{"id":812,"date":"2016-04-18T19:49:42","date_gmt":"2016-04-18T18:49:42","guid":{"rendered":"\/?p=812"},"modified":"2016-04-18T19:49:42","modified_gmt":"2016-04-18T18:49:42","slug":"seeing-revolutionary-info-structure","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.lancaster.ac.uk\/cemore\/seeing-revolutionary-info-structure\/","title":{"rendered":"Seeing Revolutionary Info-Structure"},"content":{"rendered":"

Adam Fish<\/a> blogs about how flying a camera-equipped drone over a data center can\u00a0improve\u00a0our infrastructural literacy. His ethnographic project ‘Seeing Information Infrastructure in the North Atlantic’ investigates information infrastructure in Iceland, Shetland Islands, Isle of Man, Faroe Islands, Sweden and UK.<\/h3>\n

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It’s the summer of 2015 and I am on a former Naval Air Force base in Keflavik<\/a>, Iceland. The wind is 20 miles per hour and still won\u2019t keep the midge flies from darting into my eyes. A massive once-white satellite disc hovers above collecting signal intelligence. I am hunched over my black boxy backpack unpacking an unmanned aerial vehicle, spinning its four propellers on, checking its battery, bluetooth tethering its on-board camera to my iPhone so that I might see as it sees, behind me another video camera on a tripod films the scene as I use my thumbs to thrust the drone off the abandoned and weedy tarmac and into the sky, just eye-level and arms length from myself. Seagulls swoop in to see what is suddenly threatening their airspace. Gusts of 40 miles per hour shove the drone to the west, but it automatically recorrects to my eyeline level – my daughter has come to call this thing the \u201cdragonfly\u201d for these very stunts. I embark on a few exploratory examinations of the satellite disc, circumnavigating this space eye with my airborne digital eye, gusts funnel off the curves of the disc, shoving the drone back and forth. I\u2019ve already crashed this 1000 pound plastic remote controlled devices twice, thankfully some engineers were able to straighten out its wickedly bent arm.
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