Saved by sari and
On Digital Gardens: Tending to Our Collective Multiplicity
“How do you take a walk with someone on the internet?”
Annika Hansteen-Izora • On Digital Gardens: Tending to Our Collective Multiplicity
we believe in each other’s collective smallness
On Digital Gardens: Tending to Our Collective Multiplicity
value practice over perfection.
On Digital Gardens: Tending to Our Collective Multiplicity
Digital gardens believe slow time is beautiful. They are designed to support us in reclaiming our time rather than being organized by it. Digital gardens reject the information highway for the clock where minutes are the lengths of easeful breath.
Annika Hansteen-Izora • On Digital Gardens: Tending to Our Collective Multiplicity
A digital garden is a framework for speculation around how online space can be designed from the imagination of gardens. Here, the values of gardens, pluralism, interdependence, sustainability, adaptation, and discovery are centered in the design process of technosocial spaces. A garden is made up of the following parts:
Seeds: the content... See more
Seeds: the content... See more
Annika Hansteen-Izora • On Digital Gardens: Tending to Our Collective Multiplicity
Digital gardens have largely been understood as websites that allow users to explore and publish thoughts in more fluid and unpolished ways. The term “digital garden” is not new. It’s been shaped by almost two decades of pondering, from early tinkerings in Mark Bernstein’s 1998 essay “Hypertext Gardens” to Mike Caulfield’s 2015 talk “The Garden and... See more
Annika Hansteen-Izora • On Digital Gardens: Tending to Our Collective Multiplicity
Brand and product designer Frank Chimero noted in a 2018 talk at the Substans Conference in Bergen, Norway, that “if we’re setting out to change the character of technology in our lives, we’d be wise to learn from the character of places.”*
On Digital Gardens: Tending to Our Collective Multiplicity
As a kid, gardens and the internet both offered a place to dream, create, and play.
But that was then. Today, the internet is an omnipresent force that organizes the ways we learn, connect, and love—often in ways that are more nefarious than virtuous. The internet is a place, and that place has largely been led by those who value the accumulation of... See more
But that was then. Today, the internet is an omnipresent force that organizes the ways we learn, connect, and love—often in ways that are more nefarious than virtuous. The internet is a place, and that place has largely been led by those who value the accumulation of... See more
Annika Hansteen-Izora • On Digital Gardens: Tending to Our Collective Multiplicity
“ORGANISES”
“How do you take a walk with someone on the internet?”