Atlas of CyberspaceAddison-Wesley, 2001 - 268 Seiten "The Atlas of Cyberspace" is one of the first books to explore the new cartographic and visualization techniques being employed to map the spatial and visual nature of cyberspace and its infrastructure. Lavish illustrations and clear writing are aimed at the intelligent lay person and should appeal to all Web users. |
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Seite 180
... room , a bar , by the swimming pool or in a dungeon . Each room is known to its occupants by its textual description , and it can contain any number of objects ( such as furniture ) . Rooms are linked by exits that enable MUD ...
... room , a bar , by the swimming pool or in a dungeon . Each room is known to its occupants by its textual description , and it can contain any number of objects ( such as furniture ) . Rooms are linked by exits that enable MUD ...
Seite 181
... rooms from the center of the MUD . Rooms are represented on the map by their name ( or abbreviation ) and the various connections between them are shown by the lines . Straight lines are simple " walkable " connections and are ...
... rooms from the center of the MUD . Rooms are represented on the map by their name ( or abbreviation ) and the various connections between them are shown by the lines . Straight lines are simple " walkable " connections and are ...
Seite 188
... Rooms are represented by small dots , many of which are labeled to indicate interesting locations . Clusters of rooms are coded using the same color scheme . The rooms are arranged spatially to show the relative locations of rooms but ...
... Rooms are represented by small dots , many of which are labeled to indicate interesting locations . Clusters of rooms are coded using the same color scheme . The rooms are arranged spatially to show the relative locations of rooms but ...
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
AlphaWorld arc-node architecture ARPANET browser browsing cables CESNET chapter chief cartographer Clicking color color-coded communication complex connections Courtesy created cyberspace database detail developed display domain name Dynamic Diagrams environment EverQuest example explore FurryMUCK further information further reading geographic global graph graphics Group hierarchy homepage hyperlinks hypertext id Software individual information spaces infrastructure interactive interface Internet ISPs Judith Donath labeled LambdaMOO layout lines London map showing maps and spatializations MBone messages metaphor MIT Media Lab navigation Netscan newsgroup nodes opposite overview Paul Kahn Pizza players representation represented Research reveal Richard Bartle scale screen Screenshots taken Server shown Snow Crash social structure technique technologies teleports Tim Bray tool topology traceroute traffic flows treemaps University Usenet UUNET virtual worlds VRML zoom