File:Sheffield Indymedia - 2010-03-27 Ideas Around Hacking - How Does Openness Work - 1 Ideas Around Hacking.vorb.oga

From Wikiversity
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Sheffield_Indymedia_-_2010-03-27_Ideas_Around_Hacking_-_How_Does_Openness_Work_-_1_Ideas_Around_Hacking.vorb.oga(Ogg Vorbis sound file, length 54 min 30 s, 94 kbps, file size: 36.54 MB)

This is a file from the Wikimedia Commons. The description on its description page there is shown below.

Commons is a freely licensed media file repository. You can help.

Summary

Description
English: Attached are recordings of two discussions, Ideas Around Hacking and How Does Openness Work? which were held at Access Space http://www.access-space.org/ in Sheffield on 27th March 2010.

Original article: http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/regions/sheffield/2010/03/448253.html.
Date
Source http://radio4all.net/index.php/program/40996
Author Sheffield Indymedia
Other information
Featured speakers Lisa Haskell, Patrice Reimens, Dominic Smith, Sam Vardy, Toni Prug and James Wallbank
Language English
Credits VolodyA! V Anarhist for reencoding and wikification
Broadcast Advisory Unchecked
Additional Notes Following is the text used to advertise the talks:

Saturday 27th March 2010: Two Events About Openness

*Ideas Around Hacking
*How Does Openness Work?

Lisa Haskell, Patrice Reimens, Toni Prug, Dominic Smith, Sam Vardy, James Wallbank

An afternoon of conversation and discussion organised and hosted by Access Space, Unit 1, AVEC Building, 3-7 Sidney St Sheffield. S1 4RG

1pm - 2pm

Ideas Around Hacking: A conversation around ideas of openness and collaboration in society and the "public sphere" with net theorists Patrice Reimens and Toni Prug (author of forthcoming book, Hacking The State).

2.30pm-4pm

How Does Openness Work?

Can ideas of openness from the realm of Free and Open Source Software apply to wider society, artistic practise, architecture and organisations?

A panel discussion including Lisa Haskell, Patrice Reimens, Dominic Smith, Sam Vardy, Toni Prug and James Wallbank .

4pm-5pm Q & A

Panel members:

Lisa Haskel works as a programmer, systems administrator and teacher with open source softwares and platforms for internet-based communications. She has been observing and writing about old and new technologies for more than 20 years, always most interested in possibilities for access and participation.

Patrice Riemens (1950) is a Social Geographer, advocate of Free and/or Open Source Software and member of the Dutch Hackers Group Hippies from Hell.He is also a translator of the contemporary French philospher Paul Virilio.
http://www.antenna.nl/

Dominic Smith is the co-founder of http://ptechnic.org/ and is an artist, hacker and musician. Dominic develops and manages the open source media lab, events, residencies and training programmes which have included Channel 4's Sound Circuit workshop, Newcastle 2004; partners with Access space and Folly in Grow Your Own Media Lab, a national programme of ‘ground-up’ computing and the Open Mute tour, 2005. Dominic's art practice extends to music, sound, installation and live performance which include works and performances at; The ICA, London, 2004; The CCA, Glasgow, 2004; Feed Festival, Birmingham, 2004, presented at EyeBeam in New York, 2008 and in 2009 completed a residency at SCANZ in New Plymouth - New zealand. Currently Dominic is a researcher with CRUMB at Sunderland University, studying towards PhD.
http://ptechnic.org/

Toni Prug is a PhD student at the School of Business and Management at Queen Mary College, University of London. With ten years of software and network engineering and hacking behind him, he is working on organizational forms, hacking existing practices, ideologies and state-forms. Along with working with academic journals on implementing aspects of open process cooperation, he is the author of a forthcoming book, Hacking The State.
http://hackthestate.org/

Sam Vardy is a PhD student at the School of Architecture at the University of Sheffield. His research and practice explores alternate ways to operate as an architect, and focuses on the notions of self-organisation and the collective appropriation of space.
http://www.gmproducts.org.uk/

James Wallbank is an artist, educator and free software advocate. He first conceived Access Space in 1998, following huge success in recycling redundant computers for artistic projects. The arts group he'd founded, Redundant Technology Initiative, was so overwhelmed with the potential of the hundreds of computers they'd recovered, he realised that the public would have to get more involved. In 2000 RTI opened Access Space, which poses the question “How can you get creative with all this technology?” He's a frequent presenter at Media Arts Festivals and ICT Conferences, delivers FLOSS Training for Business, and does occasional lecturing at Universities & Colleges.
http://www.access-space.org/

Licensing

Creative Commons Public domain This file has been released explicitly into the public domain by its author, using the Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication formerly here

This file may be used for any purpose including unrestricted redistribution, commercial use, and modification.


Note: Creative Commons has retired this legal tool and does not recommend that it be applied to works. It is recommended you use {{Cc-zero}} instead.
This legal tool may not be effective or applicable in non-US jurisdictions.

Captions

Add a one-line explanation of what this file represents

Items portrayed in this file

depicts

27 March 2010

File history

Click on a date/time to view the file as it appeared at that time.

Date/TimeThumbnailDimensionsUserComment
current16:16, 8 March 201254 min 30 s (36.54 MB)Beta M=={{int:filedesc}}== {{Information |description={{en|1=Attached are recordings of two discussions, Ideas Around Hacking and How Does Openness Work? which were held at Access Space http://www.access-space.org/ in Sheffield on 27th March 2010. <br /><br...

The following page uses this file:

Metadata