Seminars

Seminars

Fractures and Resilience: Digital Subcultures in Times of Crisis (GRADE Panel)

Photo In cooperation with Grassroots of Digital Europe (GRADE)

Digital subcultures such as the demoscene are children of an almost utopian era in a peaceful region: The late 1980s and early 1990s in Northern and Western Europe, where these subcultures took form, were dominated by a discourse of benevolent globalisation, the triumph of liberal democracy, and the feeling that national borders and wars between states are a thing of the past. Today, this self-perception is clearly shattered.

But were digital subcultures in Europe really sheltered from war, violence and permanent crisis until very recently? How did computer enthusiasts in Eastern Europe, where home computers had been circulating en masse already in the late 1980s, cope with the social ruptures caused by economic transformation in the 1990s? How did creative computing communities in Yugoslavia survive the bloody wars of the 1990s? How did the vibrant computer subcultures in the post-Soviet space position themselves regarding the increasing Russian neo-imperialist ambitions from the mid-1990s onwards, culminating in the full-scale Russian invasion of Ukraine in 2022?

Did creative computing cultures simply break under pressure, did they sometimes even cave in to nationalist and imperialist currents of the time, or did they, to the contrary, draw strategies of resilience from their inherently cosmopolitan and transnationalist predispositions? In this GRADE discussion panel we invite academics and creative computing practitioners to discuss the history and present of digital subcultures facing war and crisis, focussing on the current war against Ukraine.

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Graphic credit: “Special Military Operation” by epoqe

Art of Coding presents Lightning Talks and current update of the UNESCO

by Melkor / Madison / Nodepond

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The Art of Coding will present three Lightning talks about the aestetics and cultural nerd practises around preserving and archiving digital culture.

Nodepond will show and tell how to build a solar-powered digital archive, that can be served from anywhere in the world: including your living room. Bring the solarpunk out in you!

Madison wants to raise awareness about the problem of preserving the demo scene legacy long term, and how to archive our digital artifacts.

Melkor will give an update about the current status of the demoscene UNESCO project in Europe.

Demo development for the Commodore PET

by Bodo/Rabenauge

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This seminar focuses on demo development for the Commodore 8296 and other models in the Commodore PET series. It begins with a brief introduction to the hardware architecture of these classic machines, followed by an in-depth explanation of newly developed graphics modes - most notably the so-called “Mode2”. These enhanced display modes offer exciting new possibilities for visual output on PET systems and will be explored in detail.

Another key part of the seminar covers the open-source tools that have been created specifically for demo development.