HDSA 2016. If you are so smart why are you so poor: Difference between revisions

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'''If you are so smart why are you so poor?'''  
{{Event
|Name=HDSA 2016. If you are so smart why are you so poor
|Location=De PUNT, Waag Society
|Date=2016/07/24-2016/08/05
|Time=10:00-18:00
|Type=HDSA2016
|Web=Yes
|Print=No
}}
H&D believes designers and artists should be empowered with the tools of the digital realm including coding and hardware usage and construction. Conversely technologists should be more comfortable and effective in engaging in creative processes through familiarity with the vocabulary of designers and artists. All disciplines should become more comfortable in theoretical and social discourse, and thus be asking questions such as ''should we'' instead of ''can we''.<br><br>



At work. About immaterial labor, digital economies and techno-societies.  
During the summer of 2016 Hackers & Designers invited an international group of ambitious participants to learn by creating, researching, and discussing.  



Date: July 25th - August 5th 2016
[[File:DSC00461.jpg|Roel and Dennis|thumb|]]<br>


Location: De PUNT & WAAG


===At work.===


H&D believes designers and artists should be empowered with the tools of the digital realm including coding and hardware usage and construction. Conversely technologists should be more comfortable and effective in engaging in creative processes through familiarity with the vocabulary of designers and artists. All disciplines should become more comfortable in theoretical and social discourse, and thus be asking questions such as not only “can we” but “should we”.
Centering around the controversial topic of immaterial labor, and the effects digital economies have on our current techno-society, H&D engages in the on-going discussion at stake in both design/art and developer practices. H&D invited the summer academy participants to go into discussion and critically reflect on their (digital) activities that exist outside/alongside the traditional wage-based definition of labor. What does it mean for the future of our practices to contribute to creative commons and open source projects, to self-initiate, to organize communities, to promote and publish on social networks, to perpetually generate content, to evolve multiple identities as blog gers, vloggers, mojo contributors…?


[[File:DSC00440.jpg|Thumbs up|thumb|]]<br>


During the summer of 2016 Hackers & Designers invites an international group of ambitious participants to learn by creating, researching, and discussing.


After a successful first edition in 2015, 2016’s summer academy will be developed in collaboration with Waag Society.
===Progam===


The program was divided in two thematic blocks of each 5 days – both dealing with the condition of being ''At work''.


[https://jbg1.typeform.com/to/eq8l6T Keep up to date for the open call for participation.]


====Block 1 Soft work: 25 – 30 July 2016====


'''At work.'''
at De PUNT, Frans de Wollantstraat 84, Amsterdam


The program will center around the controversial topic of immaterial labor, and the effects digital economies have on our current techno-society, – an on-going discussion at stake in both design/art and developer practices. H&D engages this year’s summer academy participants to go into discussion and critically reflect on their (digital) activities that exist outside/alongside the traditional wage-based definition of labor. What does it mean for the future of our practices to contribute to creative commons and open source projects, to self-initiate, to organize communities, to promote and publish on social networks, to perpetually generate content, to evolve multiple identities as bloggers, vloggers, mojo contributors…?


''With [http://dyne.org/ Dyne (Freecoin)], [http://www.hackyourfuture.net/#/ Hack Your Future], [http://technofle.sh/ Technoflesh (Simone Niquille)] & [https://twitter.com/carinanamih?lang=de Carina Namih], [http://constantvzw.org/site/?lang=en Nicolas Malevé (Constant Association for Art & Media)]'', [http://ilu.servus.at// Lídia Pereira]


'''Progamme'''


The program will be divided in two blocks of each 5 days. Both program blocks fall under the thematic umbrella: ‘‘At work‘‘.
*Mode of production: hands-on! wire framing, software development & prototyping, designing, discussion
The first block ‘‘Soft work‘‘ has a focus on software construction along side looking at soft concepts including soft money, soft intelligence, soft power, soft or informal forms of organization of work etc. while taking place at De PUNT.


The second block: ‘‘Hard Work‘‘ focuses on Hardware construction along hard concepts like hard money, hard data, hard labor, etc., while taking place at the Fablab of Waag Society. The two blocks complement each other in terms of taught technical skills and in regards to the content.  
*Workshops: [[Dowse|Dowse – The Privacy Hub for the Internet of Things]], [[Internet of Bodies|The Internet of Bodies]], [[Networked Labor|Networked Labor and Collective Intelligence. On mechanical turks and machine learning]]


Participants can apply for one of the two blocks or for the full program.
*Talk [[Immaterial Labor Union]]


'''All workshops will be accessible for both the tech-savvy and newbie nerds.'''
*Topics: Digital economies, machine learning, computer vision & mechanical turks




'''Block 1 Soft work'''
The first block ''Soft work'' focused on software construction along side looking at soft concepts including soft money, soft intelligence, soft power, soft or informal forms of organization of work etc. while taking place at De PUNT.


July 25th-July 30th 2016


====Block 2 Hard work: 1 - 5 August 2016====


Curated by H&D, taking place at De PUNT, Frans de Wollantstraat 84, Amsterdam
at Waag Society’s Fablab, Nieuwmarkt 4 Amsterdam


Mode of production: hands-on!
''The participants developed projects & prototypes, with technical support by the workers of the Fablab.''


