Walking the
Internet:

Princeton
NYC

Hello and welcome to our walking tours of the internet.

About ( - )

Ingrid Burrington asks,

"How do you see the Internet?"

Over the past two years, I've asked a lot of people this question. It's a question often met with confusion or requests for clarification. Do I mean "What do you think about the Internet, like in the grand scheme of things?" or "How do you think the Internet works?" or "How do you access the Internet?" Really, I'm asking all three.

Sometimes it helps to start with that last question: how people access or use the Internet. For most people, the answer is that they see the Internet through screens browsers and apps on laptops and phones. Sometimes people will point at a router, vaguely understanding that's the device their Wi-Fi connection comes from.

Once I understand the specifics of how someone interfaces with the Internet, I'll ask the second question: "How do you think the Internet works, and how do you visualize that process?" At this, answers vary, though they tend to follow three common trajectories, each one aligning well to certain tropes seen in stock photos and illustrations sometimes used to describe "the Internet."

“I have no idea, maybe black magic.”

This answer sometimes involves hand-waving and anx-ious, slightly apologetic faces. To be fair, there are a lot of bad stock images out there that support that answer-which is to say, they make the mechanisms of the Internet appear impossibly complicated and opaque. You may have seen these sorts of images. Sometimes it's a man at the peak of an over-Photoshopped mountain, his arms reaching for a giant laptop in the sky from which fluffy white clouds emerge. Other times, it's a different man (always men in these weird dreamscapes, usually wearing ties), hands cradling poorly rendered collages of computers and a globe floating in some ethereal mist that could be data traveling across the network-or could be fairies, no one really knows.

Ironically, some of these baffling images emerge from attempts to make the Internet seem less complicated, through metaphors like "the cloud." Metaphors can be useful teaching tools, but when all that people know about the Internet are metaphors, it tends to make their understanding of it more clouded, not less.

Ingrid Burrington, Networks of NYCVIS 217. Graphic Design: Circulation

In our class, VIS 208. Graphic Design: Conversations, we explored these themes to make sense of the internet. Each week, we came together to explore connectivity and creativity across the virtual and physical world. We've designed this walk to connect New York and Princeton to eachother, the internet, and the rest of the world, to help you think about how we "see" the internet. We are all still trying to answer, so come along with us to explore the new discoveries and connections we have made and hopefully, make your own along the way!

Special thanks to all students of VIS 208: Minh Duong, Avi Gewirtz, Britney Guo, Ian Jaccojwang, Alice Lee, Irene Kim, Anya Miller, Emmie Pickerill, Oyinkansola Sangoyomi, Iroha Shirai, Marie Sirenko, & David Villarreal. And thanks to Alex Wolfe for leading the "walking tour of the internet" for Princeton VIS classes (VIS 208 and VIS 217) in NYC on Tuesday, April 4, 2023.


Bibliography

Networks of NYC: An Illustrated Field Guide to Urban Internet Infrastructure, Ingrid Burrington

A short guide for meaningful walks on the internet, Kristoffer Tjalve

How to make your own map of the internet, Tiana Dueck

5 Oblique Strategies for Navigating Zillow, Elan Kiderman Ullendorff

Wikipedia App's Places Tab, Carolyn Li-Madeo et al

100 Scores: movement inspired by computers, Lai Yi Ohlsen

The Physicality of the Internet, Karly Wildenhaus et al

infrastructure walks, critical infrastructure lab