Some Interesting This is not one of those websites with a bazillion links, but there are a few places that I have found useful in my research and teaching as a source of information and of the thinking of other scholars whose work I respect. I hope you will find them interesting and useful as well.




Each link on this page takes you out of my Web Office (hence the "Guy walking out the door" icon just to remind you).


Telecom Information Resources is the ne plus ultra source for information about telecommunications, the Web, Internet, what Congress is doing, what the RBOCs think of things, what Mitch Kapor and the EFF is up to, and generally anything going on in the world of networks. Jeff MacKie-Mason at the University of Michigan maintains this page, and he does a great job. If it ain't here, you're never gonna find it. .
Economics of Networks is maintained by Nick Economides at the Stern School, New York University. Newly updated, Nick's site is definitely worth a visit. It includes an extensive bibliography on network economics as well as his own work, and includes a listing of economists working in networks, telecoms, Internet, whatever, with their e-mail addresses.
Hal Varian is the Maestro of Microeconomics, and now he's the Wizard of the Web. Anyone interested in the economics of the Net, of information goods, of pricing network services, needs to check out Hal's home page. He is now Dean of the School of Information Management and Systems, but his real title is Godfather of Internet Economics.

Family Matters: The Business Forum My bro's website, designed expressly for the small businessperson; loaded with content on just about anything affecting small business, this site is a must if you are in that market. Easy to navigate and well-organized (he was always the organized Faulhaber), it's definitely worth a cruise.

The Jackeroo Files Find out what happens to a young boy who sucks his feet when he goes to the Big City and falls into the clutches of ... the grandparents! 

The Jackeroo Files II The continuing adventures of Jackeroo, as he negotiates the alarums and excursions of his first year on this bizarre planet. For all you web-fans of the Jackeroo, this is not to be missed.


© Gerald R. Faulhaber, 1995, 1996, 1997-2003.
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Created 12/30/95; Revised ; http://rider.wharton.upenn.edu