Here's one batch.
The message logs are raw in the extreme: they're massive, and many of the messages are phone numbers, codes, or computer-generated response protocols. But some of them are discernable as government or emergency-response messages.
Some of them are personal, like "CALL ME AT HOME AS SOON AS YOU GET THIS MESSAGE," and some relay rumors and news headlines, like "Y! || American Airlines says it ``lost'' two aircraft carrying 156 people."
The message logs are being released in chronological sequence over a 24-hour period by WikiLeaks, to simulate, in a way, the response to 9/11.
The logs are aesthetically hectic, or crazy, for lack of better words, to look at--which is fitting, because that's what trying to piece together the events of 9/11, as they happened, was like. They're a very stripped-down way of reliving it.
This article available online at:
http://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2009/11/9-11-seen-through-emergency-pages/30883/
