seen from Canada

seen from United States

seen from Türkiye
seen from United States

seen from Türkiye

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Malaysia

seen from Netherlands
seen from Colombia

seen from Canada
seen from Türkiye
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Kenya

seen from United States

seen from Colombia
seen from United States
GOOGLE PIXEL WATCH: MEMORY AND STORAGE SETTINGS DETAILED
GOOGLE PIXEL WATCH: MEMORY AND STORAGE SETTINGS DETAILED
As you may know, the Pixel Watch is here. It’s been a product of the imagination of tech enthusiasts for a long time, but this year it’s a reality. Google itself has confirmed it as well, and even though the launch is only done “this fall”, it seems that it can not be kept secret. This probably corresponds to October. So, we have a few months of Pixel Watch leaks ahead of us, and the latest one…
View On WordPress
GOOGLE PIXEL WATCH: MEMORY AND STORAGE SETTINGS DETAILED
GOOGLE PIXEL WATCH: MEMORY AND STORAGE SETTINGS DETAILED
As you may know, the Pixel Watch is here. It’s been a product of the imagination of tech enthusiasts for a long time, but this year it’s a reality. Google itself has confirmed it as well, and even though the launch is only done “this fall”, it seems that it can not be kept secret. This probably corresponds to October. So, we have a few months of Pixel Watch leaks ahead of us, and the latest one…
View On WordPress
Key to the newness of the digital is a conflation of memory and storage that both underlies and undermines digital media's archival promise. Memory, with its constant degeneration, does not equal storage; although artificial memory has historically combined the transitory with the permanent, the passing with the stable, digital media complicates this relationship by making the permanent into an enduring ephemeral, creating unforeseen degenerative links between humans and machines. This conflation of memory with storage is not due to some inherent technological feature, but rather due to how everyday usage and parlance arrests memory and its degenerative possibilities in order to support dreams of superhuman digital programmability.
The Enduring Ephemeral, or the Future Is a Memory By Wendy Hui Kyong Chun. Critical Inquiry 35 (Autumn 2008): 148-171. [stop @ 161]