HTML energy is all around us and in every website. Building websites has become complex, but the energy of HTML persists. What makes HTML special is its simplic...
Neta Bomani (https://netabomani.com) is a worker who engages in social practices like oral history and direct action through organizing and making archives, writings, prints, zines, computational objects and workshops.Ritu Ghiya (https://www.r-i-t-u.com) is an artist who works as a designer and web developer. Her digital works involve retrieving and archiving personal and collective ephemera – in an attempt to channel the serendipity of the offline world.
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Omar Rizwan
Omar Rizwan (https://rsnous.com) is a researcher at Dynamicland, a research lab in Oakland, California, led by Bret Victor.
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31:52
Aidan Quinlan
Aidan Quinlan (https://aidanquinlan.net) is a designer who also teaches "A Handmade Web."
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22:03
Philip Guo
Philip Guo (http://pg.ucsd.edu) is an assistant professor of cognitive science at UC San Diego. His research spans human-computer interaction, programming tools, and online learning.
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38:20
Emma Rae Norton
Emma Rae Norton (http://marceldochamp.net) is interested in the computer mouse and coding slowly by hand.
HTML energy is all around us and in every website. Building websites has become complex, but the energy of HTML persists. What makes HTML special is its simplicity. HTML isn’t a vast language, yet you can do a lot with it. Anyone who wants to publish on the web can write HTML. This accessibility and ease of use is where its energy resides. In this podcast, we talk to people about their relationship with HTML energy—how they first encountered it, how they harness it, and where it's going. Who's writing HTML today?