"As government, media, and public fail to adequately grapple with the scale of planetary
anthropogenic heating, few if any approaches have been proposed except
geoengineering. We pin our hopes on technological fixes, repeating the formula that got
us into this mess. Our planetary future(s) will undoubtedly be computed, in the sense of
analysis but also the computing processes and infrastructures (sourcing and extraction;
energy and water; waste and repair) that are increasingly driving and abetting planetary
change. Whether AI, Bitcoin, or space-based communications and sensing, computing is
still largely about turning carbon into power.
This Cornell/Edinburgh Happening presents our playful, quixotic, speculative and counter-
normative workshop outcomes that critically consider how we could introduce new ideas
and concepts into our thinking around planetary and computational futures, asking how
we might compute with the planet, rather than through or against it. Can tired minds and
tired bodies on a tired planet find the time, space, and imagination to recompute?"
Thursday May 29: The Workshop; 9:30 – 16:30
This first day of our Happening involves workshops led by academic colleagues from
Cornell and Edinburgh, providing grounding prompts allowing for speculative
engagement with the breadth of our computational infrastructures and systems. workshop sessions will run throughout the day, asking participants to materialise the
four technological systems that support us, the impact they have, and whether we can think about them in alternate ways
- Alex Taylor will be asking participants to pay attention to the energy infrastructure
in the city, exposing the hidden system of components and subcomponents that
make energy consumption possible.
- Arno Verhoeven will aim to expose the planetary impact of such systems by
visually translating carbon and energy data into montaged materialities that can
be more meaningful, tangible and insightful.
- Chris Csikszentmihalyi will ask participants to de-construct relationships and
construct new maps of human intention, organization, and activity, both as a cause
and as a means of intervention
- Steve Jackson will help colleagues to “turn lines into circles,” imagining the points
of impact and intervention that could turn computation’s penchant for take-make-
waste to benefit those that already have resources, into systems that acknowledge
relationality, living systems, and conservation.
Friday May 30: The Happening
11:00 – 15:00
Our Friday will involve co-constructing materials from the previous day’s workshop.
Please do join us to help compile the workshop outcomes as we prepare for the public
Happening presentation!
17:00 – 20:00
Starting at 17:00, we will reconvene at InSpace (1 Crichton Street) to share our work with
the Edinburgh community (including participants in the Open Source Hardware World
Summit), featuring a Recomputing the Planet roundtable from Jackson, Csikszentmihalyi,
Verhoeven and Taylor, audience participation, sharing of workshop results, and (we
hope) wider collective musings and (re)imaginings. To join the evening happening,
please sign up to our Friday Eventbrite listing: places are limited!