Open Source Democracy: How Online Communication is Changing Offline PoliticsDemos, 2003 - 66 lappuses Political structures need to change. They will emerge from people acting and communicating in the present, not talking about a fictional future ... (from cover). |
No grāmatas satura
1.–5. rezultāts no 10.
25. lappuse
... economy ( see Barbrook2 ) . People developed and shared new technologies with no expectation of financial return . It was gratifying enough to see one's own email program or bulletin board software spread to thousands of other users ...
... economy ( see Barbrook2 ) . People developed and shared new technologies with no expectation of financial return . It was gratifying enough to see one's own email program or bulletin board software spread to thousands of other users ...
26. lappuse
... economy based on community and mutual self - interest . People were turning to alternative news and entertainment sources , which they didn't have to pay for . Worse , they were watching fewer commercials . Something had to be done ...
... economy based on community and mutual self - interest . People were turning to alternative news and entertainment sources , which they didn't have to pay for . Worse , they were watching fewer commercials . Something had to be done ...
29. lappuse
... economy . True enough , the mediaspace might be infinite but there are only so many hours in a day during which potential audience members might be viewing a programme . These units of human time became known as eyeball - hours , and ...
... economy . True enough , the mediaspace might be infinite but there are only so many hours in a day during which potential audience members might be viewing a programme . These units of human time became known as eyeball - hours , and ...
41. lappuse
... economic or political success . Though provisionally functional , none of them are absolutely true . To mistake any of them for reality would be to mistake the map for the territory . This , more than anything , is the terrible lesson ...
... economic or political success . Though provisionally functional , none of them are absolutely true . To mistake any of them for reality would be to mistake the map for the territory . This , more than anything , is the terrible lesson ...
42. lappuse
... economic prosperity as central to its basic premise as any fundamentalist vision of a perfect past era in harmony with God , believers in the capitalist narrative responded the only way they could . They sought a war to defend their ...
... economic prosperity as central to its basic premise as any fundamentalist vision of a perfect past era in harmony with God , believers in the capitalist narrative responded the only way they could . They sought a war to defend their ...
Citi izdevumi - Skatīt visu
Bieži izmantoti vārdi un frāzes
ability actively actually allows American Andrei Cherny behaviour broadcast civilisation closed source collaboration collective corporate counterculture covered create culture current renaissance deconstruct the content democratic Demos open access Demos This page demystified develop dimensional dimensions do-it-yourself economy effort emergence energy engage entire experience formerly fractal functioning fundamentalist gamer gift economy global holograph human ideas impact implementation individual innovation interactive media interactive mediaspace interactive technologies internet users invention joystick Karen Armstrong leap living mainstream media conglomerates medium metaphor narrative networked democracy open access licence open source operating systems organisation page is covered participate participatory perspective policies political programme pyramid scheme reality rebirth recognise relationship religion remote control renaissance revolution rights reserved role self-similarity shared shareware simply slime mould social society story storytelling structures surfer teledemocracy television underlying understanding value systems viewer world views