There is no Software, there are just Services

Christopher Kelty, Andrew Lison, Liam Magee, Christoph Neubert, Jussi Parikka, Martina Leeker, Anders Fagerjord, Ned Rossiter, Seth Erickson, and Irina Kaldrack
meson press
2015-09-30

Is software dead? Services like Google, Dropbox, Adobe Creative Cloud, or Social Media apps are all-pervasive in our digital media landscape. This marks the (re)emergence of the service paradigm that challenges traditional business and license models as well as modes of media creation and use. The short essays in this edited collection discuss how services shift the notion of software, the cultural technique of programming, conditions of labor as well as the ecology and politics of data and how they influence dispositifs of knowledge.

Contributors: Ned Rossiter, Jussi Parikka, Christoph Neubert, Liam Magee, Andrew Lison, Christopher M. Kelty, Anders Fagerjord, and Seth Erickson.

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Keywords

  • Adobe
  • Business Models
  • Data
  • Dropbox
  • Google
  • Knowledge
  • Labor
  • Licensing
  • Politics
  • Programming
  • Services
  • Social Media
  • Software
  • Media studies: internet, digital media and society
  • Media studies
  • Media studies
  • programming
  • services
  • social media
  • software
  • P87-96
  • business models
  • cultural technique
  • data
  • digital labor
  • knowledge

There is no Software, there are just Services

Christopher Kelty, Andrew Lison, Liam Magee, Christoph Neubert, Jussi Parikka, Martina Leeker, Anders Fagerjord, Ned Rossiter, Seth Erickson, and Irina Kaldrack

meson press

2015-09-30

CC BY-SA

Is software dead? Services like Google, Dropbox, Adobe Creative Cloud, or Social Media apps are all-pervasive in our digital media landscape. This marks the (re)emergence of the service paradigm that challenges traditional business and license models as well as modes of media creation and use. The short essays in this edited collection discuss how services shift the notion of software, the cultural technique of programming, conditions of labor as well as the ecology and politics of data and how they influence dispositifs of knowledge.

Contributors: Ned Rossiter, Jussi Parikka, Christoph Neubert, Liam Magee, Andrew Lison, Christopher M. Kelty, Anders Fagerjord, and Seth Erickson.

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Included in Packages

Topics

  • Adobe
  • Business Models
  • Data
  • Dropbox
  • Google
  • Knowledge
  • Labor
  • Licensing
  • Politics
  • Programming
  • Services
  • Social Media
  • Software
  • Media studies: internet, digital media and society
  • Media studies
  • Media studies
  • programming
  • services
  • social media
  • software
  • P87-96
  • business models
  • cultural technique
  • data
  • digital labor
  • knowledge