@Arcana I suggest starting with the AR/VR chapter of my 2017 “Radical Technologies: The Design of Everyday Life,” but there are strongly relevant bits in “Against the Smart City” (2013), “Urban Computing and its Discontents” (2007) and “Everyware: The Dawning Age of Ubiquitous Computing” (2006), in the latter particularly the sections on ethical development of interfaces meant to be used in public space.
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Adam Greenfield (adamgreenfield@social.coop)'s status on Monday, 05-Feb-2024 01:53:14 JST Adam Greenfield -
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Sexy Moon (moon@shitposter.club)'s status on Monday, 05-Feb-2024 01:53:10 JST Sexy Moon @adamgreenfield @Arcana nobody's buying the apple vr because they're poor lol the thing costs a fortune Haelwenn /элвэн/ :triskell: likes this. -
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Adam Greenfield (adamgreenfield@social.coop)'s status on Monday, 05-Feb-2024 01:53:12 JST Adam Greenfield @Arcana I also suggest, if you’re not already familiar with him and what he believes, looking into Marc Andreessen’s recent thinking about “reality privilege” and augmentive and virtual mediation as, effectively, consolation prizes offered to the multitude for their manifest failure to be wealthy.
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Johnny Peligro (mischievoustomato@rebased.taihou.website)'s status on Monday, 05-Feb-2024 02:36:42 JST Johnny Peligro "im a poor person, therefore buying a 3500$ device is what i need"
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