1,000 research outputs found

    sj-pdf-1-bds-10.1177_20539517231153806 - Supplemental material for Learning machine learning: On the political economy of big tech's online AI courses

    No full text
    Supplemental material, sj-pdf-1-bds-10.1177_20539517231153806 for Learning machine learning: On the political economy of big tech's online AI courses by Inga Luchs, Clemens Apprich and Marcel Broersma in Big Data & Society</p

    Michael Rodriguez interviews author Paul Clemens

    No full text
    Author Paul Clemens talks about his book "Made in Detroit," the genre of memoir, and writing about race. Clemens is interviewed by Michigan State University Librarian Michael Rodriguez for the MSU Libraries' Michigan Writers Series. Held in the MSU Main Library

    Author Paul Clemens reads from his book "Made in Detroit" at the Michigan Writers Series

    No full text
    Author Paul Clemens reads from his book "Made in Detroit" and answers questions from the audience. The event is convened by Peter Berg, head of the Michigan State University Libraries' Special Collections. Part of the MSU Libraries' Michigan Writers Series. Held in the MSU Main Library

    What was the network?

    No full text
    CLEMENS APPRICH, DAPHNE DRAGONA, GEERT LOVINK, AND FLORIAN WÜST - CONVERSATION MODERATED BY KRISTOFFER GANSING On August 6, 2019, the curatorial advisors of the transmediale 2020 exhibition, ‘The Eternal Network’, gathered at the festival’s offices in Berlin for a conversation on the status of network culture and theory today. Starting from the question ‘What was the network?’, the conversation explored the multiple trajectories of networks within cybernetics, art and philosophy, also taking the limits of networks into account. This included a reconsideration of the role of alternative and critical networks in today’s widespread digitalization, with its data-centric platform economy and the techno-cultural changes wrought by artificial intelligence

    Clemens Setz — an Author of Popular Literature?

    No full text
    This essay show the references to the so-called Popliteratur in the work of the Austrian writer Clemens Setz. Although Setz does not fit into the assumed periodization of this movement, his texts seem to have an aesthetic of pop-literature that corresponds to both the early and later approaches of the trend. The creative handling of archives of folk culture, experimental writing and the media networks have a pop-literature effect. Many texts are reminiscent of language-critical, experimental cut-up texts by the Beat Generation authors. The thematic repertoire also shows characteristic pop literary writing: There is no processing of social, political problems and the Nazi past, but, for example, the processing of generational conflicts, the problems of growing up and sexuality. The media staging of the author intended by the publisher also shows well-recognized mechanisms of pop culture

    Native language identification using a meta-classifier ensemble

    No full text
    author: Clemens KolbMasterarbeit University of Innsbruck 202

    Native language identification using a meta-classifier ensemble

    No full text
    author: Clemens KolbMasterarbeit University of Innsbruck 202
    corecore