Workshopping, wire framing, software development & prototyping, designing, discussion
''With [http://dennisdebel.nl/ Dennis de Bel] & [http://www.roelroscamabbing.nl/ Roel Roscam Abbing]''


''(Lineup to be announced)''


*Mode of production: hands-on!


'''Block 2 Hard work'''
*Workshop: [[Modem Workshop|Modem Workshop. A(n) (im)practical introduction to Hertzian space.]]


August 1st-5th 2016
*Hardware hacking, wiring, soldering, prototyping and discussing while making a smart machine


Curated by Waag Society & Hackers & Designers,taking place at Waag Society’s Fablab, Nieuwmarkt 4 Amsterdam


Research question: Does smart technology make us dumb?
The second block: ''Hard Work'' focuses on Hardware construction along hard concepts like hard money, hard data, hard labor, etc., while taking place at the Fablab of Waag Society. The two blocks complement each other in terms of taught technical skills and in regards to the content.


Workshopping: Make an animate machine (bezielde machine)


Modes of production: hands-on!
====[[H&D Summer Talks 2016|H&D Summer Talks''', August 5th 2016 at Butchers Tears, Amsterdam]]====


Hardware hacking, wiring, soldering, prototyping and discussing while making a smart machine
The workshops will be contextualized with a public film night and lecture program – the Hackers & Designers Summer Talks.
Public program


''(Lineup to be announced)''
For the lecture night Hackers & Designers invited cross-disciplinary speakers to take the participants and the public into a deeper conversation around the topics investigated during the summer academy.




The workshops will be contextualized with a public film lecture program, the Hackers & Designers Summer Talks.
==Approach==


For the lecture night Hackers & Designers and Waag Society will invites cross-disciplinary speakers to take the participants and the public into a deeper conversation around the topics investigated during the summer academy.
===DIY (Do it yourself)===
 
''(Lineup to be announced)''
 
 
'''DIY (Do it yourself)'''


The hands-on approach and the challenges that come with making as opposed to talking will stay central throughout the whole program. H&D believes that in order to develop a deeper understanding of the qualities and disadvantages of technology we need to look inside the black boxes of the technology that we heavily rely on in our daily physical and digital, and our private and professional lives. Therefore we urge the participants of the summer academy to open the box, look inside it, rummage through it or even make their own boxes.
The hands-on approach and the challenges that come with making as opposed to talking will stay central throughout the whole program. H&D believes that in order to develop a deeper understanding of the qualities and disadvantages of technology we need to look inside the black boxes of the technology that we heavily rely on in our daily physical and digital, and our private and professional lives. Therefore we urge the participants of the summer academy to open the box, look inside it, rummage through it or even make their own boxes.


[[File:DSC_2999.jpg|Lab Hannah|thumb|]]<br>


'''DIT (Do it together)'''
===DIT (Do it together)===
 
Technologists will be invited to engage at the very beginning of the creative process. Similarly the designers and artists will be invited to experiment and engage with unfamiliar and deeper technological concepts with which they may not be immediately equipped. It is through Aanvraag e-culture: Hackers & Designers Summer Academy 2016 2 the collaborative approach where common vocabulary and understanding will arise, and be available in future endeavors beyond the Summer Academy.
 


'''Participants'''
Technologists will be engaged at the very beginning of the creative process. Similarly the designers and artists will be invited to experiment and engage with unfamiliar and deeper technological concepts with which they may not be immediately equipped. It is through Aanvraag e-culture: Hackers & Designers Summer Academy 2016 2 the collaborative approach where common vocabulary and understanding will arise, and be available in future endeavors beyond the Summer Academy.


Are you highly motivated, interested in cross-disciplinary collaboration and self-initiation?
[[File:DSC_2975.jpg|Lab Together|thumb|]]<br>


Are you a professional practitioner in the fields of design, art, and technology in and outside of the Netherlands or an international undergraduate/graduate students?


*'''All workshops were accessible for both the tech-savvy and newbie nerds.


'''[https://jbg1.typeform.com/to/eq8l6T Keep up to date for the open call for participation.]
'''


Find the extensive PDF version of the 2016 program here: [http://hackersanddesigners.nl/HD2016-program%2008.05.46.pdf] and the documentation of 2015 Summer Academy here:  [http://wiki.hackersanddesigners.nl/mediawiki/index.php/HDSA_2015._About_bugs,_bots_%26_bytes]


As soon as the open call is closed applicants will be vetted based upon submitted applications, motivation, portfolios, and a history of engagement and/or interest in technology.


