class home page located here. You should also start either a section of your home page or a separate page for assignments for this class and provide a link to this assignmen there. 3. Once everyone is done and if we have time you will give a brief presentation to the class on one of your networks. I'll go first with my Seattle Community Network example just to break the ice. |
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