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From September 2005 to June 2006 a team of thirteen scholars at the The University of Southern California's Annenberg Center for Communication explored how new and maturing networking technologies are reconfiguring the ways by which we interact with content, media sources, other individuals and groups, and the world that surrounds us.
This site documents the process and the results.
edited by Kazys Varnelis
Available now from MIT Press
Culture: Networked Public Culture
Politics: Democratic Deliberation and Mobilization on the Internet
Infrastructure: Networked Futures
Conclusion: The Rise of Network Culture
Place, Ubiquity, and the Thing
[Anne Friedberg]
Beyond Locative Media
[Marc Tuters / Kazys Varnelis]
Digital Democracy in the Internet Age
[Mark Kann]
Intimate Visual Co-Presence and Pervasive Image Capture and Sharing
[Mimi Ito]
Power to the Cyborgs
[Mimi Ito]
More ...
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