Symposium

Archives of Disappearance

Friday 27 March 2015

«The majority of the common characters in the major languages of the world are encoded in the 65 000 536 code points, states the Unicode Consortium. But the 16 bit encoding has the capability to encode up to 11 114 112 code points. Long are the quaint days of ASCII's a 128 code points. Unicode even encodes fictionnal writing systems such as Elvish or Klygnon. Its code space includes any writing system whatsoever with no regard to whether it was ever employed by human culture. More than this, since streams of ASCII remain the basis of all file transfers on the net and since ASCII is now a subset of Unicode and since Unicode provides a structure for exchange and storage of data, then we must recognize that this enconding is the fundamental encoding of all that is on the net.»

To cite this document:
Baldwin, Sandy. 2015. “Archives of Disappearance”. Within (Re)constituer l’archive. Symposium hosted by Figura-Nt2 antenne Concordia. Montréal, Université Concordia, 27 mars 2015. Document audio. Available online: l’Observatoire de l’imaginaire contemporain. <https://oic.uqam.ca/en/communications/archives-of-disappearance>. Accessed on May 1, 2023.
Historical Periodization:
Fields of Discipline:
Objects and Cultural Practices:
Figures and Imaginary:
Classification