Open Directory - Society: Subcultures: Cyberculture
See also: - Research by Barry Wellman and associates into social networks, social support, virtual community, computer networks as social networks - Articles, reviews, fandom columns and other opinion writing. Archives include information on some video games and e-business. - Cyberpunk culture and digital music. - The first global organization focused on inhabited virtual spaces on the Internet. These spaces are shared in real time by thousands of users and represent a new frontier in the experience of cyberspace. - Provides essays, organizations, e-zines and general resources related to CyberCulture. - A LiveJournal community. Rivet boys and rivet girls rant and moan about technology, music, conspiracies, art, and design. - Cyberculture project that brings a virtual community of cyber freaks from 17+ different countries into the same existence. The silvery buss travels over land and through cyberspace posting virtual trips online recreating their reality and immortalizing their adventures. - Contains various links to topics related to cyberspace. - Promotes inquiry into and discussion of intellectual, philosophical, artistic, and literary issues, and works for the intellectual and social achievement of society. - A comprehensive database of listings for electronic works, their authors, and their publishers. - A collection of articles by Michael Finley and others on cyberspace and cyberculture. - Random art, animation, and site news. - Guide to the True Underground. - A comic strip made by internet chatters, for internet chatters, using an internet chat program (MS "Comic" Chat). Unintended social commentary on cyber-living. - A matrix architect's information designer lunchbox. - A website devoted to Microsoft's downfall. - Uses creative web arts to look at the Cosmos and new cosmologies, Gaia and gaian science, the Earth adventure and the life of the spirit. - Britain's most sarcastic high-tech weekly newsletter. - Information on online communities, personal pages, information on hackers and cyber-liberties, and examination the nature of online life and identity. - The problems of the future today and flash portal. Club a Seal, Telebubby Fun Land and Pico. - A participatory self-adaptive website, where the content is contributed by its users. Where science fact meets science fiction. - Offers programs that bring innovators together from different fields, to undertake collaborative social innovation projects and initiatives around the world. - A place for people who love to do nothing. - Official site of the book by David Weinberger. Includes the entire text of selected chapters, and reviews. - A website and weblog about topics and issues discussed in Howard Rheingold's book Smart Mobs: The Next Social Revolution. - Humorous articles and discussions on the daily basis. - Editorial columns, links, and discussions about the Internet's effects on different aspects of society. - Multiply concatinated cultural output node. Includes hombre profiles, cartoons, and drink recipes. - Research site that is primarily concerned with how humor and humanity are conveyed online. - Respects the individuals, their intelligence and their privacy; it's an open forum for thoughts and debate. - Study about how Internet/online impacts the lives of users -- Encompasses marriages, family, friendships, health, predators, cybersex, online romance and Internet addictions -- based on a survey by AOL. - An evolving conceptual framework for understanding the various psychological components of cyberspace and how people react to and behave within it. - Online version of Howard Rheingold's book. - Online community known for engaging conversation and intelligent debate. Features more than 260 conferences ranging from technical and specific to abstract and surreal. - Place where the real and the virtual meet. - A work-safe catalog of Internet and popular culture, with articles contributed by readers. - A container for the digital stuff of internet culture.