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OverviewThe topics include the erosion of e-mail, bandwidth for all, the rise and fall of dot-com mania, techno-mysticism, sustainable social networks, the fight for a public Internet time standard, the strategies of Internet activists, mailing lists culture, and collaborative text filtering. Stressing the importance of intercultural collaboration, Lovink includes reports from Albania, where NGOs and artists use new media to combat the country's poverty and isolation; from Taiwan, where the September 1999 earthquake highlighted the cultural politics of the Internet; and from Delhi, where a new media centre explores free software, public access and Hindi interfaces. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Geert Lovink , Timothy DruckreyPublisher: MIT Press Ltd Imprint: MIT Press Edition: New edition Dimensions: Width: 17.80cm , Height: 2.00cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.630kg ISBN: 9780262621809ISBN 10: 0262621800 Pages: 394 Publication Date: 11 August 2003 Recommended Age: From 18 years Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: No Longer Our Product Availability: Out of stock The supplier is temporarily out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you on backorder and shipped when it becomes available. Table of ContentsReviews... a truly brilliant book by a truly brilliant guy. Frontwheeldrive [L]ovink offers a technologically savvy, theoretically tight, and -- perhaps surprisingly -- easily readable collection of 'net criticism.' Capital Magazine Lovink unravels the euphoric claims for broadband and P2P as capably as he skewered push technology five years ago. Wired ... A unique contribution to the field...not to be missed. Journal of Communication ... Geert Lovink warns that government and corporations are shutting down the culture of dissent that is the Net's true value. Wired A brilliant deciphering of informational politics. Rogers shows us how the Web can be a site for both officialdom and its unsettling. He also proposes a Web epistemology based on the ways in which Web dynamics can function as embedded adjudication cultures, and thus assess the trustworthiness of information sources. --Saskia Sassen, University of Chicago, author of *Globalization and Its Discontents* ... a truly brilliant book by a truly brilliant guy. Roy Christopher Frontwheeldrive For over a decade now, Lovink has been one of the most prominent figures in cyberculture and new media worldwide. A new-media theorist, an Internet critic, an activist, an inventor of new innovative forms of net-based discourse, an organizer of ground-breaking events--remarkably, he excels at all these different roles. I think of Lovink as a network of distributed sensors: everywhere at once, he is always the first to notice new changing directions of net culture, the first to name them, and the first to offer sober and illuminating analysis. Now we are fortunate to have his brilliant dispatches from the net front collected in one book. This is a new kind of book from a new type of public intellectual. Think of it as theory on-the-go--or as a set of help files to keep handy as you navigate the present, on- and off-line. Lev Manovich , Department of Visual Arts, University of California, San Diego, author of The Language of New Media Lovink offers a technologically savvy, theoretically tight, and---perhaps surprisingly---easily readable collection of 'net.criticism.' Tobias C. van Veen Capital Magazine Lovink unravels the euphoric claims for broadband and P2P as capably as he skewered push technology five years ago. Paul Boutin Wired Remember the future? Geert Lovink comes not to praise, but to bury, the 'techno mysticism and digital Darwinism' that fogged our vision in the 1990s. The preeminent practitioner of Net criticism (a discourse he co-founded), Lovink combines a no-bullshit street wisdom acquired in his days as a squatter with a bear-trap intellect honed on postmodern theory and endless late-night debates. Geert Lovink is the Linus Torvald of open-source theory--a free-agent thinker cracking the cultural code that cages our minds. Where he leads, I follow. Mark Dery , author of The Pyrotechnic Insanitarium: American Culture on the Brink ... A unique contribution to the field...not to be missed. J. Macgregor Wise Journal of Communication ... Geert Lovink warns that government and corporations are shutting down the culture of dissent that is the Net's true value. Paul Boutin Wired Remember the future? Geert Lovink comes not to praise, but to bury, the 'techno mysticism and digital Darwinism' that fogged our vision in the '90s. *The* preeminent practitioner of Net criticism (a discourse he co-founded), Lovink combines a no-bullshit street wisdom acquired in his days as a squatter with a bear-trap intellect honed on postmodern theory and endless late-night debates. Geert Lovink is the Linus Torvald of open-source theory---a free-agent thinker cracking the cultural code that cages our minds. Where he leads, I follow. --Mark Dery, author of The Pyrotechnic Insanitarium: American Culture on the Brink Please note: The only change I made was to substitute co-founded for founded, at the author's request. Thank you. A brilliant archeology of the world of new media by one of its longtime activists and theorists. Lovink's knowledge of technology, extensive participation in multiple grassroots initiatives, and critical politics give him a perspective on the subject that is unlike that of any other author I know. --Saskia Sassen, University of Chicago, author of *Globalization and Its Discontents* ... a truly brilliant book by a truly brilliant guy. Roy Christopher Frontwheeldrive Lovink offers a technologically savvy, theoretically tight, and--perhaps surprisingly--easily readable collection of 'net.criticism.' Tobias C. van Veen Capital Magazine Lovink unravels the euphoric claims for broadband and P2P as capably as he skewered push technology five years ago. Paul Boutin Wired ... A unique contribution to the field...not to be missed. J. Macgregor Wise Journal of Communication ... Geert Lovink warns that government and corporations are shutting down the culture of dissent that is the Net's true value. Paul Boutin Wired Lovink offers a technologically savvy, theoretically tight, and---perhaps surprisingly---easily readable collection of 'net.criticism.' -- Tobias C. van Veen, Capital Magazine Author InformationGeert Lovink is an independent media theorist and net critic. He is the founder of nettime mailing lists, a member of Adilkno, and a cofounder of the online community server Digital City. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |