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El temario en CD de Tago Estudios es didáctico, entendible y práctico. Aplicable a qualquier sofware, P.C, lugar, trabajo, casa, etc...
This reminding me of an old argument with a colleague back in architecture school.
I’m not completely agreed on your view on temporary architecture, because I belived we are living in the age of the temporary application. The notion of “temporary” has always had mixed connotations, but in business, it’s a fact of life. Just this past holiday season, companies such as Kodak and American Apparel set up full functioning outlets on south of Houston Street in New York, just for a few weeks to test demand for certain products. I think is an interesting redeployment of “brick” in the era of clicks. In sofware, at the bits and bytes level, we’re well acquaited with having temporary files, directories, caches, user IDs, licenses, and so forth. And the notion of the “ad hoc” application has been around for some time, especially as it relates to networking and mobile computing. And, let’s face, it, most companies do not run versions of mission-critical applications that are more than three year old. Under this model, we can build and disassemble applications as business needs change or ask how temporary events such as Olympic, refugees housing in the wake of huricane Katrina, and ect… intensify the possibilities and limitations for architectural innovation. Built to change, not to last. The goal is not to expend time and energy building a system that will last through the ages, but build a supportive infrastructure that will easily accommodate change. As an architect, our designs should reflect changing ideas of fabrication, and architecture’s relationship to social and culture practices.
In some aspects I do agreed with you on CHEAP ARCHITECTURE meaning BAD DESIGN building, but who to blame the clients or the architects.
By: Nam Nguyen on November 7th, 2006
at 2:35 pm
.
your response is well-recieved, and it is exactly what i am proposing as a solution for this problem. in such a changing world, architects should treat any structure they design as temporary, such as the Houston Street projects that you reference. my problem was that architects are not designing with this mindset. if american culture is not willing to invest in sturdy architecture that will serve the test of time, but would rather have cheap, disposable buildings that will be torn down after a short-period of time, then, as architects, we should design every project as if it were a temporary structure. perhaps the answer to this problem of “temporary architecture” is temporary architecture.
By: zac porter on November 7th, 2006
at 3:21 pm
.
“temporary architecture” is only a movement in architectural world like modernism, it purpose is to fill-in the needs for constant changing society. a 100 years from now what we considered a genius building of our time are not so genius. interm of admiration for historical reference, structure and construction then yes, but no to functionality. regardless whether CHEAP and DISPOSABLE, or STURDY buildings, if it’s a good design building or structure will stand in the test of time. (like EIFFEL TOWER). let not make this mistake a bad design should not be mix with temporary architecture, “good design can be built as low cost” whether a project it mean only last for six month or sixty years. as architects, we should be flexible and diverse, adaptation it the reason why human race are not go extinct, and i’m not suggesting we should treat every project as temporary structure. as far as american culture on temporary architecture, just like ANDY WARHOL quote “In the future everyone will be world-famous for 15 minutes.”
By: Nam Nguyen on November 7th, 2006
at 3:35 pm
Camera : Kodak Autographic Jr #1.
Film: Kodak Ektar 100 ASA
Processing: The shop around the corner
Scanning: Epson v500, epson sofware
Post processing: Lightroom 3.3 + PSP4
Digital illustration of a pretty blue eyed blonde lady wearing framed eye glasses. in this portrait I tried to digitally create the look of a water color painting. Sofware used was Photoshop CC 2021 & Rebelle 3. Hardware my homebuilt AMD Ryzen 3700 Windows 10 desktop & Wacom Intuos 3 stylus & tablet.
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2002: Clay Shirky coins Social Software
2003: ST shifted from "Social Sofware Solutions" to "Enterprise Social Software", two people take us more seriously and the stage is set for a Wikipedia editing war
2004: In July Chris Shipley coins Social Media. In October O'Reilly coins Web 2.0
2006: Andrew McAfee's "Enterprise 2.0" paper is published, he coined the term in 2005 while doing case work on JP Rangaswami's ST deployment
Today, Social Media is an increasingly popular term with subsets such as Social Media Marketing. Subsets of Enterprise 2.0 are emerging, from Social CRM to Social Business Design.
Its important to note that if you trace back all this language you will find a healthy balance between tools (technology) and practice (implementation). Every time a category name gets traction it immediately gets diluted and we tend to have multiple names for the same thing even at the same time. We also keep making the same mistakes, inventing new language that isn't clear enough for late adopters, just as those adopters get up to speed on earlier terms.
Language evolves through use. Big deal.
UPDATE: Not sure where to put Stowe's prescient coinage of Social Tools 1999. The first time we met face to face he showed me a paper copy.