14 research outputs found

    Enacting experimental alternative spaces

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    This paper analyses the experimental nature of alternative spaces and the affective, emotional and embodied experience their enactment generates. In so doing, it grounds the analysis on the intentional community of Damanhur (Italy), as an example of experimental spaces. Scholarship concerning intentional communities draws on utopian studies that consider them as utopian laboratories. More recently, non‐representational approaches have emphasised the processual nature of utopias, yet studies have overlooked the experimental nature of these alternative spaces. Drawing upon in‐depth ethnographic data, this paper engages with community experimentations that took place in Damanhur for residents and visitors. It illustrates how utopian enactment is experimental and thus, disordering, unsettling and creative. Moreover, I argue that experimentations are not limited to unsettling the social structure of the community and, when studying the enactment of alternative spaces, emphasis should also be on their capacity to affect the individual

    Tourism and mobile technology

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    Abstract. While tourism presents considerable potential for the use of new mobile technologies, we currently have little understanding of how tourists organise their activities or of the problems they face. This paper presents an ethnographic study of city tourists ’ practices that draws out a number of implications for designing tourist technology. We describe how tourists work together in groups, collaborate around maps and guidebooks, and both ‘pre- ’ and ‘post-visit ’ places. Implications are drawn for three types of tourist technology: systems that explicitly support how tourists co-ordinate, electronic guidebooks and maps, and electronic tour guide applications. We discuss applications of these findings, including the Travelblog, which supports building travel–based web pages while on holiday

    Quantitative ultrastructural changes associated with lead-coupled luxury phosphate uptake and polyphosphate utilization

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    Quantitative electron microscopy (stereology) was used to assess the ultrastructural response of three algae representative of the classes Chlorophyceae, Cyanophyceae, and Bacillariophyceae to lead-coupled polyphosphate degradation. The organisms were exposed to a culture medium concentration of 20 ppb Pb for 3 hr at the time of luxury phosphate uptake and subsequently transferred to phosphorus and lead-free medium. A differential sensitivity was observed as follows: Plectonema > Scenedesmus > Cyclotella . In Plectonema and Scenedesmus , detrimental cytological changes were observed when the polyphosphate relative volume dropped below 0.5%, which was approximately the P-starvation level of polyphosphate. Few significant ultrastructural changes were observed in Cyclotella after one week in P-deficient medium. At this time, the relative volume of polyphosphate was still 1.5%. Although a few significant ultrastructural changes occurred with phosphate deprivation, the greatest numbers of changes occurred in cells that had been exposed to a short-term (3 hr) low level of Pb. Changes in the relative volume of polyphosphate in all three organisms suggest that Plectonema and Scenedesmus have higher phosphate nutrient requirements than Cyclotella . The ecological implications of metal sequestering by polyphosphate are discussed.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/48065/1/244_2005_Article_BF01054908.pd
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