494 research outputs found

    Brick-and-Platform: Listing Labor in the Digital Vintage Economy

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    Vintage goods are valued for their nostalgic association with pre-digital modes of production, but their contemporary trafficking is increasingly organized by processes of platformization. The central component of what we call “listing labor in the digital vintage economy” is the online display of collectible merchandise, but listing labor also entails promoting sellers’ brands on social media and using sales platforms and other logistical media to manage inventory, process transactions, and handle shipments. Listing labor is performed by branded merchants and their employees alongside independent entrepreneurs. The digital vintage economy connects brick-and-mortar shops and resale supply chains organized around flea markets, thrift shops and charity bins, estate sales, and consigners, to online clearinghouses like eBay and Craigslist, and to social media and payment apps. In this article, we argue that listing labor in the digital vintage economy further develops the concept of “platform labor.” We focus on vintage clothes and vinyl records, dominated by women and men, respectively, to help us analyze divisions of listing labor organized by gender, race, age, and class. We draw upon 20 semi-structured interviews with shop owners and employees and on participant observation in independently owned clothing boutiques and record stores in several US cities. The digital vintage economy provides another angle for understanding how identity-based distinctions affect the opportunities associated with platform labor, and our account of listing labor highlights the need for studies of platformization that analyze its effects on specific local economies as well as on job markets and commercial sectors

    Natural Hazards in Puerto Rico

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    Puerto Rico faces natural hazards including hurricanes, earthquakes, tsunamis, landslides, subsidence, and flooding. Although Puerto Ricans perceive themselves as highly vulnerable to these hazards, few have adopted mitigation measures except for mandatory insurance

    Earthquake Insurance: Mandated Disclosure and Homeowner Response in California

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    Earthquake insurance can reduce potentially disastrous economic losses to house• holds and is therefore a prime method of mitigating against the worst economic effects of damaging earthquakes. The decision to purchase such insurance is a special case in the general study of individual response to uncertainty in the environment. An understanding of this decision process elucidates the ways in which environmental information becomes translated into behavior change. Although California legislation has mandated the disclosure of the availability of earthquake insurance to all residential property owners since 1984, less than half of California homeowners have earthquake insurance. This paper reports on the results of a survey of 3,500 owner-occupiers in Contra Costa, Santa Clara, Los Angeles, and San Bernardino Counties conducted in the summer of 1989. The survey was undertaken to discover the locational concentrations of insurance policy-holders and the socioeconomic, demographic, and attitudinal characteristics that distinguish insured from noninsured homeowners. The results show that insurance purchase is not spatially related to geophysical risk and that the purchase of insurance is not systematically related to income, equity in the home, age of the head of household, or other socioeconomic characteristics. Instead, perceived risk is the primary factor associated with insurance purchase

    Replay Real World Network Conditions To Test Cellular Switching

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    A system and method for capturing real-world conditions for designing test cases for testing of network switching algorithms is disclosed. Two devices working on different communication networks are taken while commuting from home to office or vice versa. Different real-world conditions like time, network type: e.g. LTE, 3G, etc. signal strength, location, device state, e.g. moving or stationary etc. are continuously captured on the way. These pieces of information are captured by an app installed on the respective devices. It is feasible to capture additional information that a test case designer is interested in. In the end, the device will have captured a log file of the various conditions encountered. All the scenarios logged can be replayed on a simulation engine evaluating the quality of switching algorithms. A major advantage of the method is to automate test case generation by capturing and replaying actual events, thereby making the process scalable

    Introduction

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    Introduction to: The University against itself: The NYU Strike and the Future of the Academic Workplac

    Observations of Antarctic Polar Stratospheric Clouds by Geoscience Laser Altimeter System (GLAS)

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    Polar Stratospheric Clouds (PSCs) frequently occur in the polar regions during winter and are important because they play a role in the destruction of stratospheric ozone. During late September and early October 2003, GLAS frequently observed PSCs over western Antarctica. At the peak of this activity on September 29 and 30 we investigate the vertical structure and extent, horizontal coverage and backscatter characteristics of the PSCs using the GLAS data. The PSCs were found to cover an area approximately 10 to 15 % of the size of Antarctica in a region where enhanced PSC frequency has been noted by previous PSC climatology studies. The area of PSC formation was found to coincide with the coldest temperatures in the lower stratosphere. In addition, extensive cloudiness was seen within the troposphere below the PSCs indicating that tropospheric disturbances might have played a role in their formation

    Perspectives on the environmental implications of sustainable hydro-power: comparing countries, problems and approaches

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    Perspectives on the Environmental Implications of Sustainable Hydropower gathers scientific papers from three of the worlds most important hydropower producers to discuss aspects of sustainable hydropower and the means by which it can be studied and achieved. The papers examine the application and use of new technologies and protocols for studying hydropower, adaptive management and the implications and use of long-term data sets for minimizing hydropower impacts on fish populations. The papers include a cross section of biological and hydrological experts. The implicit among country comparisons highlight a number of common hydropower themes, particularly the need to expand from single species studies to include broader consideration of the ecosystem, the importance of maintaining habitat, trait and species diversity and the need for consistently collected long-term data sets. Hydropower Sustainability Long-term studies Brazil Canada NorwaypublishedVersio

    Low Power to the People: Pirates, Protest, and Politics in FM Radio Activism

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    Review of Low Power to the People: Pirates, Protest, and Politics in FM Radio Activis
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