Self-tracking devices have been observed to accelerate time, be used sporadically and busyness being a barrier to use at work. Drawing on notion of multiple temporalities, this article expands the focus on temporalities of users’ engagement with technologies to analysing them within broader biographical, institutional and political times. The argument is grounded in interviews with UK public sector office workers self-tracking sitting time that featured the following three themes: (1) the participants related their sitting to deteriorated work conditions after government austerity politics and redundancies, (2) the pressurised rhythm of work made it difficult to reduce sitting time and fostered a sense of discontent and powerlessness and (3...
In the early years of the twenty-first century the office is popularly imagined as having a mobile a...
Media technologies are structuring time and space in crucial ways. Especially the temporal aspect ha...
Using time diary evidence on change in the frequency and distribution of activities from UK time dia...
Digital technologies such as the mobile phone, the Internet, and personal computers gained widesprea...
In contemporary capitalist economies such as the UK, it is commonly held that an increasing number o...
In contemporary capitalist economies such as the UK, it is commonly held that an increasing number o...
Research on the lived experience of organisational temporalities has thus far overlooked the potent...
The aim of this article is to analyse the construction of time as perceived by a grou...
That time is a valuable commodity in our contemporary society preoccupied with productivity and the ...
Purpose: This article explores the varied ways that individuals create and use calendars, planners, ...
This article explores anticipation as a temporal structure in digital platforms. It contributes to t...
Today’s mobile knowledge professionals use a diversity of digital technologies to perform their work...
Sociological studies of work and time have argued that academic temporalities are increasingly ratio...
This article explores implications of the central position of the smartphone in an age of constant c...
Sociological studies of work and time have argued that academic temporalities are increasingly ratio...
In the early years of the twenty-first century the office is popularly imagined as having a mobile a...
Media technologies are structuring time and space in crucial ways. Especially the temporal aspect ha...
Using time diary evidence on change in the frequency and distribution of activities from UK time dia...
Digital technologies such as the mobile phone, the Internet, and personal computers gained widesprea...
In contemporary capitalist economies such as the UK, it is commonly held that an increasing number o...
In contemporary capitalist economies such as the UK, it is commonly held that an increasing number o...
Research on the lived experience of organisational temporalities has thus far overlooked the potent...
The aim of this article is to analyse the construction of time as perceived by a grou...
That time is a valuable commodity in our contemporary society preoccupied with productivity and the ...
Purpose: This article explores the varied ways that individuals create and use calendars, planners, ...
This article explores anticipation as a temporal structure in digital platforms. It contributes to t...
Today’s mobile knowledge professionals use a diversity of digital technologies to perform their work...
Sociological studies of work and time have argued that academic temporalities are increasingly ratio...
This article explores implications of the central position of the smartphone in an age of constant c...
Sociological studies of work and time have argued that academic temporalities are increasingly ratio...
In the early years of the twenty-first century the office is popularly imagined as having a mobile a...
Media technologies are structuring time and space in crucial ways. Especially the temporal aspect ha...
Using time diary evidence on change in the frequency and distribution of activities from UK time dia...