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  1. Mod Cyberspace, Mod the World!

    Skawennati and Jason Edward Lewis talk about their experience as co-directors of the Skins workshops in Indigenous Storytelling and Experimental New Media, through which Indigenous youth across Turtle Island have been taught how to make both video games and machinima. Skawennati explain how and why she adopted the internet as her homebase, touching upon early projects such as CyberPowWow and Imagining Indians in the 25th Century and showing excerpts from TimeTraveller™ and She Falls For Ages.

    Carlos Muñoz - 29.08.2018 - 15:25

  2. Hyperdrama and virtual development: notes on creating new hyperdrama in cyberspace

    Deemer explaining hyperdrama through his own experience as a hypertext and hyperdrama author, specifically walking through the process of developing a one act hyperdrama in Santiego. Subtitles used are “What is hyperdrama?”, “The problems of hyperdrama”, “Enter Santiago”, “A creative process in Cyberspace”, and “Hyperdrama and syberspace”.

    Heidi Haugsdal Kvinge - 28.09.2021 - 14:37

  3. Cyberreader

    Description by publisher: 

    "CyberReader explores today's hottest topics and the increasingly important role that new technologies play in society. The selections range from the scholarly to the popular and include subjects such as virtual societies and identities, network security and hackers, online pornography, virtual libraries, hypertext, cyberpunks, cyborgs, the virtual class and the alternate reality of MUDs and MOOs. The book's introduction places the development of cyberspace in a historical context rooted in the 1960's, and each new section builds on the last to create a complete primer on how to conduct research, and even courses, on the Internet. Questions at the end of each unit connect the readings and an elaborate companion website directs students to additional sources on the Internet. An extended glossary and bibliography make cyberspace accessible even to the novice." (https://www.pearson.com/us/higher-education/program/Vitanza-Cyber-Reader...)

     

     

    Mathias Vetti Olaussen - 28.09.2021 - 15:08

  4. Escape Velocity: Cyberculture at the end of the Century

    In Escape Velocity Mark Dery takes is on an electrifying tour of the high-tech subcultures that both celebrate and critique our wired world: would-be cyborgs who believe the body is obsolete and dream of downloading their minds into computers, cyber-hippies who boost their brainpower with smart drugs and mind machines, on-line swingers seeking cybersex on electronic bulletin boards, techno-primitives who sport "biomechanical" tattoos of computer circuitry; and cyberpunk roboticists whose Mad Max contraptions duel to the death before howling crowds.

     

    Description retrieved from https://www.amazon.com/Escape-Velocity-Cyberculture-End-Century/dp/08021...

    Kine-Lise Madsen Skjeldal - 03.10.2021 - 21:20

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