Patrice Riemens on 17 Mar 2001 16:19:27 -0000 |
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<nettime> Michel Elie and l'Observatoire des usages de l'Internet |
There were very French people, or for that matter, Europeans, involved in the Internet's very first pioneering years of existence. But Michel Elie was one of them. In an article 'L'heritage des pionniers de l'Internet' Le Monde's 'Interactif' supplement of wednesday March 14, 2001 details his rather adventurous and intellectually challenging 'parcours' since he was a young bursary at UCBerkeley in 1969 and joined the Network Working Group which was busy setting up the university net project of ARPA. This was at the height of the Vietnam war, when Berkeley's campus was one of the focal point of the anti-war movement. Michel Elie recalls now that "(he) never had the impression of participating in a military project. If that had been the case, how could I have been admitted in the developpers team without signing a non-disclosure agreement? And how would have it been acceptable that a number of participants in that project were in effect Vietnam draft dodgers?". Michel Elie has many more interesting things to say about these, and later, years, which you might care to read on Le Monde's site (http://interactif.lemonde.fr) - IF it does not crash yr browser! (those damned frogs...;-). Now he's somewhat retired, but he's leading the intriguing "Observatoire des usages de l'Internet' at the Montpellier University campus: http://www.oui.net # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: [email protected] and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: [email protected]