Last night, a friend of a friend came by the makerspace and suggested the book Jamming the Media to me.
He's a cool dude! But he's not always exactly coherent, you know? So I didn't know if I should give any salt to this recommendation.
It was published in 1997, and written by Gareth Branwyn.
A cursory glance at the book online made it look like the kind of coffee table drek you'd get at a barnes and noble in 2009, but it had all the right words on it.
I looked up the author, and he has the street cred:
- Published his own Zine "Going Gaga" which was well reviewed and circulated widely
- Became a contributor to bOING bOING when that was still a print publication
- Editorial Director at Make
- Wrote for Wired
- Author of the Happy Mutant Handbook
Basically 1) exactly the kind of guy I should know about and 2) one of the only voices from that era of computing worth listening to about the media?
But I'd never heard of him. Somehow this guy has completely missed my radar.
He's still a regular boingboing contributor, I read things he's written on a regular basis, I just missed his name?
So I found a copy of the book from the internet archive and checked out the digital edition, which I've been reading in their incredibly frustrating web viewer because I don't want to fuck with Adobe Digital Edition DRM.
I ordered a copy of the book. It'll be here in 3 or 4 days.
In the meantime, the book reads like something out of my own head. He's quoting the authors I quote. He's referencing the movements I reference (he's skipping some! Information about, for example, The Videofreex, was basically impossible to find in the 90s and up to the point I am in the book now he hasn't mentioned them even though it would be natural to do so, so I have to assume he had not heard of them at that point.)
Apologies for the text screenshots, but here are some samples of this book against a thing I wrote when I first joined Mastodon.
(see my thing at http://ajroach42.com/diy-media/)
I ordered a copy of the book. It'll be here in 3 or 4 days.
In the meantime, the book reads like something out of my own head. He's quoting the authors I quote. He's referencing the movements I reference (he's skipping some! Information about, for example, The Videofreex, was basically impossible to find in the 90s and up to the point I am in the book now he hasn't mentioned them even though it would be natural to do so, so I have to assume he had not heard of them at that point.)