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Let's make our techno-bling pretty, at least. Let's remember the days when the machines that now cage us promised liberation.

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An Old Aesthetic for New Technology

By Annalee Newitz, AlterNet. Posted July 3, 2007.


Let's make our techno-bling pretty, at least. Let's remember the days when the machines that now cage us promised liberation.
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If someone were to hold a knife to your throat and ask what the aesthetic sensibilities of the computer age are, you'd probably babble something about the iPod and its curvy, candy-colored precursor, the iMac. You'd think of the typical PC laptop, dumb and square and black, and you'd wonder whether this question about aesthetics was actually a trick. Because there are no computer age aesthetics.

Of course I'm exaggerating. There are a million interesting designs for consumer electronics and computers, but most don't call attention to themselves. Computer aesthetics say "I am functional" -- even the iPod Shuffle's, whose colorful clip-on version kids attach to the gold chains around their necks as techno-bling.

But your Gateway computer, with its stalwart rectangular tower, is not the last word in how technology can look. Think of the crazy dial phones from the 1920s, with their curlicues and shiny brass and polished wood handsets. Or recall early radios, with their curving wooden exteriors meant to look like fancy furniture. And if you really want to see some seriously decorated machines, just check out pictures of devices from the 19th century, when everything from radiators to dynamos was covered in filigree and iron flowers and stamped, embossed shiny crap. For the record, I fucking love embossed shiny crap.

I think the search for an over-the-top tech aesthetic is driving the current craze for steampunk, a design and fashion style that combines Victorian sensibilities with contemporary gizmos. The ideal steampunk device would probably be a coal-powered cyborg, such as the creatures found in the novels of British fantasist China Miéville. In the real world, one of the most popular steampunk tinkerers is Jake von Slatt, who recently rebuilt his desktop computer as a vision in brass, marble, and old typewriter parts. He even offers a step-by-step guide to making your own functioning steampunk computer on his Web site, the Steampunk Workshop. Whenever von Slatt produces a new creation -- a telegraph sounder that taps out RSS feeds, for example -- pictures of it are always wildly popular on social news site Digg and elsewhere on the Web. Geeks who might not know what the word aesthetic means are instinctively drawn to the way von Slatt has made artifice from functionality. I expect to see cheap, knockoff steampunk computers for sale any day now.

As steampunkish critic John Brownlee has pointed out in several articles on the topic, steampunk designers tend to reverse-engineer ordinary electronics -- say, a computer keyboard -- and enhance them with parts that look antique. The idea is not just to create machines whose beauty goes beyond functionality. It's also, Brownlee contends, to recall an era when amateurs could contribute meaningfully to the development of science and technology. We live in a time when no single human being can fully comprehend the Windows operating system. No wonder we're nostalgic for the days when beachcombers could be naturalists and tinkerers could invent the telephone.

I think the popularity of steampunk also expresses our collective yearning for an era when information technology was in its infancy and could have gone anywhere. In 1880 we hadn't yet laid the cables for a telephone network, and computer programming was just an idea in Ada Lovelace's head. Nineteenth-century technology was often operated by factory laborers, and it meant backbreaking work and the ruination of healthy bodies. Information technology, to the 19th-century mind, would be something that set us free from brutal assembly lines.

One hundred years later, I wish it were so. Information technology has its own brutal assembly lines, mind-numbing data work that cripples our fingers with repetitive strain injuries and mangles our backs with the hunched postures required to work at a computer all day long. Seen from this perspective, steampunk is an aesthetic that tells the truth about us. We are no better off than our Victorian ancestors, bumbling into the future with crude technologies whose implications we barely understand. But let's make our devices pretty, at least. Let's remember the days when the machines that now cage us promised liberation.

Digg!

See more stories tagged with: victorian era, steampunk, technology

Annalee Newitz (annalee@techsploitation.com) is a surly media nerd whose flat is full of servers and anaglypta.

