Describes how local hacker communities across Europe appropriated the computer and forged new cultures around it. Explores the mediating actors instrumental in introducing and spreading the cultures of computing around Europe. Highlights the role of mischief, humor, and play in hacker culture
Hacking emerged in the 1960s at university computer science laboratories in the United States where ...
In this paper we describe the hacker culture by analyzing 25 years of communication on one of the ol...
Hacker and maker spaces (HMSs) are open-access workshops devoted to creative and technical work. The...
Hacking Europe focuses on the playfulness that was at the heart of how European users appropriated m...
Playfulness was at the heart of how European players appropriated microcomputers in the last quarter...
Playfulness was at the heart of how European players appropriated microcomputers in the last quarter...
Hackersare identified as a specific subgroup of computer workers. The history of the hacker communit...
Hacking provides an introduction to the community of hackers and an analysis of the meaning of hacki...
This conceptual paper aims to contribute to our understanding of the FLOSS innovation and how it is ...
Hackers tend to be portrayed as criminals or activists. In current digital media landscapes, however...
Hacking is an ambiguous term. Over the past 50 years, its meaning has been constantJs expanded and r...
In this dissertation I examine the alterglobalization of computer expertise with a focus on the crea...
Development in computing resulted in creation of various communities devoted to nonformal computer s...
© 1998 Fiona BavintonThis research explores hacking sub-culture, and tests a theory that this sub-cu...
Geeks, hackers and gamers share a common ‘geek culture’, whose members are defined and define themse...
Hacking emerged in the 1960s at university computer science laboratories in the United States where ...
In this paper we describe the hacker culture by analyzing 25 years of communication on one of the ol...
Hacker and maker spaces (HMSs) are open-access workshops devoted to creative and technical work. The...
Hacking Europe focuses on the playfulness that was at the heart of how European users appropriated m...
Playfulness was at the heart of how European players appropriated microcomputers in the last quarter...
Playfulness was at the heart of how European players appropriated microcomputers in the last quarter...
Hackersare identified as a specific subgroup of computer workers. The history of the hacker communit...
Hacking provides an introduction to the community of hackers and an analysis of the meaning of hacki...
This conceptual paper aims to contribute to our understanding of the FLOSS innovation and how it is ...
Hackers tend to be portrayed as criminals or activists. In current digital media landscapes, however...
Hacking is an ambiguous term. Over the past 50 years, its meaning has been constantJs expanded and r...
In this dissertation I examine the alterglobalization of computer expertise with a focus on the crea...
Development in computing resulted in creation of various communities devoted to nonformal computer s...
© 1998 Fiona BavintonThis research explores hacking sub-culture, and tests a theory that this sub-cu...
Geeks, hackers and gamers share a common ‘geek culture’, whose members are defined and define themse...
Hacking emerged in the 1960s at university computer science laboratories in the United States where ...
In this paper we describe the hacker culture by analyzing 25 years of communication on one of the ol...
Hacker and maker spaces (HMSs) are open-access workshops devoted to creative and technical work. The...