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Wiley InterScience | ||||||||||
![]() Transactions of the Institute of British GeographersVolume 27 Issue 3, Pages 309 - 335 Published Online: 17 Dec 2002 Journal compilation © 2010 Royal Geographical Society (with the Institute of British Geographers) Published on behalf of the Royal Geographical Society (with The Institute of British Geographers)
Abstract | Full Text: PDF (Size: 474K) | Related Articles | Citation Tracking The automatic production of space Copyright Royal Geographical Society (with The Institute of British Geographers) 2002 KEYWORDS software • code • timespace • everyday life • automatic ABSTRACTThis paper is concerned with the changing nature of space. More and more of the spaces of everyday life come loaded up with software, lines of code that are installing a new kind of automatically reproduced background and whose nature is only now starting to become clear. This paper is an attempt to map out this background. The paper begins by considering the nature of software. Subsequently, a simple audit is undertaken of where software is chiefly to be found in the spaces of everyday life. The next part of the paper notes the way in which more and more of this software is written to mimic corporeal intelligence, so as to produce a better and more unobtrusive fit with habitation. The paper then sets out three different geographies of software and the way in which they are implicated in the reproduction of everyday life before concluding with a consideration of the degree to which we might consider the rise of software as an epochal event or something much more modest. |
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