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Had to go to Wired and take a look at the van Slatt toys.
Posted by: Sojourner on Jul 4, 2007 1:09 PM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The keyboard is inviting, as opposed to mine and everyone I've ever used, which have been repulsive. I can imagine the pleasure of using it--if it really works and isn't a "just look; don't touch."

The telegraph is a thing of beauty. But I prefer to keep my rss feeds in a cage, so the technology leaves me out.

Being old-school, I'm interested to know whether writing skills have improved for students with the ubiquity of the pc. Sure, games are graphics. But when I saw recently a young lady pull out her cell phone only to type in an email message, my hope for the future of literacy warmed.

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Minimalism and efficiency are the new arts?
Posted by: ABetterFuture on Jul 4, 2007 2:26 PM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I find art in the microarchitecture of intel's latest core 2 offerings.

Antec's P180 cases, when you find them in firesales with free shipping, are incredible things of functional beauty.

There's a special sense of functionality in just about anything from thermalright I've ever used. Their si-128 cooler mated to an arctic cooling one-way 120mm air-push fan makes dissipating 90-140W a near-effortless thing of beauty. I've been buying antec and seasonic power supplies for the past three years: silent fans and an 85% efficiency means less heath and less noise. My perspective has been formed from building fast, quiet, sometimes tiny "designer" computers that I sell for a tiny profit while I'm slogging through school.

I find that when the function is creative, inventive, and performs incredibly, does it deserves smidge of credit for its form, which may be an inherent property of its function. Computers are still very much like bridges: you design them primarily to work, and then give them trappings of panache on the back-end.

P.S. Steve Jobs is a creative cat, who knows how to design for his niche. The Ipod was one of his more unique children, that was able to breake out of that niche, in spite of it's "why bother" appeal and his DRM-infected software front-end. I wonder whether the Iphone has the legs to break out of the MacNiche? Isn't it missing some basic, elegant things like a tiny bump to orient your hand, so that you don't have to be looking at it in order to dial?

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Art, Politics and Culture
Posted by: talkville on Jul 5, 2007 12:53 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The NSA, FBI, CIA and many other organizations can just as well monitor, control and, yes, cage on sexy, beautiful, down-right erotic 'steam-punky' and other aesthetically charged Machines. It's the Organism using these extended Senses (e.g. Technology) who matter in the end. Promises are promises; liberation is a task, an activity and - these dark days- a necessity. Products, like pc's and iPods and Paris Hilton, can be beautiful, pleasing to the eyes; like Jessica Simpson utters on the DirectTV commercial: "I don't know what it means, but I want one!". They can, and more and more often are, empty and vacuous inside. Now there's a cage! On towards liberation, beautiful or not.

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» RE: Art, Politics and Culture Posted by: sweet_byrd
» RE: Art, Politics and Culture Posted by: talkville
How about...
Posted by: JoshuaLudd on Jul 5, 2007 7:45 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
... we remember when technology that now cages us promised to liberate us... and learn from that experience and start breaking out of our cage, rather than just redecorating it.

I prefer life to bling. I prefer experience to status.

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» RE: How about... Posted by: mike_burns
More accurately...
Posted by: ateo on Jul 6, 2007 1:51 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
...technology has given us an awareness of our cage that we would not otherwise have. Luckily it gives us places like Alternet on which to whine about said cage inbetween our trips to Star Bucks and our favorite Sushi Bar.

That's America for you, lots of people whining and nobody who cares enough to do anything about it.

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» RE: More accurately... Posted by: mike_burns
» Speak for yourself, sloth. nm Posted by: JoshuaLudd
Watch you language
Posted by: mike_burns on Jul 6, 2007 11:47 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Some one as pretty as Annalee, Should not use the "F" word.





Unless, she is alone with me.

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Beautiful Anachronisms
Posted by: SallyJ on Jul 10, 2007 10:34 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"For the record, I fucking love embossed shiny crap."

I'll second that, sister! I lurve my ipod, but does it really have to look like a cold dead piece of plastic? How about a little mahogany or velvet or brass?

