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  • Bridging the Digital Divide South Africa needs cheap, fast, and reliable bandwidth to fulfil its aspirations . not just in big science, but to reach its development goals as well. Phil Charles demonstrates the relationship between astronomy and the Internet and argues that the time has come for bold action.
  • Internety Cimmunications Using SIP, Delievering VoIP and Multimedia Services with Session Initiation Protocol, by Henry Sinnreich ansd Alan B. Johnson, Published by Wiley Publishing, Fig 18.3 2nd Edition.
  • Email from Mike Jensen, 12/17/2011 , I'm writing a chapter for a book commissioned by the w3 foundation on internet access and i wanted to use one of your pinger project graphics
  • Symmetrry Magazine, Violume 5, Issue 4, September 2008.
  • Email from Yohei Kuga at KEIO University, 5/14/2011 I'm Yohei Kuga at KEIO University from Japan. Now I'm writing a book that topic is Internet architecture and current status written in Japanese. And in this book, I hope to introduce PingER activities with 'PingER metrics intensity map'. Could I use PingER metrics intensity map image in the book? (image URL: http://www-iepm.slac.stanford.edu/pinger/intensity-maps/pinger-metrics -intensity-map.html) We think Image size is one-half page (about size is 10cm x 8cm) with image source and references.
  • Email from Katherine Blundell, oct 15, 2009 I have come across an interesting plot attributed to you on page 1 of the attached article, showing growth in bandwidth to various countries, particularly developing ones. Is there an updated version of this plot you might be willing to let me have? This is partly for my own interest, and partly because I will be speaking tomorrow at the annual Microsoft Research e-Science workshop on a project of mine (www.GlobalJetWatch.net) involving deploying telescopes various countries separated in longitude. While the project is research-driven, there is an important educational/outreach component with a web-learning site to help encourage children in developing countries to learn - and love - science, but could potentially be hindered by lack of bandwidth to these countries. I was tentatively wondering about very briefly making this point at this particular workshop, but obviously I would only do this if you were happy for me to, and I would of course fully attribute the plot to you.
  • Email from Katie Yurkewicz I am currently creating a Web site companion for Science Grid This Week, and I would like your permission to include the PingER plot I used in Science Grid This Week in the new site's image bank. The site will be called the Science Grid Network, and will host Science Grid This Week and include science grid-related images, links and presentations. The image bank will be part of the existing interactions.org image bank (http://www.interactions.org/imagebank/) and subject to that bank's permission policy. I will include your name and email address as a contact for the image unless you request otherwise. The image I intend to archive is shown here: http://www.interactions.org/sgtw/2005/0622/pinger_more.html Please let me know if I have permission to archive the image. If you have another PingER image that you'd rather I use, or any other images, links or introductory grid-related presentations that you would like to include on the site, please send them along!
  • Email from robert_mitchell@computerworld.com 12/21/2005 Computerworld would like to publish the pie charts on page 7 of your January 2005 IDFA SCISC SCIC Network Monitoring Report and source them to the ICFA at Stanford. This would be for an infographic concerning Internet reliability and would be part of a larger feature I am writing on the Internet and telecommunications services. Can you let me know before the holidays if you have any objections or if there are issues you would like to discuss, such as proper sourcing?