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  • • System architecture
    9 KB (1,292 words) - 15:18, 9 May 2010
  • [[Image:panic-architecture-maggie-nichols.jpg|center|600px]] ...cially when attached to an audible update signal, is another form of panic architecture because it invites the user to obsessively click it.<ref>Webb, Matt, and To
    2 KB (203 words) - 18:22, 16 December 2011
  • ...is also applied to Foursquare, as it is a territory marking participation architecture such as Foursquare or Google Search Results. In the analog space, this is s
    597 B (89 words) - 21:09, 5 June 2011
  • ...sniffing relates to Foursquare, as it is a territory marking participation architecture.
    283 B (36 words) - 17:21, 16 October 2010
  • *Art, Architecture, Visual & Cultural Studies: Roger Conover, Executive Editor (253-1677)
    1 KB (194 words) - 00:41, 11 May 2010
  • [[Category:Architecture]]
    174 B (17 words) - 01:40, 11 May 2010
  • Architecture Architecture v. 95 no. 7 (July 2006) p. 55-6 2006
    9 KB (1,472 words) - 13:25, 6 June 2011
  • [[Category:Architecture]]
    766 B (102 words) - 23:27, 7 June 2010
  • *[[The Metapolis Dictionary of Advanced Architecture]]
    4 KB (538 words) - 18:21, 16 September 2012
  • Malcolm McCullough, Digital Ground: Architecture, Pervasive Computing, and Environmental Knowing, MIT Press, 2004
    7 KB (899 words) - 02:21, 16 January 2011
  • Lars Lerup is the Harry K. and Albert K. Smith Professor in Architecture and Dean at Rice University.
    1 KB (227 words) - 11:04, 30 March 2011
  • ...t works. He has also written extensively on other aspects of the theory of architecture. Present Appointments: Professor of Architectural and [[Urban Morphology]]
    1 KB (192 words) - 11:30, 30 March 2011
  • ...and design applications. It has been extensively applied in the fields of architecture, urban design, planning, transportation and interior design. Over the past
    6 KB (951 words) - 11:23, 30 March 2011
  • ...b/SpaceIsTheMachine.pdf Space is the machine - A configurational theory of architecture] by Bill Hillier, p. 188.</ref>
    1 KB (190 words) - 11:30, 30 March 2011
  • ...the concepts elaborated on in this site, including the second self, panic architecture and how technology is changing humanity.</span>
    6 KB (840 words) - 18:12, 15 April 2011
  • [[Category:Architecture|Cell Phone, The: An Anthropology of Communication]]
    2 KB (245 words) - 02:13, 7 February 2011
  • [[Category:Architecture]]
    495 B (46 words) - 23:21, 25 January 2011
  • [[Category:Architecture]]
    346 B (32 words) - 01:58, 11 May 2010
  • [[Category:Architecture]]
    1 KB (186 words) - 00:47, 8 June 2010
  • [[Category:Architecture]]
    3 KB (498 words) - 18:14, 21 August 2010
  • *[[Panic Architecture]]
    11 KB (1,722 words) - 14:11, 5 June 2011
  • .... Alex Pentland, Advisor. Massachusetts Institute of Technology, School of Architecture and Planning, Program in Media Arts and Sciences, 1999.</ref> at the MIT Me
    2 KB (308 words) - 12:04, 16 November 2011
  • Unlike the [[Persistent Architecture]] of the standard-issue desktop keyboard, a chorded keyboard is an input de *[[Persistent Architecture]]
    2 KB (357 words) - 01:38, 14 October 2011
  • ...he local vicinity for assistance. We are currently working on the software architecture that will support such a system. A graduate seminar was run in spring of 20
    4 KB (651 words) - 13:48, 15 May 2010
  • '''CAT Architecture'''
    5 KB (817 words) - 15:34, 14 May 2010
  • [[Category:Architecture]]
    2 KB (277 words) - 22:07, 25 January 2024
  • ...rchitecture, Planning and Preservation and a founding member of conceptual architecture practice AUDC [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kazys_Varnelis_(historian)]. ...ture and urbanism, which he began as director of the Los Angeles Forum for Architecture and Urban Design [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kazys_Varnelis_(historian)].
    2 KB (222 words) - 08:25, 21 November 2010
  • Related subjects » Architecture - Database Management & Information Retrieval - Geography - Population Stud
    1 KB (190 words) - 18:33, 26 May 2010
  • ...the architecture of rude interfaces us not being dnstructef by traditional architecture any longer --- buy rather programmers, interaction designers, software arch In short, the architecture of the system had to be altered.
