Tag Archives: computers & writing

Digital Dead End

Book cover for Digital Dead End

“Rendering oppression visible makes it available for intervention and change” — Virginia Eubanks, Digital Dead End, p. 28 

As I sat reading Digital Dead End earlier this week, I overheard a conversation between some of my friends who were in the same room. They were discussing the availability of keyboards, “mouses,” and other hardware at a local charity. I listened purposefully, then, as the conversation turned toward the lack of available software. My friends did not discuss the lack of available training, although I know that is an issue for the many people with economic struggles in my area. And that, in essence, was the most important concept I took away from this text: Distribution is not the problem as far as ensuring access to technology. The much larger problem is how we think about technology in combination with social justice. Eubanks alleges that “continued emphasis on the development of science and technology as the route to greater prosperity and equality for all American is a familiar but dangerously underexamined species of magical thinking” (p. xv). In other words, if we are to work toward social justice as digital rhetoricians and technology scholars, we must work toward structural change–and this includes changes in our ways of thinking about technology, what it does, and what constitutes “access.” 

How Authors Write

This is a re-post from MIT Technology Review. I think it would be a great piece to assign in a digital writing course. The full article is here:

http://www.technologyreview.com/review/429654/how-authors-write/

And here’s an excerpt:

At a time when new media are proliferating, it is tempting to imagine that authors, thinking about how their writing will appear on devices such as electronic readers, tablet computers, or smartphones, consciously or unconsciously adapt their prose to the exigencies of publishing platforms. But that’s not what actually happens. One looks in vain for many examples of stories whose style or form has been cleverly adapted to their digital destinations. Stories on e-readers look pretty much as stories have always looked. Even The Atavist, a startup in Brooklyn founded to publish multimedia long-format journalism for tablet computers, does little more than add elements like interactive maps, videos, or photographs to conventional stories. But such elements are editors’ accretions; The Atavist’s authors have not been moved, as Baker was, by the creative possibilities of a new technology. Writers are excited to experimentation not by the media in which their works are published but, rather, by the technologies they use to compose the works.

Iphone 5 is out today

So I updated my iPhone 4 just to see what would happen. It does look different, but I’m still figuring out if I like the content changes or not. Well, most of them. I already know the new map feature is terrible, but I’m optimistic about the rest. Meanwhile, in case anyone needed a reminder about culture+technology, there’s this: “It’s not even really about the phone, it’s about joining the party.” (From this video: http://cnn.com/video/#/video/world/2012/09/21/vo-japan-iphone-sale.cnn)

Games for Change

This is a link to Arizona State’s TeachOnline site about the 2012 Games for Change Conference. I am especially interested in the James Paul Gee talk on “Big G” games. (Partly because it’s a fascinating study on the “popular” uptake of theory.)

C&W Memorabilia

2011 Computers and Writing T-shirt

Check out this site featuring online versions of Computers & Writing Memorabilia. What a cool project! The shirt archive is my favorite, with the 2011 shirt topping that list.