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E-raamat: Smartphones as Locative Media

  • Formaat: EPUB+DRM
  • Sari: Digital Media and Society
  • Ilmumisaeg: 26-Mar-2015
  • Kirjastus: Polity Press
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780745685045
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  • Formaat: EPUB+DRM
  • Sari: Digital Media and Society
  • Ilmumisaeg: 26-Mar-2015
  • Kirjastus: Polity Press
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780745685045
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Smartphone adoption has surpassed 50% of the population in more than 15 countries, and there are now more than one million mobile applications people can download to their phones. Many of these applications take advantage of smartphones as locative media, which is what allows smartphones to be located in physical space. Applications that take advantage of peoples location are called location-based services, and they are the focus of this book.

Smartphones as locative media raise important questions about how we understand the complicated relationship between the Internet and physical space. This book addresses these questions through an interdisciplinary theoretical framework and a detailed analysis of how various popular mobile applications including Google Maps, Facebook, Instagram, Yelp, and Foursquare use peoples location to provide information about their surrounding space.

The topics explored in this book are essential reading for anyone interested in how smartphones and location-based services have begun to impact the ways we navigate and engage with the physical world.

Arvustused

"A useful road map for readers seeking to obtain an in-depth understanding of the relevance and impacts of locative media on society. The book is well-structured, innovative in its thinking, and contains a number of original case studies and rich theoretical discussions that will be equally interesting for experienced academic audiences and the general public." LSE Review of Books

"Concise and accessible, Frith's Smartphones as Locative Media could serve as an important stanchion for expanding this area of mobile studies, bringing people into important places, showing them around the highlights, and setting up engaging discussions."  Brett Oppegaard, University of Hawaii 

"We are increasingly using location-enabled phones to find our way, locate services and find one another. All the while, their traces raise basic questions of privacy. Jordan Frith provides an excellent and finely-tuned analysis that helps us to understand the nuances of this fundamental social transition." Richard Ling, Nanyang Technological University

"Smartphones as Locative Media is a fine book that offers an engagingly written, accessible, up-to-date, and thorough account of contemporary location-based services. Taking our embrace of the smartphone as a point of entry, Frith considers the rise and emerging capabilities of mobile location-based services, their still evolving social uses, and the political economic dimensions and privacy implications of these services. The book makes an important contribution to the literature on locative media, and forms a valuable resource for anyone studying or teaching on the development, growth, and wider impacts of location-enabled mobile technologies."  Rowan Wilken, Swinburne University of Technology, Australia

Acknowledgments ix
1 From Atoms to Bits and Back Again
1(11)
Communication media and the annihilation of space and place
4(3)
The place of locative media
7(5)
2 Mobilities and the Spatial Turn
12(15)
The importance of the space and place
13(6)
Mobile media and spatial experience
19(5)
Conclusion
24(3)
3 The Infrastructure of Locative Media
27(18)
Location awareness
28(3)
The generations of mobile networks
31(5)
Open and closed: Google, Apple, and smartphone technology
36(6)
Conclusion
42(3)
4 Wayfinding through Mobile Interfaces
45(17)
The social production of mobile maps
46(5)
Mobile wayfinding and flexible alignment
51(2)
Spatial cognition and mobile maps
53(7)
Conclusion
60(2)
5 Location and Social Networks
62(19)
A brief history of location-based social networks
65(3)
Coordinating through location
68(4)
Constructing identity through location
72(2)
Sharing location and the future of public space
74(5)
Conclusion
79(2)
6 Writing and Archiving Space
81(15)
Mobile composition: Layering stories, reviews, and tips
83(7)
Mobile remembering: Composing memories in place
90(4)
Conclusion
94(2)
7 Market Forces and the Shaping of Location-based Services
96(16)
Tracing Foursquare
97(3)
The importance of venture capital
100(10)
Conclusion
110(2)
8 The Negotiation of Locational Privacy
112(19)
Institutional locational privacy
113(9)
Social privacy
122(7)
Conclusion
129(2)
Conclusion: The Future of Locative Media
131(16)
Location-based services and the global South
132(5)
The future of splintered space
137(5)
Possible futures of locative media
142(5)
Notes 147(5)
References 152(24)
Index 176
Jordan Frith is assistant professor of Technical Communication at the University of North Texas.