In this I paper I explore the need for a new field of geographic enquiry called
cybergeography. This is the investigation of the complex and multifaceted structure,
use and experience of the online world inside global computer-communications
networks, most obviously represented by the Internet and the World-Wide Web. In
particular I focus on how one can study the geography of Internet diffusion from
publicly available statistics. Then I consider ways that the landscapes of Cyberspace
can be mapped to enhance our understanding of their evolving form and texture using
examples of a real-time “weather map” of Internet congestion and maps of the urban
structure of virtual world.
(An earlier version of this paper was presented at Association of American
Geographers Conference, Boston in March 1998.)
Author(s):
Martin Dodge
01/05/1999
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