Western-derived maker movements and their associated fab labs and hackerspaces are being lauded by some as a global industrial revolution, responsible for groundbreaking digital “entanglements” that transform identities, practices and cultures at an unprecedented rate (Anderson 2014; Hills 2016). Assertions proliferate regarding the societal and entrepreneurial benefits of these “new” innovations, with positive impacts ascribed to everything, from poverty to connectivity. However, contradictory evidence has started to emerge, suggesting that a heterogeneous set of global cultural practices have been homogenized. This paper employs a materialist genealogical framework to deconstruct three dominant narratives about information technologies, w...
US technological leadership and domination of the world economy were further enhanced by the extraor...
In the 1970s, researchers and engineers built the technical predecessor of today’s global digital ne...
This paper considers the following question—where do computers, laptops and mobile phones come from ...
Western-derived maker movements and their associated fab labs and hackerspaces are being lauded by s...
Digital maker culture is increasingly studied for its impact on production and consumpti...
This article proposes the techno-cultural workshop as an innovative method for opening up the materi...
Supported by easier and cheaper access to tools and expanding communities, maker cultures are pointi...
The rising of maker's movement in recent years has been spoiled by the popularization of open source...
The writings of computer futurist writers such as Ray Kurzweil, Eric Schmidt, Hans Moravec, and Pete...
From 3D printing to maker culture, there’s a rise of technical practices that resist large industria...
Despite the large impact of digital technology on the lives and future of all people on the planet, ...
The internet has enabled new forms of sharing and collaboration which arguably have been pioneered b...
This paper suggests that technology is excessively ‘high’ in two senses. The first sense refers to a...
Through examining the phenomena of the musical mashup against the backdrop of the contemporary Ameri...
In this paper we argue that Makers engage in various degrees of sociotechnical identity formation. W...
US technological leadership and domination of the world economy were further enhanced by the extraor...
In the 1970s, researchers and engineers built the technical predecessor of today’s global digital ne...
This paper considers the following question—where do computers, laptops and mobile phones come from ...
Western-derived maker movements and their associated fab labs and hackerspaces are being lauded by s...
Digital maker culture is increasingly studied for its impact on production and consumpti...
This article proposes the techno-cultural workshop as an innovative method for opening up the materi...
Supported by easier and cheaper access to tools and expanding communities, maker cultures are pointi...
The rising of maker's movement in recent years has been spoiled by the popularization of open source...
The writings of computer futurist writers such as Ray Kurzweil, Eric Schmidt, Hans Moravec, and Pete...
From 3D printing to maker culture, there’s a rise of technical practices that resist large industria...
Despite the large impact of digital technology on the lives and future of all people on the planet, ...
The internet has enabled new forms of sharing and collaboration which arguably have been pioneered b...
This paper suggests that technology is excessively ‘high’ in two senses. The first sense refers to a...
Through examining the phenomena of the musical mashup against the backdrop of the contemporary Ameri...
In this paper we argue that Makers engage in various degrees of sociotechnical identity formation. W...
US technological leadership and domination of the world economy were further enhanced by the extraor...
In the 1970s, researchers and engineers built the technical predecessor of today’s global digital ne...
This paper considers the following question—where do computers, laptops and mobile phones come from ...