Difference between revisions of "Automatic Production of Space"
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===Definition=== | ===Definition=== | ||
− | The Automatic Production of Space is a way of describing the new geography created by software running on networked environments. In 2002, Nigel Thrift and Shaun French wrote about how the "technical substrate of Euro-American society has changed...as software has come to intervene in nearly all aspects of everyday life and has begun to sink into...the background".<ref>Thrift, Nigel and Shaun French. The Automatic Production of Space. School of Geographical Sciences, University of Bristol. 2002. Pg. 309. </ref> | + | The Automatic Production of Space is a way of describing the new geography created by software running on networked environments. In 2002, Nigel Thrift and Shaun French wrote about how the "technical substrate of Euro-American society has changed...as software has come to intervene in nearly all aspects of everyday life and has begun to sink into...the background".<ref>Thrift, Nigel and Shaun French. The Automatic Production of Space. School of Geographical Sciences, University of Bristol. 2002. Pg. 309.</ref> |
− | + | When one puts an item into a physical bag, it gets heavier. When one puts an item into virtual space, the computer that holds it stays the same weight. Every time a page is accessed it reproduces for that current user, with little energy required for the duplication. Space is easily produced in virtual reality. Space is created with every click on the web, every document uploaded to the web, and every social networking profile. Each of these formats have no imitation on space as there is in real life. | |
===Related Reading=== | ===Related Reading=== |
Revision as of 20:18, 3 July 2011
Definition
The Automatic Production of Space is a way of describing the new geography created by software running on networked environments. In 2002, Nigel Thrift and Shaun French wrote about how the "technical substrate of Euro-American society has changed...as software has come to intervene in nearly all aspects of everyday life and has begun to sink into...the background".[1]
When one puts an item into a physical bag, it gets heavier. When one puts an item into virtual space, the computer that holds it stays the same weight. Every time a page is accessed it reproduces for that current user, with little energy required for the duplication. Space is easily produced in virtual reality. Space is created with every click on the web, every document uploaded to the web, and every social networking profile. Each of these formats have no imitation on space as there is in real life.
Related Reading
References
- ↑ Thrift, Nigel and Shaun French. The Automatic Production of Space. School of Geographical Sciences, University of Bristol. 2002. Pg. 309.