Iraqis scramble to restore Internet

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valryte
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Iraqis scramble to restore Internet

Post by valryte »

BAGHDAD, Iraq, May 26 — Amr Bakr is an Internet addict. These days, the computer repairman finds himself in need of a fix. His mornings used to consist of sipping coffee while he checked his five e-mail accounts and read news online from the BBC and al-Jazeera. Since American missiles demolished antennas and transmitters atop the Iraq Ministry of Information building early last month, Bakr and the rest of Iraq have been cut off. “I MISS IT A LOT,” Bakr said, sitting in a computer repair shop next to one of Baghdad’s shuttered state Internet cafes. “I used to use it at least five to six hours a day.”
While Bakr and other Iraqis are upset about the slicing of their precious tether to the world, they’re also optimistic about the future of the Internet in Iraq, where access was previously available to a tiny minority — and only then under severe restrictions.
“I consider it as a gate to the 21st century for Iraqis who have been living in a dark age,” said Shakir Abdulla, director general of the State Company for Internet Services, the agency that distributed the Internet in Iraq. “This will change their mentality.”
For the past few weeks, Abdulla’s technicians have been hammering together an Internet base station that will soon serve a 50-seat Internet cafe and some homes for the first time since April.
Until then, Internet access comes only via personal satellite phones carried mostly by reporters here or through a cafe in the city’s Babil district with five computers hooked up to a satellite phone.
When it arrives, an unfettered Internet will nudge Iraqi society in new directions, offering business opportunities, alternative politics and contact with people abroad. Such leaps in communication can also stoke unrest.
“It’s not clear that shopping is what they’ve got in mind. Or maybe shopping is exactly what they have in mind,” said Jonathan Zittrain, a professor at Harvard Law School’s Berkman Center for Internet and Society. “The respective popularity of each function of the Internet is very culturally derived...”
You're definately in the dark age if you don't have access to PRON! You must agree, this alone is justification for war!

http://www.msnbc.com/news/917510.asp?0cv=CB20
Last edited by valryte on May 28, 2003, 12:51 am, edited 2 times in total.
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Forthe
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Post by Forthe »

A programmer messing up bold tags. Shame on you.
All posts are personal opinion.
My opinion may == || != my guild's.
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Crav
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Post by Crav »

Hey if Bush had said we are going to free Iraq so that they can have access to pron I would have been much more supportive of the war, it's a much nobler endeaver than going in looking for WMD that have yet to be found :wink:. Seriously though it's nice to see some similiarities between peoples, I mean how many of us don't begin the day by getting on our computers :). I am a bit peeved that he has more email accounts than I do, I only have two that I check daily!
Crav Veladorn
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"Science without religion is lame, religion without science is blind."
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valryte
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Post by valryte »

WTF?!?! no idea where those came from...
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