I have no desire to live in the past (please...indoor plumbing, anyone?) but I get giddy when beautiful things from the past stumble into my life. I prefer the tag "beautiful anachronisms" because there are things I love in this genre that aren't strictly steampunk.

As for the big picture, there's an enticing tension when elements from different eras co-exist. I find myself drawn to it, but can't explanation why.

Check out some of the beautiful anachronisms on my blog.

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Repetitive strain injuries will be a thing of past too
Posted by: Cowicide on Jul 10, 2007 12:00 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Once more ppl start using more Mac programs like MaxiMice, xGestures and Apple finally makes an Applescript that records everything you do flawlessly and lets you quickly and easily edit/repeat those actions at will... there will be very few RSI problems in computer work.

RSI toolkit:

Apple's Exposé
(First of all, use Mac OS X for a far superior GUI with Exposé and much, much more...)

Maximice
(There's no better way to scroll with Safari, compliments the hell out of the scroll wheel on a mouse)

xGestures
(Set this up properly and you'll move through your Mac like a ninja)

QuicKeys
(Until Apple gets Applescript/Automator recording right)

FinderPop

iSnip

BTW, even if you don't care about RSI, these tools listed above WILL dramatically speed up your productivity (if you set them up and use them properly) so you can get your work finished much quicker and get outside and away from your computer more often (if you are in to that kind of thing).

I've been using apps like described above since OS 9 days and my wrists never so much as get sore (at all) even when I need at times to work nearly 20 hour days for weeks on end, for months on end and years and years upon years... on end... at times...

There's no reason to get RSI anymore.... and if you used the OS 9 tools that did much of the same as I described above, there was no reason to get it in the 90's either.

Sigh, one day I'm going to have to make a website to show how to set all this up properly with videos, etc. so more ppl will get it and stop getting RSI.

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Are You Kidding?
Posted by: fnarf on Jul 10, 2007 2:00 PM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
You write "cripples our fingers with repetitive strain injuries and mangles our backs with the hunched postures required to work at a computer all day long".

Huh? Not if your workstation is set up correctly. I don't use any of the tools Cowicide mentions -- just a plain ol' keyboard set at the correct height with proper elbow support. I type 10,000 words a day without any problems at all, and my back is fine.

If you think that's comparable to coal mining, or working in a steel forge, or in pressurized cassions a hundred feet underwater building a bridge pier, or steaming a big locomotive, you're nuts.

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machines and their promised liberation
Posted by: CLBJ on Jul 10, 2007 2:23 PM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"But let's make our devices pretty, at least. Let's remember the days when the machines that now cage us promised liberation."

So, our response to a perceived failed promise is decoration and nostalgia? For my part, I think I will be more careful of what I believe.

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Art Nouveau and the Arts and Craft Movement
Posted by: aharon on Jul 12, 2007 12:08 PM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I would argue that the romantic sensibilities inherent in the organic lines and design of the Arts and Craft Movemnt, late gothic revival, and Art Nouveau, are at the core of the appeal of steampunk. In the still obscure and novel inventions of the late 19th and early 20th centuries were gadgets that in their infancy had to be modified with the touch of a master craftsman, since they were not yet captured in the form and molds of industrial mass production. Arts and Craft and Art Nouveau were romantic movements reacting to Industrialization, the processes refashioning man, culture, and society in the name of efficiency and market domination. Steampunk returns us to the aesthetic where technology and its realization was at its core not yet subservient to mass production -- thus its connection to our present subcultures of Hacking, Craft Making, and righteous independence as expressives. And then, of course, there is the brilliant and ironic appeal of taking a "ready made" mass produced good, and remaking it in our image -- that is the influence of Marcel Duchamp and Dadaism -- the post-WWI reaction to the trash and trash culture left behind by the disposable economy of mass production.

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Steampunk Magazine
Posted by: erinwiegand on Jul 21, 2007 7:52 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Steampunk Magazine is a fantastic new magazine (published sporadically, at the moment) -- I'm not even a huge fan of steampunk as a genre, and I totally love this zine. Check it out.

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