Extractions: The Internet Passport: Northwestnet's Guide to Our World Online [Paperback] By Jonathan Kochmer List Price : Min Price : click here to see all sellers and prices DotEdu Special : additional 5% off what's this You Save : ISBN-10 : ISBN-13 : Binding : Paperback Publisher : A1 Accepts showMark(1); What is Google
Extractions: Your Web browser is not enabled for Javascript. Some features of WorldCat will not be available. Home WorldCat Home About WorldCat Help ... Search for Contacts You are not signed in or Register Search for items: Advanced Search Type: Book; English Publisher: Edition: 5th ed ISBN: OCLC: Related Subjects: Internet. Citations: Cite this Item Export to EndNote Export to RefWorks Find in other WorldCat libraries Add This Page to Favorites Save to: [New List] [Existing Lists] Things I Recommend Things I Own Things to Check Out Your list has reached the limit of 250 items. Please create a new list with a new name; move some items to a new or existing list; or delete some items. Review this Item Edit Public Notes Link to this Page addthis_url = location.href; addthis_title = document.title; addthis_pub = 'worldcatorg'; Libraries Details Subjects Reviews Enter Location Information: Enter postal code, state, province or country
CQU Library Catalogue - Browse Search Results You searched CQU Library Catalog - Title Internet passport NorthWestNet s guide to our world online / Jonathan Kochmer and NorthWestNet. http://library.cqu.edu.au/cgi-bin/chameleon?host=localhost 3333 DEFAULT&search=S
RFC 1432 (rfc1432) - Recent Internet Books Kochmer Jonathan Kochmer, and NorthWestNet, The Internet Passport . NorthWestNet NorthWestNet, NorthWestNet User Services Internet Resource Guide, p. http://www.faqs.org/rfcs/rfc1432.html
Extractions: RFC 1432 (RFC1432) Internet RFC/STD/FYI/BCP Archives RFC Index RFC Search Usenet FAQs Web FAQs ... Cities Alternate Formats: rfc1432.txt rfc1432.txt.pdf RFC 1432 - Recent Internet Books mids@tic.com companion@world.std.com info@nwnet.net 74230.3622@CompuServe.com 617-944-3700 800-447-2226 Library Solution Press 1 Jacob Way 510-841-2636 Reading, MA 01867 fax: 415-594-0411 1100 Industrial Road, Suite 9 San Carlos, CA 94070 Bantam, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group Inc. LITA Publications 212-765-6500 ALANET ALA0085 800-223-6834 800-545-2433 fax: 212-765-3869 312-280-4270 666 Fifth Avenue fax: + 312-440-9374 New York, NY 10103 50 East Huron Street Chicago, IL 60602 Digital Press buddenhagen@cecv01.enet.dec.com
RFC 1432 (rfc1432) It is paradoxically both the fourth edition of and the successor to the other NorthWestNet book listed later. Marine April Marine, ed., Internet Getting http://www.cse.ohio-state.edu/cgi-bin/rfc/rfc1432.html
Extractions: RFC 1432 RFC 1432 RFC 1432 RFC 1432 Network Working Group J. Quarterman Request for Comments: 1432 MIDS March 1993 Recent Internet Books Status of this Memo This memo provides information for the Internet community. It does not specify an Internet standard. Distribution of this memo is unlimited. Abstract This article originally appeared in Volume 2 Number 12, (December 1992) of Matrix News, the monthly newsletter of Matrix Information and Directory Services, Inc. (MIDS). 1. Which Books Here is a list of books related to using the Internet, which is the global and exponentially growing network of more than a million computers that communicate by interactive use of the TCP/IP protocols, for the use of millions of users. This article was prompted by the recent publication of nine or ten books on the Internet in the space of a year (some are so new they aren't even published yet). I have also included some books that have been around for quite a long time (as long ago as the dim past of 1984). I think all of them contain useful information for people new to the Internet. Some of the books included here are about more than the Internet. Some of them are about the Matrix, which is the set of all computer networks worldwide that exchange electronic mail. The Matrix includes FidoNet, UUCP, BITNET, USENET, the Internet, and many others, but is not limited to any one of those networks. This particular bibliographic collection is oriented around the largest computer network in the world, the Internet, because of all the recent books about that network. Matrix News continues to publish information about the Matrix, including but not limited to the Internet. Quarterman [Page 1] RFC 1432 RFC 1432 Recent Internet Books March 1993 I have excluded from this article books that are solely about technical aspects of technology, such as the TCP/IP protocols. Instead, I have included books about the resources and users of the Internet. I have grouped them in rough classifications for convenience of presentation. Several of these books fit several classifications. For that reason and others, the classifications should be taken as illustrative, not definitive. Table 1 summarizes some features of all the books described. Thanks to various people for input; especially David Bridge. Much of the detailed bibliographic information came from the Library of Congress catalog server supported by Digital Research Associates, Inc., accessed via gopher and Telnet over the Internet. Please note that prices may change, as may electronic mail addresses, telephone and fax numbers, and postal addresses. The price you pay, in particular, may be less because of a discount, or more because of shipping, or because you buy the book outside of the United States. The information included here is accurate to the best of my knowledge, but your mileage may vary. Use at your own risk. But please do report errors, changes, and additions to mids@tic.com. Some bibliographic citations end in a line of the form domain.name:path/name This means you can retrieve further information by connecting to domain.name with FTP, logging in as user anonymous, using your electronic mail address as a password, and changing to path/name as a directory, or retrieving it as a file, whichever works. Some citations end in a line of the form local@domain This is a domain address