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MAPPING-CYBERSPACE  April 2001

MAPPING-CYBERSPACE April 2001

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Subject:

Re: news article "Internet sites offer their visitors real sense of place."

From:

All of My Hart <[log in to unmask]>

Reply-To:

All of My Hart <[log in to unmask]>

Date:

Wed, 18 Apr 2001 17:57:38 -0600

Content-Type:

text/plain

Parts/Attachments:

Parts/Attachments

text/plain (134 lines)

I agree from the floor; where I did fall at the subtle irony laughing..
proportion is important even in the outscale of descriptors in both mapping
and the satires of Junius Juventus Juvenalis (Juvanal, Steve) as I was
raiding papers at The Budaker Particle Physics Institute in Siberia when
yours came in... my IP trace of self is proportionate on the PC Server next
to this one.
Give them hell..
http://liftoff.msfc.nasa.gov/RealTime/JTrack/3D/JTrack3D.html I was here
too; the Russian sats are bonkers; and I wonder why...
Cheers,
Bill Hart temporarily in Colorado
Preprint BINP 2000-5 ( PostScript, in russian)
MS diploma thesis ( PostScript, 650 kB, in russian)
Event reconstruction in vertex chamber of KEDR detector.
Transparencies of a talk presented at BINP Young Scientists Contest, May,
1999 ( PostScript, 456 kB, in russian)
Measurement of VEPP-4M dispersion function at interaction point.
Transparencies of a talk presented at BINP Young Scientists Contest, May, 4,
2000 ( PostScript, 310 kB, in russian)
Simulation of background for muon collider with lithium lens (November,
1999):

Memorandum ( PostScript, 77 kB, in russian)
Simulation and reconstruction for inner tracker of LHCb detector (since
March, 2000):

Momentum resolution of LHCb tracker vs. spatial resolution and pitch size
( PostScript picture, 21 kB)
Simulation of spacial resolution and cluster size of triple GEM chamber (
PostScript picture, 42 kB)
Segmentation of inner tracker layer (2D readout) ( PostScript picture, 41
kB)
Inner tracker software
HTML documentation
ITDigitize package (digitization), 20 kB
ITAlgorithms package (clusterization and hits building), 10 kB
Example trail options file, 8 kB
**Anton Polouektov's Pages were FUN!**
Budker INP, Novosibirsk, Russia
YES, here's proof of the 30 JUMP Route from my HOME in Colorado at MY IP...

Traceroute from Rainbow.inp.nsk.su<~~SU=Soviet UNION to 216.146.147.65
(216-146-147-65MOI<~~Colorado, USA: traceroute to 216-146-147-65.
(216.146.147.65) 30 hops max, 40 byte packets  1  nsc-gw.inp.nsk.su
(193.124.167.4)  6 ms  6 ms  4 ms  2  Space-Link-gw.inp.nsk.su
(193.124.167.32)  12 ms (ttl=255!)  6 ms (ttl=255!)  6 ms (ttl=255!)  3
DESY.Hamburg.DE.Radio-MSU.net (194.67.255.205)  603 ms (ttl=254!)  602 ms
(ttl=254!)  604 ms (ttl=254!)  4  DESY1.WiN-IP.DFN.DE (188.1.3.45)  917 ms
(ttl=253!)  612 ms (ttl=253!)  592 ms (ttl=253!)  5
ZR-Hamburg1.WiN-IP.DFN.DE (188.1.170.1)  674 ms (ttl=252!)  679 ms
(ttl=252!)  671 ms (ttl=252!)  6  ZR-Hannover1.WiN-IP.DFN.DE (188.1.144.22)
919 ms (ttl=251!)  700 ms (ttl=251!)  754 ms (ttl=251!)  7
IR-New-York1.WiN-IP.DFN.DE (188.1.144.110)  930 ms (ttl=250!)  947 ms
(ttl=250!)  808 ms (ttl=250!)  8  dfn-ir-ny1.ny4.ny.dante.net (212.1.200.65)
825 ms (ttl=249!)  1016 ms (ttl=249!) *  9  * * * 10
501.ATM2-0.XR1.NYC4.ALTER.NET (152.63.22.10)  2115 ms (ttl=247!) rofl rofl
rofl.....   *2115 Milliseconds In and Out*


----- Original Message -----
From: "Steve Franklin" <[log in to unmask]>
To: <[log in to unmask]>
Sent: Wednesday, April 18, 2001 6:14 PM
Subject: Re: news article "Internet sites offer their visitors real sense of
place."


> I have beta tested ViOS, as well as tried UBUBU (I pronounce it OO BOO
> BOO, despite what they say) and Antarcti.ca. The flaw that I see in all
> of them is that the scale of the geography is all wrong. Would you
> really go across the street to learn about the company there, not to
> mention flying to Australia to check out kangaroos?
>
> Early attempts at 3D browsing involved geography on the scale of the
> classical Greeks' mnemonic system: Associate various ideas with the
> features of a house. They would use, among other things, links connected
> to pictures hanging on the wall in a hallway. I submit that the 3D
> acquisition of information in the real world involves going to the
> library and walking up and down the aisles, or wandering through a
> bookstore, or talking to the professors at a university, all on a much
> smaller and more intimate scale than vast cities arrayed in cyberspace.
>
> I suspect there's more than a little bit of overconfidence in these
> planetary monstrosities. What do you folks think?
> ______
> Steve Franklin
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "martin dodge" <[log in to unmask]>
> To: <[log in to unmask]>
> Sent: Monday, April 16, 2001 07:03 AM
> Subject: news article "Internet sites offer their visitors real sense of
> place."
>
>
> > Hi, this article may be of interest
> > martin
> >
> > -----
> > USA Today: Internet sites offer their visitors real sense of place.
> >
> > Several start-ups and tech researchers are betting the Internet is a
> > place, and the future is in treating it that way. In recent weeks,
> I've
> > talked with two such companies, ViOS and Antarcti.ca. There are lots
> of
> > others, including start-up UBUBU and researchers in corporate labs...
> > http://www.usatoday.com/money/columns/maney/2001-04-11-maney.htm
> >
> >
> > (Thanks to Tomalak's Realm at http://www.tomalak.org for the pointer
> to
> > this story)
> >
> >
> ________________________________________________________________________
> _
> >
> > martin dodge
> >
> > cyber geography research
> > centre for advanced spatial analysis, university college london
> > gower street, london, wc1e 6bt, united kingdom
> >
> > email: [log in to unmask]        tel: +44 (0)207 679 1782
> >
> > http://www.casa.ucl.ac.uk       http://www.cybergeography.org
> >
> >                 http://www.mappingcyberspace.com
> >
> ________________________________________________________________________
> __
> >

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