At the turn of the millennium, scholars and pundits reflected on how communica- tion systems could shape events and societies, often while basking in the perceived glow of the then-novel Internet. Others pled for reasoned engagement with the interplay between communication infrastructures and the social life of knowledge, a much-needed corrective in a moment of rampant breathless digital utopianism. This article explores the interplay between communication infrastructures and the social life of knowledge through specific sociotechnical arrangements, low-power FM (LPFM) radio and large-scale commercial Internet-based ‘platforms’, both of which exist in our historical present. In particular, I use the formation of LPFM, which occurred at the ...
The Internet, a product of many minds building upon the inventions of older minds, has been characte...
Sticky.net.au is an online network of young people that enables content sharing, distribution and co...
In many parts of Africa, the term ‘pavement radio’ (from the French radio trottoir) has been used to...
This chapter explores a case of activism to promote FM broadcasting in the USA at the turn of the mi...
On the anniversary of the first century of broadcasting, this article surveys the formation of broad...
This article contextualizes discourses surrounding new media technologies by examining activism arou...
This article makes an argument for connecting old and new technologies in our efforts to create a co...
This article offers evidence from a literature review that mediatization research has yet to engage ...
Necessary and important focus has been given to the future of digital, satellite and Internet radio ...
The introduction of the Low Power FM (LPFM) service by the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) p...
One of the things I pointed out in my book SuperMedia a couple of years ago was how some ‘Old’ media...
During the spring and summer of 1999, the Low Power Radio Service Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NPR...
Pirate radio still flourishes in dense, multiethnic cities such as Brooklyn, New York, despite the r...
As digital radio broadcasting enters its third decade of operation, few would argue that it has met ...
With the contemporary explosion in popularity of web 2.0, Twitter, Skype, Facebook and other social ...
The Internet, a product of many minds building upon the inventions of older minds, has been characte...
Sticky.net.au is an online network of young people that enables content sharing, distribution and co...
In many parts of Africa, the term ‘pavement radio’ (from the French radio trottoir) has been used to...
This chapter explores a case of activism to promote FM broadcasting in the USA at the turn of the mi...
On the anniversary of the first century of broadcasting, this article surveys the formation of broad...
This article contextualizes discourses surrounding new media technologies by examining activism arou...
This article makes an argument for connecting old and new technologies in our efforts to create a co...
This article offers evidence from a literature review that mediatization research has yet to engage ...
Necessary and important focus has been given to the future of digital, satellite and Internet radio ...
The introduction of the Low Power FM (LPFM) service by the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) p...
One of the things I pointed out in my book SuperMedia a couple of years ago was how some ‘Old’ media...
During the spring and summer of 1999, the Low Power Radio Service Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NPR...
Pirate radio still flourishes in dense, multiethnic cities such as Brooklyn, New York, despite the r...
As digital radio broadcasting enters its third decade of operation, few would argue that it has met ...
With the contemporary explosion in popularity of web 2.0, Twitter, Skype, Facebook and other social ...
The Internet, a product of many minds building upon the inventions of older minds, has been characte...
Sticky.net.au is an online network of young people that enables content sharing, distribution and co...
In many parts of Africa, the term ‘pavement radio’ (from the French radio trottoir) has been used to...