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trincoll_journal [2023/12/19 21:54] bant07trincoll_journal [2023/12/19 22:01] (current) – [Trincoll Journal] bant07
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 The magazine was started by a group of 25 Trinity students to serve as an alternative to the printed //[[tripod|Trinity Tripod]]//. It was "first developed as Hypercard Stacks on Macintosh SE's, a Quadra 840AV, and a Centris 610," and utilized an early version of the NCSA Mosaic. Upon switching to the World Wide Web system for publishing, //Trincoll Journal// became one of the first student-run magazines on the web. The first issue was released on May 1, 1992. The magazine was started by a group of 25 Trinity students to serve as an alternative to the printed //[[tripod|Trinity Tripod]]//. It was "first developed as Hypercard Stacks on Macintosh SE's, a Quadra 840AV, and a Centris 610," and utilized an early version of the NCSA Mosaic. Upon switching to the World Wide Web system for publishing, //Trincoll Journal// became one of the first student-run magazines on the web. The first issue was released on May 1, 1992.
  
-[{{:trincoll_journal_logo.gif?400 |//TrinColl Journal// logoImage credit: Wikipedia}}]+The magazine was published weekly and incorporated graphics, sounds, and texts into its layoutEach week featured a new and interactive graphic to serve as the "cover" of the magazineThe sometimes humorous and sometimes serious articles existed in several different categories, including "Commentary," "Sports," "Technology," "Fluid Thoughts," "Intercourse," and "Photo Essay." 
  
-The magazine was published weekly and incorporated graphics, sounds, and texts into its layoutEach week featured a new and interactive graphic to serve as the "cover" of the magazineThe sometimes humorous and sometimes serious articles existed in several different categories, including "Commentary," "Sports," "Technology," "Fluid Thoughts," "Intercourse," and "Photo Essay." Though most of the staff were Trinity students, the journal took contributions from students attending a variety of colleges, including corespondents from schools such as Princeton University, the University of Melbourne (Australia), Tufts University, New York University, and University of Hartford.   +[{{:trincoll_journal_logo.gif?400 |//TrinColl Journal// logoImage credit: Wikipedia}}]
  
-Even though the //Trincoll Journal// website became defunct in 2000, the Trinity College official website allowed its content to be accessed for a period of time, although now it is only accessible via the [[http://web.archive.org/web/20000819083021/http://www.trincoll.edu/zines/tj/|Wayback Machine]].+Though most of the staff were Trinity students, the journal took contributions from students attending a variety of colleges, including corespondents from schools such as Princeton University, the University of Melbourne (Australia), Tufts University, New York University, and University of Hartford.   
 +  
 +Even though the //Trincoll Journal// website became defunct in 2000, the Trinity College official website allowed its content to be accessed for a period of time, although now it is only accessible via the [[https://web.archive.org/web/20060522142341/http://www.trincoll.edu/zines/tj/|Wayback Machine]].
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 ===== Sources ===== ===== Sources =====
  
-[[http://web.archive.org/web/20000819083021/http://www.trincoll.edu/zines/tj/|The Trincoll Journal (archived in the Wayback Machine]]+[[https://web.archive.org/web/20060522142341/http://www.trincoll.edu/zines/tj/|The Trincoll Journal (archived in the Wayback Machine]]
  
 [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trinity_Journal_(webzine)|Trinity Journal (webzine)]] [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trinity_Journal_(webzine)|Trinity Journal (webzine)]]
trincoll_journal.1703022874.txt.gz · Last modified: 2023/12/19 21:54 by bant07