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Subject: 
Re: De Bouwsteen in LA Times
Newsgroups: 
lugnet.org.nl, lugnet.loc.nl
Date: 
Fri, 18 May 2001 11:20:24 GMT
Viewed: 
3053 times
  
In lugnet.org.nl, Manfred Moolhuysen writes:
In lugnet.org.nl, Wessel Burgers writes:
Just for the record: I'd like to mention that 'De Bouwsteen' was also
mentioned in this LA Times Article:

http://www.latimes.com/business/cutting/ttimes/20010118/t000004859.html

Is iemand zo slim geweest om het genoemde artikel te downloaden? Ik heb
destijds helemaal niet beseft dat het raadplegen van een artikel bij deze
krant na 14 dagen niet meer gratis is.

Groeten, M. Moolhuysen.


Thursday, January 18, 2001
Lego Enthusiasts Are Building Connections Online, Brick by Brick


By STEVE CARNEY



    Lego enthusiasts say you can build almost anything with the beloved
plastic bricks. And one Boston couple has proved just that over the last
four years--they've built a worldwide community.
    With their Web site, at http://www.lugnet.com (an abbreviation of Lego
Users Group Network), Todd Lehman and Suzanne Rich have created the
Internet's home base for Lego enthusiasts around the globe. The site
features Lego news, chat rooms, links to aficionados' personal sites, photos
of members' creations and even inventories of Lego pieces, listing all the
various sets in which each is available.
    "We figured somebody would inevitably do this. All these people are
smart people and incredibly dedicated," said Rich, 30. "It was pretty
obvious the amount of enthusiasm people have."
    About 1,000 people visit the site every couple of days. About 600 from
around the world have registered as members, and tens of thousands more are
regular visitors, Rich said.
    "It's great. It's satisfying. This is really what we hoped it would be,"
said Rich, who used to work for Lego as a freelancer making conceptual
drawings in the company's Boston office. But the site isn't affiliated with
the company--it is strictly by and for devotees of the bricks.
     "We sort of like being unofficial. It makes the fans more comfortable.
They can say what they want," Rich said. "It's sort of like the underground.
     "A common thread is people tend to be interested in technical things
and creative things," such as engineers or graphic designers who use
computers. For example, Lehman, 33, is a computer programmer who now works
at Boston University.
     The site announces its broad appeal: "You are not alone! LUGNET is home
to thousands of Lego fans of all ages. We are a community which never
sleeps--and has been called 'the friendliest place on the Internet.' "
     "It's really encouraging to see people out there doing the same thing,"
Rich said. "It's like having a peer group. If I was only building Lego in
isolation, I don't think I would be doing it with the same kind of passion."
     The appeal stems from the simplicity of the pieces and the complexity
and variety of things that they can be used to create. Far advanced from the
static square blocks and flat panels of decades ago, Lego now features
programmable bricks that can be plugged into computers, and one set includes
a digital video camera, Rich said.
     "It's a beautiful system. It's intricate," she said of Lego. "In those
ways it's not really a toy, it's a medium. It can be pretty addictive."
     Lehman coded the LUGNET site in HTML himself, and Rich said she spends
an average of 20 hours a week answering e-mail and adding content.
     "We talked about making a site that would bring everybody's individual
Lego sites together, and we could pool information," Rich said. "We really
wanted it to be a network of user groups, so there are smaller communities
within the community."
     Those communities range from the Dutch user group (De Bouwsteen, which
translates as "the Building Brick") to the Dixie user group (based in
Georgia, its home page features the group's mascot, Bubba, a Lego figure in
overalls exclaiming, "Hi, y'all"), and many more around the globe.
     The site also features a massive ongoing project--a database of the
thousands of types of Lego sets the company has ever sold.
     "We get information from people all over the world. It's really a
community project. And I've heard that people at the company, at Lego, do
use it because I don't think they have anything like that," Rich said.
     In addition, LUGNET links to a site of the week. "We never thought
there would be another Lego site each week that would be worth highlighting,
but there's been no shortage," Rich said. "It's amazing."


* * *
     Steve Carney is a freelance journalist.
- - -

Stevecarney@journalist.com


Copyright 2000 Los Angeles Times


hier is de tekst,denk wel aan de rechten :)
martyn



Message is in Reply To:
  Re: De Bouwsteen in LA Times
 
(...) destijds helemaal niet beseft dat het raadplegen van een artikel bij deze krant na 14 dagen niet meer gratis is. Groeten, M. Moolhuysen. (24 years ago, 16-Feb-01, to lugnet.org.nl, lugnet.loc.nl)

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