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Urban Space, Campus Space, and Library Space in the Digital Era: Architectural and Ethical Issues

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Author(s)
Mitchell, William J.
Keywords
Interdisciplinarity

Full record
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URI
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12424/3759445
Online Access
http://hdl.handle.net/10150/105438
Abstract
These 50 slides presented in Plenary Session I: The Ethics of Global Interconnectivity, on Wednesday, January 12, at the 2005 ALISE Conference, explore the theme of information technology affecting life in the modern world. In answer to the question â How can networked information delivery add functionality and value to architectural space and urban public space?â the author explores the interactions of information technology (IT), architecture, and urban spaces, and claims that the interactions are subtle and complex, and have evolved over time. His statements concentrate on four aspects of information connectivity: 1) staged transformation from points of availability of new technology to continuous fields of availability, 2) fragmentation and recombination of building types and urban patterns, 3) new, valuable forms of human interaction result from injection of digital communication into face-to-face settings, and 4) the paradox of high tech space with a low tech look. Different stages of IT development are outlined as: Stage 1: the mainframe and minicomputer era, Stage 2: the Internet era, Stage 3: Portable wireless devices, Stage 4: Increased wireless functionality, and Stage 5: Ubiquitous connectivity. Many images are shown in support of the ideas presented.
Date
2005-01
Type
Presentation
Identifier
oai:arizona.openrepository.com:10150/105438
Urban Space, Campus Space, and Library Space in the Digital Era: Architectural and Ethical Issues 2005-01,
http://hdl.handle.net/10150/105438
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