for further email inquiries. Quarterman [Page 3] RFC 1432 RFC 1432 RFC 1432 RFC 1432 ... RFC 1432 Recent Internet Books March 1993 Benedikt: Michael Benedikt, ed., Cyberspace: First Steps, p. 444, MIT Press, Cambridge, MA, 1991. $15.95. ISBN 0-262-02327-X. An anthology of sociological examinations of networks and related topics, by writers, scholars, and public figures. Edited by a professor of Architecture at the University of Texas. Kahin: Brian Kahin, ed., Building Information Infrastructure: Issues in the Development of the National Research and Education Network, p. 446, McGraw-Hill Primis, New York, 1992. $34.95, ISBN: 0-390-03083-X. Book Review: Matrix News, 2(5). May 1992. Includes the entire text of the High Performance Computing Act (HPCA) of 1991 that authorized the forthcoming National Research and Education Network (NREN), as well as numerous examinations of what it does and should mean. Papers from a workshop at Harvard's Kennedy School of Government. Tough sledding in spots, but very rewarding in others. Parkhurst: Carol A. Parkhurst, ed., Library Perspectives on NREN: The National Research and Education Network, p. 86, LITA, Chicago, 1990. $10.50. ISBN 0-8389-7477-5. Book Review: Matrix News, 1(7). Oct. 1991. Another NREN policy anthology; this one oriented towards library uses. Quarterman [Page 8] RFC 1432 RFC 1432 RFC 1432 Recent Internet Books March 1993 Sterling: Bruce Sterling, The Hacker Crackdown: Law and Disorder on the electronic frontier, p. 352, Bantam, New York, 1992. $23. ISBN 0-553-08058-X. An in-depth examination of the forces of law who try to deal with computer crime, and of the issues involved, written by one of the science fiction writers who invented cyberpunk. The real story behind Operation Sundevil and the Legion of Doom. Readable, informative, amusing, and necessary. 7. Resource Guides These have always been available online. NorthWestNet: NorthWestNet, NorthWestNet User Services Internet Resource Guide, p. 297, NorthWestNet, Bellevue, WA, 1992. $20. ISBN [none]. Book Review: Matrix News, 2(1). Jan. 1992. ftphost.nwnet.net:nic/nwnet/user- guide/README.nusirg NorthWestNet's Resource Guide. IRG: NNSC, Internet Resource Guide, p. 240, NSF Network Service Center (NNSC), BBN, Cambridge, MA, 1991. $15. ISBN [none]. nnsc.nsf.net:resource-guide/README. The original Internet Resource Guide. Quarterman [Page 11] RFC 1432 RFC 1432 RFC 1432 RFC 1432
Title: Regional Consortiums: The Northwest Experience The regional network gradually came to be known as NorthWestNet. As the network evolved, NorthWestNet became heavily involved in training and educating its http://www.educause.edu/ir/library/html/cnc9732/cnc9732.html
Extractions: This paper was presented at the 1997 CAUSE annual conference and is part of the conference proceedings, "The Information Profession and the Information Professional," published online by CAUSE. The paper content is the intellectual property of the author. Permission to print out copies of this paper is granted provided that the copies are not made or distributed for commercial advantage and the source is acknowledged. To copy or disseminate otherwise, or to republish in any form, print or electronic, requires written permission from the author and CAUSE. For further information, contact CAUSE at 303-449-4430 or send e-mail to info@cause.org Regional Consortiums: the Northwest Experience Bob Gillespie, Northwest Academic Computing Consortium (NWACC), Bellevue, WA Keiko Pitter, Willamette University and NorthWest Higher Education Academic Technologies (NWHEAT), Salem, OR Tom Aldrich, University of Puget Sound, Tacoma, WA Abstract: In the Pacific Northwest, the Northwest Academic Computing Consortium (NWACC) and NorthWest Higher Education Academic Technologies (NWHEAT) have served valuable, but different roles and have worked with different constituents. NWACC serves a large and diverse audience of colleges and universities, and works with a formal structure, bylaws, dues, and steering committees. NWHEAT arose to serve a small group of colleges and operates informally. This session will explore how to start a consortium and the advantages and disadvantages of each model, focusing on benefits to individual members, degree of formality and structure, methods of communication, and accomplishments to date. The session will also cover efforts to tie the two groups together while maintaining their separate mission, and future plans for collaboration between the groups
Extractions: Search Search Create a profile and get found by employers. Click here to get started! Add an image northwestnet / verio's 5 most popular tags: ruby on rails film-scoring sibelius perl ... Experiences (0) at northwestnet / verio People Skill tags: musician producer composer film-scoring ... software dev manager Background: Amazon.com pacific northwest film scoring program Western Washington University northwestnet / verio Availability: Open for projects Answer questions about your time with northwestnet / verio
FoRK Archive: One More For Rob (Keith Also) NorthWestNet Network Operations Center NWNETNOC domainmaster@NWNET.= NET (206) 685-4444. Domain Server. Record last updated on 08-Mar-97. http://www.xent.com/FoRK-archive/jun98/0168.html
Net Training Bibliography The Internet Passport NorthWestNet s Guide to Our World Online. Of value beyond NorthWestNet. Krol, Ed. The Whole Internet User s Guide Catalog. http://bubl.ac.uk/ARCHIVE/internet/books/curren18.htm
Extractions: Content from our trusted partner BNET Get your own CNET Networks Widget. Content provided in partnership with InterNAP CEO Tony Naughtin promises a faster, more reliable connection. The Internet's history as an open network of equal researchers, in the last few years, has run up against its new and vigorous life as a medium for electronic commerce. When money is on the line, best-effort delivery doesn't cut it. Exponentially increasing traffic at the public peering sites has led to lost packets, traffic snarls, and unacceptable delays for e-tailers whose customers will go elsewhere if a site doesn't respond quickly enough.
