"The Internet In A Cup"
| Economist.com offers a story talking through the history of coffee through business. It shows the similarites of the 17th and 18th century coffeehouses to the internet, a place where people go to exhange information. The article opens with... "WHERE do you go when you want to know the latest business news, follow commodity prices, keep up with political gossip, find out what others think of a new book, or stay abreast of the latest scientific and technological developments? Today, the answer is obvious: you log on to the internet. Three centuries ago, the answer was just as easy: you went to a coffee-house. There, for the price of a cup of coffee, you could read the latest pamphlets, catch up on news and gossip, attend scientific lectures, strike business deals, or chat with like-minded people about literature or politics. The coffee-houses that sprang up across Europe, starting around 1650, functioned as information exchanges for writers, politicians, businessmen and scientists. Like today's websites, weblogs and discussion boards, coffee-houses were lively and often unreliable sources of information that typically specialised in a particular topic or political viewpoint. They were outlets for a stream of newsletters, pamphlets, advertising free-sheets and broadsides. Depending on the interests of their customers, some coffee-houses displayed commodity prices, share prices and shipping lists, whereas others provided foreign newsletters filled with coffee-house gossip from abroad." This is a good take on coffeehouses. It is an older article but a good one. Jump over there and see how coffeehouses acted as our first "internet." --be bold |
...a thought by Cafe Evoke Coffee Catering at 2/22/2005 06:59:00 AM
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