Funded by:
[[File:Stim.jpg]]<br>




'''Price'''
In collaboration with:
[[File:WS_logo_white.png|Waag Society|200px]]<br>


The full program inclusive an informal welcome dinner, daily lunch, free access to the public programs, an arduino kit: €350,00 (excl. BTW)


Price one program block: €200,00 (excl. BTW) Price public program: €5,00 entrance
Supported by:
[[File:copy-bt_logo.png|Jajajaneeneenee|180px]]<br>
[[Ja Ja Ja Nee Nee Nee]]
[[File:sketch-v1-janee_03.png|Jajajaneeneenee|180px]]<br>




Documentation of last years Summer Academy: [[HDSA_2015]]
This publication is made using Wikimedia as a co-writing and editing tool, Pandoc to translate the wiki markup to html and Scribus to layout the pages.
More elaborate: [http://wiki.hackersanddesigners.nl/mediawiki/index.php/Book_sprint_2015 Book sprint Summer Academy 2015 print documentation]
Find more about the workflow on the [[How to document a summer academy|H&D wiki]] and the source code on the H&D [https://github.com/hackersanddesigners/handd-book github]

Latest revision as of 16:57, 9 January 2020

HDSA 2016. If you are so smart why are you so poor
Name HDSA 2016. If you are so smart why are you so poor
Location De PUNT, Waag Society
Date 2016/07/24-2016/08/05
Time 10:00-18:00
PeopleOrganisations
Type HDSA2016
Web Yes
Print No

H&D believes designers and artists should be empowered with the tools of the digital realm including coding and hardware usage and construction. Conversely technologists should be more comfortable and effective in engaging in creative processes through familiarity with the vocabulary of designers and artists. All disciplines should become more comfortable in theoretical and social discourse, and thus be asking questions such as should we instead of can we.

During the summer of 2016 Hackers & Designers invited an international group of ambitious participants to learn by creating, researching, and discussing.

DSC00461.jpg



At work.

Centering around the controversial topic of immaterial labor, and the effects digital economies have on our current techno-society, H&D engages in the on-going discussion at stake in both design/art and developer practices. H&D invited the summer academy participants to go into discussion and critically reflect on their (digital) activities that exist outside/alongside the traditional wage-based definition of labor. What does it mean for the future of our practices to contribute to creative commons and open source projects, to self-initiate, to organize communities, to promote and publish on social networks, to perpetually generate content, to evolve multiple identities as blog gers, vloggers, mojo contributors…?

DSC00440.jpg



Progam

The program was divided in two thematic blocks of each 5 days – both dealing with the condition of being At work.


Block 1 Soft work: 25 – 30 July 2016

at De PUNT, Frans de Wollantstraat 84, Amsterdam


With Dyne (Freecoin), Hack Your Future, Technoflesh (Simone Niquille) & Carina Namih, Nicolas Malevé (Constant Association for Art & Media), Lídia Pereira


  • Mode of production: hands-on! wire framing, software development & prototyping, designing, discussion
  • Topics: Digital economies, machine learning, computer vision & mechanical turks


The first block Soft work focused on software construction along side looking at soft concepts including soft money, soft intelligence, soft power, soft or informal forms of organization of work etc. while taking place at De PUNT.


Block 2 Hard work: 1 - 5 August 2016

at Waag Society’s Fablab, Nieuwmarkt 4 Amsterdam

The participants developed projects & prototypes, with technical support by the workers of the Fablab.

With Dennis de Bel & Roel Roscam Abbing


  • Mode of production: hands-on!
  • Hardware hacking, wiring, soldering, prototyping and discussing while making a smart machine


The second block: Hard Work focuses on Hardware construction along hard concepts like hard money, hard data, hard labor, etc., while taking place at the Fablab of Waag Society. The two blocks complement each other in terms of taught technical skills and in regards to the content.


H&D Summer Talks, August 5th 2016 at Butchers Tears, Amsterdam

The workshops will be contextualized with a public film night and lecture program – the Hackers & Designers Summer Talks.

For the lecture night Hackers & Designers invited cross-disciplinary speakers to take the participants and the public into a deeper conversation around the topics investigated during the summer academy.


Approach

DIY (Do it yourself)

The hands-on approach and the challenges that come with making as opposed to talking will stay central throughout the whole program. H&D believes that in order to develop a deeper understanding of the qualities and disadvantages of technology we need to look inside the black boxes of the technology that we heavily rely on in our daily physical and digital, and our private and professional lives. Therefore we urge the participants of the summer academy to open the box, look inside it, rummage through it or even make their own boxes.

DSC 2999.jpg


DIT (Do it together)

Technologists will be engaged at the very beginning of the creative process. Similarly the designers and artists will be invited to experiment and engage with unfamiliar and deeper technological concepts with which they may not be immediately equipped. It is through Aanvraag e-culture: Hackers & Designers Summer Academy 2016 2 the collaborative approach where common vocabulary and understanding will arise, and be available in future endeavors beyond the Summer Academy.

DSC 2975.jpg



  • All workshops were accessible for both the tech-savvy and newbie nerds.


Find the extensive PDF version of the 2016 program here: [1] and the documentation of 2015 Summer Academy here: [2]


Funded by: Stim.jpg


In collaboration with: Waag Society


Supported by: Jajajaneeneenee
Ja Ja Ja Nee Nee Nee Jajajaneeneenee


This publication is made using Wikimedia as a co-writing and editing tool, Pandoc to translate the wiki markup to html and Scribus to layout the pages. Find more about the workflow on the H&D wiki and the source code on the H&D github