Another interesting article - and one which takes pains to put the Luddites back into their right context!
http://www.pastemagazine.com/articles/2011/12/the-shallows-what-the-internet-is-doing-to-our-bra.html
:)
C
Luddite (noun, dating from 1811) - name taken by a group of protesters who destroyed machinery in Midlands and northern England 1811-16 for fear it would deprive them of work. Name supposedly originates from Ned Ludd, a Leicestershire worker who had wrecked machinery in 1779. Name is applied to modern rejecters of automation and technology from at least 1961.
Wednesday, 14 December 2011
Monday, 21 November 2011
Luddite Website
Check out the following for more news about the Luddite Bicentenary celebrations:
www.luddites200.org.uk
C
www.luddites200.org.uk
C
Tuesday, 8 November 2011
Robots Are Taking Our Jobs
Yet another interesting blog post on the subject of the Luddite fallacy and the rise of technology:
http://www2.macleans.ca/2011/11/07/robots-are-taking-our-jobs/
:)
http://www2.macleans.ca/2011/11/07/robots-are-taking-our-jobs/
:)
Tuesday, 4 October 2011
Thursday, 29 September 2011
Tuesday, 6 September 2011
The Struggle Of The Luddite Remains...
Here's yet another website that actually gives an accurate definition of the word 'luddite'.
http://gizmodo.com/5837029/heres-where-the-word-luddite-really-comes-from
So, why isn't there something more substantial to celebrate the 200th anniversary of the uprising?
http://gizmodo.com/5837029/heres-where-the-word-luddite-really-comes-from
So, why isn't there something more substantial to celebrate the 200th anniversary of the uprising?
Monday, 30 May 2011
Rage Against The Machine
Friday, 11 March 2011
Don't Forget
I understand that today is an important anniversary.
"The first incident during the years of the most intense Luddite activity, 1811-13, was the 11 March 1811 attack upon wide knitting frames in a shop in the Nottinghamshire village of Arnold, following a peaceful gathering of framework knitters near the Exchange Hall at Nottingham. In the preceding month, framework knitters, also called stockingers, had broken into shops and removed jack wires from wide knitting frames, rendering them useless without inflicting great violence upon the owners or incurring risk to the stockingers themselves; the 11 March attack was the first in which frames were actually smashed and the name 'Ludd' was used. The grievances consisted, first, of the use of wide stocking frames to produce large amounts of cheap, shoddy stocking material that was cut and sewn into stockings rather than completely fashioned (knit in one piece without seams) and, second, of the employment of 'colts', workers who had not completed the seven-year apprenticeship required by law."
Lest we forget...
"The first incident during the years of the most intense Luddite activity, 1811-13, was the 11 March 1811 attack upon wide knitting frames in a shop in the Nottinghamshire village of Arnold, following a peaceful gathering of framework knitters near the Exchange Hall at Nottingham. In the preceding month, framework knitters, also called stockingers, had broken into shops and removed jack wires from wide knitting frames, rendering them useless without inflicting great violence upon the owners or incurring risk to the stockingers themselves; the 11 March attack was the first in which frames were actually smashed and the name 'Ludd' was used. The grievances consisted, first, of the use of wide stocking frames to produce large amounts of cheap, shoddy stocking material that was cut and sewn into stockings rather than completely fashioned (knit in one piece without seams) and, second, of the employment of 'colts', workers who had not completed the seven-year apprenticeship required by law."
Lest we forget...
Saturday, 8 January 2011
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