Difference between revisions of "Channel Cyberia"

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[[Channel Cyberia]] was a web project associated with the [[LM network]]. Channel Cyberia was launched in May 1996.<ref>"[http://www.campaignlive.co.uk/news/24822/INTERACTIVE-BEHIND-HYPE-CAN-CAFE-CYBERIA-INTERNET-CHANNEL-Channel-Cyberia-prepares-its-own-brand-TV-Net/ Can Café Cyberia make it as an internet channel?]", Campaign website, accessed 6 Nov 2010</ref>
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[[Channel Cyberia]] was a web project associated with the [[LM network]] and part of the internet firm [[Cyberia]]. Channel Cyberia was launched in May 1996.<ref>"[http://www.campaignlive.co.uk/news/24822/INTERACTIVE-BEHIND-HYPE-CAN-CAFE-CYBERIA-INTERNET-CHANNEL-Channel-Cyberia-prepares-its-own-brand-TV-Net/ Can Café Cyberia make it as an internet channel?]", Campaign website, accessed 6 Nov 2010</ref>
 
It was sold to MSN, having failed to raise funding, by 1999. <ref>"[http://www.zdnet.co.uk/news/it-strategy/1999/11/11/bible-internet-startup-culture-the-uk-versus-america-2075054/ Internet startup culture]", ZDnet website, accessed 6 Nov 2010</ref>
 
It was sold to MSN, having failed to raise funding, by 1999. <ref>"[http://www.zdnet.co.uk/news/it-strategy/1999/11/11/bible-internet-startup-culture-the-uk-versus-america-2075054/ Internet startup culture]", ZDnet website, accessed 6 Nov 2010</ref>
 
LM associates commissioning editor [[Andrew Calcutt]], [[Helen Searls]] and controller [[Keith Teare]] played leading parts.
 
LM associates commissioning editor [[Andrew Calcutt]], [[Helen Searls]] and controller [[Keith Teare]] played leading parts.

Revision as of 13:36, 28 November 2010

Channel Cyberia was a web project associated with the LM network and part of the internet firm Cyberia. Channel Cyberia was launched in May 1996.[1] It was sold to MSN, having failed to raise funding, by 1999. [2] LM associates commissioning editor Andrew Calcutt, Helen Searls and controller Keith Teare played leading parts.

According to David Webb, 'a former supporter of the RCP',

The Cafe Cyberia/Easynet company was originally set up by/involving Keith Teare, an LM-er, and it is curious to note on my visits to the cafe how many LM-ers were working for the organisation, although I do not know if Teare is still involved. Andrew Calcutt was working on something or other there, Helen Searls was involved in Channel Cyberia, a 24-hour Internet site designed to have changing content to be like the news on the telly. I know because I bumped into her in the cafe and, as at the time I did not know how to do frames in HTML, she was able to tell me how she designed the homepage. Channel Cyberia was a wierd site, with articles by Mick Hume on football (against the nationalism in football) and discussion sections on Kenan Malik's book, The Meaning of Racism. By the way, I do not see anything sinister in setting things up and trying to do things, but if they are really arguing social transformation is not possible today, I do not see why I shouldn't detail what they have been up to. LM-ers tend to all do the same thing at once. Something might be tried, and then dropped with no explanation as to why it is not continuing.[3]

Resources

Notes

  1. "Can Café Cyberia make it as an internet channel?", Campaign website, accessed 6 Nov 2010
  2. "Internet startup culture", ZDnet website, accessed 6 Nov 2010
  3. David Webb RCP/LM front organisations Google Groups: alt.politics.socialism.trotsky (original URL: http://groups.google.com/group/alt.politics.socialism.trotsky/msg/36a8b426db6ec720) Apr 8 1998, 7:00 am, accessed 25 November 2010