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Media lab (often referred to as new media lab, media art lab or media research lab) is a term used for interdisciplinary organizations, collectives or spaces with the main focus on new media, digital culture and technology.
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The definition of media lab is widely discussed and is open for debate. The term can describe a space, a cultural organization as well as a community or a way of working in which collaboration and experimentation plays a crucial role. Media labs usually:
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The name "media lab" was coined in 1985 with the creation of the MIT Media Lab by Nicholas Negroponte grew out of the Architecture Machine Group - a research group dedicated to studying man-machine interfaces - within MIT's School of Architecture and Planning.[1]
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In media labs diverse activities take place: artistic research and development, creative production, knowledge sharing and exchange, education program, workshops, tinkering, experimentation, cultural mediation.
Media labs can be most easily categorized by the way they are organized which often relates to the way they are funded:
Media lab
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A lot of people are motivated to use technological tools for social and political goals.
Media labs play a role in society to understand the new ways of education, culture, communication and even political participation.
Working in a media lab context can be considered as informal ways of learning.
working attitudes: artistic research - creative technologies - DIWO - DIY - DIY culture - experimentation - interdisciplinary
fields of activities: digital art - digital culture - human–computer interaction - interaction - internet - media art - new media art
tools, concepts: Creative Commons - F/LOSS - FLOSS Manuals - free culture - open content - open hardware - open source - public domain
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