Lane Education Network On 1 May we upgraded the connection from the UO campus network to NorthWestNet from T1 to dual T1, and made this dualT1 connection available to all LEN http://www.uoregon.edu/~jqj/LEN/LEN_7-15-95.html
Extractions: Award Number 41-40-94029 The main activities of the Lane Education Network development team during this quarter of operations included establishment of an Internet connection for the metropolitan-area network connecting the partners, deployment of the public access facility in the Eugene Public Library, and continuation of several collaborations and on-line resources that depend on the availability of the network infrastructure. In addition to a general survey of the network, individual progress reports from several of the participants are attached below. URL:http://darkwing.uoregon.edu/~jqj/LEN/LEN_7-15-95.html The Lane Education Network is a consortium of educational, governmental, health care, industry, and civic groups who are collaborating to develop innovative and effective uses of multimedia technology in education. Our goal is to develop and evaluate a wide variety of applications that use networked computers to provide life-long learning opportunities throughout our community. In pursuing this goal, we hope to both enhance the educational opportunities in our own community and to provide experience and guidance to other communities who seek to implement similar networks. In the evaluation plan submitted in December, we presented the following milestones relevant to this quarter's activities:
Gopher? _The_Internet_Passport NorthWestNet s Guide to Our World Online By Jonathan Kochmer and Published by NorthWestNet, Bellevue, WA. 1993. 516 pp. http://www.bio.net/hypermail/yeast/1993-April/000049.html
Extractions: Mon Apr 26 19:02:42 EST 1993 Previous message: gopher? Next message: Question:physiological conc. of PDC and ADH in yeast Messages sorted by: [ date ] [ thread ] [ subject ] [ author ] ... dp2p+ at andrew.cmu.edu Hi Yeast People! What is gopher? Denys Here's some information to help get you started with gopher. Best of luck, Dan Jacobson danj at welchgate.welch.jhu.edu Gopher Info This is a heavily edited version of the Gopher FAQ intended to give people just starting with gopher enough information to get a client and jump into Gopher-space - a complete version can be obtained as described below. Once you have a gopher client point it at merlot.welch.jhu.edu and welcome to gopher-space! Dan Jacobson danj at welchgate.welch.jhu.edu - Common Questions and Answers about the Internet Gopher, a client/server protocol for making a world wide information service, with many implementations. Posted to comp.infosystems.gopher, comp.answers, and news.answers every two weeks. The most recent version of this FAQ can be gotten through gopher, or via anonymous ftp: pit-manager.mit.edu:/pub/usenet/news.answers/gopher-faq Those without FTP access should send e-mail to mail-server at rtfm.mit.edu
WHERE TO START FOR NEW INTERNET USERS Jim Milles Ver. 4.3 15 May Kochmer, Jonathan and NorthWestNet. _The Internet Passport NorthWestNet s Guide to Our World Online_. 4th ed. Bellevue, WA NorthWestNet, 1993. 515 pp. http://www.ifla.org.sg/documents/internet/newuser.txt
WebNet 96 - San Francisco, CA - October 15-19, 1996 The material included cases, readings, pointers to the online edition of NorthWestNet s Internet Passport, and assignments. The cases and readings were http://ad.informatik.uni-freiburg.de/bibliothek/proceedings/webnet96/Html/411.ht
Extractions: Abstract: The paper describes the use of World Wide Web-based textbook for a required MBA course covering business information sources offered in the School of Management of the University of Alaska Fairbanks. It raises theoretical questions about the which text models are most suitable for organization of such materials. Preliminary practical results are that students' reaction to the use of www-based materials is in part a function of currency, and in part a function of whether the materials were designed to take advantage of HTML, or whether they were simply translated from printed form. Preliminary theoretical results are that stream based and shallow hierarchical object based text models do not work well with the new medium. Unresolved questions revolve around which object model for hypertexts provides sufficient value to overcome the disadvantages of screen-based reading.