North Korea appears to have made its first full  connection to the Internet. The connection, planning for which has been  going on for at least nine months, came as the reclusive country  prepares to mark the 65th anniversary of the founding of the ruling  Workers' Party of Korea with a massive celebration and military parade.  
A Web site for the country's official news agency was the first to  appear from among a group of 1,024 Internet addresses that had been  reserved for North Korea but never used. The Korea Central News Agency's  new Web site is different from one operated by a group in Tokyo and  carries news and photos a day ahead of the Japanese site.
Other  North Korea-linked Web sites and a recently launched Twitter feed  operate from locations outside the country or via direct connections to  China's national Internet.
The site appeared as Pyongyang  welcomed foreign journalists to the city to observe Sunday's parade. A  press room for the journalists was set up at the Koryo Hotel and  reporters were given full access to the Internet. Typically visitors to  Pyongyang are only able to make telephone calls or send e-mails through  designated computers.
"The North Korean IT guys at the press room  really know their stuff. We're logged on," wrote Melissa Chan, a  correspondent for Al Jazeera, in a Twitter message.
She later  appeared live on the channel via a Skype link.
"We have access to  Facebook, Twitter and here I am able to Skype with you," she said.
The  access is extraordinary for a country that keeps such tight control on  how its citizens communicate.
While Internet access is believed  to be available to small group of elite members of the ruling party, the  rest of the country is not permitted access to outside sources of news.
Radios are pre-tuned to state broadcasts, magazines and newspapers  from other countries are banned and the only Web access available is to a  nationwide intranet that doesn't link to sites outside of the country.  As PCs are unusual at home, most access is via terminals in libraries.
The first signs of a greater interest in the Internet came late last  year when a  batch of Internet addresses, long reserved for North Korea, were  assigned to a North Korean-Thai joint venture.
The numeric IP  addresses lie at the heart of communication on the Internet. Every  computer connected to the network needs its own address so that data can  be sent and received by the correct servers and computers. Without  them, communication would be impossible.
Frequent monitoring of  the addresses by IDG News Service repeatedly failed to turn up any use  of them until now.
 
 
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