Operations Room Hangar
An Operations Room at Hangar
During 4 days, a group of people gathered around an object of study in Hangar, Barcelona to do
Fundamentals
Operators
- Aggeliki (TITiPI, researcher)
- Anna (Hangar, director)
- Antonio (Hangar, head of research)
- Donald (pre-recorded contribution)
- Femke (TITiPI, co-director)
- Helen (TITiPI, co-director)
- Jara (TITiPI, Hangar InfraMaintainance Fellow)
- Jorge (Hangar, web-developer)
- Laila (Hangar, administrator)
- Matteo (Hangar, system-administrator)
- Miriyam (TITiPI, co-director)
- Seda (TITiPI, co-director) (pre-recorded contribution)
Guest: Jaume (external accountant)
Documentation
[Antonio adds]
Hangar
[include diagram?]
LaaS
SaaS, Software as a Service, is a business model where an organisation develops a software product and makes it available to customers online. The software is hosted in the cloud and the user accesses it remotely for a subscription (monthly, yearly, etc.). The so-called “cloud” is built on deeply extractive, exploitative and exclusionary log(isti)cs. In political-aesthetic terms, it is a regime that prescribes what is feasible and thinkable, flattens and standardizes everyday experience, rigidifies the material conditions of possibility in the sharing of experience with the technological, and imposes logistically mediated conditions of subjectivity and coexistence.
The relational logistics of the category of life (Life as a Service, LaaS) needs to be studied in a broader framework. Despite the necropolitical mandate of the cloud, and against the cloud but from within, what would be the practices and positionalities that could make room for ontological and epistemic disobedience, providing palliative care towards its eventual abolition?
More on LaaS: https://hangar.org/en/fellowship/laas-life-as-a-service-de-jara-rocha-primer-fellowship-hangar/
TITiPI
Operations Room
[picture?]
An Operations Room is a situation designed to interrogate the impact of a specific computational infrastructure and its implementations on the operations of a (public) institution, organisation, or collective. Participants with divergent interests, and expertise across scales are invited to study an infrastructure that matters to them and to the (public) institution which deploys it. An Operations Room uses a mix of transdisciplinary methods such as code-inspection, decolonial critical discourse analysis, dependency mapping, creative experiments, and interface analysis. Participants can include engineers, organizers, activists, designers, labourers, accountants, policy people and other users. Together they utilize the prism of "operations" to arrive at an integrated understanding of how a technology manages operations, through what a technology currently does, might do in the future and how it does so. Examples of technologies that could be the subject of an Operations Room: a videoconferencing platform for higher education; a keycard system for managing transactions in refugee camps; a mobile health management tool; a protocol for registering and communicating vaccination status. An Operations Room lasts up to a day and could take place on-line but is ideally physically located in a space relevant to the institution that deploys the technology. Great care is taken in curating the group of participants and mix of methods, preparatory research, selecting tools for documentation, scenography of the room and overall hosting of the situation. An Operations Room can be proposed by an organisation, a concerned individual or follow from a Drop-in Clinic; an outcome of an Operations Room might be a bugreport or a proposal for further participatory research.
[more from Helen's intro]
[picture?]
Documentation system: audios, pics, pads, keywords and timestamps
Sage
[screenshot?]
Materials in the Room
[maybe put a picture?]
Books, pamphlets and references
[maybe put a picture?]
Other
[picture?]
- Grid (Operations Room team)
- Counter Cloud Action posters: Digital Depletion Strike and Cloud Abolition
- Diagram
- "la vida es demasiado corta como para andarse con hojas de cálculo" ("life is too short for spreadsheets", Sage corporate slogan), 17 index cards, TITiPI (2023)
- image: Patent Edith Clarke
- image: Microsoft Operations Room
- image: Marie Neurath
- image: Invoicing printing cliches, Barcelona 1970's (?)
Activation
Day 1
- 14:30 Open doors to the Room, loose encounter with the Operations Room and its materials
- 15:00 Fundamentals
- Welcome (Antonio, Matteo, Jorge, Laila, Femke, Helen, Aggeliki, Miriyam, Jara, Anna)
- Documentation system: keywords and timestamps
- Hangar and InfraMaintainance
- Life as a Service (LaaS)
- TITiPI, The Cloud Regime
- Operations Room as a method
- Why SAGE on-line accounting system with recorded insert
- 17:30 Break
- 18:00 Laila's tour through Sage; discussion and articulations of questions
- 19:00 End
Day 2
- 10:00 Infrables micro version: share an experience with digital administration
- 10:20-10:40 round 1
- 10:40-11:00 round 2
- 11:00 Reading of 2 accounts with accompaniment
- 11:20 Break
- 11:30 Collective infrasoftware study. In this session we made different cuts trough the concrete Sage ecosystem, as implemented by Mits Informatica:
- e-invoicing standard (xml, metadata, NextGenEU) https://pad.constantvzw.org/p/titipi.operationshangar-standard
- interface and dependencies (Sage, cloud storage, Mits; relations between standard and platform) https://pad.constantvzw.org/p/titipi.operationshangar-dependencies
- accounting operations (following specific accounting operations related to Hangar's actual administration) https://pad.constantvzw.org/p/titipi.operationshangar-accounting
- 13:00 Bringing analyses together
- 14:00 Lunch break
- 16:00 Visit to Lumbung press @Hangar
- 18:00 End
- 19:00 Documentation meeting
Day 3
- 10:00 Collective diagramming session: budgetting potentials, cracks, inventions and/or constrains
- 11:30 Break
- 12:00 Input guest: Jaume, Hangar's accountant
- 13:00 Budget reading: closing the room for/with Hangar's team
Day 4 + Day 5: continued internal worksession