Dear Nancy, Dear Colleagues,
Maastricht and in its surrondings offer a lot to visitors,
especially if you plan to stay
few days before/after the conference.
This reference might be interesting:
Maastricht Tourist Office (in 4 languages):
http://www.vvvmaastricht.nl/
Here you can find pretty much "everything" about Maastricht fine life,
from restaurants to city tours.
Moreover, for those of you that will arrive in Maastricht during the weekend
before the conference, we will organize some meeting-points. I will give you
more information on it in the next days.
Talk to you soon!
Kind Regards, Monica Murero
Conference Chair
IR 3.0: Net / Work / Theory
International Conference of the AoIR
MECC conference & exhibition center
Maastricht (NL)
13 October pre-conference workshops
14-16 October 2002
-----Original Message-----
From: Nancy Baym
To: air-l(a)aoir.org
Sent: 27/09/02 23.29
Subject: [Air-l] Maastricht
I'm sure air-l is so quiet because we are all busy preparing for our
upcoming meeting in Maastricht.
Has anyone been researching the area or spent time there and want to
recommend things to do there? Maybe people who were interested in
doing the same things might be able to hook up in advance this way?
Just a thought from your friendly local social engineer,
Nancy
________________________________________________________
AirFolk,
(A new batch of goodies before we meet in Maastricht!)
New Book Reviews in Cyberculture Studies (October 2002)
Each month, the Resource Center for Cyberculture Studies (RCCS)
<http://www.com.washington.edu/rccs> publishes two or three full-length
book reviews. The reviews reflect a modest attempt to locate critically
various contours of the emerging and interdisciplinary field of
cyberculture studies.
RCCS's book reviews section now includes full-length reviews of over 150
books on cyberculture, the Internet, and technoculture. New reviews for
October 2002 include:
Donna Gibbs and Kerri-Lee Krause, eds., Cyberlines: Languages and Cultures
of the Internet. James Nicholas Publishers, 2001.
Reviewed by:
Rodney K. Marshall
Patrick Martin
Stephanie Browner, Stephen Pulsford, and Richard Sears, Literature and the
Internet: A Guide for Students, Teachers, and Scholars. Garland, 2000.
Reviewed by:
Pramod K. Nayar
Stacy Gillis
Betsy Huang
Response from:
Stephanie Browner
Steven Johnson, Emergence: The Connected Lives of Ants, Brains, Cities,
and Software. Scribner, 2001.
Reviewed by:
Laura Kertz
Nils Zurawski
If you or your colleagues are interested in reviewing books for RCCS,
contact us directly at <dsilver(a)u.washington.edu>. As always, please
feel free to forward this message.
david silver
http://faculty.washington.edu/dsilver
To SUBSCRIBE to cyberculture-announce, a low volume announcement list
for RCCS events and updates, email: listproc(a)u.washington.edu; No
subject is needed. In the body, type: subscribe cyberculture-announce