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・ Internet Initiatives Development Fund
・ Internet intermediary
・ Internet Invention
・ Internet Journal
・ Internet Junkbuster
・ Internet Key Exchange
・ Internet kill switch
・ Internet Killed Television
・ Internet layer
・ Internet leak
・ Internet Leaks
・ Internet linguistics
・ Internet Listing Display
・ Internet Locator Server
・ Internet Low Bitrate Codec
Internet Magazine
・ Internet Mail 2000
・ Internet Mail Consortium
・ Internet mail standard
・ Internet Map Server
・ Internet Mapping Project
・ Internet Marketing Conference
・ Internet mediated research
・ Internet meme
・ Internet Memory Foundation
・ Internet Message Access Protocol
・ Internet messaging platform
・ Internet Messaging Program
・ Internet metaphors
・ Internet Mix


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Internet Magazine : ウィキペディア英語版
Internet Magazine

Internet Magazine was a monthly print title launched in October 1994 by the UK publishing house, Emap. Its last issue, number 119, was published in July 2004.

==History==
Internet Magazine covered almost anything internet-related, as long as there was a consumer or small business slant. It was spun out of a now-defunct technical computer networking monthly called Datacom having been proposed by that magazine's then deputy editor Neil Ellul to its publisher Roger Green. The first issue of Internet appeared in October 1994 with a lead story focused on how businesses 'took the plunge' by starting up their own websites. Deemed 'the practical guide to what's on and where to go', it listed a showcase of internet content available on the World Wide Web, or by using FTP or the Gopher protocol.
Gradually, the dot-com boom helped boost the magazine's popularity, and in the late 1990s its pagination quadrupled from 52 pages to more than 200.
Regular features included "Bookmarks of the Rich and Famous", in which a celebrity was asked their favourite websites. Featured celebrities included Kelly Brook, Loyd Grossman, Terry Pratchett, Steve Redgrave and Martine McCutcheon. In 2000, Internet Magazine began hosting a regular 'Movers and Shakers' event which featured 50 of what it deemed the biggest names in the Internet industry. The first event included guests such as Bob Geldof, who had established an internet travel website called Deckchair.com (now part of lastminute.com), as well as lastminute.com's founders, Brent Hoberman and Martha Lane Fox. The last annual Movers and Shakers event was held in 2003.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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