You will be intersted in the following............Alex alex.kuskis@utoronto.ca This URL http://client.alexa.com/tvarchive/html/ Was offered in the Toronto Star Story Web sheds light on 9/11 PAUL IORIO SPECIAL TO THE STAR "...So for those who missed it, there's now a Web site library that has compiled streaming video of all major Canadian and U.S. television news programs from that morning, shown with the ads intact - plus a generous sampling from overseas media outlets. (The site is run by a non-profit online TV library called The Television Archive and can be accessed at tvnews3.televisionarchive.org/tvarchive/html. Its American network feeds are from affiliates in Washington, D.C.)..." ----- Original Message ----- From: "Greg Wise" <Greg.Wise@asu.edu> To: <air-l@aoir.org> Sent: Sunday, January 12, 2003 7:50 PM Subject: [Air-l] The Internet and September 11
I've been finding information on Internet use and September 11th in the United States (e.g., the Pew Internet & American Life reports), but am now looking for work on non-US internet use. Any suggestions?
Also, are there reports out there that cover pager, text-pager (e.g., Blackberry), and cell phone use in NY during that crisis? For example, people being able to contact loved ones via text-pagers when the phone lines were busy, etc. Or even email use in that context?
And since I'm asking a lot, I might as well ask if there are studies of Non-US broadcast coverage of September 11th (was it carried live? By who? For how long? Etc.) Again, most of the things I've been able to find are solely for the US context. I'm probably just looking in the wrong places.
Off-list replies are fine (gregwise@asu.edu)
Cheers,
greg
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