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Soundspace: A Manifesto

Architecture and Culture, 2014
ABSTRACTThe manifesto is a long-standing and powerful tool for challenge within architecture, deployed by those as diverse as Vitruvius and Frank Lloyd Wright (who proposed a Walt Whitman-inspired “Work Song” of 1896) to those publishing in blogs across the designing planet today.
Ouzounian, G, Lappin, SA
exaly   +4 more sources

A Manifesto for Manifestos

Canadian Theatre Review, 2012
An interactive manifesto (in the form of an origami bird) questioning the cultural sector's dangerous flirtation with the exchange economy, its notions of "the creative class", and releasing cultural discourse from the shackles of mercantile economic models and into a currency of the soul.
Natalie Alvarez, Jenn Stephenson
openaire   +1 more source

The Dataware manifesto

2011 Third International Conference on Communication Systems and Networks (COMSNETS 2011), 2011
In this paper we concern ourselves with Service-Oriented Architectures (SOA) in the “business to consumer” (B2C) arena. In particular we consider the services required to enable consumers to combine data they possess with data held about them by businesses and government.
Derek McAuley   +2 more
openaire   +1 more source

The proceduralist manifesto

SIGGRAPH 89 Art show catalog - Computer art in context on - SIGGRAPH '89, 1989
Computer art’ has become a meaningless term, because soon virtually all art will be computerized in some way or another. The author introduces the concept of proceduralism as a label to represent a special class of art, one that constructs images using abstract qualitative and quantitative parameters, rather than simulates classical drawing and ...
openaire   +1 more source

Readersourcing—a manifesto

Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology, 2012
This position paper analyzes the current situation in scholarly publishing and peer review practices and presents three theses: (a) we are going to run out of peer reviewers; (b) it is possible to replace referees with readers, an approach that I have named “Readersourcing”; and (c) it is possible to avoid potential weaknesses in the Readersourcing ...
openaire   +2 more sources

The antiusability manifesto

Proceedings of the 20th conference of the computer-human interaction special interest group (CHISIG) of Australia on Computer-human interaction: design: activities, artefacts and environments - OZCHI '06, 2006
In the style of a brief polemic editorial, antiusability is introduced as a radical design paradigm to reclaim conscious dominion of the user interface, with gaming machines being employed as a framing example.
openaire   +1 more source

The Parties’ Manifestos

2011
It has become the norm in parliamentary democracies for political parties to publish manifestos (or ‘programmes’) setting out their policy priorities for the period following the election. The common definition of a manifesto is that it represents the policy package a party puts to the voters at election time. There is something of a feedback loop here:
Jane Suiter, David M. Farrell
openaire   +1 more source

Manifesto call

Emergency Nurse, 2006
RCN Wales has put improving access to emergency care at the top of its demands in the run up to Welsh Assembly Government elections next May.
openaire   +2 more sources

A NEUROGENETICIST'S MANIFESTO

Journal of Neurogenetics, 2003
This discussion of approaches and accomplishments in the neurogenetics business will focus largely on certain invertebrate nervous systems and how they function: physiology, neurochemistry, and behavior, as opposed to neural development. In turn, most of the treatment will deal with genetics as such, as opposed to genic studies that are solely ...
openaire   +2 more sources

The third manifesto

ACM SIGMOD Record, 1995
We present a manifesto for the future direction of data and database management systems. The manifesto consists of a series of prescriptions, proscriptions, and "very strong suggestions."
Hugh Darwen, C. J. Date 0001
openaire   +1 more source

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