See you many times!: Difference between revisions

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==WEEK 1==
== See you many times! ==
 
This trimester will be dedicated to researching the entanglement that binds together digital technologies with ''time'', an inquiry that opens up as many philosophical questions as much as it offers material and practical examples.
 
Everyday digital and electronic devices are fundamentally bound to a time-sensitive and time-critical mode of existence: they are controlled by many temporal rhythms precisely regulated and counted: the gigahertz of the cycles of processors in computers and smartphones, the milliseconds that a data packet takes to bring its message to its destination, the refresh rate of a screen tuned to adapts to human visual perception...
 
This tight relation is in fact working in both directions: as much as computation and processes are regulated by time intervals, since already many decades precise time keeping has been fully delegated to computers. This circular relation, though, needs physical matter to be guaranteed: electrons and bits do not keep time in themselves, and need a physical materialization.
 
From the atomic clocks, the hyper-precise devices that measure the passing of time by observing the alteration of matter at the nuclear level, to the quartz crystals that are necessary for precise time measurement and time functioning in any electronic circuit or computer, matter is always entangled in this recursive relation between electronic functioning and time regulation.
 
While these sound like very scientific and technical matters, at the same time the question of time management is a very social and political one, that contributes to define the industrial and post-industrial societies and economies we live and work in. Regulating the societal relation to time is an operation charged with governmental aspects, so we won't shy away to understand how and when it happens.
 
 
==WEEK 1: time as material - time as rhythm - time as control system - time as perception==


===Monday 7 April===
===Monday 7 April===
10-17: Special Issue
10-17: Special Issue


===Tuesday 8 April===
==WEEK 2: What happens when we refuse linear time as we know it?==
Prototyping
===Monday 14 April===
10-17: We take a look at the politics of time, crip time and timezone protocols


==WEEK 2==
==WEEK 3: visit to telecom museum==
===Monday 14 April===
===Tuesday 22 April===
10-17: Special Issue
10-17: tracing the history of communication and time regulation. By Exploring networks, signals, and delays we look at how information travels through time and how machines keep time.


==WEEK 3==
== May Vacation ==
===Monday 21 April===
MAY VACATION
10-17: Special Issue


==WEEK 4==
==WEEK 4==
MAY VACATION
===Monday 12 May===
10-17:
 
What does it mean for a device too "run out of time"?
 
coming sessions we take apart e-waste, examining the material traces of obsolescence, extraction, and repair


==WEEK 5==
==WEEK 5==
===Monday 5 May===
===Monday 19 - Tuesday 20 May===
10-17: Special Issue
10-17: visit to e-waste facility tbc + quartz session


==WEEK 6==
==WEEK 6==
===Monday 12 May===
===Monday 26 May===
10-17: Special Issue
10-17: Special Issue
==WEEK 7==
==WEEK 7==
===Monday 19 May===
===Monday 16 June===
10-17: Special Issue
10-17: Special Issue


==WEEK 8==
==WEEK 8==
===Monday 26 May===
===Monday 23 June===
10-17: Special Issue
10-17: Special Issue


==WEEK 9==
==WEEK 9==
===Monday 2 June===
===Monday 30 June===
10-17: Special Issue
 
==WEEK 10==
===Monday 9 June===
10-17: Special Issue
 
==WEEK 11==
===Monday 16 June===
10-17: Special Issue
 
==WEEK 12==
===Monday 23 June===
10-17: Special Issue
10-17: Special Issue

Revision as of 16:18, 25 March 2025

See you many times!

This trimester will be dedicated to researching the entanglement that binds together digital technologies with time, an inquiry that opens up as many philosophical questions as much as it offers material and practical examples.

Everyday digital and electronic devices are fundamentally bound to a time-sensitive and time-critical mode of existence: they are controlled by many temporal rhythms precisely regulated and counted: the gigahertz of the cycles of processors in computers and smartphones, the milliseconds that a data packet takes to bring its message to its destination, the refresh rate of a screen tuned to adapts to human visual perception...

This tight relation is in fact working in both directions: as much as computation and processes are regulated by time intervals, since already many decades precise time keeping has been fully delegated to computers. This circular relation, though, needs physical matter to be guaranteed: electrons and bits do not keep time in themselves, and need a physical materialization.

From the atomic clocks, the hyper-precise devices that measure the passing of time by observing the alteration of matter at the nuclear level, to the quartz crystals that are necessary for precise time measurement and time functioning in any electronic circuit or computer, matter is always entangled in this recursive relation between electronic functioning and time regulation.

While these sound like very scientific and technical matters, at the same time the question of time management is a very social and political one, that contributes to define the industrial and post-industrial societies and economies we live and work in. Regulating the societal relation to time is an operation charged with governmental aspects, so we won't shy away to understand how and when it happens.


WEEK 1: time as material - time as rhythm - time as control system - time as perception

Monday 7 April

10-17: Special Issue

WEEK 2: What happens when we refuse linear time as we know it?

Monday 14 April

10-17: We take a look at the politics of time, crip time and timezone protocols

WEEK 3: visit to telecom museum

Tuesday 22 April

10-17: tracing the history of communication and time regulation. By Exploring networks, signals, and delays we look at how information travels through time and how machines keep time.

May Vacation

MAY VACATION

WEEK 4

Monday 12 May

10-17:

What does it mean for a device too "run out of time"?

coming sessions we take apart e-waste, examining the material traces of obsolescence, extraction, and repair

WEEK 5

Monday 19 - Tuesday 20 May

10-17: visit to e-waste facility tbc + quartz session

WEEK 6

Monday 26 May

10-17: Special Issue

WEEK 7

Monday 16 June

10-17: Special Issue

WEEK 8

Monday 23 June

10-17: Special Issue

WEEK 9

Monday 30 June

10-17: Special Issue