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Revision as of 07:38, 10 May 2023
wiki-to-pdf: how this publication was made
Infrastructural Manouevres
This publication (whether you are holding it in its paper format or looking at it on a screen) has been written and laid out with a wiki-to-pdf system installed at http://titipi.org/wiki-to-pdf. The code and ongoing documentation of the system is hosted at https://gitlab.constantvzw.org/titipi/wiki-to-pdf
wiki-to-pdf
wiki-to-pdf is a contraption for ongoing publication efforts. It combines the collaborative editing possibilities of Mediawiki with the pdf-in-the-browser approach of the pagedjs library to produce paginated, elastic, malleable and re-editable publications for printing and on-line reading.
The system proposes a hybrid publishing toolkit that blurs the boundary between digital and printed publication. It enables different workflows and labour division that divert from the traditional publishing models in which textual and visual material are submitted to a designer that carefully works towards a final layout of the materials. In wiki-to-pdf the work on content and design happens in parallel on the very same system: the CSS files that set the style for the publication are stored in a wiki page, just like all the texts and images that compose the book content. This allows continuous re-editions - diverse in content and design - of ongoing research. Individual articles can keep being edited even after a publication is released, and they can be included in multiple publications on the same system.
The system is composed of:
- Mediawiki, that allows collaborative text writing and editing, using a simple and accessible markup and holding a history of all the different versions of a text.
- Pagedjs, a Javascript library that expands the possibilities of web-browser CSS styles to include pagination and printing tasks, allowing to act on non-screen issues such as page numbers, crop marks, sheet sizes.
- Flask, a framework to make web-pages with python, that can join together in one system the output of mediawiki and the processing made by pagedjs.
'Unfolding:' continuum
wiki-to-pdf is just the latest iteration of a continuity of diverse efforts to patch together collaborative writing practices with hybrid approaches to design... Each of the components of this system has been seen in action before, in one of the different projects brought about by a network of inter-dependent groups of people, tools and situations. To give an idea of this continuum, here are a few related projects that have been fundamental to the development of wiki-to-pdf:
- Open Source Publishing's html-to-print efforts, starting in 2014 and going through a wide range of situations, from workshops with design students to large-scale publishing efforts such as the Medor magazine. A starting point to design printed matter by the simple use of CSS @print styles, using etherpad to work collaboratively on files;
- Mondotheque, a wiki-based publication made between 2014 and 2016, for which André Castro and Alexia de Visscher developed a system based on Semantic Mediawiki and weasyprint to produce a printable pdf from a wiki system;
- Diversions, for which Gijs de Heij and Sarah Magnan came up with a way to Unfold a set of mediawiki pages into HTML files, to which pagedjs could be added to allow more precise work on pagination;
- Volumetric Regimes book, in which Manetta Berends brought in Flask to combine together all these elements in yet another setup.
Just Free-software?
These are just the first examples that come to mind, but the range of experiments and attempts that have been tried is much larger. All these projects have been informed by previous efforts in a certain sense, and working on them is a sort of delayed collaboration. Sometimes one can see pieces of code from a project reappearing in another iteration of such a system later on, CSS styles floating one project to another. The shared free-software ground of these projects allows for a compatibility between heterogeneous elements, and in each of these transmutations the subjective taste-for-systems of the developers results in adding or removing elements according to their inclinations, modifying workflows and interfaces, each time re-structuring "the system" along a different recipe. In this series of recombinations of a wide range of software, there is some sort of slight variation of the free-software community mode of making software. The insistence on some of these systems results in every time being a little bit more comfortable with the frictions and obstacles that each of them present, especially when their functioning is pushed into territory they were not designed for (such as producing pdf publications in the browser!).
Contributors
- Miriyam Aouragh
- Nishat Awan
- Gwen Barnard
- Manetta Berends
- Yasmine Boudiaf
- Cristina Cochior
- Naomi Alizah Cohen
- Nadia Fadil
- Seda Gürses
- Clareese Hill
- Helen V Pritchard
- Infrastructural Manouevres
- Arun Kundnani
- Other Weapons
- Martha Poon
- Participants of the Digital Solidarity Networks workshop
- Femke Snelting
- Eric Snodgrass
- Cassandra Troyan
- Magdalena Tyżlik-Carver
- TITiPI
- Varia
Colophon
This workbook is made by The Institute for Technology in the Public Interest (TITiPI), a trans-practice gathering of activists, artists, engineers and theorists and features contributions from the instituters and companions that emerged from our work together collectively during 2020 and 2021. An an outcome of a series of conversations, workshops and collective reflections on shifting infrastructural presences. It is not so much the end of a process, but the beginning of further work on together imagining alternatives to their extractive implications; as an embodied fight against the Big Tech takeover through writing, talking, making, tooling and reflecting. The workbook engages with these shifts by considering the importance of attending to radical care, survival and resistance under racial capitalism, non-extractive research, in our work on cloud infrastructures. It offers ways to make account and hold accountable the complexity of relations that make these cloud infrastructures and proposes activities and exersizes you can do in your communities and institutions to research how cloud infrastructures are scaling up inequality, perpetuating the violence of racial capitalism and creating environmental harm whilst also reducing the possibilities for resistance, fighting oppression and creative life.
Edited by: TITiPI (Helen V Pritchard, Femke Snelting)
Design and wiki-to-pdf research: Infrastructural Manouevres
Transcriptions: Yasmine Boudiaf, Gwen Barnard
The research that contributed to this workbook and the research commissions that it features was funded by Human Data Interaction: Legibility, Agency, Negotiability’ Network Plus, UKRI (EPSRC) and Research Communities Funding: COVID-19 / Quintin Hogg Trust
Printed at the Critical Media Lab @ Institute for Experimental Design and Media Culture (IXDM), Basel http://criticalmedialab.org
Copyleft with a difference, 2022: artists, authors and The Institute for Technology in The Public Interest
Unless otherwise noticed, texts and images are available under the Collective Conditions for Re-Use (cc4r) 1.0. You may copy, distribute and modify them according to the terms of the cc4r. https://constantvzw.org/wefts/cc4r.en.html
ISBN: 9789464513202
Download workbook: https://titipi.org/pub/Infrastructural_Interactions.pdf
Plain text version: https://titipi.org/wiki/index.php/Unfolding:Infrastructural_Interactions
Cite as: Infrastructural Interactions: Survival, Resistance and Radical Care, edited by Helen V Pritchard, and Femke Snelting. Brussels: The Institute for Technology In the Public Interest, 2022. http://titipi.org/pub/Infrastructural_Interactions.pdf