Not knowing what else to do, in the numb hours after the towers fell, I made a web page that explored the World Trade Center in literature and culture, as well as urban technology in general. I updated it a bit over the next few weeks or months, but have mostly left it as an historical record. Â
As journalists improvised to meet the public’s demand for online updates (in this pre-Twitter, pre-Facebook world, they turned to the unfiltered blogs of individual New Yorkers and other witnesses), their response to the 9-11-2001 terrorist attacks essentially invented modern online journalism, in much the same way that the live coverage of the assassination of JFK invented what we recognize as TV journalism.Â
Â
Googling for information during the 9-11 attacks was very frustrating. At the time, Google did not make any special effort to index the news sites on a regular basis, so searches for “World Trade Center” turned up old hits like booking information for Windows on the World (the restaurant at the top of the North Tower).
Â
Google actually added a message recommending that people looking for current news visit news pages directly, since the results in Google’s index were out of date.
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