    11 KB (1,734 words) - 16:10, 13 February 2011
  • ====Information Architecture for the World Wide Web: Designing Large-Scale Web Sites, by Peter Morville, ...tion-architecture-for-the-world-wide-web.jpg|300px|thumb|right|Information Architecture for the World Wide Web]]
    32 KB (4,962 words) - 00:56, 18 June 2010
  • ...h her digitally. There is a dichotomy of identity present in her life. The architecture of the online space allows her different movement than what is possible in ...h her digitally. There is a dichotomy of identity present in her life. The architecture of the online space allows different movement than what is possible in real
    12 KB (2,016 words) - 19:44, 26 November 2010
  • Firefox StumbleUpon plugin. Settings to postmodernism, architecture, graphic design, Art. .... Exhibits which take the simracrulum and make it lie. Sites that make the architecture of the videogame into reality. Rebasing the idea of the videogame, taking i
    1 KB (208 words) - 14:41, 16 August 2010
  • ====Architecture of Participation==== ...Reilly wrote about his use of the phrase "the [[participation architecture|architecture of participation]]" to describe the nature of systems that are designed for
    2 KB (394 words) - 19:14, 12 December 2010
  • ===[[Information Architecture]]=== ...and online communities, and ways of bringing the principles of design and architecture to the digital landscape.
    62 KB (9,581 words) - 14:33, 21 January 2011
  • ===[http://journalofia.org/focus/ Journal of Information Architecture]=== ...evelopment of the scientific body of knowledge in the field of information architecture.
    3 KB (444 words) - 19:35, 22 June 2010
  • Was it the architecture of Twitter? A trust economy, established by the rapid exchange of everyday
    9 KB (1,454 words) - 01:57, 23 June 2010
  • Design becomes paramount in ultra-light modernity? When ideas and architecture float, only the lightest can rise to the top, but in contradiction, this ul ...without its label, without its atmosphere, without that experience. As the architecture of experience goes online, design will be the ultimate harbinger of visitor
    2 KB (331 words) - 01:54, 24 June 2010
  • Brahe received his B.S. in Architecture from Portland State University, and he has a passion for ethical design and The presentation involved architecture. One of the best slides demonstrated a beautifully formed pedestrian bridge
    13 KB (2,072 words) - 15:35, 26 January 2011
  • [[Architecture or Techno-Utopia: Politics after Modernism]] by Felicity Dale Elliston Scot [[Digital Ground: Architecture, Pervasive Computing, and Environment]] by Malcolm McCullough
    10 KB (1,482 words) - 12:47, 26 January 2011
  • ===Digital Ground (Architecture)=== [[Digital Ground: Architecture, Pervasive Computing, and Environment]] by Malcolm McCullough
    6 KB (880 words) - 21:24, 13 July 2010
  • Tim O’Reilly used the phrase "the architecture of participation" to describe the nature of systems that are designed for u ...A good software project or social network “can be seen to have a natural architecture of participation”.
    38 KB (6,509 words) - 23:19, 6 September 2010
  • Tim O’Reilly used the phrase "the architecture of participation" to describe the nature of systems that are designed for u .../oreilly.com/pub/a/oreilly/tim/articles/architecture_of_participation.html architecture of participation]”.
    46 KB (7,981 words) - 12:24, 1 October 2011
  • ...nderstanding how the brain and body function. Useful as a base information architecture for understanding how computers might affect the brain.
    5 KB (695 words) - 22:39, 13 September 2010
  • ==[http://www.flickr.com/groups/informationarchitecture/ Information Architecture]== Information Architecture (often abbreviated "I.A.") is the practice of structuring knowledge or data
    7 KB (991 words) - 14:19, 4 June 2011
  • *[[Panic Architecture]]
    3 KB (419 words) - 20:33, 18 December 2011
  • ...an architecture inflences how people move, and people affect how a digital architecture is created. we're dealing with soft architectures online that can be more e ...ed architecture of our time is clearly giving rise to a quest for a haptic architecture". (Translation - We see most things now (computer monitors, ect) - we don't
    40 KB (6,616 words) - 23:54, 20 September 2010
  • ===[http://www.iab.org/ Internet Architecture Board]===
    25 KB (3,731 words) - 22:19, 20 January 2011
  • ...illing, and any other redundant experience that might dull [[Participation Architecture|participation culture]]. Automation also helps to make Impossible Feasts mo
