video
Description:
1 online resource (1 video file (47 minutes)) : sound, color
London, England : Pidgeon Digital, 2009.
Advancing Geometries / [presented by] Cecil Balmond (Balmond Studio).
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Description:
1 online resource (1 video file (47 minutes)) : sound, color
video
London, England : Pidgeon Digital, 2009.
books
Wyoscan.
Description:
1 online resource.
[Place of publication not identified] : Halmos, 2015., [Place of publication not identified] : O-R-G, 2015.
books
[Place of publication not identified] : Halmos, 2015., [Place of publication not identified] : O-R-G, 2015.
books
Drafting culture : a social history of Architectural graphic standards / George Barnett Johnston.
Description:
vii, 285 pages : illustrations ; 30 cm
Cambridge, Mass. : MIT Press, ©2008.
Drafting culture : a social history of Architectural graphic standards / George Barnett Johnston.
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vii, 285 pages : illustrations ; 30 cm
books
Cambridge, Mass. : MIT Press, ©2008.
audio
Atelier in situ.
Description:
1 audiocassette (DAT) (approximately 63 min.) ; 2 7/8 x 2 1/8 in., 1/8 in. tape. master
[1997]
Atelier in situ.
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Description:
1 audiocassette (DAT) (approximately 63 min.) ; 2 7/8 x 2 1/8 in., 1/8 in. tape. master
audio
[1997]
books
Description:
187 pages : illustrations (some color) ; 22 cm.
London : Reaktion Books, 2013., ©2013
Photography and travel / Graham Smith.
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Description:
187 pages : illustrations (some color) ; 22 cm.
books
London : Reaktion Books, 2013., ©2013
video
Description:
1 online resource (1 video file (28 minutes)) : sound, color
London, England : Pidgeon Digital, 1980.
Lessons Of Milton Keynes / [presented by] Derek Walker.
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Description:
1 online resource (1 video file (28 minutes)) : sound, color
video
London, England : Pidgeon Digital, 1980.
books
Galerie Isabella Bortolozzi 2020
books
Galerie Isabella Bortolozzi 2020
The digital condition
$27.95
(available to order)
Summary:
Our daily lives, our culture, and our politics are now shaped by the digital condition, in which greater numbers of people are engaged in negotiating meaning in ever more dimensions of life, from the trivial to the profound. They are making use of a complex communication infrastructure, currently dominated by social mass media such as Twitter and Facebook, on which they(...)
The digital condition
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Price:
$27.95
(available to order)
Summary:
Our daily lives, our culture, and our politics are now shaped by the digital condition, in which greater numbers of people are engaged in negotiating meaning in ever more dimensions of life, from the trivial to the profound. They are making use of a complex communication infrastructure, currently dominated by social mass media such as Twitter and Facebook, on which they have come to depend.Amidst a confusing plurality, Felix Stalder argues that there are three key constituents of this condition: the use of existing cultural materials for one’s own production, the way in which new meaning is established as a collective endeavor, and the underlying role of algorithms and automated decision-making processes that give shape to massive volumes of data. These three characteristics define what Stalder calls “the digital condition.”
Archive, library and the digital
video
Description:
1 online resource (1 video file (28 minutes)) : sound, color
London, England : Pidgeon Digital, 1989.
Symbolic Statements / [presented by] Jean Nouvel.
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Description:
1 online resource (1 video file (28 minutes)) : sound, color
video
London, England : Pidgeon Digital, 1989.
The second digital turn
$33.95
(available to order)
Summary:
Almost a generation ago, the early software for computer aided design and manufacturing (CAD/CAM) spawned a style of smooth and curving lines and surfaces that gave visible form to the first digital age, and left an indelible mark on contemporary architecture. But today's digitally intelligent architecture no longer looks that way. In The Second Digital Turn, Mario Carpo(...)
The second digital turn
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Price:
$33.95
(available to order)
Summary:
Almost a generation ago, the early software for computer aided design and manufacturing (CAD/CAM) spawned a style of smooth and curving lines and surfaces that gave visible form to the first digital age, and left an indelible mark on contemporary architecture. But today's digitally intelligent architecture no longer looks that way. In The Second Digital Turn, Mario Carpo explains that this is because the design professions are now coming to terms with a new kind of digital tools they have adopted—no longer tools for making but tools for thinking. In the early 1990s the design professions were the first to intuit and interpret the new technical logic of the digital age: digital mass-customization (the use of digital tools to mass-produce variations at no extra cost) has already changed the way we produce and consume almost everything, and the same technology applied to commerce at large is now heralding a new society without scale—a flat marginal cost society where bigger markets will not make anything cheaper. But today, the unprecedented power of computation also favors a new kind of science where prediction can be based on sheer information retrieval, and form finding by simulation and optimization can replace deduction from mathematical formulas. Designers have been toying with machine thinking and machine learning for some time, and the apparently unfathomable complexity of the physical shapes they are now creating already expresses a new form of artificial intelligence, outside the tradition of modern science and alien to the organic logic of our mind.
Digital Architecture