Difference between revisions of "Where do media go to die?"

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==Obsolescence==
 
==Obsolescence==
Obsolescence can take many forms,  
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Media and representational practices can fall into disuse for two reasons: subsequent media or practices perform a similar function more efficiently (with efficiency broadly conceived, to include such ineffable qualities such as style and fashion), or the ecological system subsequent media or practices introduce renders earlier media or practices inoperable. 
 
===Outmoded===
 
===Outmoded===
 
===Inoperable===
 
===Inoperable===
 
  
 
http://obsoleteskills.com/Skills/Skills
 
http://obsoleteskills.com/Skills/Skills
  
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==Extinction==
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Can media go the way of the Dodo?  Do lapsed patents, legal probations, the termination of manufacturing cycles, or any such events fall into such a category?  Or must a media technology be both unusable and unreproducible for it to be extinct?  Can
  
 
==Extinction==
 
Go the way of the dodo
 
Lapsed patent?
 
Cease manufacturing?
 
The last floppy disk
 
  
 
Not only must all such media no longer be in use, but there must be no remaining physical or working artifact
 
Not only must all such media no longer be in use, but there must be no remaining physical or working artifact

Revision as of 15:18, 23 April 2008

The bodily metaphor of death cannot account for the curious trajectory of media decline. Most dossiers are premised on the belief that media don't necessarily die when they just happen to break, and, conversely, that most 'dead' media may still work perfectly fine. Are we to understand the persistent availability of dead media for purchase on eBay, or for rediscovery in our basements and attics, as an opportunity for grave-robbing? Or, to push the metaphor to its limit, are our closets full of fully functional, intact bodies? There is no clear boundary between the living and dead with media: the failure of component parts (the brain, heart, etc…) does not a media death make. Instead, media either slowly recede into disuse—rendered obsolete, inoperable, or outmoded by subsequent media or shifting social, political, or cultural imaginaries—or finally go extinct. Is the problem once again one of metaphor? Does archaeology, to adopt an alternative language, always entail a resurrection of the dead, or might it be a return of the irrepressibly alive?

Media never say die. And yet history is littered with media that no longer figure in contemporary practice. Perhaps this is where we should look for a new definition: practice. Rather than a binary distinction between the living and dead, based on a concept of bodily or systemic integrity (a pulse), might we instead develop a process-oriented definition? An archaeology of media is an account of slow decline, a history without a clear change-of-state. Obsolescence is our watchword. Dead Media Dossiers are stories of the becoming outmoded and, occasionally, inoperable. They are not obituaries. And beyond obsolescence, can we imagine a world where media actually cease to exist? Will there some day be a world free of America On-Line sign-up CDs? And if so, might this really constitute an extinction, an irrecoverable loss?

Obsolescence

Media and representational practices can fall into disuse for two reasons: subsequent media or practices perform a similar function more efficiently (with efficiency broadly conceived, to include such ineffable qualities such as style and fashion), or the ecological system subsequent media or practices introduce renders earlier media or practices inoperable.

Outmoded

Inoperable

http://obsoleteskills.com/Skills/Skills

Extinction

Can media go the way of the Dodo? Do lapsed patents, legal probations, the termination of manufacturing cycles, or any such events fall into such a category? Or must a media technology be both unusable and unreproducible for it to be extinct? Can


Not only must all such media no longer be in use, but there must be no remaining physical or working artifact

Can it be brought back to life? Are media technologies simply ideas or technical plans?

http://flickr.com/photos/adubber/sets/72157600179591602/