Difference between revisions of "Ted Byfield, Menno Hurenkamp, Andreas Kallfelz, Eric Kluitenberg, Geert Lovink (eds.) (2000) Tulipomania DotCom Reader"
(Página creada con «'''Ted Byfield, Menno Hurenkamp, Andreas Kallfelz, Eric Kluitenberg, Geert Lovink(2000).''Tulipomania DotCom Reader.''Amsterdam.Institute of Network Cultures.''' Enlace:ht...») |
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− | + | [[File: Tulipomania_DotCom_Reader-img.jpg | thumbnail | right]] | |
− | + | == <small>'''Abstract'''</small> == | |
− | + | In times of rapid growth of new media as an economic factor, the danger of creating a stagnating cultural ghetto is immediate. The aim of Tulipomania was not to express “Schadensfreude” towards all those who gambled – and lost, nor to mobilize resentment towards the steadily growing number of Internet millionaires. The conference was neither organised to call for state-lead interventionism against the monopolizing tendencies of the narrow ‘winner-takes-all’ business model promoted through the DotCom hype. There is enough (self)confidence to leave these easy anxieties aside and appeal to a much more powerful, temporary, networked collaborative imagination. Technical skills are no longer enough. Unlike perhaps five or ten years ago, we need a firm, broad, critical, compassionate knowledge of the Internet economy, one in which analysis opens a multitude of possibilities for involvement. | |
+ | == <small>'''File'''</small> == | ||
− | + | [[File: Tulipomania_DotCom_Reader.pdf]] | |
− | [[ | + | == <small>'''Source'''</small> == |
− | [[ | + | |
− | [[ | + | [[Institute_of_Network_Cultures|Institute of Network Cultures]] |
− | [[ | + | |
− | [[ | + | == <small>'''Links'''</small> == |
− | [[ | + | |
− | [[ | + | '''URL:''' http://networkcultures.org/blog/publication/tulipomania-dotcom-reader/ |
− | [[ | + | |
− | [[ | + | '''Wayback Machine:''' https://web.archive.org/web/*/http://networkcultures.org/blog/publication/tulipomania-dotcom-reader/ |
− | [[ | + | |
+ | |||
+ | [[Category:Library]] | ||
+ | [[Category:Institute of Network Cultures]] | ||
+ | [[Category:Ted Byfield]] | ||
+ | [[Category:Menno Hurenkamp]] | ||
+ | [[Category:Andreas Kallfelz]] | ||
+ | [[Category:Eric Kluitenberg]] | ||
+ | [[Category:Geert Lovink]] | ||
+ | [[Category:English]] | ||
+ | [[Category:Holland]] | ||
+ | [[Category:2000]] |
Latest revision as of 18:26, 10 May 2017
Contents
Abstract
In times of rapid growth of new media as an economic factor, the danger of creating a stagnating cultural ghetto is immediate. The aim of Tulipomania was not to express “Schadensfreude” towards all those who gambled – and lost, nor to mobilize resentment towards the steadily growing number of Internet millionaires. The conference was neither organised to call for state-lead interventionism against the monopolizing tendencies of the narrow ‘winner-takes-all’ business model promoted through the DotCom hype. There is enough (self)confidence to leave these easy anxieties aside and appeal to a much more powerful, temporary, networked collaborative imagination. Technical skills are no longer enough. Unlike perhaps five or ten years ago, we need a firm, broad, critical, compassionate knowledge of the Internet economy, one in which analysis opens a multitude of possibilities for involvement.
File
File:Tulipomania DotCom Reader.pdf
Source
Links
URL: http://networkcultures.org/blog/publication/tulipomania-dotcom-reader/
Wayback Machine: https://web.archive.org/web/*/http://networkcultures.org/blog/publication/tulipomania-dotcom-reader/