When I think about the Internet, I used to imagine all types of invisible digital information flying in the air above our heads like pigeons carrying letters around. Just as what is mentioned in A Network of Fragments, people tend to pay much attention to data center and data-center regions and seldom do they think of how these data connect with each other. Just as what Burrington said:”… the truest and most compelling moments happen not at the landmark but somewhere between landmarks, in the places hidden in plain sight and only really comprehended as they recede from view.” Those cables, though quite and hard to be noticed, are “reminding us of where the Internet actually lives”. The universal, free and all-accessible future that is envisioned by Tim Berners-Lee couldn’t come true without these visible cables connecting the invisible information. They are literarily linking people around the globe together and serving as the bloodstream of the entity of the Internet. So I think that is why Burrington wrote down this at the beginning of his article:” There’s a poetry in the bits and pieces of Internet infrastructure that hide in plain sight all around us.” Those physical fragments are worth being admired just like how people admire the room where the Internet was born. They never really ask for much attention, but that doesn’t mean that we can ignore them, because “at the end of the day these fragments remain the only forms I trust.”