[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zgZfry82LC4Some household appliances cost us while they sit around and collect dust. They suck energy just by being plugged in, even if they aren't turned on. This wickedly wasteful phenomenon is commonly known as standby power, but we call it Vampire Energy.
Vampire Energy
Some household appliances cost us while they sit around and collect dust. They suck energy just by being plugged in, even if they aren't turned on. This wickedly wasteful phenomenon is commonly known as standby power, but we call it Vampire Energy..
By Morgan Currie,
Morgan Currie
My research broadly probes the way cultural, political, and economic factors interact with the design and development of information infrastructures. My recent research examines the production and circulation of government data, and how these datasets interact with social, political, and economic systems. I start with these data infrastructures’ historical beginnings and follow them through their standardization in policy, their circulation in technical systems, and their reuse by the public. The topic of emerging data infrastructures grows increasingly important as these systems condition the possibility for new economies, forms of governance, civic behavior, and political struggle.\r\n\r\nI received my Ph.D. from the Department of Information Studies at UCLA in 2016, and my MLIS from the same department in 2014. I have a Masters in New Media from the University of Amsterdam (2011). I am currently a lecturer in the School of Media, Culture, and Design at Woodbury University.\r\n\r\n
Lindsay Utz
Danielle Flug
Rowland Holmes
Nigel Holmes