Executable Urbanisms: Messing with Ubicomp’s Singular Future

Publication date

2013

Authors

Tuters, Marc
de Lange, M.L.ORCID 0000-0003-3871-2655ISNI 0000000419394759

Editors

Buschauer, Regine
Willis, Katharine S.

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Part of book
Open Access logo

License

Abstract

This chapter consists of two parts. In the first part we take a brief look at how locative media coincide with a >Spatial Turn< in media studies. In the last dec- ades of the twentieth century the notion of a >third wave< of human-computer interaction technology from corporate research and development projects into the mainstream media. According to the technology discourse, information would soon become context-aware, acquiring something like its own >body< with which we might interact against the backdrop of architectonic space. We would thus move from the graphic user interface as desktop, to new metaphors of rooms, streets, cities and even the planet as a whole. While the concept of a mobile spatial interface has today become commonplace due to the integration of location-sensing technology into smartphones in the latter part of the first decade of the twenty-first century, we argue for a new consideration of this >Spatial Turn< through discussions in cultural geography as well as by practices in media art drawing on the metaphors of second nature, spatial practice, cog- nitive mapping, and traceability.

Keywords

Taverne

Citation

Tuters, M & de Lange, M 2013, Executable Urbanisms : Messing with Ubicomp’s Singular Future. in R Buschauer & K S Willis (eds), Locative Media : Multidisciplinary Perspectives on Media and Locality. transcript Verlag, Bielefeld, pp. 49-70. https://doi.org/10.14361/transcript.9783839419472.49