Interesting read.
I'm sympathetic to the driving narrative, and love to point fingers as
much as the next person, but doesn't this article generalize and
speculate way too much about a) what engineering is; which I would
counter-argue is a creative practice full of fuzzy thresholds, complex
emerge
o consider more? What else? Can we
accept the usage of google's open source artifacts, of which there are
many, as a trade-off to more easily develop applications? Is there a
way of talking about these issues that simultaneously respects the
complexity and elasticity of the technology, but does
erman):
https://www.diepresse.com/6197941/kulturszene-macht-geschlossen-front-gegen-moegliche-kuerzungen-bei-oe1
https://www.derstandard.at/story/2000139569800/oe1-muss-900-000-euro-einsparen-zeit-ton-jazz-radiohund
-August.
# distributed via : no commercial use without permission
#is a mode
Hey Everyone,
Thanks for sending in some support. It looks like something worked!
I've heard that most programs will be spared for the time being.
-August.
> Dear Nettime,
>
> The Austrian National radio is in the process of removing multiple cultural
> program
nature of the internet to be
centralized by commercial parties? Or, more importantly why did the
well-funded academic engineers and computer scientists loose interest in the
research? Is the problem of the internet solved already?
-August Black.
--
http://aug.ment.org
http://underweb.info
G
ity - e-mail travels via standard protocols, but has
> everything to do with prevailing trends, where big clumps win.
What do standards have to do with usability?
And, should I even mention your yahoo address? Or is that only for anonymity?
Excuse me in advance if I am getting too person
> in time. Indeed the dynamic of choice, when choosing where to give our
> attentions, is a crucial awareness to learn -- because it is the *where* we
> focus those immediate attentions on that becomes *empowered*.
well said.
thanks for listening to my speculation.
best -august.
--
w that 2 of the
3 major browser vendors are free software - is mostly irrelevant.
I'm talking about the entire space of the WWW: the software, data
stores, API's, etc. Getting user data out of these private centralized
networks is not just an engineering problem.
-august.
# di
n.com/how-computers-broke-science-and-what-we-can-do-to-fix-it-49938
-august
--
Reproducibility is one of the cornerstones of science. Made popular by
British scientist Robert Boyle in the 1660s, the idea is that a
discovery should be reproducible before being accepted as scien