Wired's Dylan Tweney has a great piece up on the world's burgeoning crop of Hacker Spaces -- clubhouses where members pitch in to share the rent in exchange for a role in governing a collectively managed collection of hacking kit: workbenches, tools, and components. I've visited hacker lofts in Vienna, San Diego, Los Angeles and elsewhere, and they always have a fantastic vibe, that palpable buzz you get from gathering a lot of smart, passionate, creative people inside each others' spheres of attention and set them to work, a cross-pollinated vigor.DIY Freaks Flock to 'Hacker Spaces' WorldwideAt the center of this community are hacker spaces like Noisebridge, where like-minded geeks gather to work on personal projects, learn from each other and hang out in a nerd-friendly atmosphere. Like artist collectives in the '60s and '70s, hacker spaces are springing up all over.
There are now 96 known active hacker spaces worldwide, with 29 in the United States, according to Hackerspaces.org. Another 27 U.S. spaces are in the planning or building stage.
Located in rented studios, lofts or semi-commercial spaces, hacker spaces tend to be loosely organized, governed by consensus, and infused with an almost utopian spirit of cooperation and sharing.
"It's almost a Fight Club for nerds," says Nick Bilton of his hacker space, NYC Resistor in Brooklyn, New York. Bilton is an editor in The New York Times R&D lab and a board member of NYC Resistor. Bilton says NYC Resistor has attracted "a pretty wide variety of people, but definitely all geeks. Not Dungeons & Dragons–type geeks, but more professional, working-type geeks."
For many members, the spaces have become a major focus of their evening and weekend social lives.
Wednesday, April 1, 2009
The new shit...
This is what i've been saying for a while now. The internet culture, and hackers, and really anyone contributing to the internet in a positive way, are this generations real rebels. There are things going on online that none of us could have even dreamed of organization wise 20 years ago, well none of us except the real nerds. This is punk. Any way here's a piece i found on Boing Boing that was borrowed from a Wired Blog.
Labels:
hackers,
internet,
Punk,
rebel culture
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I'm sure you won't be shocked to learn these are my friends. In fact, I lived with Bre (from NYCR) in Vienna and Berlin and have stayed with him in Brooklyn when I've visited NY. Next time I'm there I'll bring you by if you wanna see it all first hand.
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