Results 171 to 180 of about 33,572 (204)
Hacking: field notes for adaptive urban planning in uncertain times
Penelope Allan, Roel Plant
exaly +3 more sources
Urban spaces became battlefields, signifiers have been invaded, new structures have been established: Netculture replaced counterculture in most parts and also focused on the everchanging environments of the modern city. Important questions have been brought up to date and reasked, taking current positions and discourses into account.
Günther Friesinger +2 more
+6 more sources
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.
Related searches:
Related searches:
The hack: What it is and why it matters to urban studies
Urban Studies, 2021This commentary advances the ‘hack’ as an urban concept. While the hack transcends existing literatures on the digital and informality, it is a distinctive concept and is being used systematically in new domains. I situate the hack conceptually, outline its empirical and methodological value and propose a framework to research the urban hack ...
openaire +3 more sources
Hack Boston: Monitoring Wireless Security Awareness in an Urban Setting
2006 Canadian Conference on Electrical and Computer Engineering, 2006This paper describes "Hack Boston," a project carried out by members of the IEEE student chapter at Northeastern University (NU) in Boston, MA. Our purpose was to identify the presence of wireless networks in order to determine qualitatively and quantitatively how secure these networks are, thus monitoring the security awareness of the wireless ...
Matthew B. Kowalski +2 more
openaire +1 more source
Marine Pollution Bulletin, 2021
Port Hacking is a tide-dominated, drowned river valley at the southern edge of the Sydney conurbation (Australia) and is bordered by intense urbanization to the north and native bushland in the south. The current work provides a first-time, baseline evaluation of the magnitude of human-induced change and risk posed by sedimentary metals in Port Hacking
G F, Birch, J-H, Lee, T, Gunns
openaire +2 more sources
Port Hacking is a tide-dominated, drowned river valley at the southern edge of the Sydney conurbation (Australia) and is bordered by intense urbanization to the north and native bushland in the south. The current work provides a first-time, baseline evaluation of the magnitude of human-induced change and risk posed by sedimentary metals in Port Hacking
G F, Birch, J-H, Lee, T, Gunns
openaire +2 more sources
Hacking the street - regenerative design principles for the existing urban street section and public realm [PDF]
According to the UN, two out of every three people on the planet will live in cities by 2050 (UN-DESA, 2019). For sustainable development, cities must dynamically control and restrict their growth, save biodiversity and ecosystems, and at the same time address housing needs.
openaire +1 more source
Hacking ‘Technical’ Decision Making as a New Municipalist Strategy:
Maria Francesca De Tullio +1 more
openaire +2 more sources

