Difference between revisions of "ASCII"
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ASCII started in [[1999]] in a squatted building on the Herengracht. The ASCII location in Javastraat 38HS, Amsterdam Oost has been closed in December [[2006]] and given over to the citywide-active group Assadaaka who is reopening the venue and fill it with their own program and activities. | ASCII started in [[1999]] in a squatted building on the Herengracht. The ASCII location in Javastraat 38HS, Amsterdam Oost has been closed in December [[2006]] and given over to the citywide-active group Assadaaka who is reopening the venue and fill it with their own program and activities. | ||
+ | ; Articles | ||
+ | * Aileen Derieg, [http://eipcp.net/transversal/0707/derieg/en "Things Can Break: Tech Women Crashing Computers and Preconceptions"], ''transversal'', 2007. ([http://eipcp.net/transversal/0707/derieg/de German], [http://eipcp.net/transversal/0707/derieg/es Spanish]) | ||
− | http://scii.nl/ | + | ; External links |
+ | * [http://scii.nl/ Home page] |
Revision as of 17:51, 11 February 2013
ASCII (Amsterdam Subversive Center for Information Interchange) is a project for a people's communication lab in squatted buildings in Amsterdam.
ASCII is set up using recycled old computers and using free software to bring broader access to technology for everybody. ASCII is a collective of free and autonomous thinkers, technically and politically aware hackers and free software developers.
ASCII started in 1999 in a squatted building on the Herengracht. The ASCII location in Javastraat 38HS, Amsterdam Oost has been closed in December 2006 and given over to the citywide-active group Assadaaka who is reopening the venue and fill it with their own program and activities.
- Articles
- Aileen Derieg, "Things Can Break: Tech Women Crashing Computers and Preconceptions", transversal, 2007. (German, Spanish)
- External links