The directory was developed and organised in a distributed manner by country, with around twenty people in different countries maintaining various sections. Canada, through the
Canadian Heritage Information Network (CHIN),[11] was the first country to become involved. The
MDA maintained the United Kingdom section of museums,[12] later the
Collections Trust.[13] The
Historisches Centrum Hagen has maintained and hosted pages for
Germany.[14]
Other countries actively participating included
Romania.[15] In total, around 20 countries were involved.[7]
The directory was influential in the museum field during the 1990s and 2000s.[16][17] It was used as a standard starting point to find museums online.[18] It was useful for monitoring the growth of museums internationally online.[19] It was also used for online museum surveys.[20][21] It was recommended as an educational resource[22][23] and included a search facility.[24]
VMoC was reviewed by
Discovery Channel,
Lycos, Anbar Electronic Intelligence, Bookmark Central, Planet Science, RedOrbit, and Science NetLinks during the 1990s.[33] It has also been referenced in books[34][35] and papers.[36][37][38] VMoC has provided computing history event reports.[39]
^Gaia, Giuliano; Boiano, Stefania; Bowen, Jonathan P.;
Borda, Ann (2020). "Museum Websites of the First Wave: The rise of the virtual museum". Electronic Visualisation and the Arts. EVA London 2020. Electronic Workshops in Computing (eWiC).
BCS. pp. 24–31.
doi:10.14236/ewic/EVA2020.4.
^Bowen, Jonathan P. (1997). "The Virtual Library museums pages (VLmp): Whence and Whither?". In Bearman, David; Trant, Jennifer (eds.). Museums and the Web, 1997: Selected Papers. Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania:
Archives & Museum Informatics. pp. 9–25.
^Veltman, Kim H. (2001). "Developments in Virtual Museums". In Valentino, P.; Mossetto, G. (eds.).
Museo contro museo. Le strategie, gli strumenti, i risultati [La crescita nel settore dei musei virtuali] (PDF) (in Italian). Giunti, Firenze.{{
cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (
link)
^Максимова, Т. Е.
"Виртуальные музеи: анализ понятия" [Virtual museums: analysis of the concept]. cyberleninka.ru (in Russian). Retrieved 24 June 2022.
^Farr, Graham; Ainsworth, Barbara; Avram, Chris; Sheard, Judy (February 2016). "Computer History on the Move". Proceedings of the 47th ACM Technical Symposium on Computing Science Education. SIGCSE '16.
Association for Computing Machinery. pp. 528–533.
doi:10.1145/2839509.2844575.
^Lee, J.A.N. (2004). "History of Computing in Education". In Impagliazzo, J.; Lee, J.A.N. (eds.). IFIP International Conference on the History of Computing.
IFIP Advances in Information and Communication Technology. Vol. 145. New York, NY:
Springer. pp. 1–16.
doi:
10.1007/1-4020-8136-7_1.
ISBN978-1-4020-8135-4.