    610 B (87 words) - 18:57, 2 July 2011
  • ...s and more voluntary contribution. Facebook is an example of a stimulating architecture that uses Stigmergy to increase worker involvement. For most, Facebook is a
    4 KB (560 words) - 00:08, 15 August 2012
  • .... We’re so sick of having to be available for every impulse (see [[Panic Architecture]]) We used to look for information to solve a problem. It was slow. Now, In
    6 KB (979 words) - 19:51, 30 January 2011
  • [[Category:Architecture]]
    2 KB (358 words) - 13:49, 27 April 2011
  • ...tructed digital space architecture is decreased. In other words, a digital architecture whose psychological space creates personal anxiety in the user is less like
    4 KB (572 words) - 08:28, 21 November 2010
  • ...of the architectural experience and to develop a new field of neuromorphic architecture, "brains for buildings". *Neuroscience applied to architecture
    1 KB (150 words) - 08:12, 21 November 2010
  • ...and its cultural interactions. It has been defined by Anthony Dunne as the architecture of the physical interactivity between a device and a person.<ref>Ibid.</ref [[Category:Architecture]]
    3 KB (485 words) - 01:03, 9 December 2023
  • ...inside and outside often change places. [[wiki|Wikis]] are a form of soft architecture because they are both structured and expandable. Every edit changes a Wiki,
    569 B (86 words) - 23:05, 5 November 2011
  • ...witter less iconic and faster. With profiles compressed for easy flow. The architecture of the system provides for an asyncronistic, particulate, frictionless flow
    4 KB (596 words) - 17:54, 26 November 2010
  • The iPhone is a piece of what we might call power architecture. Power commodity aesthetics. A persons external devices now allow them to m
    2 KB (222 words) - 19:11, 26 November 2010
  • ...e (or complicating it). The iPhone is a piece of what we might call "power architecture". That is, it makes us more of a God than almost any other object. The iPho
    2 KB (361 words) - 04:24, 24 December 2010
  • The hive-like architecture of Twitter allows information to flow very quickly. Increasingly, the danc
    1 KB (250 words) - 19:38, 26 November 2010
  • ...s by fans through the digital technosocial interface of the social network architecture.
    2 KB (259 words) - 20:04, 26 November 2010
  • ...with each advance in communication architecture. Twitter’s communication architecture is one of the leanest systems for information exchange. On it, consumers ca
    1 KB (201 words) - 20:05, 26 November 2010
  • everything from hairstyles and architecture to artwork and religious
    2 KB (308 words) - 21:59, 25 April 2011
  • You ask, what about web 2.0 and mashups? I think that the architecture that was defined by these wizards, being in the spirit of tinkering and mas
    26 KB (4,479 words) - 19:32, 27 November 2010
  • ...r to her position at Steinhardt she was a Research Fellow in New Media and Architecture in joint affiliation with the Department of Culture and Media and the Human *Architecture as Media (Graduate)
    4 KB (544 words) - 23:59, 1 December 2010
  • ...pace in a postcivil society] by Lieven de Cauter, Psychology Press, 2008 - Architecture - 345 pages [[Category:Architecture Theory]]
    5 KB (813 words) - 17:19, 31 August 2012
  • ...r) can be comprised of multiple subjects working collectively in a process architecture. In this case, the human/computer interaction of robot/machine that occurs
    2 KB (360 words) - 23:46, 12 January 2011
  • Professor: Nicholas de Monchaux, Assistant Professor of Architecture and Urban Design, University of California
    944 B (129 words) - 20:50, 14 January 2011
  • interfaces, paleontology and panic architecture." - [[Amber Case]], [http://www.ted.com/talks/amber_case_we_are_all_cyborgs
    844 B (123 words) - 20:41, 14 January 2011
  • *[[Panic Architecture]]
    350 B (40 words) - 23:53, 14 January 2011
  • Malcolm McCullough, Digital Ground: Architecture, Pervasive Computing, and Environmental Knowing, MIT Press, 2004
    7 KB (836 words) - 11:47, 30 March 2011
  • [http://dspace.mit.edu/handle/1721.1/40099 Architecture for Cyborgs : laptops and spatial use at MIT]
    443 B (57 words) - 23:54, 12 June 2011
  • ...permutations. Informed by urban theory, postmodernist criticism in art and architecture, and debates concerning identity politics and the public sphere, the book a
    2 KB (253 words) - 02:07, 16 January 2011
  • ...y of mapping our place in the city, remaining optimistic about the role of architecture to affect change.
    954 B (135 words) - 02:26, 16 January 2011
  • ...history and theory that is rarely produced. The rapid evolution of modern architecture from Le Corbusier to Brazil to Miami to the roadside motel in a brief 40-ye ...hed," a generalization from the findings of the first part on symbolism in architecture and the iconography of urban sprawl. (The final part of the first edition,
    2 KB (288 words) - 02:27, 16 January 2011
  • *[[Persistent Architecture]]
    2 KB (315 words) - 18:56, 30 November 2011
  • ...e: Freedom in (Digital) Architecture From: Equipotential Space: Freedom in Architecture. Praeger publishers. Serverino, Renato. New York, London. Pg. 14.</ref> Equ ...engaged with machines and browser software. Highways, for instance, are an architecture on which only those with vehicle shells can travel. In the same way, there
    3 KB (512 words) - 15:48, 29 October 2011
  • [[Image:persistent-architecture-maggie-nichols.jpg|center|600px]] Standard-issue computer mice and keyboards are examples of [[Persistent Architecture]]. Though other more efficient input devices may exist, the tendency for th
    3 KB (380 words) - 13:55, 25 September 2011
  • *[[Architecture Fiction]]
    1 KB (153 words) - 18:08, 30 June 2011
  • [[Architecture or Techno-Utopia: Politics after Modernism]] by Felicity Dale Elliston Scot [[Digital Ground: Architecture, Pervasive Computing, and Environment]] by Malcolm McCullough
    21 KB (2,850 words) - 18:48, 16 February 2011
  • [[Category:Architecture]]
    2 KB (339 words) - 01:39, 29 October 2023
  • (make lists of words relative to earch architecture, such as twitter vs. well, vs. facebook vs. parc)
    270 B (31 words) - 23:19, 25 January 2011
  • ..., dark rooms, diy haircuts, intelligence and the study of vintage culture, architecture, printing and graphic design elements. hard work and lots of analog sociali
    1 KB (202 words) - 23:50, 25 January 2011
  • [[Category:Architecture]]
    5 KB (664 words) - 01:04, 9 December 2023
  • ...Hohmann joined Terrazign as a junior designer. She has a Master degree in Architecture from Rice University and an intrest in working with wool felt.
    1 KB (187 words) - 21:20, 26 January 2011
  • ...by the social network, when they ask for what, etc. conforms to a certain architecture
    14 KB (2,183 words) - 18:09, 30 January 2011
  • ...duced, published, detected and consumed by various applications within the architecture." [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Event-driven_architecture].
    704 B (99 words) - 19:11, 4 February 2011
  • "Social architecture is a field which looks at how to engineer social systems and media tools (s ...architecture of one situation might be very different from another.Social architecture looks at why that is. Social architectures are created during software and
    900 B (135 words) - 19:50, 10 June 2011
  • ...hool of Journalism and Mass Communication, and has taught in the dance and architecture programs. Her Master of Liberal Studies thesis, “Cyborg Ballerina, Cyber ...examines the relationships between performers and space, choreography and architecture, audiences and perceptions of place. As a scholar, she’s interested in ex
    6 KB (798 words) - 16:14, 27 March 2011
  • ...ings, like any other component or subsystem, must be localized in a system architecture whose basic modes of operation are probabilistic, statistical. No objects, ...telecom-muting, electronic cottage, urban homelessness, migration, module architecture, reinforced (simulated) nuclear family, intense domestic violence.
    94 KB (14,469 words) - 10:12, 29 March 2011
  • A type of architecture created by [[Greg Lynn]]. *[[Architecture Fiction]]
    271 B (29 words) - 20:11, 16 June 2011
  • *[[Waveform Architecture]]
    112 B (11 words) - 11:39, 29 March 2011
  • [[Image:architecture-fiction-Maggie-Nichols.jpg|center|600px]] Architecture fiction is a way of exploring and testing alternative built forms and urban
    4 KB (598 words) - 11:48, 11 October 2011
  • *[[Architecture Fiction]]
    461 B (63 words) - 00:34, 6 November 2011
  • ...ive hyperlinks to interesting things on the web. What people needed was an architecture that was optimized for speed. Google's no-frills and speedy interface provi
    12 KB (2,156 words) - 14:09, 28 August 2011
  • ...al career to have. User experience design, interaction design, information architecture and service design. These are becoming increasingly important careers today
    12 KB (2,091 words) - 09:04, 6 November 2011
  • ...l, traffic jams, physical and mental isolation, elevator music, and boring architecture. The only way out of this isolation is through reconnecting to culture and 26 Architecture Fiction
    11 KB (1,670 words) - 17:17, 18 December 2011
  • ...Once a piece of information is consumed, another appears in its place. The architecture of Facebook is one that almost guarantees instant participation. Each click
    7 KB (1,148 words) - 18:28, 16 September 2012
  • ...s subjects such as time and space compression, hyperlinked memories, panic architecture, mobile technology, interface evaporation and how technology is changing th
    791 B (118 words) - 19:00, 22 September 2012
  • [[Category:Architecture]]
    2 KB (241 words) - 00:40, 9 December 2023
  • ...affordances of the place. The subtle aesthetic contours of the surrounding architecture and geography subconsciously direct the travelers with the ultimate goal of
    2 KB (244 words) - 23:02, 25 January 2024

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